Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 154, 29 June 1906 — Page 3
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Treating Wrong Disease. ' Many times women call on their family ph y8lclans,$8uffwing as they imagine, one' from Vdyspepsiaanother from heart dlseaae.vi another from liver or kidney disease, another from! nervous exhaustion' or prostratlonfanother with pain here and there,andtinithisw"ayithey .'ail present felilte.totthemselveg'anditheir easy-going and;indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and,dittinct diseases, for which lie, assuming themto bcsuch.Drpscribes his
pills and potions, v In reality, they are all Dniy$ symvimiut eauseu Dy pome uvnne disease. .The physician, ignorant of the taue.of .Suffering, encourages this prac-ticejiptll-large bills are made. The suftrlfig'Patient gejs no better, but probably worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. Alprper .medicine like Dr. Tierce's FaOTltepPrAcription, directatl to the cause woul'dihave entlrelviremoved'the.disease. thereby dispelling, all ..those distressing 1 Bteacriotiprolonged -misery. It has Jeen well paid.tthat "a disease known isvnalf cured." r Pierce's. Favorite Prescription. is a icientiiicmedicine, carefully. devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and'aaapted to woman's delicate system. It.is mate:of native' medicinal roots and Is perfectly harmless TClts effects in any CohdUion.pf .the nyhtem. AsmipowerfulilnvlgoratIng tonic "FaroritetPrecription'.',iimparts strength to tlfe, whole system and to the organs dlstljjctjyleniinine in particular. For overworked vwornTOut," "run-down," debilitated4 teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "whop girls," house-keepers, bucinpiriothcr9,Jtand feeble women gen-w-aily.ilOr.vPljfirceJsihavarite Prescription Is 4tbogrea test .eil Alii y.1 boon, being unEqualenas anUPpe'tlzJng cordial and reBtoratlve,t0nlc. As a 8O0,thiDgi and strengthening nervine iFavoritePrescrlption " is unequaled nnd Us. in valuable' In allaying ana subduing vnervous .excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, r hysteria, spasms, chorea, St. Vitus' dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms!commonly attendant upon functional and organic .disease of the uterus. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and 'despondency. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as candy. ..Strawberry. Season F wsh berries, per qt. '. ; rnin, 3 qtsfor f, r rczrms, per i l'lione orders fa a: c1. promptly deliver ; PiuHMOND'TEA, fiOFFEE I AND GROGERpO. J TUnc 138 715 tVlain -St. - THE NEW PHIIiLWS VAUDEVILLE THEATER O. Q .NVJRRAYt MANAGER. WEEK - OFtv JUNE j 25th. DAILY. at 3 and 8:15 P.M. A-MISSGRAYCE MILLER, ', " OvrtVirQ.'' ! . HAYDN. . I TheTConcertlna King. JOHN . CARRIE. MACK. Bit 'of Humor and Bomegood' songs. MISS, LEON A.THOM j Illustrated 'songs? " w w ' y I Initheir 1 clever ; sketch 'The FiWsh . a i . . TH,OS.,F. SHEA. .- J Comedy: Singing and Dancing. Wills & barron. ! "Hooligan as tho Insurance Agent." ilTHE PHILISCOPE. i "The Shooting Expoditlon" and ' "Those Terrible Kids." , Beer of quality, nfblned with pur ity, our Richmond afort Beer is the tier to drink. It la; the flavor and healthfulness that iconatitutet quality' Irt BeeK , ThlaIa pocsible.by'the bfest material n'drnddern' brewlng'fac brewing! title. THEiMIHCKvBRETIHG-CO. ALH UNT llnth yCan, seller; Aide you anyf thing In real eUate. See him. FIRST EXCURSION OF THElSEASON TO f.llCIIIGfl CITY C. C.. & L. RAILROAD S2;00fR0 HD TRIP Opaclal Train leaves Richftnond at 10:30 p f GaturdayNNight, June 30 I Arrivesimicnisan city 6 a. in. aunaay. Returning' lea vWs Michigan vuy p. m. aunqay. ,C.A.lalr)ip.-T.4Aichmona HometTel 4: -"JTUS. -
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MRS. WILL N. HARBEN, WIFE OF THE SOUTHERN NOVELIST. Mrs. Ilvbeh Is' ri native of South Carolina and Is a descendant of General Francia, -'larion of Revolutionary fame. She Is also a niece of .Lady CathewAor'stouu "of 'India." Mr. Hurben, -tio Is author of "The Georgians'and other well knri .va novels, also has blood connections with English nobility. . As Mioa
