Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 February 1906 — Page 7
THE MORNING PALLADIUM TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20. 1906.
PAOXS OCVIIIiV 0 MILLION; FOUND STARVING
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OUR GLASSES CURE Office hours from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. 'Examinations free. Nos. 4 and 5 Aldine Building, Main street, near Tenth. Headache Oared. Mrs. Ryan, wife of Lee Ryan, liveryman on South Tenth street, says: "For years I had suffered with severe headaches almost constantly. I wa told by several specialists that my eye were the cause of it, so that I finally consented to the wearing of glasses which would help me for only a short period, when the headaches would return again. I was told that nothjng more could be done for me unless I submitted to having drops put in my eye to suspend the accommodation. I wa fearful of the effect, asi I knew of others whose eye had been penuaa mydriatic. I consulted Mr. and! Mrs. Lingerfield and Mass Sweuzer, f
as I noticed in their advertisement that they corrected all latent trouble without the use of a mydriatic. I am very much pleased with the re suits, as it ia now nearly one year wince they fitted me with glasses and my head has not ached since I have worn them. I am grateful, too, to have found some one who was able to correct my trouble without the use of drops." Mydriatics. We do not use Belladonna, Atropine or other mydriatics, injurious drugs all of them, and belonging to a past stage in the science of optics as applied to eyesight testing. Total dilation with a powerful oaydriatie will set your eyes at rest. It will set hm at rest so well that in a great many cases it will take the j' eye3 a year or more to get back to their normal conditions, reiy often rest them so well that tie eyes are never comfortab'e agair. By means of modern methods we obtain more accurate and sa'.'.s factory results without the usi o? drops, also avoiding much of the discomfort and often serious -danger to the patieat. Mrs. Commo!, wife of V.. L. Comr.ona, propru'fr of the Willow Crove Dairy, Ways: "M eyes were more thoroughly testei by Mr. and Mrs LingerilelJ anl Miss Sweitzcr than by any o'.'ici optician I had previously consulted. The glasses they furnished me are giving entire satisfaction, md I wear thara with perfect comfort, which I hul not been able to do heretofore."
, tu to Yoo Haw Always
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You have heard that some foods furnish fat, other foods make muscle, and still others are tissue building and heat forming. You know that most foods have one or more of these elements, but do you know that no food contains them all in such properly balanced proportions as a good soda cracker ? The United States Government report shows that soda crackers contain less water, are richei in the muscle and fat elements, and have a much higher per cent of the tissue building and heat forming properties than any article of food made from floor. That is why UnccdQ QlOCUlt should fqrn an important part of every meal They represent the superlative of the soda cracker, all their goodness and nourishment being brought from the oven to you ia a package that is proof against air, moisture and dust the price being too small to mention.
NATIONAL DISCUIT COMPANY
WILL NOTfflRRY TILL THEY ARE 30 BEAUTIFUL YOUNG GIRLS FORM CLUB AND TAKE REMARKABLE PLEDGE. MOTIVES OF THOSE JOINING Many of Members Are Talented and Want To Carry Out Their Work Undisturbed. New York, Feb. 19. The Thirty Years Marriage Club has been formed. It is even declared to be growing in membership. A Manhattan girl, who in spite of her twenty-four years is already obtaining recognition as an illustrator, was a month ago asked to join the club. At first, misled by the name, she was aghast. Then after the purpose of the organization had been explained to her, she laughed. "Pledge myself not to marry until I am thirty," she exclaimed. "That would be a superfluous formality, for there is not the slightest danger of my entering into matrimony before tha time. I am too much engrossed in my work. "And yet," she added, more sober ly, "I believe that the club is a good thing. Many people have not the courage of their convictions; this, may supply the necessary backbone." j Finally she consented to join after , this fashion: j "If you think my joining the club will help my girl eo-workers to live their own lives in defiance of foolish criticism, I will become a member. Besides from a more subjective standpoint, it will be an inspiration to me to be indentified with a body of young people who care more for their work than for anything else in the world." The Thirty Years Marriage Club was founded by a little grop of seniors in a coeducational college but it now has members in many parts of the United States. Although a majority are college graduates, man and women widely differing in training and vocation have signed its pledge. And the motives that led them to it are as various as their callings. The women members are decidedly interesting. Not all of them work for a living or for fame. There are butterflies among them. One St. Louis belle is not afraid to acknowledge that she belongs to the Thirty Years Marriage Club. "When a girl is young and has money and friends, and some share of good looks, life is so delightful that marriage and its responsibilities
seem a doubtful supplement," she said frankly. "I feel like postponing it until I have somewhat satisfied my desire for pleasure. But already the gossips are counting up the number of seasons since I made my debut, and public opinion has a compelling force. For fear that in some weak-minded moment I should give up my freedom before I was ready to do so, I joined the club." A Chicago girl who lately fell heir to a large fortune celebraed the event by joining the Thirty Years Marriage Club. "Why are you tying yourself down in this manner?" asked a friend. "Tying myself down? Not a bit of it!" was her spirited reply. "I am gaining freedom. As soon as the estate is settled up I will be off to the other side of the water. Until I am thirty the United States will see very little of me, for I shall be going up and down the world, into all its strange places. In my wanderings I will be quit of fortune hunters. When thirty comes I will have had my fill of travel and if I marry my quiet hearthstone will be animated by pleasing memories." Both of these are in doubtful tanding among their fellow-members. Their views seem hardly to embody the club ideal which is, in the main, the doctrine of self-development. Pleasure is. not the aim of the cleareyed young women who have signed the thirty-year pledge. "Each of us was put into the world to develop our own character, our own ability. We must follow the path that leads to that," one of them said. "Nor is the object an entirely selfish one, for each individual achievement raises the standard of human excellence. The speaker was a musician, just returned from a year's study abroad. In addition to her concert work she is studying the theory at Columbia. "My ideal is to write my own songs," she added. "It will take until I am thirty to obtain the requisite knowledge of harmony and counterpoint." The girls who share her flat are enthusiastic club members. One is a reader with a magazine publisher. "I am having a practical course in English," she explained, "and it leads to an editorship."
