Richmond Palladium (Daily), 26 February 1906 — Page 7
THE MORNING PALLADIUM MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1906.
PAGE 8EVEXJ.
T.I1 '1 ,, 1 mil . ini'ilU.,, i ti I1. , '"I'" (Mill I I. ; I. I ll" lli.!M l' i.l- ' : . ! i .H i-')...tf.r Afcgelable Preparalionfor Assimilating HieFoodandBcgulaling the Stomachs andBowels of
,il 1' ! Promotes DigestionJCheerfurness and Rest. Contains neither Opium,Morpliine norMineraL Not 3Jarc otic. AbcJmutm . A perfect Remedy forCoistipaTion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions ,f everishness and Loss of Sleeh Facsimile' Signature of :; NEW YORK. mi C VJL doctor- acruJLL A ' Many mothers of families in the United States have reason to be grateful to the person who recommended Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This is a medicine specially prescribed for diseases of womankind. It does not core eczema, catarrh in all its forms, nor heart disease, for it is pat up for the tingl purpot of curing dittos peculiar to women. It has a reputation of over a third of a century of cures, and has old more largely on this continent than any other medicine for women. Another point in its favor it does not contain a single drop of alcohol or harmful habit-forming drugs. It is rarely vegetable and perfectly harm ess m any condition of the system. An alcoholic compound for women is something no woman should take and yet "Favorite Prescription" is the only tonic and nervine put up for sale through druggists, especially for woman's weaknesses, that does not contain alcohol and that too in large quantities. Womanly weakness will always bring nervous irritability and a nervous condition, for which alcohol is the worst thing in the world. What a woman thus afflicted needs is a vegetable tonio and invigorating nervine like Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription, which will build up her delicate system and bring about a healthy tone. It cures the drains and weaknesses of women, also displacements r as prolapsus, anteversion, retroversion , irregular and painful periods and kindred ailments. If you want to know what ails you the United States mail will bring you the best medical advice for only the cost of writing materials and stamps. Many women owe their present good health to the fact that they consulted Dr. Pierce by letter, giving him all possible information about their condition, symptoms, etc., and received in return ffooa medical advice which cost them nothing. This is why we advise you to write to Dr. R. V. Pierce, the founder of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo. N. Y. IDr. Pierce by no means confines himself to prescribing his well-known (roprietary medicines. He tells you n the most common-sense way what ails you, what you ought to do, what : ' (SUNDAY (EXCURSION c iMiRATESmi VIA J Dayton & Western Dayton and Re'urn, - - $1.00 Eaton and Return, - - .50 : . Tickets at above price will be old every Sunday ontil f either notice.
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cumH For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Thirty Years 111 TMI OIMTAWII MMNNr. NKW VONK OIT. 2C OY . fxvaV Vaip Wrv... line of treatment should be followed out in your particular case, and if your case does not indicate . the need of his proprietary medicine, he tells you plainly and frankly what you do need, and the best possible method of improving your health. If you are a young woman just entering upon the duties of life, you should have good medical advice of a confidential nature. If you're the mother of children, yon may want advice about yourself and how best to put your system in order that your children may be healthy. To sunerert irom chronic diseases wnicn people who are past the youthful stage of life and want confidential advice about their ailments or their physical condition, Dr. Pierce offers careful consideration and the best medical advice within his power, free of cost. " Favorite Prescription ' is indeed an ideal medicine for women, and by far the best I have known to restore lost health and strength," writes Mrs. R. C. Roelker, 24 Ingram Street, Henderson. Ky. M I suffered misery for several years, being troubled with flooding. My back ached and I had bearings-down pains and frequent headaches. A'ould often awake from 6leep in such pain and Buffering it would be hours before 1 could close my weary eyes again. I dreaded the long nights as well as the weary days. Consulted two different physicians hoping to get relief, but finding that their medicine did not seem to cure me I tried Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, as a friend had recommended it so strongly. Am glad that I followed her advice for it was the only medicine for me. Every ache and pain has gone, and not only this, my general health has improved. I feel well and strong, have a fine appetite, have gained flesh and never looked better. My advice to suffering women is to take the 'Favorite Prescription and they will never be disappointed with the results." Formula printed on wrapper. You should read The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, by R. V. Pierce, M. D. Send 21 cent in one-cent stamps, for this 1008 page book in paper covers, or 31 cents for the cloth-bound. Address Dr. R. V. Pieroe, Buffalo, N.Y. FINE BUILDING LOT. f ' We have for sale the inest lot for a good house in Richmond. W. H. Bradbury & Son Weetcott Block ltlDD
