Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 151, 26 June 1906 — Page 4
Yhe Richmondtealladium, Tuesday, June 26, 1906.
Page 4.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Masonic Building, North 9th and A 8treets. Entered at Richmond Postofflce as second class matter. Weekly Established 1831. Oaily Established 1876. TEKMS OF SUBSCP.IPTION. By Mall in Advance. Daily, one year $3.00 Dally, elx months 1-50 Dally, three months, 75 Dally, one month. 25 Daily and Sunday, per year $4.00 BY CARRIER, 7 CENT8 A WEEK. Persons wishing to take the PALLADIUM by carrier may order by postal or telephone either 'phone No. 21. When' delivery ia irregular kindly make complaint. The. PALLADIUM will be found t the following places: Palladium Office. ; Westcotr Hotel. ? Arlington Hotel. 4 Unlon'Newa Company Depot. Gates' Cigar Store, West Mala. ) The Empire Chjar Store. ONE CENT AT ALL PLACES OF 8ALE. TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1906. WHY REPUBLICANS WILL TRIUMPH. i When-William Jennings Bryan returns from his long sojourn In foreign lands he will bo accorded a welcome in New York City by the leading Democrats of the country that from all Indications promises to be the most wonderful and enthusiastic reception ever given In this country for a' citizen in private life. It will be a Bort of an advance Democratic convention. At the gorgeous banquet that is being arranged speeches will be made by many of the Democratic leaders who in previous national campaigns have been opponents of the Nebraskan. On this occasion Bryan will be declared the nominee of the party In 1908. It will be of course an unofficial endorsement but the action then taken will be ratified two years hence. United, the Democratic party Is a hard nut to crack; divided as it has been in past campaigns the trick has been easy. Only Hearst and his henchmen are out of the fold Just now, and Hearst promises to try and stir un discontent. The Republicans, however, will not -.rely on Hearst. The very sentiment v that has brought Dryan into popularity has not been created by the Democrats hut by the Republicans. The administration of Roosevelt has probed ind cleanest put more corruption than any other ' administration in either party for a tiafj, century. The legislation of Roosevelt , has probed and cleaned outjmore corruption than any jther administration in either, party ' t for a half century.".:The legislation igainst corporations to. general and, the railroads and Standard Oil In partlcular is the work of the-JRepublican party. The sentiment of the Ameri3an people shows that they approve this kind of activity, but some of them overlook "the accomplishment of their own party and blindly attribute It to the influence of Bryan. The next campaign will be one of education as well as those that have pono before. Before it is over it will be shown that some or the very principles which Bryan's platform will advocate (that is those which stand tor the curtailment of the powers of the giant trusts and the cleanlns up jf public offices) are those which the Republican party under Roosevelt have already put into practice. Bryan's arraignment of the trust evil can not bo so severe as Roosevelt's actual work against it As usual It will be a case of the Democratic party promising what it nill do, while the Republicans will be ble to point back to what they have really done. With n candidate that stands for a continuation of the reform policy that has been carried on during the present administration, the Republicans will triumph in 190S, Will Visit Canada. Charles E. Shlvcley, Supremo Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias purposes to visit the Grand Lodge of Manitoba at Winnipeg on July 23d Tlio Grand Lodge of Quebec at Montreal, during the week of August 20 25, and the Grand Lodge of Maritime provinces at St. John, X. B. on the . . . .. . istn or August. -, ? w . O Bears tU 0TOZIZA. 1h8 Kind Yra HawAiws Bcap
SONGS OF THE PEN
Prof. Charles Eliot Norton ha-j said that .whatever your occupation may be, and however crowded your hours with affairs, do not fail to secure at least a few minutes every day for refreshment of your inner life with a tt of poetry. INDIRECTION By Richard Realf. Realf was born in Sussex County, England, on the itu June, 1834. Wrhen still a yung man he moved to this country, and was identified with carious metropolitan publications. Most of hl3 best work was done diring the civil war and the period following.In June 18(15, Real married Sophie E. Graves, of Porter County, Indiana. Realf too t his own life at Oakland, Cal., on the 28th of October. 1878. A series of his poems wl I appear In followingt issues. Fair are the flowers and the children, but their subtle suggestion Is fairer; Rare is the roseburst of dawn, but the secret that clasps It 13 rarer; Sweet the exultance of son?, but the strain that preceeds it Is sweeter; And never was poem yet writ, but tiie meaning out mastered the meter. A Never a daisy that grows, but a mystery guideth the growing; Never a river that flows, but a majesty scepters the flowing: Never a Shakespeare that soired, but a stronger than he did enfold him, Nor never a prophet foretells, but a mightier seer hath foretold him. Back of the canvas that throbs the painter is hinted and and hidden; Into the statue that breathes the soul of the sculptor Is bidden; Under the joy that.is felt lie the infinite issues of feeling; Crowning the glory revealed is the glory that crowns the revealing. , Great are the symbols of be'ng, but that which is symboled is greater; Vast the create and beheld, but vaster the inward creator; Back of the sound broods th3 silence, backof the gift stands the giving; ' Back of the hand that receives thrill the sensitive nerves of receiving. ; t . Space Is as nothing to spirit the deed is outdone" by the doing; The heart of the wooer Is warm, but warmer the heart'of'the wooing; 1 " i And up from the pits where these shiver, and up from, the heights where those shine, Twin voices and shadows swim starward, and the essence of life is divine.
