Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 165, 10 July 1906 — Page 3

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OPERATION AVOIDED EXPERIENCE OF MISS MERKLEY i Che Was Told That an Operation Was I Inevitable. How She Escaped It

When a physician tells a woman suffering with ovarian or womb trouble" that anjoperation is necessary, the very thought of the knife and the operation table strikes terror to her heart, and our hospitals are full of women coming for ovarian or womb operations. There are cases where an operation is the only resource, but when one considers the great number of cases of ovarian and womb trouble cured by Lydia E. I'lnkham's Vegetable Compound after physicians have advised operations, no woman bhoulil submit to one without first trying the Vegetable Compound and writing Jlrs. 1'inlchara, Lynn, Mass., for advice, -which fs free. Miss Margret Merldejr of 27 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis.i writes: Dar Mrs. Pinkharo: ! " Tm of BtnnRth, extrmfl nfrvousnww nhootinR pains through thf jelvlc organs, bearing down pains and crampif romiH'lWxl , m to wek medical ndrice. t lie lhotor, after ' making an examination, said I Jml ovarian trouble and ulceration and 4dvifhd an operation. To this I" strongly objrtef and decided to try Lydia 13. Ilnkhum's'VeijetAhln Compound. The ulceration qtifckly healed, all the bad symptoms disapiiearAt and I am once more strong, vigorous and well." Ovarian and womb troi bles are steadily on the increase amor j?' women. If the monthly periods are very painful, or too frequent and excsive if you have pain or swelling loW down in the ieu suie, oeurinR- uon u imius, jeucorrhrf.a, don't neglect j'onrsfclf : try Lydis K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. THE NEW PHILLIPS VAUDEVILLE Tl I EATER kNAGER. O. G .M-JRRAY Mi WEEK OF JUI F JULY 9T I I t: 15 j. hi. I 9TH DAILY at 3 and 8: A MISS GRAYCE MILLER. ? Overture. l D EDW. CANNON, i Eccentric Comedian. C MYLIE AND ORTH. Comedy Sketch. l D MISS LEONA THOMPSON. Illustrated Songs! "M Heart's To- . night in Texas;" "Will the Angels Let Me Play?" E-i THE LAMONTS. i A Banjo and Singing aovclty Act. F LADELLE, King of Magic. G SEEKER WILKES& CO. Presenting a Plackfaco comedy Sketch. H THE PHILOSCOPE. Latest Motion Pictures. GENNETT THEATRE VAUDEVILLE. IRA SWISHER. Manager. WEEK OF JULY 9TH. Daily 3, 8 and 9:20 p. m. PROF. GU3 TREDERICKS Overture. ; ETHEL WHITESIDE AND HER PICKANINNIES. An act that is absolutely a novelty. An net that makes (the audience for get tho dignity they 'think they posess. VIRGINIA HAYDEN. Tho worlds greatest phenominal baritone. Rival of the late Helena Mora. DIXON & FIELDS. America's representative German , comedians. ERNEST REN K. Illustrated songs. . CHAS. HECLOW. Eccentric comedian. FOUR DANCING HARRISES. Refined novelty singing and dancing. THE GENOSCOPE. The latest motion pictures. THE DAYTON & WESTERN TRACTION GO. la effect May 5. 1906. Subject to chango without notice. ! " MAIN LINE AM am i a M fi.M fl.4j H.t ntut n.:,7.W)' t 42verv 7.0.1 1 I H.&H hour H(K.(Hll.(Hltunttl Rlch'd lM ' M M (Uti 'il.no V.:t7ill.AS S.(H Knlon Ar W.Alex" Itayton " S.58 llO.WMtl.UO , NEW PARIS BRANCH (THROUGH SKkVICR 1 Leave Richmond for Ntew Paris. 6 :50, 6:45, S:20. 9:20,110:00. 11:20, i. m, 12:20, 1:20, 2:26. 3:00. 4:20. a. 5:20. 6:20. 7:20. 8:20. 3:55 and 11:00 P. M. ; Transfere at New Westville. Direct connections at Dayton with 'Lima Limited" trains for Troy, Piqua and Lima, leaving Richmond at 5:50. 8:00, 12:00 a. m.. and 3:00 p. m. CONNECTIONS At Eaton with P.. C. C. & St. L. for points north and south. At West Alexandria Mth Cincinnati Northern It. U. for points north and south. At Dayton with elec'trie lines diverging for Troy. Piqrii, Sidney, Lima. Xenia, Springfield. Co-' lusibus. Hamilton and Cincinnati. ; Through rates, through pickets to lall points. For further information , call Homo Thono 2C9. ? i Arrangements fo parties, special cars, etc., call phono or writs C. O. BAKER, G. P. and P A.. West Alexasdrla, O. I MARTIN SWISHER, Agent.