TOR Bean the Signature of The Kind Yon Haw Always Bought The End of the World. of troubles that robbed E. H. Wolfe, of Bear Grove, la., of all usefulness, came when he began taking Electric Bitters. He writes: "Two years ago Kidney trouble caused me great suffering, which I would never have survived had I not taken Electric Bitters. They also cured me of General Debility." Sure cure for all Stomach, Liver and Kidney complaints, blood ' diseases, headache, dizziness and weakness or bodily decline. Price 50c Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co. 'a drug store.
NEW YORK WOMAN DISCOVERED UNCONSCIOUS AND COLD IN HOME.
FOUND DYING BY A CHILD Came of Old Knickerbocker Family, Her Father Making a Fortune' in Fordham. New York, Feb. 19. Miss Maria Corsa, fifty-six years old, whose fortune is estimated at from $600,000 to $1,000,000 is dead at her home, Morris avenue and 134th street, in the Bronx. Her death was caused by starvation and exposure, due to her life of seclusion and false economy. She lived entirely alone in one room of the Corsa residence, denying herself eves the necessities of life, and refusing the warmth of a fire, which might have been built with coal which had been in the cellar for years. Miss Corsa, or "Aunt Maria," as the children in the neighborhood called her, died last Monday night after thirty-six hours of medical treatment which was provided by neighbors. Miss Gussie Zink, fifteen years old, who lives in Walton avenue, near 184th street, went on Sunday morning to the Corsa home, and on, receiving no reply to repeated knockings, ran to the rear and peered through a window in the kitchen. She saw Miss Corsa lying on the floor, and frightened, ran to neighbors and told them of what she had seen. J. P. Stoecker, of No. 2,390 Morris avenue, with Edward Handy, and other residents of the neighborhood, accompanied the girl to the Corsa home. They found Miss Corsa still on the kitchen floor. She was conscious, and when the neighbors lifted her to a lounge, she tried to fight them off. She had little strength left, however, and when she was placed on the lounge she became unconscious. Dr. Edward C. Podvin, of No. 2,371 Morris avenue, was called in. He saw that the woman's condition was serious and worked all day to restore her. Everything that medical science could suggest was done to resuscitate her, but she died at eleven o'clock on Monday night without regaining consciousness. Miss Corsa was born in Port Morris. Her father and mother were both of old Knickerbocker families, and with the Schuylers, Valentines, Berrians and Briggs were among the first settlers in Fordham. In fifteen years, the neighbors say, Miss Corsa had been outside of the house three times. Two of the occasions were the funeral of her father and mother. After her father's death she closed up the house and began to live in one room, the kitchen. 'Hie other part of the house was neglected and the cellar and glass veranda in the rear resembles a junk shop. The furniture of the kitchen consists of two old chairs, a lounge and a small wooden table. A stove, which examination shows has not been lighted probably for years, is also in the room. All through the severe winters THE EASY OIL. Scott's Emulsion' is "the easy oil" easy to take, easy in action. Its use insures deliverance from the griping and nauseating sensation peculiar to the raw oil. Nobody who has any regard for their stomach thinks of taking cod liver oil in the old way when Scott's Emulsion is to be had. It is equally certain that no one having a regard for their health will accept a cheap emulsion or alcoholic substitute for Scott's Emulsion. It fulfills every mission of cod liver oil and more. SCOTT & BOWNK. 409 Pearl Street. New York
BEAD THIS! Wanted, Found and Lost, in whieh personal gain does not enter, are inserted in thes columns free, providing they are not over fifteen (15) words ia 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 postofEce.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. FOR RESULTS.