PICKLE-VERBS To be taken with a pinch of pepper and disintegrated after the manner of WISDOM. If a man cannot find ease within himself it is preposterous for him to seek it in his wife. Without virtue there can be no hap piness; and there is no felicity like the knowledge of having "stung" the other man. He is most potent who has his wife in his own power. Y """" He Is happy, that can choose other people's business for them. A truly noble spirit, can forget Injur ies, but never a financial debt. "There are some follies as catching as Infectious diseases," said Mayor Z. when he rode the motor-cycle. Excess of wine, neither keeps se crets, not .performs promises, but it does lend diversion to life. "Time," is what we wish for most and for which we get little money. Learning makes a' good man better, but a bad man worse. ANIMAL ODDITIES. The 'normal life of a mouse Is three years. 1 Birds never eat fireflies and really try to shun their vicinity. Wild birds do Vnot slug more than eight or ten weeks in the year. Giraffes and ant eaters each have tongues nearly two feet In length. There are 240,000 different species of insects on earth. Some of these are so small that 4.000 of them are only equal to a grain of sand. The cuckoo does not build a nest, but deposits its solitary egg In the nest of another bird. ' The intruder Is always cared for by the deluded hosts. Patagonlan llamas live for years without tasting water, aud a breed of cows near Losert, France, and noted for the richness of the milk, takes it very rarely. THE ROYAL BOX. In a few years' time, when the leases fall . in, the south London property of the Prince of Wales will bring him about $750,000 a year. The German emperor, who recently has added a Spanish- uniform to his stock of clothes, has the biggest wardrobe of any sovereign in the world. It Is said that the czar of Russia receives from his subjects through the post no f ewep thau 100 petitions every day of his life.- The majority of these documents before reaching the monarches hands are examined by a confidential secretary. The new bey of Tunis, Mohammed! Nasr, Is a stout ish man of middle height. He has an amiable expression and passes for the most learned member of his fau-Iiy. He began to study French four years ago. Ills daughters, the princesses, speak French fluently. GOWN GOSSIP. Few plain linen suits are seen, lace embroidery and applique having forced their way here, as elsewhere. Deep berthas of renaissance lace are used to convert low necked gowns Into afternoon dresses. With linen skirts and, as for that, skirts of every sort are worn little Jackets of linen and lace. ' . Valenciennes and baby Irish lace are combined In some of the most expensive of the lingerie waists. The dotted Swisses, which are always dainty, are quite as popular as ver, especially the all white ones. New York Post.
