Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 152, 27 June 1906 — Page 3

The Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, June 27, 1906.

Page Three.

Treating Wrong , Disease. Many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion or prostration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they all present ' alike to themselves and their easy-going and Indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which he, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills and potions. In reality, they are all only aympt'nna caused by some uterine disease.- The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages this practice until large bills are made. The suffering patient gets no better, but probably worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent com plications. A proper medicine like Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort Instead of prolonged misery. It has been well said, that'" a disease known is half cured." ' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is a (Scientific medicine, carefully devised by n experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate system. It is made of native medicinal roots and t,Js perfectly harmless ic 4 Vqffects in any condition of the nyntem. As a powerful invigorating tonic "Favorite (Prescription " Imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs distinctly feminine in particular. For overworked, "worn-out," "run-down," debilitated . teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop girls," house-keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the greatest, earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nervine "Favorite, Prescription " Is unemialed and is invaluable in allaying ana subduing nervous excitability, Irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, chorea, St. Vltus's dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the uterus. It indnces refreshing sleep and relieves mental-anxiety and despondency. Dr. Picrco's Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as candy.

We carry in stock an assort ment or all or the standardr fla vors of ICE CREAM vvyth we are pleased to dellvej to your door In quantities of from a quart up. Telephone us youf orders and bear In mind that ne guarantee the quality of ouif goods to be as good as tbe blst no exceptions. f C Richmond tJrcam Co. 9 South Fifth St. .Strawberr re 3 Season Fresh berries, per gjTlOc Canning:, 3 qts for Raspberries, per bix, 10c Phone orders faithfiilly filled and promptly delivered RICHMOND ml COFFEE ahdgroceWco. Phone 138 715 Main St. THE NEW PHILLIPS VAUDEVILLE THEATER O. G .M'JRRAY MANAGER. WEEK OF JUNE 25th. DAILY at 3 and 8:15 P. M. A MISS GRAYCE MILLE Overture. HAYDN. The Concertina King. JOHN & CARRIE MACI Bit of Humor and Bor good songs. MISS LEONA THOMPi Illustrated songs. IVY, DELMAR & IVYl In their clever skt "The Finish of Alexander." THOS. F. SHEA. Comedy Singing and Dancing. WILLS &. BARRON. '.'Hooligan as the Insurance Agent." .THE PHILISCOPE. "The Shooting Expedition" . and "Those Terrible Kids." r 4 Beer of quality, combinedCvith pur ity our Richmond Export veer is the Beer to drink." It Is the flavor and Healthfulness thatconstltutes quality inf Beer. This is possible by the Jbest material nd modern brewing If alili tie. THICK BREYHIG CO., New Phone 42 . AL. H. HUNT 7 North rCntlJ Can sell or tradeou anything In real estate. See him.

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MISS BILLIE BURKE, POPULAR ACTRESS, WHO HAS BEEN LEFT A FORTUNE. Billle Bnrke Is an American girl who has been the rage of London for some time past. There she plays "Commere" and other roles In the London Coliseum "revue." Recently the popular actress was left $35,000 by Wallace T. Sawyer, an old friend of her father.