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SALISBURY IS AGAIN IN PRINT
E. I. LEWIS WRITES ABOUT OLD COUNTY SEAT BEING "HOODOOED." ESTABLISHED BY TRICKERY He Also Tolls of Hindoostan and Palestine, Which Have Also Vanished from Earth. E. I. Lewis, writing in the Indianapolis News Saturday, on "Ambitious Indiana County Seats that Have Vanished from Earth," has some interesting things to say about Salisbury, once the county seat of Old Wayne. The other two towns which he tells about are Hindoostan and Palestine. Hindoostan was formerly the county seat of Martin. Lewis? says that it was killed by the prevalence of sickness. Palestine, the former county seat of Lawrence, he says, was built over a burial mound, a fact not known till long after sickness had also wiped it out of existence. Salisbury, he thinks, was "hoodooed" by the murder of Henry Chryst. He gives an introductory paragraph to Salisbury and then follows a good account of it. "Oh, yes; when we plow in the spring we turn up brickbats and pieces of broken crockery. That's all we see left of old Salisbury Wayne county's first county seat. Gt pretty fair corn out of this field. The courthouse stood there near the hedge and down there in the holler stood the elm tree used as the gallows for the first legal execution in Indiana. If they hadn't moved the county seat away from here perhaps there would have been no Richmond." The farmer who owns and farms the site of Wayne county's first county seat looked out over a snow covered field. Salisbury was a healthy enough place, but it seems to have been hoodooed out of existence. It is asserted by local historians that the county seat was located at Salisbury in 1810, by trickery, and this alleged trickery undoubtedly led to the long agitation, that in 1817, resulted in the seat's being shifted over to Centerville, which, half a century later, lost the courthouse to Richmond. In the spring of 1816, a year before the removal of the county seat from Salisbury, a man named Henry Chryst, convicted of murder, was hanged to the branch of an old elm tree that stood on the outskirts of the town. The really harrowing feature of the tragedy occurred that night, when the son of the executed man, a lad of only twelve years, cut the cold body of his father down and loading it on a sled, hauled it fifteen miles through the forests and darkness to the Chryst home. The whole affair was so horrible that it cast a gloom over the town. Those were days of superstition and many thought that the execution brought the vengeance of God on the town. The fact that superstition existed just about that time is shown in the court records of the trial of a man named Petit, who, "not having the fear of God before his eyes," and "impelled by his Statnic Majesty, the devil," was charged with having committed theft. The town, according to some, became "impelled by the devil." Salisbury, notwithstanding these handicaps, really did show unmistakable indications of developing into a large city. The court house and jail attracted population and civic pride led the citizens to advance the assertion that theirs was the most vigorous town in the eastern part of Indiana Teritoory. At one time the population was over 300 souls, which was considerable for those days, and there were industries that employed a number of men. But the decline came in a hurry when the court house and jail were moved over to Centerville. Most of the population followed the logs to the new location and in 1S2G ten years later there were only ten families left.
It was at Salisbury that Oliver P. Morton was born and there he served his apprenticesip as a hatter. Among the noted men who presided over and tried cases in the court at Salisbury were Benjamin Park, James Noble, Jesse L. Holman, John Watts and Mile C. Eggleston. The very location of the town has
been wiped out of memory. It is impossible to locate accurately the old streets, the exact spot where the courthouse square was, or where Morton was born, though the house in which he was born, now used as a barn, stands near its original location. The logs of the old jail and court house were used later in building houses in Centerville, and a few of those of the old jail can be seen in a cowshed there. The bricks that were used in the old log courthouse are now in the building on the southeast corner of Main and Pearl streets in Richmond, and all that is left at Salisbury is the few scattered bits of crockery and fragments of brickbats that are turned up occaionally by the plowman.