ChanUler Mrs.' Harden was one of the Vaudeville at the New Phillips. Miss Lcona Thompson, who sings theillustrated songs at the New Phillp'sin, vaudeville, growing in popularity,' and her work Is well' received. Pr'lissHThompson v has two effective senses this week, one of them ; being tneTe'ver popular ' "For Sale, a Baby." The Illustrations are above the average. Pictures shown by tho Philoscope this week ar eslaiuqo scope this week J are also, quite pleasing, tone depicting' the incidents of a shooting expedition and the other the pranks of "Those Terrible Kids." The Ume'has not yet come, and may never comejwhen Illustrated songs and motion pictures can be eliminated from vaudeville, and they are a pleasing part of the offering at the New Phils uns wceK. Practical Astrology He foretells things by tlie stars." "I suppose a policeman's star means trouble." The Coming Airship. We should; hesitate about turning up our noses at-the fat, impotent flying machine which, though it now sticks closer to the earth than a poor relation to a rich uncle, may some day force us to turn up our noses to see it as it condescends to look down on us. Tall oaks from little acorns grow, and possibly, tall flights may yet grow from big, unwieldy, balloons. You never can tell, and even if you did tell who could swear that what you told .was so? It is only ten years ago that the automobile picked itself up bodily by the tires and lifted itself out of the toy class, and who can tell but what the flying machine may give itself similar treatment? Then, again, tho future looks like the inhabitants of Africa when we remember that balloons have been about in . the same state of mind ever since the memory of the oldest inhabitant. Her Specialty. . he couldn't make' a custard pie, Nor bake a loaf of bread, Kor put a wash out on the line. Nor sweep, nor make a bed. She couldn't boil potatoes right, Nor just plain hash prepare. Nor turn, a plate, of toast out crisp Nor cook a beefsteak rare. Not one of .these was in her line; She jr.aj't built. that way. Xou', think the man who married her Would for. deliverance pray, , But sh could'rustle out each week And bring in thirty per, ' , And, that's the reason why the men Made goo goo eyes at her. Th Oaprey. .Allusionls oftenmnde, especially In fashlonournalsto' "osprey" feathers. Few-"'words 'have i been more loosely bandied aboht than this bird name. The Roman; author Pliny's "osslfraga" (boneWeaker hasbeen identified with thelam'mergeyerir vulture that is reputed to.breairup.bones too big for it to devour whole by dropping them froma height upon rocks. But both "ossifrage" . and "osprey," a newer form, crinietojbe applied to quite enother bird,; the fish hawk, which is now the 'true "osprey." Tet the "osprey" feathers more properly egret feathers, or aigrettes do not come from, this birdUnit from the egret, or lesser vrbltVhe'ron. The Sen Otter. The sea ottercombines the habits of a seal with the intelligence and amusing character of the otter. When met in herds "far out at sea, which is but seldom now, they are commonly seen Btrimmlng on their backs. They even eat their 'food lying in this position on the water and nurse their young ones on their chests between their paws, exactly as a ? south sea island mother swims with her baby In the water. When swimming, in: this attitude they even;sbade their, eyes withtheir paws
ftT THE THEATERS
belles of the south. v'", IN A POISON FACTORY. The Deadly DraffaHaTe a Fascination For tUe 'Workmen. "Slip'on! this j glass "mask," said the foreman. "Ifou -will fuVed it." Thevisitor donned the uncanny mask of glass, and the foreman' led the way to , the "cyanide of potassium department. "We make 1,000 tons of cyanide a year," he'' said.' "A dose of five grains is a fatalo'ne. Thus our annual product Jsenough to kill 2,500,000 people." He opened a doer,' and a room filled with, writhing flames, dense shadows, 6parks, smoke and weird figures in glass masks was revealed. In the center of the room, in a great caldron, 100 pounds of molten cyauide of potassium bubbled and seethed. The flames glinted strangely