AT THE, THEATERS

Vaudeville at the Gennett. There is much on the vaudeville bill at the Gennett this week to be commended and the reception given it by a large audience last night indicates plainly that there is to be a big week's business done at this houso. Specal interest centers in the act by Kthel Whiteside and her three pickaninnies, and this is a real novelty that proves highly entertaining. Miss Whiteside is herself a clever singer and dancer and with the antics of the "picks' added to this, it is indeed a lively turn. The love scene put on by the pickaninnies and their crap game with a chicken as the prize are spots of more than ordinary interest. Dixon and Fields, who have the German comedy role this week, are truly classed as among the best in this line, as they have the German dialogue and their singing and dancing down to a fine point. Their claim to refined entertaining will not be disputed. Virginia Hayden, baritone singer, has a most unusual voice for a woman and many are inclined to doubt that she is real ly entitled to wear skirts until they see her in street costume. She declaims well in addition to her vocal numbers. Charles Heclow, eccentric comedian, is one of the most active big men ever seen at the Gennett and performs s nie feats that a're new and also does singing and monologue work. Gennett patrons have not tired in the least of the Four lancing Harrises and they got the same warm welcome that was accorded them on two previous occasions. Their singing and dancing is better than ever before and the act is staged more effectively than on other previous appearances. The illustrated pongs this week, sung by Ernest Henk, are "The Man With the Ladder and the Hose," and "Good Hye Sweet Marie," and the motion picture films are "The Wig Case," Panorama on an English Railway" and "The Law of Pardon." OA rc : its and Children. Tlia Kind Yeu Have Always Braghi Bears the Signature of GET ft RAISE IN WAGES BACK TO THE OLD SCALE Employes of the Massachusetts and Rhode Island Cotton Mills Get an Advance of Five Per Cent, in Their Wages. Publishers' Press J Boston, July 9. An advance of 5 per cent in wastes ct cotton mills in 30 or more cities, towu3 and villages of southern Massachusetts and Rhode Island went into effect Monday. About 43;000 operatives are benefitted. Sinco the inception of the upward movement in mill wages early in the year, 163,000 textile operatives in the New England states have had their pay advanced live to 14 per cent. Of the total number 110,000 work in the cotton mills and about 55,000 in the woolen and worsted plants. All the cotton mills in Fall River Increased wages 10 per cent a week ago with the exception of the Fall River Iron Works mills which were paying 10 per cent more than the other factories. This brought the weaving schedules to the basis which existed before the reduction cf 190-1. Monday the Fall River Iron works mills which are controlled by M. C. I). Borden of New York, made a further advance which again places wages in Borden's mills higher than those paid in tho other factories. The iron works and cotton mlils employ about 3,. 0 hands. An advance of five per cent in wages was made in all the cloth mills of New Bedford and in some of the yarn mills. About 13,000 hands are employed in that city. Practically every, cotton mill in Rhode Island and mills elsewhere controlled by Rhode Island interests also gave the five per cent raise to 25,000 employes. OASTOriXA. Bet tha si Kind You Have Aiwavs BoisM Signature of Boys Drowned. Danville, 111., July 9. Otto and Rudolph Schrauni, S and 11, were drowned in a pond at Batestown. The boys fell from a log on "which they were playing. TO THE POINT Telegraphic News Bciled Down and Bunched For Convenience. Fred L. Hancock, who killed Prof. Jesse Troutman, killed himself in c?ll St Brewton. Ala. Explosion of gas wrecked plant of fnion Cement Co.. at Bellefontaine, O. and killed two workmen. Albert and Charles Bollin, 22 and 19, brothers, drowned whilo bathing In Silver lake, near Covington, Ky. Akuv Morton, negro, shot and killed his wife on streets of Indianapolis, Ind. Narrowy escaped lynching. Democratic congressional committee is arranging to have W. J. Bryan speak in Ohio during the coming campaign. Chester Thompson shot and killed G. M. Emory, lawyer, at Seattle, Wash., who forbade his attentions to Emory's neice. Thompson ws,s arrested.