Do yon use an atomizer in treating Nasal Catarrh Then you will appreciate Ely's Liquid Cream Balm, the mildest, quickest, surest remedy for this disease. In all curative properties it is identical with the solid Cream Balm, which is so famous and so successful in overcoming Catarrh, Hay Fever and Cold in the head. There is relief in the first dash of spray upon the heated sensitive air-passages. All druggists 75c, including spraying tube, or mailed by Ely Bros., 56 Warren St., N. Y. Food of the Oyster. "Many gallons, probably many barrels, of water are drawn through th9 gills of each oyster each day," writes a university professor, "and the microscopic beings that it may hold are strained out and pushed along into the oyster's mouth. Each microscopic organism Is a long time in traveling from the point where it first touches the gill to the oyster's stomach; all this while it is alive and capable of becoming the parent of new generations when re moved from the gill and placed under suitable conditions. Most of these or ganisms are wholesome to man, and all that enter the oyster's stomach are quickly killed and converted into its palatable and nutritious substance, but so long as they are traveling along the gills all are alive and, some are ex tremely dangerous to man. The oyster exercises choice in the selection of Its food, rejecting some of the microscopic organisms and swallowing others, but those that are discharged Into the wa ter with the sewage of cities are not unfortunately among the ones that are rejected, and before these have entered the oyster's stomach they are most favorably placed for gaining entrance Into human stomachs and multiplying there." Queer Beliefs About the Fern. The fern was i-imposed to seed only on St. John's nigLt and thus to possess those singular properties for which it had become almost sacred. The gathering of the seed was believed to be attended with considerable danger. Povet In his "Pandemonium," published In 16S4, says: "Much discourse hath been about gathering of fern seed (which Is looked upon as a magical herb) on the night of midsummer's eve, and I remember I was told of one who went to gather it, and the spirits whisk ed by his ears like bullets and some times struck his hat and other parts of his body. In fine, though he apprehended he had got a quantity of It and secured it in papers and box be side, when he got home he found all empty. But most probable this appoint Ing of time and hours is of the devil's own Institution, as well as the fact that, having once ensnared people, to an obedience to his rules, he may with more facility oblige them to stricter vassalage." Cnpaclty of Great Churches. The Roman Advertiser gives the fol lowing statistics of the capacity of the great churches of the world, allowing four persons to every square yard: Persons. Sq. yds Milan cathedral 37.000 9.250 St. Paul's, Rome 32,000 8,000 St. Paul's, London 25,600 6,400 St. Petronlo's, Bologrna 24,400 6,100 Florence cathedral 24,300 6,075 Antwerp cathedral 24.000 6,000 St. Sophia's. Constantinople 23,000 5.7S0 St. John's Lateraii 22.900 5,725 Notre Dame. Paris 21,000 6,250 Pisa cathedral 13,000 3,250 St. Stephen's. Vienna 12,400 8,100 St. Dominic's. Bologna 12,000 8.000 St. Peter's, Bologna 11.400 2,850 Cathedral of Siena 11.000 2,750 St. Mark's. Venice 7,000 1.750 The piazza of St Peter's in its widest limits, allowing twelve persons to the square mile, holds 624,000; allowing four to the same, drawn up in military array, 206,000. In Its narrowest limits, not comprising the porticoes of the Piazzi Ilusticucci, 474,000 crowded and 158,000 in military array. Diclcena Guy Clothe. We were walking down Wellington street. Strand, and just passing the office of Household Words, when a hansom cab stopped, and out stepped a gayly dressed gentleman. His bright green waistcoat, vivid scarlet tie and pale lavender trousers would have been noticed by any one, but the size of the nosegay in bis buttonhole riveted my attention, for it was a regular flower garden. My father stopped and Introduced me, and I, who had only seen engravings of the Maclise portrait and a very handsome head In my mother's photograph album, was astonished to find myself shaking hands with the great novelist Charles Dickens. From Miss Friswell'a "Recollections."
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 115) words ia length. No business advertisements inserted free of charge. Advertisers will do well to remember that letters directed to Initials Only are not de'ivered through the postoflSce.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. FOR RESULTS.