AT THE THEATERS Vaudeville at the Phillips. It's worth the price of. admission to hear Mr. Ivy, of the team of Ivy, Delmar and Ivy, deliver his lecture on "Woman" In vaudeville at the New Phillips this week, and to hear the stories John Mack tells of his friend Clancy. Ivy has a good word for all women until he gets down to his mothar-in-lnw, which he finds an impassable barrier. According to the way he tolls it, God made the earth and rested; he then made man and rested; ho then made woman, and neither God nor man has rested since. Mack's friend Clancy is the fellow who painted a barber pole, making the stripes run up and down Instead of around, as is the usual custom. When called to task by the proprietor of the shop, he says, "Well, can't you wait? I'm going to twist the pole." Wills and Barron, who were counted on to prove one of the especially strong spots on the bill, are not a disappointment," and some portions of their act are entirely new to New Phillips patrons. Etiquette Amonrc Forest Ransrera. While in the forest reserve In which we hunted I met several of the forest ranger, all of them intelligent men. some with college education, men wbd seemed peculiarly adapted to their calling, who knew the mountains thoroughly, handy with an ax and gun and full of resources. A degree of ethics obtained among tbe sportsmen, guides, trappers and forest rangers that was interesting. When any oue goes to a deserted cabin, In most of which would be found food, bedding, a stove, etc.. It Is proper form for him to stay all night, eat all he can put away under his belt,' if In dire need divide any supply of tobacco and matches he may find, but he must take away nothing else, siuce to carry on an article of little value, such as hammer, hatchet, pinchers, snow glasses, screw driver, fish hook, pipe or other similar article might inconvenience the owner greatly when he happened along and wanted them and was forty miles or more from a source of supply. If a belated wanderer fails to wash the dishes and leave a supply of dry wood sufficient to build a fire and cook a meal he is at once tabooed and his companionship is not sought after. Northwestern Sportsman. The SUe of the San. The sun, provided we measure only the disk seen with the smoked glass, is 866,000 miles in diameter 1. e., 10S earths could be comfortably ranged side by side across the disk. To cover the surface would require manjr thousands. To fill the Interior we should need 1,300,000. On a smaller scale we might represent the sun by a ball two feet in diameter and the earth by a good sized grain of shot. Let the sun be hollowed out, then place the earth at its center and let the moon revolve about It at its real distance of 240,000 miles. There would yet remain nearly 200,000 miles of space between the moon's orbit and the inclosing shell of the sun. Indeed to journey from one side of the sun to the other, through the center, would take one of our swift express trains nearly two and a half years. So vast a globe must be heavy. Since Its density is only one-quarter that of the earth it only weighs as much as 332,000 earths, or two octillions of tons. The attraction of gravity on its surface would cause a man whose weight was 150 pounds to weigh two tons. ..... . ."Great Baala of California. The Great Basin of California Is so called because It is a great basin, or sunken area, the bottom of which Is below sea level. It has lately been pretty well filled with water from the Colorado river, forming the Salton sea, sixty miles long, thirty miles wide and fifteen feet deep. White Horses. White horses are not used In warfare because they make too good a

o 00 CITY AND COUNTY Births. Male twins to Max and Helen Lousch, 927 South Eighth street, fifth and sixth children. Girl to Argus and Grace Horr, 104 Randolph street, second child. Contagion. Helen Logue, of 240 South West Third street, measles. Myra Chamness, 309 North Fourteenth street, measles Deaths and Funerals. STEWART Miss Ida Stewart, aged 35 years, died Monday night at her home three miles north of the city on the New Paris pike. The funeral will be at the house this morning at 11 o'clock. The burial will be at Earlham. THE FIRST SPECTACLES. Tbex Were Made In Italy In the Thirteenth Centnry. Spectacles were invented late in the thirteenth century. The use of glass to aid the sight of defective eyes Is, however, much older. Nero looked through a concave glass in watching the gladiatorial games, and many other historical men of his day were dependent on similar devices for lengthening their sight. Till the latter part of the thirteenth century only tbe single glass was In use. In 1290 the double glass was inTented, and in the fourfe-nth century spectacles were used quite frequently by the very wealthy and high born, although they were still so scarce that they were bequeathed in will with all the elaborate care that marked the disposition of a feudal estate. The first spectacles were made In Italy. Somewhat later the manufacture of cheaper glasses sprang up in Holland, and It spread late in the fourteenth century to Germany, Nuremberg and Rathenow acquired fame for their glasses between 1490 and 1500. For many years glasses were used only as a means of aiding bad eyes, until the fashion of wearing merely for tbe sake of wearing them sprang up in Spain. It spread rapidly to the rest of the continent and brought about the transformation of the old thirteenth century spectacles into eyeglasses and eventually into the monocle. QalrkallT-er. Quicksilver is found in veins of rocks, like gold, silver and other metals. Sometimes the tiny globules of the mercury appear in the interstices of the rock, but usually it Is found in the form of cinnabar, a chemical compound containing 13.8 per cent of sulphur and 86.2 per cent mercury. When pure and reduced to a powder it la a bright red color. The principal uses of quicksilver are for removing free gold and silver in placer and quartz mining, for manufacturing vermlllion paints and dyes, for backing mirrors, for making thermometers and many other scientific instruments. What Water Did. certain liquor dealer, a hard headed old Scot, grew rich in the trade. After he had grown rich the old man built himself a fine house, a limestone mansion on tbe hill, with a park around it, with conservatories, stables and outbuildings in a word, a palace. One day the old Scot rode in the omnibus past his fine house. A temperance man pointed up at tbe grand edifice and said, with a sneer, "It was the whisky built that, wasn't it?" "Na, na, man; the water," the Scot answered. London Mali. The First Sapphire. There Is an Indian legend that Brahma, the creator, once committed a sin that he might know the torments of remorse and thus be able to sympathize with mortals. But the moment he had committed it he began repeating the mantras, or prayers of purification, and in his grief dropped on the earth a tear, the hottest that ever fell from an eye, and from it was formed the first sapphire . . .