The Richmond Palladium, Tuesday, July 10, 1905.

Oer on Copyright. 1903, by F rtdtricK. StoKfJ Co. The girl's eagerness fell away rrom her; she reclined back in her seat and Plghed deeply. The preliminaries of the day passed her like a dream, for she knew nothing of the procedure, but at last her attention -was aroused, for she saw ber father on his feet, and before she was aware he began to speak, tho voice at first cold and calm, penetrating the remotest corner of that vast room, in argument that even she recognized as clear, logical and dispassioned as if he were setting forth the case of another. lie was listened to with the most profound respect by enemies and friends alike. He seemed to brush away the charges against him as If they were very cobwebs of accusation. As he went on be wanned more to Ids theme, and by and by the girl, leaning intently forward, drinking in every word, knew that she was listening to oratory such as bad never before greeted the ears of England and probably never would again. A breathless tension held the audience spellbound, and it seemed impossible that his direst foe could remain unmoved. The belief in his acquittal now became a certainty ami it was every moment more and more evident that this acquittal would also be a triumph. The speaker went on to his peroration. "And now, my lords, I thank tJod I have been, by his blessing, sufficiently instructed in the extreme vanity of all temporal enjoyments, compared to the importance of .our eternal duration. And so, my lords, even so, with all humility and with all tranquillity of mind, I submit clearly and freely to your judgments. And whether that righteous doom shall be to life or death, 1 shall repose myself, full of gratitude and confidence, in the arms of the (Jreat Author of my existence." On none of the vast visible throng had the effective oration exercised greater power than upon an unseen listener. The awed stillness was suddenly broken by a splintering crash, and the startled audience, looking up, saw the frail latticework of the alcove shattered, and the king standing there like a ghost enframed by jagged laths. Stern determination sat on that handsome countenance; a look which said as plainly as words, "This man shall not die!" His hands clutched the broken framework beneath him, and he moistened his lips as if to give utterance to the words his expression foreshadowed. But before he could speak, a tall, angular figure sprang out from among the commons and held up a sinewy hand. His face was ablaze with anger; his stentorian voice dominated the hall, envenomed with hatred, striking the ear with terror as does the roar of a tiger. "The might of England, in parliament assembled, gives judgment untrammeled and unafraid. The king is not here. The king cannot be here. The throne is vacant and must remain vacant until justice is done." As tho last words rang out, the long index finger, shaken menacingly, pointed at the empty chair. There was defiance of king or minister in words and tone and gesture, a challenge to the throne. The pale face of the king became ghastly white, his hand trembled and fragments of the latticework fell from beneath it. Irresolution took the place of former determination, and he glanced pitifully from right to left as if seeking human support, of which, In the amazed stillncos, there was no indication. Then the fine white hand of an unseen woman showed for a moment on his arm like a snowflake, ami Charles, with one look of haunting compassion on the prisoner, disappeared from sight. The phantom picture had vanished from its ragged frame without a sound and blank darkness occupied its place. Truly the king was not present, conjured away by the strenuous hand of the fierce combatant on the stage and the soft hand of the woman behind the scenes. "Who is that man?" whispered Frances, gazing in frightened fascination on the rude interrupter. "That is Jobn Pym, the chief prosecutor and deadly personal enemy of Lord Strafford." As the girl gazed at this dominating individuality all the froth of confidence In her father's acquittal, whipped up by the chatter of conversation at the beginning, evaporated. There stood the personified hatred of England against the Earl of Strafford. No wavering in accent or actionthere, but a determined man, knowing what he wanted and bent on having it. To her excited Imagination the resolute face took on the semblance of a death mask, and the clinched hand seemed to grasp the shaft of an ax. It was as if the headsman had suddenly stod forth and claimed his own, and a chill as of the grave swept over the audience with a shudder in its wake. A low wailing cry went sobbing across the silence, a cry that tugged at Strafford's heart when he heard It. What memory did it stir in his troubled mind? A reminiscence of something that had escaped him, crowded out by matters of more pressing moment. "What Is that?" he asked anxiously. "It is nothing, my lord," answered Vollins, stepping between his master and the commotion among the women. "A lady has fainted, that is all. They are taking her out." CHAPTER VII. NCE out in the open air. Fran ces Went worth came again into control of herself, ashamed that for the moment ber emotions had overwhelmed her. She had no desire to re-enter Westminster hall even if the doorkeepers would have permitted her. so she wandered slowly back to the inn which was her temporary home. In the arening John Vollins ;ame to see her and offered money, which, she told him. she did not need. lie gave some account of Py m's speech and sidL that the com-

