Richmond Palladium (Daily), 6 February 1906 — Page 7

THE MORNING PALLADIUM TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1906.

PAGE SEVER. NERVOOS DISEASE NO LONGER FAD

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A Fool tto Work mi

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Work! Work!! Work!!! Lots of energy is needed to keep up the pace. In the struggle, the man with the strong body and clear brain wins out every time. The man of to-day needs something more than mere food ; he needs a food that makes energy a food to mork on. Although some people may not realize it, yet it is a fact, proved and established beyond doubt, that soda crackers and this means Unooda BlSCUlt are richer in muscle and fat-making elements and have a much higher per cent of tissue-building properties than any other article of food made from flour. That this is becoming known more and more every day is attested by the sale of nearly 400,000,000 packages of UllOOdO Biscuit y the finest soda cracker ever baked. An energy-giving food of surpassing value sold in a package which brings it to you with all the original flavor and nutriment perfectly preserved. Truly the food to Ivork on. Whoever you are whatever you are wherever you work Uneoda Biscuit.

NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY

9

If Lil

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to

Sreen or Black ; Are rich in all Tea Essentials. Five , minutes' steeping tin absolutely Boiling Water gives best results. Do not Boil these teas. One teaspoonful makes two cups. , ARE SOLD LOOSE OR IN SEALED PACKETS BY GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO., 727 MAIN. ' I, --yzr DY AUTHORITY OFJTHE 4 ' " o rYLO! COMMISSIONER'

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DO YOU GET UP WITH A IAMB BACK?

Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news

papers is sure to know of the wonderful

cures maae oy ur.

Kilmer's SwampRoot, the great kidney liver and blad-

It is the great medInn w : i .i.

I lll uiuuipu VU lilt , nineteenth century ;

fgX, of scientific research

Dy ut. jvumcr, inc eminent kidney and

bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not ro ommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work and in private practice, and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root, and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your

address to Dr. Kilmer foil

& Co., Binghamton, N. Y. The regular fiftv-cent and one-

dollar size bottles are Hm of Swamp-Root, sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. V., on every bottle.

CROOK POSES AS PIERPONT MORGAN

ADVENTURER DUPES AMERICAN GIRLS IN FRANCE REPRESENTING FINANCIER.

oil a purse, which was of gold and pearls. Later he imposed upon some American young women studying at the Sorbonnc or at art schools as Mr. Pierpont Morgan. lie said that he was about to found a refuge for American castaways in Paris, and borrowed money from the girls.

TRAVELED IN AUTOMOBILE

And Stopped at the Very Best Hotels Leading People Were Highly Pleased To Know Him.

TALK TO EUROPE THROUGH EARTH

PRIEST EXPECTS HIS INVENTION TO CARRY DISPATCHES UNDERGROUND.

SHAFTS 3,000 FEET DEEP

A Mystery Solved. "How to keep off periodic attacks

' of biliousness and habitual constipa

tion was a mystery that Dr. King's New Life Pills solved for me," writes John N. Pleasant, of Magnolia. Ind. The only pills that are

guaranteed to give perfect satisfae-

lion xo everyDoay or money rexunaeu. Only 25c at A. G. Luken & Co.'s drug store.

Paris, Feb. 5. Marco, a Roumanian adventurer, who was arrestedrecently for having robbed several women, has admitted to the two examining magistrates who are dealing with his case, nearly all the charges against him. The Roumanian passed as "Sir Charles Walter, an officer of the English Navy," as "Lord Leicester," and as "Mr. Pierpont Mor

gan." He is a man of good educa-,

tion and address, and a civil engineer '

by profession. On coming to Paris last year he

took rooms in a first class hotel, and went about in a magnificent motor car. His first victim was Mile. Ma-' thony, described as a lyric artist, who was overjoyed to have made the acquaintance of an English officer, as she supposed Marco to be. j The so-called Sir Charles Walter greatly admired the lyric artist's ( bracelets and ear rings, and asked , her to lend them to him, as he want- j ed to get his jeweler to copy the precious ornaments, the value of

which the owner estimates at 60,000 francs. Mile. Mathony did as she was requested, and the sham English officer

disappeared with her jewels. She ;

met him some time after in a Montmartre resort, and had him arrested. He admitted to the judge that he pawned the jewelry, and was about to be tried on this charge only when other persons who had been deceived and robbed by the man came forward. One is described as a young Eng

lishwoman and the other ns a Russian Princess. To the Englishwoman .Marco represented himself to be the

Due de Mbntebello. She met him out-side a theatre last November, and took him to her residence near the Trocadero. Next day he accompanied her to a fashionable dressmaker's and as she was trying on clothes, he stole her purse, containing a large sum of money, and fled. The Russian Princess he met in a tea room off the boulevards and won her over by his talk and his title of "Lord Leicester, secretary of the embassy." From her he also abstract-

Will Expend $20,000 to Perfect System Similar to Successful Aerial Line.