THE MACHINIST.

His Work; Raaares From a Heedlo te a Battleship. There ia. perhaps, no other trade and very few professions," writes William Haddow in tbe Technical World Magazine, "that require the high order f intelligence, the study, the application, the real hard beaded common sense, the surgeon's delicacy of touch, for Instance, in fitting of fine work, that the machinist's trade demands to give the excellent work and the interchangeability of parts found in the modern rifle or sewing machine. The range of bis work is from a needle to a battleship; from automatic machinery that "would talk French had it one more movement to measuring machines guaranteed not to vary more than the fifty-thousandth part of an inch from the absolute. This precision will perhaps be better appreciated when It Is remembered that 150 times this limit of variation Is only equal to the diameter of tbe average human hair. Standard plug and ring gauges, to take a specific example, are so accurately fitted to each other than the expansion due to the warmth of the hand, if the plug be held in it for a few moments, ?111 make It impossible to Insert the plug In the ring, while if tbe ring be expanded in the 6a me way the plug will drop clear through it "When the machinist has become skillful enough to fulfill the above requirements he may receive from 2.50 per day up to whatever be can make himself worth and prove it." OIL PAINTINGS. With a Little Care They May Vastly Be Cleaned. Many a good picture that has looked dark and dirty for years from having been exposed to the dust can easily be cleaned and freshened In a very simple way. The picture should be taken from its frame and dusted carefully with a soft cloth. Peel a large potato and cut It in half, go over the whole picture with a sponge that has been dipped In tepid water, then with the flat side of the potato rub the surface of the picture with a light circular movement, being careful not to press too heavily on the canvas. Tbe potato will soon begin to loosen tbe dirt and the colors underneath will begin to show brighter. When all the stains and dirt have been removed the picture should be sponged again in warm water, care being taken to wash off any starch that may have been left from the potato. In case the picture is badly cracked as little water as possible should be used, as It is apt to ooze under the paint and do some injury. Many oil paintings are injured by the dampness from the walls on which they are hung. Tbe dampness is apt to cause the canvas to decay, and there are few canvases made to resist its attacks. To prevent this particular form of decay the back of the canvas should be painted when perfectly dry with white lead, Objects to Slipshod English. The well of Judge Bacon's court at Whitechapehla to be a well of English undented. During a recent discussion with counsel on tbe absence of one of the parties to an action on a previous occasion this dialogue took place: Judge Bacon The defendant was not presemt? Counsel No, your honor, he did not turn up. Judge Bacon What! "Turn up!" Pray do not use such slipshod expressions! Counsel I apologize, your honor. I should have said the defendant failed to enter an appearance at your court. These are high pressure days, and since your honor was at tbe bar we have no longer time to indulge in perfect English. Judge Bacon Oh! London News. CHURCH AND CLERGY. The Church of England has an income of $75,000,000 a year. There are within the United States today 199,558 religious organisations, with 30,313,311 members, an average of 160 members to a church. The Methodist church on John street, a few doors east of Nassau,, New York city, was the first Methodist church in America. It was of wood and stood somewhat back from tbe street. It was built In the year 1764. In a recent speech at Taunton, England, the bishop of Bath and Wells said It was a sin for a man of leisure to take the Lord's day for pleasure, but a hardworking man who never had a chance for recreation except on that day did no wrong to take it then. POLITICAL. A politician in landing a job Is very much like a woman in landing a husband. He puts in all his work before he gets the Job and forgets to keep up appearances after he has it Atchison Globe. We have no wgrd to say against politics. Only it need not absorb us completely. Tbose who are interested In other things and who make a decent living by hard work can give too much time to politics that is, too much for their own rood- Indianapolis News. FIRST EXCURSION OF THE SEASON TO MICHM CITY VIA C. G. & I. RAILROAD $2.00 ROO TRIP Special Train leaves Rich mond at 10:30 pi m Saturday Nirjiit, June 30 Arrives Michigan City 6 a. m. Sunday. I : Returning leaves Michigan city 7 p. m. sinaay. For particulars ak C. A. Blair, P. & T. A. Richmond Home.TeL 44. 1