WANTED Wood choppers to cut 500 cords of wood, about one mile from town. Apply to A. C. Underbill. Telephone 357. WANTED There U an opening for a worthy young man to work his way through the Business College. Phone 240. 2-15-tf WANTED Boy of 16 at Starr Piano Works. Apply to W. Erk. WANTED Boy at Boston Store. WANTED Girl for light housework. God wages if competent. Apply No. 105 South 15th. WANTED Middle aged woman desires place as housekeeper, practical nurse or core of aged. Address this office. WANTED Washing at 123 South 8th street. WANTED Girl, 214 North Ninth street. General housework. situation Wanted Boy, ie years, best references; new 'phone 1341. FOR RENT Nice furnished room for gentleman. 120 South Seventh. FOR RENT A new house with bath electric light and all modern improvements, located on W. 5th street, $12.00 per month. Inquire at 35 N. 8th street, or phone 822. 16-2t. FOR BAUEL Richmond property a specialty. Porterfield, Kelly Block. Phone 329 tt FOR SALE Cyphers Incubator, cheap. Inquire at 218 Central avenue. 23-3t FOR SALE Cheap, good square piano, 104 S. 21st street. 3t Miss Corsa lived in this room without heat and very little nourishment, while within reach lay mortgages and bonds, the value of which would have paid for a mansion and a life of ease and luxury. Where she got the little she did eat no one knows. Not a morsel of food was found in the house. Her only companion in her solitary life was a small black dog, as lean and emaciated as was its mistress. The house is a large three story frame dwelling, and stands in the center of the plot. An old barn is a short distance away. The ground is valued at $100,000. A large tract of land in the Port Moris section of the Bronx, valued at $100,000, is also part of the estate. The rest of the fortune consists of real estate down town in Manhattan and several valuable pieces in Harlem. A large portion of the estate consists of first mortgages and bonds. Bern tha Signatue of 9 The Kind Yon Have Always fcwstt HOW'S THIS. . We offer One Hundred Dollar Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waidmg, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggistts, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internallq, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggistts. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Harsh physics react, weaken the bowels, cause chronic constipation. Doan's Regulets operate easily, tone the stomach, cure constipation. 25c. Ask your druggist for them.
FOR SALE Household furniture at 410 North Fifteenth street. LOST A pocket book containing three dollars and sme small change at Garfield building Friday evening. Phone 896 and receive reward. LOST Two flat door keys ia Erst alley north of liein, between 9th and 10th. Return to old postofiice and get reward. LOST At high school or between there and Fourteenth and North C, a gold watck fob. Return to 211 North Fourteenth street. Receive reward. Phone 1107. LOST A small package of lace.
Finder return to the Palladium office. LOST Gold beads and locket on 14th street, between S. A street and Vaile school. Locket set with chip diamond, monogramed K. Please return to 1317 South A street, receive reward. LOST Gilt belt between 13th and 14th on south B street, or on south 13th, between B and E streets. Leave at Bentlage's grocery or tel epbone 145C and get reward. LOST A small crescent shaped brooch studded with pearls and set with an opal in the center. Return to Palladium office and get reward. LOST Fox terrier. Return to 425 South 7th street or 'phone 1593. LOST A gold bracelet on Main street, between 4th and 5th. Return to Palladium and recve reward. FOUND Gold spectacles on interurban car at Dayton yesterday morning. The lady who lost them can have the same at City Restaurant. Dayton & Western TractiwiCo Leave Richmond for Eaton, West Alexandria, Johns ville, New Lebanon and Dayton : 5 :50, 6 :45, 8 :10, 0 :10, 9:55, 11:10, 11:55 a. m.; 1:10, 1:55, 3:10, 3:55, 5:10, 5:55, 7:10 8:10 p. m. 10:05 and 11:00 p. m, to Eaton and West Alexandria. New Paris Branch Through Service. Leave Richmond for New Paris: 5:50, 6:45, 8:10 9:55 11:55 a. m. 1:55, 3:55, 5:55, 7.10, 8:10, 10:05 p. m. Transfer at New Westville. INTERSTATE LIMITED Parlor Car Hervloe stopping only at Oiiterville, Cambridge City, I)nblin. Uunrelth. Knlghtstown and Ornfll1
AM P M PM Leave Blchmond 10 M 8 bit tU Arrive Ea ton li fio 4 86 tat West Alexandria.... 12 44 4 44 9 44 Iayton IS 25 5 25 1X A M I PM P M Leave Richmond 9 25 1 2 25 TV Arrive Indianapolis 18 10 ( 6 10 la U
Special tickets mast be purchased before boarding train. No baggage carried. Trunks, eta, may be sent on trains preceding or totlowing. Direct connection at Dayton with "Lima Limited" trains for Troy, Piqua and Lima, leaving Richmond at 3:53 p. m. Connections at Eaton with P., C, C. and St. L. for points north and south. At West Alexandria with Cincinnati Northern R. R. for points north and south. At Dayton with electric line diverging for Troy, Piqua, Sidney, Lima, Xenia, Springfield, Columbus, Hamilton and Cincinnati. Through rates, through tickets to all points. For further information call Home Pbon 369. MARTIN SWISHER, Agt. Arrangements for parties, special cars, etc., call phone or write C. O. Baker, G. F. & Pa. A., West Alexandria, Ohio. Acidents will happen, but the best regulated families keep Dr. Thomas Eclectrie Oil for such emergencies..' It snbdues the pain and heals the 1 hurts. v
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