Wilkesbarre, Pa., Feb. 5. Father Joseph Murgas, of the Slavonic Catholic church of this city, who has invented a new system of aerial wireless telegraphy, which is now being adapted to practical use, announced today that experiments in underground wireless telegraphy which he had been conducting for some years have reached the stage which can promise that it will not be long before he sends a wireless underground telegraph message to Europe. He will spend $20,000 in making this ex

periment. The priest says that a shaft 3,000 feet deep will be sunk here and a similar one in Europe. Each shaft will be walled with concrete to guard it from dampness and the wires running from the receiving and dispatching point, 3,000 feet beneath the surface will be incased in iron or steel tubing.

Considerable power will be required and the same system in use with the aerial wireless will be used. This system replaces the Morse, used by other wireless systems, with musical tones, each indicating a letter of the alphabet in the code word or group of words. In this manner messages can be sent from eight to ten times faster than by the Morse system. Father Murgas worked seventeen years to perfect this aerial telegraph, now in use between this city and Scranton, and he has given several years of study to his underground theory. nis experiments have been conducted so far between points only a few miles apart, and with shallow holes and small power. He has completed a three hundred foot shaft here and is sinking one in Scranton to a similar depth, and will use these in developing the apparatus he needs for the underground messages.

BREAKDOWNS OCCUR FREQUENTLY IN ALL CLASSES OF SOCIETY.

SCIENTIST CITES CAUSES

London Physician Declares Rich and Poor Alike Go Pace That Kills.

London, Feb. 3. "The breakdown of the nervous system is no mere society craze, from which it is fashionable to suffer, but is becoming a national calamity which bids fair to rob our descendants of many of those qualities which have done so much to make this empire what it is." This prognostication forms a striking passage in an article in a review by Dr. Guthrie Rankin, a London physician. This article is interesting to American readers from the fact that neu

rasthenia or nervous breakdown first was completely described by Beard of New York in 1879. In reviewing the causes of the malady Dr. Rankin observes that the old order of life is changed in dietic usages by the keener and fiercer competition. Towns and cities are becoming more crowded and there is a demand for a more energetic and exciting life. At the same time the spirit of restlessness has imparted to all vocations a more active character than formerly they possessed. A holiday to many people is no longer the day of rest it once was. Up to the present time a large proportion of patients who suffered from functional disorders of the nervous system sprang from among the opulent classes, but now they are met with in all grades of society, women being the sufferers more frequently than men. Evidently wear and tear plus luxury, is telling its story more rapidly than does wear and tear plus unsuitable food and insufficient rest. "The day rapidly is coming," says Rankin, "when every class will suffer the rich, because they are too easily circumstanced and too self-indulgent; the poor, because they are insufficiently fed and regardless of every rudimentary law of health; and the great middle class, because they break themselves down in their unceasing endeavors to outstrip their neighbors and to amass money." Mr. Rankin declares that it is among the women who allow themselves to become neurasthenic from causes within their own control that nervous debility is rampant. "Those who belong to the cultured and leisure classes of society,." he says, "are the greatest sinners. They become especially so in the earlier half of their womanhood when swept into the whirl of social ambition. Many sacrifice not only their health but their duty to the remorseless demands of the wooden image at whose shrine they worship. They have neither time nor desire for the ordinary affairs of life. Domestic obligations have little claim upon their attention, and they find no opportunity for the practice of the old fashioned homely virtues. "Their lives become a dreary wor-

ship of mammon and a restless

search after a social novelty and physical excitement. "Children seriously interfere with the numerous engagements of such women and are regarded as undesirable accidents, which at all hazards are to be avoided." Several changes of custom and habit are mentioned by the writer in an examination of the means of prevention namely: a more rigid adherence to simplicity of life and pronounced social disapproval of the immoderate use of alcohol and tobac

co and the forbidding of both to those too young. Another suggestion is some form of compulsory military service exacted from every healthy young man. Apropos of this last suggestion, speaking at Manchester the other night, Sir Frederick Treves said the present conditions of life make ex

traordinary attacks on the nervous , system, and the best remedy was the

open air exercise. He could imagine no better open air exercise than military training, which encouraged promptness, alertness, capacity to act in common, and above all discipline.

READ THIS! Wanted, Found -and Lost, in which personal gain does not enter, are inserted in thes columns free, providing they are not over fifteen (15) words in length. No business advertisements inserted free of charge. Advertisers will do well to remember that letters directed to Initials Only are not delivered through the postoffice.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. FOR RESULTS.