TH E JAW AN D THE TEETH. Wkat Mar Bafi If W ! rslasr ft 'Fd4b. The teeth are really appendages of tbe skin, and not of 'the skeleton, as people, generally believe. The Jaw is formed in' accordance iwjth the necessity for providing a holdffor the teeth that is, if there were noiteeth to come.

the jaw would grow. differently, andwnnM not hsvo It nmcartt shun. Th jaw is not an -independent, part, as it! would like to be; It has to form itself' to accommodate i tenants ' with which, strictly speaking.llt has no ties of kindred. The use of soft (foods decreases the size of the teeth, and they will ultimately disappear,- unless 'we make more use of them. As there does not seem to be any likelihood of a change lin our habits, we must expect. to lose them in course of time. Then the jaw'will assume probably another shape.: Further, the gums might disappear, f for there can be no use for them after! the disappearance of the teeth. The loss of the teethf makes the lips fall in, and brings t us near to the Punch form of face! Weiflndfit Impossible to pronounce sounds, such as t. d, sh, ch. The change of face, so tfo say, will certainly lead to a modfficatlon of the tongue, and this Imturato thellnabllity to pronounce other sounds. Atonic Drspeotsla. The ultimate cause "of atonic dyspepsia Is constitutional! depression. It may be due toioverworfk, and especially to prolonged worry. Sometimes the dyspepsia is the , first mtmlfestatkm of tubercular poisoning. Again, there; seems to be an inherent failure of the digestive organs. Once established, dyspepsia is, in turn, the cause' of -loss of strength, of mental! inertia and visceral weakness. Some degree off simple anaemia Is almost 'inevitable. The exciting cause maylbe an lllnesslof any kind, the excessive'; ise of tea. coffee or other beverages, i the lack ofproper food, some error in (habits off eating. Often it Is not discoverable. ..GEO. MXCUYER.. Western & Southern Life Ins. Rooms fw, Colonial Bit SSCBI PBONI IBS we earnestly solicit your patron agt HARRY WOOD IG CHANDEIIER8 and a ELECTRICAL SUPPLIED Home Phonec43. Bell 265 ARLINGTON iBarbcr THoi all Up

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. First class wdMr My flfst class Ba!t- ' 'bers, under stmtlifenitary cnditiont. Your patronage soUAted." jeff meyers, raop.::

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All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good ' are butt Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health at Infants and Children Experience against Experiments What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Caster Oil, Pare goric, Drop-r and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. 1 contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karootie substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE C ASTO R I A ALY7AYO

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ACTIVE, EARNEST, PERSISTENT EFFORT GENERALLY NECESSARY TO DISLODGE AN ENEflY.