WANTED A girl for general house work. To go home at night. Call 214 North Eigkth street. WANTED .Wood choppers to cut 500 cords of wood, about one mile from town. Apply to A. C. Underbill. Telephone 357. WANTED There is 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 Girl for light housework. Good 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 Stationary fireman or oiler. Address care Palladium .. .. .21-5t.. SITUATION WANTED Boy, 16 years, best references j new 'phone 1341. FOR RENT Nice furnished room for gentleman, 120 South Seventh. FOR RENT Seven room Flat. Lavatory, both kinds of water, electric lights. Over 41 North Eighth St. Phone 626. Wtaat He liit. Dr. Price I can't make anything out of that case. His Wife What? Dr. Price Oh, don't be foolish! I mean I don't understand It. Of course I'm making money out of It London Punch. Collecting Bill. A claim was once placed in the hands of Judge Peters of Bangor, Me., for collection. A notice was sent to the debtor, who called and promised to pay the following Saturday. The Judge said: "Now, don't say you will pay Saturday night unless you mean to. Just take a few more days and be sure. Say you will pay next Wednesday." "All right," said the man; "if I live until next Wednesday I will pay that bill." Wednesday came, but no man appeared to settle the bill, whereupon the judge wrote out a notice of the death of the man' and put it in the dally paper. The next day the bill was settled. Perfumes. In the collection of perfumes two processes are employed. In one, the grease process, boxes with glass bottoms are prepared, the bottom being covered with pure grease or suet, and the flowers, gathered fresh every day during the season, are laid on trays in the box, the grease being left to absorb the fragrance. In the oil process the place of grease is taken by cotton batting saturated with oil, the process being substantially the same. In both cases the vehicle becomes impregnated with the essential oil and odor of flowers. When Solid Iron Floats. Experiments show that If a ball of solid iron is lowered Into a mass of liquid iron by means of a metal fork the ball at first sinks to the bottom with the fork. But in a few seconds it leaves the prongs and rises to the surface, where it continues to float until it melts. The rising is explained by the expansion of the ball, due to heating, whereby It becomes, bulk for bulk, less dense than the molten metal. The Law and the Sword. In all governments there must of necessity be both the law and the sword. Laws without arms would give us not liberty, but licentiousness, and arms without laws would produce not subjection, but slavery. 43ol ton. The War of Men. Few doctors are willing to take their own medicine. When a lawyer gets into trouble he hastens to hire an attorney, and it Is hard for people to admire an artist who paints his own portraitChicago Record-Herald.
ton RENT First floor Flat. ' Up to date improvements. 16 South Thirteenth street. Phone 606. FOB RENT Four room Second Floor Flat. Modern improvements. 1237 Main street. Phone 626. . , FO& BALfi. Richmond property a specialty. Porterfleld, Kelly Block. Phone 329. ' : ' -; tl FOR SALE Double yellow headed Parrott. Both Phones No. 103. Tom Mertz. FOR SALE Household furniture at 410 North Fifteenth street.
PUBLIC SALE I will offer at public sale at my residence three miles north of Richmond, on the east road, cattle, hogs, horses, farming implements and timothy hay etc., Wednesday, Feb. 28, 1906. 22-6t Sanford Henning. LOST A dark lap robe, between 15 and 17tb, on Main. Return to 47 S. 17th street and receive reward. LOST A pocket book containing three dollars and sme small change at Garfield building Friday evening. Phone 896 and receive reward. LOST If the person who found the pearl studded brooch, with opal setting, will call phone 997, a suitable reward will be given. LOST At high school or between there and Fourteenth and North C, a gold watch fob. Return to 211 North Fourteenth street. Receive reward. Phone 1197. LETTER LIST. Ladies' List. Miss Mable Brown,' Nellie Cook, Mrs. W. J. Cosgrove, Clara Enlow, Besse W. Fuller, Annie Kellar, Anna Ruark 2, Josephine Reynolds, Flora Tomalson, Mrs. Leva Thomaa, Daisy De Weese, Mrs. S. R. Ward. Gentleman's List. Lew S. Burns, D. P. Banfill, Frank Cooper, Lawrence G. Cook, T. Durham & Co., Elwanger & Barry, J. J. Flynn, Chas. II. Grove, Ed Iliatt, Moses Hess, Chaas. Hammen, IVV. N. Irwin, Edwin Johnson, Martin Keller, Clarence E. Linville, Letcher & Witt, Harry McColough, John Mattock, Richmond Maleable Iron Co., C. P. Riggs, James Robinson, Srerrily Stege, Robt. Seaman, D. N. Severance, Smith & Co., Chas. Simmons, Dietrick Spaulding, W. D. Trainer, Harry Thompson, The Richmond Metal Mfg. Co., Fred Wagner. Drops. Edward Cook 2, Newell Dobson, Clara Parry, Mrs. Madeline C. Sherman, Miss Eva Smith, Mrs. Clarence Simmons, Florence Walker. D. SURFACE, P. M. 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 s offering, 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.'s drug store. "Suffered day and night the torment of itching piles. Nothing helped me until I used Doan's Ointment. It cured me permanently.,, Hon John R. Garrett, Mayor, Girard, Ala. Acidents will happen, but the best regulated families keep Dr. Thomas' Eclectrie Oil for snch emergencies. It subdues the pain and heals the hurts. Sometimes it pays to talk, especially when you get a dollar for a tenee or two. Try to win the Palladium news "tip" prize