on the glass masks. The foreman coughed. "These, fumes," he said, "are wholesome. The men,' you see, are all robust. I have known weakly chaps, working here among these strange fumes, to pick up health and strength." In another clean, cool room the finished cyanide was stored. It looked like crystallized white sugar, good enough to eat. "Good eupugh to eat," said the foreman gravely. "Well, we have had men eat it. Four men committed suicide in that way. "The fumes seem to create in our men a desire to taste the drug. They fight this desire, most of them, successfully, but they all feel it, the same as workers In coffee plants want to chew the coffee beans, and some feel it so strongly as to succumb." Cincinnati Enquirer. THE SOLAR SYSTEM. " Some Foots "Which Give an Idea of Ita Immensity. In all the heavens, with the exception of passing meteors or meteorites, not one body occupies a position closer to earth than the moon, which Is some 240,000 miles away very far, of course, side by side with any earthly distances, but a mere fraction side by 6ide with other astronomical distances. Nest to the moon our nearest occasional neighbor is Venus, end then Mars. Both Venus and Mars, however, are often farther away from us than the sun, which remains always at somewhere about the same distance, roughly at from 90,000,000 to 93,000,000 miles. This dividing space between sun and earth Is of great fmportance In thinking about the stars, and it should be clearly impressed upon the mind. Next to the sun in point of nearness come the more distant planets Jupiter, which is' about five times as far from the sun as our earth is; Saturn, nearly twice as far as Jupiter; Uranus, nearly twice as fnr as Saturn, and Neptune, nearly three times as far as Saturn. All these planets belong to our sun, all are members of his family, all are part of the solar system. The size of the solar system as a whole, consisting thus of the sun and his planets, including our earth, may be fairly well grasped by any one taking the trouble to master two simple facts. They are these, that our earth is roughly about 92,000,000 miles away from the sun and that Neptune, the outermost planet of the solar system, is nearly thirty times as far distant from the stm as our earth Is. Chambers' Journal. Old Time Actmfr. The old time actor bad peculiar and primitive views as to elocution and ita uses. I rememlKT a certain old friend of mine who, when he recited the opening speech in "Richard III." and arrived at the line, "In the deep bosom of the ocean buried," suggested the deep bosom of the ocean by sending his voice Into his boots. Yet these were flue actors, to whom certain young gentlemen who never saw them constantly refer. The, methods of the stage have completely changed and with them the tastes of the people. The probability is that some of the old actors of only a few years ago would excite muct merriment in their delineation of tragedy. A very great tragedian of a past generation was wont in the tent scene in "Richard III." to hold a. piece ol soap In his mouth, so that, after the appearance of .the ghosts, the lather and froth migkt dribble down his chin, and he employed moreover a trick sword which rattled hideously, and, what wlti his foam -flecked face, his rolling eyes, his inarticulate groans' and his rattling blade, the small j boy ; In the gallery was scare jljinto, a jtrenzs of, vocif erotu delkt!Rich&fdHaa5e.ld ia'AUanUa
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The Chicago, Milwaukee 8c St. Paul R
F. A. MILLER, General Passenger Agent,