Energetic, persevering action Is irenerAlly necessary to overcome the obstacles a attain great ana no Die enas in me. . too. if one is afflicted with a dread sease which has fastened itself upon some of the organs of the body and become trmlv seated as a lingering or chronic sialady, active and persistent treatment U generally necessary to dislodge the enemy. Since any medical treatment, however good It may be. must be long continued Sn order to be effective in old established nd therefore obstinate cases, how lmportyit that the remedical agencies employed be of a harmless character. To be are ana harmless, when their use Is thus Frotracted. thev should be of such nature as to be easily eliminated or carried out of tho system when they have performed their work, just as the refuse of food is carried out of the system. Most mineral medicines are not thus easily gotten rid of. Take arsenic, for instance. If Introduced Into the system In any considerable quantity it will lodge in the brain, liver, kidneys and other parts and there remain as a foreign body to set up irritation and disease for a long period of time if death does not sooner intervene. This Is also time of most mineral medicines. With medicines of vegetable composition it is different. They do their work by aiding the natural functions of the several organs of the body for which they have an affinity, and like the refuse of our food, are carried out of the system through the natural emunctories the lungs, skin, kidneys and bowels. Thus no injury is done to the system in cases where the use of such medicines is continued for a long period of time. Especially is this true if the medicine taken is free from alcohol. It is well known, however, that even small portions of alcohol taken for a considerable period of time will do serious injury to the bodily organs and functions and especially to the brain. How Important then, in choosing a medicine for treating a malady of long standing, and when medicines must, in order to cure, be preseveringly taken for a considerable period of time, that those only should be used which are known to be free from alcohol and of vegetable composition. With most medicines put up for family use and sold through druggists, their composition is kept a profound secret, known only to those who compound and put them out for sale. Any afflicted person who buys and uses then, does so, as It were, in the dark, if not indeed athls or her peril. They may and generally do, contain a very large percentage of alcohol or cheap whisky whichHhoroughly unfits them for protracted use. But this is not the worst fault of many of them, objectionable though it is. Narcotics and mineral poisons, which we have shown to be so harmful, especially when used protractedly, are contained in many of these secret compounds. To overcome the well-jrrounded and reasonable objections of the more intelligent to the use of secret, medicinal compounds, Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y some timo ago, decided to make a bold iepartare from the usual course pursued by the makers of put-up medicines for domestic use, and so has published broadcast and openly to the whole world, a full and - complete list of all tbe ingredients entering into the composition of his widely celebrated medicines. Thus he has taken his numerous patrons and patients into his full confidence. Thus too he has re moved his medicines from among secret nostrums of doubtful merits, and made them Remedies of Known Comwmtum. By this bold steo he has shown that his formulas are of such excellence that he Is not afraid to subject thorn to the fullest scrutiny. He has come to believe, and is willing to concede, that his patients and ail who take his puVup medicines have s

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Bought, and which has been has borne the signature of Signature of perfect right to know what they in taking into their stomachs. Not only does the wrapper of every bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the famous medicine for weak, stomach, torpid liver or biliousness and all catarrhal diseases wherever located,; have printed upon It, in plain EnalUh-, av full and complete list of all the ingredients composing it, but a small book hat been compiled from numerous standard, medical works, of all the different schools of practice, containing very numerous extracts from the writings of leading practitioners of medicine, endorsing in the atrmgest possible trrma.ench and every ingredient contained in Dr. Pierce's medicines. One of these little books will be mailed free to any one Bending address on postal card or by letter, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y., and requesting the same. From this little book it will be learned that Dr. Pierce's medicines contain no alcohol, narcotics, mineral agents or other poisonous or Injurious agents; that they are made from indigenous, or native, medicinal roots of great value, the properties of which are extracted and perfectly preserved by the use of triplerefined, chemically pure glycerine of proper strength. It will also be found that the glycerine employed greatly enhances the curative principles of the several roots employed, as it is tbe best possible sol vent of their medicinal principles, besides possessing intrinsic medicinal value of its own, being a fine demulcent nutritive, antiseptic and antiferment. from perusing tnis nine dook or extracts, it will be found that some of the most valuable Ingredients contained in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for weak, nervous, over-worked, "run-down." and debilitated women, were employed. long years ago, by the Indiana for similar ailments affecting their squaws. In fact, one of the most valuable medicinal plants entering into the composition of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription was known to the Indians as Squaw-Weed." Our knowledge of the uses of not a few of our most vain able native, medicinal plants was gained from the Indians. As made up by Improved and exact processes, the "Favorite Prescription is a most efficient remedy for regulating all the womanly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, anteversion ana retroversion, overcoming painiui periods, toning up the nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. It cures the backaehe, the dragging-down distress in the pelvic region, the pain and tender ness over tne ovaries, ones up tne peivio catarrhal drain, so disagreeable and weakening, and overcomes every form of weak ness incident to tue organs distinctly feminine. Favorite Prescription" is the only medicine for women, the makers of which are not afraid to print their formula on the bottle wrapper, thus taking their patrons into their full confidence. It Is tne only medicine for women, every ingredient of which has the strongest possible endorsement of the most eminent medical practitioners and writers of our day, recommending it for the diseases for which "Favorite Prescription is used. It is the only put-up medicine for women, sold through drugglsts,which does not contain a large percentage of alcohol, so harmful in the long run, especially to delicate women. It has more genuine cures to its credit than all other medicines for women combined, having saved thousands of sufferers from the surgeon's knffe. It has restored delicate, weak women to strong and vigorous health and virility, making motherhood possible where there was barrenness before, thereby brightening and making happy many thousands of homes by the advent of little ones to strengthen the marital bonds and add sunshine where gloom sod despondency had reigned before. Lata