WANTED--Place to do housework. Address this office, care "K."

WANTED Five ladies for copying points. Several ladies for plattin stamping, experience unnecessary. Can be done at home. Apply personally 205 North Ninth street. Plattin Co.

WANTED Aged woman desires place as housekeeper, practical nurse or care of aged. Address this office.

WANTED Girl to do general house work. Call new 'phone 238, or at house after 5 o'clock. No. 206 N. 13th.

WANTED A young man at bakery as second hand. Must have some experience. Peter Husson.

WANTED A grocery delivery man at Peter Husson 's.

WANTED Washing at 123 South 8th street.

WANTED Girl, 214 North Ninth street. General housework.

FOR SALE. Richmond property a specialty. Porterfield, Kelly Block. Phone 329. tf.

FOR SALE A few more full blood white Leghorn Cockerels, $1 each. Hens 75c. J. T. White, Richmond, Ind., 'phone 1215.

LOST Between St. Paul's Parish House and Richmond Loan Assoc ation on North Ninth street, a gold ring with ruby and two pearls. Return to Atlantic Pacific Tea Store. Telephone 107. Reward.

FOR SALE Household furniture at 410 North Fifteenth street.

FOR RENT Nice furnisbed rwa; for gentleman, 120 South Seventn.

LOST A large square belt pin with a gold twisted rim and a painting of a boy's head on it. Please return to 45 North Sixth street. LOST A solid gold pin, grape design, between postoffice and South A and ISth streets. Return to this office. LOST A beauty pin. last Sunday. Finder call phone 265, R. 1. LOST A watch fob between Fifth street and the Star Piano Factory. Return to this office and receive reward. LOST On Main street, a package containing 3 photographs. Return to Second National Bank and get reward. LOST Roll of ingrain carpet on Union Pike between Richmond and Chester. Finder please leave word at this office. FOUND Initial pin. Owner call at 73 Ft. Wayne Ave.

Humor and Philosophy By DUNCAN M. SMITH

UNEXPLAINED.

Ladies, you are very wise, From your toe tips to your eyes. ' Wisdom that you do not hold -t T Is not much, so I've been told, 1 But there's one thing, angel mine. On which I can't get a line Why should you, since wise you ar, Step off backward from v L the - car? tm i.. ' In affairs of every day ' v " Skillfully the game you play, . Giving us advice that's worth Quite a large slice of the earth; In the household or the mart r. i Tou can always hold your part. 1 .; Why, your record then to mar, off .-M-ijr backward . .... ;

REAL ESTATE

TRANSFERS. Mary E. Weller and John L. Weller, to Forest Monger and Carrie E. Monger, part lot 7 in Hugh Moffitt add. and part lot 1 in William Wiggins add. Richmond $3,050.

HOUSEHOLD WORRIES

from

the

car?

You can twist affairs of state Or can smash a party slate. You can tame a balky horse. Or a fastened window force. And a man with brawny fist Round your little finger twist. But you will. It's known afar. Step off backward from :

the car.

It Is Good Auto Sense.

Mrs. Austin's famous pancakes. Really delicious.

"It takes a man with some judgment to run an auto." "Well, he should at least have horse sense'

Personally Conducted Tour to California. Exclusively first-class tour under the auspices of the Tourist Department, Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line; leaves Chicago Wednesday, February 7thf spending the disagreeable portions of February and March in the land of sunshine and flowers. $350.00 includes all expenses, railway fare, sleeping cars, meals in dining cars and hotel expense. Service first clam in every respect. Itineraries and full particulars on application S. A. Hutchinson, Manager, 212 Clark St.. and 120 Jackson Blvd., Chicago.

There is Not the Slightest Need for Some of them Existing in Richmond. The average mother finds sufficient annoyance and worry performing the ordinary duties in the rearing of a family, but the cares and anxiety are doubled when there is added to ordinary conditions that of weakened kidneys in a juvenile member of the family. How to cure it should be of untold value to Richmond parents. Read this: Charles Fry, of 17 South Fifth street, hoseman of fire company No. 2, says: "A child of mine was troubled for the greater part of his life with a weakness of his kidneys and nothing we used help in the least. We saw Doan's Kidney Pills advertised for such weakness and procured a box at A. G. Luken 's drug store. Giving them to him according to directions it was only a short time before he began to improve. We continued their use until cured. We certainly recommend them as splendid remedy in all such cases." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.

Old maids would be scarce and hard to find, Could they be made to Bee, How grace and beauty is combined By using Rocky Mountain Tea. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.

A woman worries until she pets wrinkles, then worries because she has them. If she takes Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea she would have neither. Bright, smiling face follows its nse. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co.