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 ,?T D. 1-5 5th and.'S. B. 1-6 5th and S. H. 1-8 7th and S. C. 1-9 7th and S. J. v SECOND DISTRICT. South of Majn, between 7th and 11th. 2-l-8th add Main. 2-3-Sth afd S. E. 2-4 7th afd s. a. ; 2-5 9th aid S.VA. ; 2-6 10th jmd SC. 2-7 11th ind Maim 2-8 11th nd S. J. tArd DISTRICT. " South of Main, East of lltS. 3-1 12th ind S. B. " " 3-2 12th and S. E. 3-1 14th and Main. 3-5 14th 4nd S. C. 3-6 ISth aV.d S. A. 3-7 20th apd Mais. 1 3-8 15th and S. A. FOURTH DISTRICT. North of Main. West of 10th to rivet; 4-1 3d an4 Main, Robinson's shop. 4-2-3d an4 N. C. 4-3 City Building. . 4-4 Sth an'a N. G. t4-5 Gaar,.$cott & Co.n 4-6 No. 1 lose House, N. 8thV-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 aud Kinsey. 5-3 W. 3d and Richmond Avenue. 5-4 W. 1st and R. R. 5-5 State and Boyer. 5-6 Grant and Ridge. ' 5-7 Ilunt and Maple. ' 5-8 Grant arid Sheridan. ,' 5- 9 Bridge .venue, Paper" Mill, 5-12 Earlham Collegre. SIXTH DISTRICT. North of D, East of 10th, 6- 1 Railroad Shops. 6-2 Hutton's Coffin Factory. 6-3 Hoosier Drill Works. 6-4 Wayne Works. 6-5 City Mill Works. 6-6 15th and R. R. 6-7 33Wnd N. H. SEVENTH DISfitrCT. : Between Main and North D. East of 110th. " 7 9th and N. A. 7-1 11th and jN. B. 7-2-14th andjN. C. w 7-3 No. 3 Hose House, -7-4 ISth and N. C. 7-5 22d and N. E. V SPECIAL SIGNALS, 2-2-2 Patrol Call. 3-3-3 Fire Pressurf 1-2-1 Fire but. 3 Fire pressure offi Though love, taey tay. will find a way. The scheming lover's gasi Ta lust to hav her Dax pay The sunt. 5 1
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South Dakota is Long on Wealth and short on people. Today it presents the best opportunities in America for those who want to get ahead on the Highway to Independence. More than 47,000,000 bushels of corn, more than 47,000,000 bushels of wheat, live stock to the value of $41,000,000, hay to the value of $12,000,000, and products of the mines above $12,000,000, were some of the returns from South Dakota for 1905. With a population of only 450,000, and the annual production of new wealth above $166,000,000, it can be readily understood why South Dakota people are prosperous and happy. The outlook for 1906 crops is the best South Dakota has ever known. Why don't you go there and investigate the openings along the new lines of this railway for yourself? From Chicago, and from many other points in Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri, direct service to South Dakota is offered via
Its main lines and branch lines fairly gridiron the rich agricultural and stocft country of South Dakota. Its mileage in South Dakota is more than 1,200 miles, and by the building of extensions is being rapidly increased. A New Line is now being built from Chamberlain, S. D., to Rapid City, S. D., through Lyman, Stanley and Pennington Counties. Some of the best opportunities for success are along these new lines. The railway company has NO farm lands for sale or rent. If you are interested, it is worth while to write today for a new book on South Dakota. It will be sent free by return mail.
ROUND TRIP TO DAYTO WEDNESDAY- A JULY r V'A DAYTON & TRACTION WESTERN CO. Horse Races At Fair Ground $4,500 in Pursqs New Amuse bents Lakeside Park and Fairview Park Grand $10,000 Display of Firewo 'ks ' Home At the Soldier At Daytdn Base Ball Dayton vs. Snringfleld C. O. BAI G. F. ER & P. A. OASTOniA. Bean the ?lhfi K'ni1 oa Harc Always Bought Call Up
We wjM lhake your Waimti
Cincinnati Recursion. Sunday, July! st, Pennsylvania Lines excursionl-ain leaves 7:00 a. m. $1.25 roundnrip from Richmond. 26-28-30. farmers Sumqey r I HE Blichmond PallaTT I dlumjls the only pa-' per published in Rich-' mom on Saturday which reaches the people living ! on the rural : outes for Sunday. Mail for run 1 free delivery is not delivered on Sunday, therefore Saturda morning's Palla- ( dlum is the only local paper which is del vered before Mon-, day. This fact proves conclusively the value of the Palladium as a medium in reaching the rural routers. Saturday morning's Palladium is the only paper, they havejto read on Sunday the day they have the most time to nsad.
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Hiotiteir CHICAGO ..GEO. M. GUYtt.. Western & Southernffe Ins. Co. Rooms 33-31 Gdfonial Bldg. homi rVmic lose Wo earnestly solicit your patron ag i HARRY W WIRINj CHANDELIERS and ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Jisme Fnone 1343. Eell2S3W2s -ARLINGTON IKDTEL Barber Ghon I First class wolk bvjSrst clasi bartbers, nnder tnctlaamtary condiItion. Your fcaffbnage solicited. JEFF METERS, PROP. Palladium Want Ads Pay. Either Phone
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