WORTH KNOWING
V p- S I rTEST AN D" SO N S"i John L. Sullivan says that he has at last conquered his appetite for strong drink. Judge Jackson of West Virginia has been on the federal bench longer than any'other man now living. He has occupied the position for forty-four years. Trofessor Rinaldo Lothrop Perkins, one of the most scholarly men of Boston, at the age of eighty lives a simple life in a small attic room surrounded by his books.Three United States senators are worth more than $10,000,000. They are William A. Clark of Montana, Stephen B. Elkins of West Virginia and Nelson A. Aldrich, of Rhode Island. In the neighborhood of his home In Mississippi John Sharp WTllliams is always called "John Sharp." This is because the family of the congressman's mother were the Sharps the great people of that section. The leading candidates for the United States senate from Colorado Thomas E. Walsh, David Moffatt and Mr. Guggenheim are all millionaires. The latter was formerly of Nev.- York, but has lately taken an. interest in Colorado smelting and Colorado politics. Joseph Ditchfield of Trevorten, Pa., sixty-five years old, grew frightened when he could not read one night by the aid of spectacles which had been worn many years. A doctor examined him and gave him a newspaper which he read clearly without glasses. He had gained his second sight. Matthew Tibbet, a member of the Mud Cat club of Princeton. Ind., made a bet that he could eat a fish that measured five feet six Inches from tip to tip in eight minutes. The wager "was accepted by the club and they lost because Tibbet produced a spoon bill catfish, which was nearly all head and tall. M. Combanalre, the French explorer, recently got lost In the forests of Cambodia. He became separated from his party aud wandered through the solitudes for eight days without any other nourishment than the water he could get from the marshes in the jungle. One of the members of the party to which he had belonged shot one tiger and six elephants in a fortnight TALES OF CITIES. New York's estimated population Jan. 1, 190G, was 4,014,340. Cincinnati, through the civic Improvement department of her Woman's club, started the first playground in Ohio. The men's clubs of twenty-fire churches of many denominations In Minneapolis are to federate for civic betterment. The death rate of Waterbury, Conn., is reported as 17 i?r 1.000 less than the rate either in the state, In the large towns or in the small towns. The town of Bowdoinham, Me., is the only one in New England which has five tide rivers within its boundaries. They are the Catchance. Abbagadassett, Kennebec, Androscoggin and Muddy rivers. Hod9s Sarsaparilla enjoys the distinction of being the great est curative and preventive medicine the world has ever known. It is an all-round medicine, producing its en-1 equalled effects by purifying, vitalizing and enriching the blood on which the health and strength of every organ, bone and tissue depend. Accept no substitute for Hood's, but incist on having Hood's AND ONLY HOOD'S.
CHILD'S AWFUL
HUMOR
Screamed with Pain Suffering Nearly Broke Parent's Heart Twelve Years of Misery Doctor Called Case Incurable Helped from First, and SPEEDILY CURED BY CUTICURA REMEDIES "I wish to inform you that your wonderful Cuticura has put a stop to twelve years of misery I passed with my son. As an infant I noticed on his body a red spot and treated same with differentremedies for about five years, but when the spot began to get larger I put him under thrare" of doctors. Under their treatment the disease spread to four different parts of his body. The longer thadoctors treated him the worse it grew. During the day it would get rough and form like scales. At night it would be cracked, inflamed, and badly swollen, with terrible burning and itching. When I think of his suffering, it nearly breaks my heart. His screams could be heard down stairs. The suffering of my son madejnefullof misery. I had no ambition to work, to eat, nor could I sleep. " One doctor told mo that my son's eczema was incurable and gave it up for a bad job. One evening I saw an article in the paper about the wonderful Cuticura and decided to give it a trial. "I tell you that -Cuticura Ointment is worth its weight in gold; and when I had used the first box of Ointmentthere was a great improvement, and by the time I had used the second set of Cuticura Soap,Ointmcnt, and Resolventmy child was cured. He is now twelve years old, and his skin is as fine and smooth as silk, (signed) Michael Steinman, 7 Sumner Avenue, Brooklyn, JN. Y., April 16, 1905." Comolrte External and Internal Treatment for erei Humor, from Pimples to Scrofula, from Infanry to Age, connijting of Cuticura Boap, 23c., Ointment, flOc., Reeolr vent, 40c. (in form of Chocolate Coated PI1U, 25c. per vHU of AO), may be had of all druralata. A ilngle et often cure. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Prop,., Bortoo. ma-Mailed Free, " How to Cure Humors of Childhood." ..Strawberry.. W j v ar eei ESSE Fresh berries, per qt. Canning:, 3 qts for 2t Raspberries, per boK, 10c Phone orders faitbrully filled and promptly delivejfd. RICHMOND TO, COFFEE AND WfflGERY CO. Phone 138 715 Main St. sekie FIRST DISTRICT. South of Main, West of 7th. 1-2 1st and S. C, Piano Factory - 1-3 2nd and S. B. 1-4 4th and S. D. , 1-5 5th and S. B. 1-6 5th and S. II.' 1-8 7th and S. a 1-9 7th and S. J SECOND DISTRICT South of Main, between 7th and 11th. 2-1 8th and Main. 2-3-8th and S. E. . 2-4 7th and S. G. ; 2-5 9th and S. A. 2-6 10th and S. C. , 2-7 11th and Main. " 2-8 11th and S. J. THIRD DISTRICT. South of Main, East of 11th. 3-1 12th and S. B. 3-2 12th and S. E. 3-4 14th and Main. -3-5 14th and S. C. ' 3-6 18th and 8. A. ,3-7 20th and Mais. 3- 8 15th and S. A. FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Main, West of 10th to' river. ) 4-1 3d and Main, Robinson ?s shop.1 4- 2 3d and N. C. 4-3 City Building. 4-4 Sth and N. G. 4-5 Gaar, Scott & Co. !4-6 No. 1 Hose House, N. 8th ' ! 4-7 Champion Mills. ,4-8 10th and N. I. 4-9 9th and N. E. 4- 12 City Electric Light Plant ' FIFTH DISTRICT. West Richmond and Sevastopol. 5 W. 3rd and Chestnut. 5- 1 W. 3d and National Avenue. 5-2 W. 3d and Kinsey. 5-3 W. 3d and Richmond Avenue.: 5-4 TV. 1st and R. R. 5-5 State and Boyer. 5-6 Grant and Ridge. 5-7 Hunt and Maple. 5-8 Grant and Sheridan. 5- 9 Bridge Avenue, Paper "MUZ 5-12 Earlham College. SIXTH DISTRICT. North of D, East of 10th, 6- 1 Railroad Shops. 6-2 nutton'a Coffin Factory. 6-3 Iloosier Drill Works 6-4 Wayne Works. 6-5 City Mill Works. 6-6 15th and R. R. 6-7- 3th und N. II. SEVENTH DISTfCJVx? . Between Main and North D. Ecsfc ltth. , 7 9th and N. A. 7-1 11th and N. B. 7-2-14th and N. C. -7-3 No. 3 Hose House. - 7-4 ISth and N. C. ,7-5 22d and N. E. SPECIAL SIGNAJjCf 2- 2-2 Patrol Call. 3- 3-3 Fire Pressure. 1-2-1 Fire out. 3 Fire iyressure off. y
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OPAL REFRIGERATORS SNOW WHITCwsihmdovim OAK CASES wmton Q Kodak the children Let the children Kodak. By th Kwak system anyone may take and ii pictures. It's Dayht all the wa rownies (almost kodaks) 1 to $9. Kodaks $5 to $105 Kodak tanks, developers and all the new things from the Kodak city. W. II. ROSS DRUG CO. AMD Green or Black Most satisfying, hot or iced. Being rich, they make a generous flavored drink even when diluted with chopped Ice. Are sold leoee or In sealed packets by Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.. 727 Main.
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM IS ESSENTIALLY the greatest county paper published in Richmond. Going to press at three forty-five every morning the PALLADIUM
is issued in time to make every ruraUwneacnertornirig mail In the county.
Draihlp Othfr
INTELLEGENT RURAL JtOUTE PATRONS have been quick
of receiving a lociil paper the same day it is published, and ,iave subscribed to the PALLADlUwpushing its rural route list up by leaps and bounds. untfT now
the PALLADIUM has combined.
ReachesRouters Dwfiyf
THE BIGGEST ARGUMENT IN GETTING rural route subscribers has been the fact that tha PALLADIUM is the only Richmond paper reaching them the same day of publication. Neither of the evening papers of Saturday reach therural routers until the following Monday. Saturday's PALLADIUM reaches the rural router on Saturday, and Monday's PALLADIUM reaches him on Monday, the same day that the Saturday issue of the evening papers arrives.
COVNT7 CIRCVLATIOFI
0000 ,
Opal Glass Lined McCray GlassJ:med Gurney Grfna Lined
Wean suit any fancy in
fze, make, struction
EMMfME
vui ill w a fijr Is the sensation of the tear ln&4
er sale than any other Ihoe sold in the City. WHY? t Because it is a strictly $30 shoe for $2.50, is GUARANTEED to be th BEST shoe made for the money, and more than fills the guarantee. CURME'S SHOE STORE, 724 main street.
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Ji O
2 Vacation Land 1
If A mile high delightful imate. H Mountain air clear ajra crisp. J A sunshine positively lectric in effect. I Glorious out-door spjfrts.
Ver
Juney to September 30 Only $30 from Chicazo, $25 from St. Louis, $1750 from Missouri River for round trip return limit October 31. 1906. Special excursion rates July 10 to 15, inclusive, account Elks' meeting: $25 from Chicago, $21 from St. Louis, etc.
Send six cents in stamps (or illustrated Colorado book. "Under the Turquoise Sky," containing complete list of Colorado hotels and boarding houses. Elks (older full of useful information- free."" ' I. F. POWERS, Dfst Pass. Aft., 9 CUypool Bid? Opposite CUypool Hotel. INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
P, 7more rural route readers than
a 0 m v----;:.
lining or con- . , Richmond shoe trade. It is having a larg if Si CI tw Rates
Paper,
RouteXCfrciriasn.
to reilize the advantages the, Other two local papers Publication. 3