the

Author of '"Jennit "Bajrter. Jourrali.ct." Etc. mons naif not askeu tne lords for judgment, which was taken by Strafford and his friends as an indication that they knew the weakness of the evidence and feared the effect of his lordship's speech in his own defense. The refusal to ask for judgment was regarded as a good omen, and for some days Frances felt the revival of hope, when she could forget the grim figure of John Pym, but the commons speedily disillusioned the Straffordian party. A bill of attainder was brought in, and (hey showed their determination to have the head of the unfortunate earl by act of parliament if not by legal yrocedure. At last the bill, passing its third reading, was sent up to the bouse of lords. There were many who said the lords would never assent to it; that the commons should have asked for judgment at the close of the trial; that if they could not hope to have the verdict as they wanted it then it was not likely the lords would allow themselves to be cozened by a side wind now. These predictions were quickly falsified. The lords gave their consent to the bill of attainder, and nothing stood between Strafford and the block but a scrawl from the king's pen. The lords, it was said by those who defended them, had been coerced by the popular. The mob had gathered

NO, NO!" GASPED CHARLES.

agaln and had clamored around the house of peers, crying for justice on Strafford. Now they transferred their loud throated exclamations to Whitehall, for success with the nobles foreshadowed success with the king. It was late on Saturday night when John Vollins made his way to the inn at some jeopardy to himself, for the streets were wild with joy at the action of the lords. He told Frances that her father's life depended solely on the firmness of the king. If Charles signed on Monday, Strafford was to be led to the block on Wednesday. Vollins was in deep gloom over the prospect. The earl, he said, had some time previously written to the king, absolving him from all his promises, offering his life freely if the taking of it would advantage his majesty in dealing with his obstreperous subjects. "But the king is trebly perjured if he signs. He cannot sign," cried Frances. Vollins shook his head. "If all the lords in England are held in terror by the people's clamor, and so let the greatest of their number slip through their fingers to the ax, how can one weak man be expected to withstand the concentration of the popular will brought against him? 'Tis blinded folly to look for it." "But the people' dare not coerce a king." "Dare they not? Go down to Whitehall and you will find them doing it This very day they have all but stormed the palace." "I will see the king, throw myself at his feet and implore him to keep his word. I was present when he bade my father take this fateful journey to London and when he promised full protection. A king's word should stand against the world, for he is the source of truth and honor in a nation." "You cannot get to see him. Every entrance to the palace is strongly guarded. Highly placed friends of my lord, friends when all others had fallen away from him, have sought admission to the royal presence in vain. He has refused to see the Earl of Bristol, whose son, Lord Digby, spoke out against the conclusiveness of the evidence, and his majesty has let it be spread abroad that he gives no approval of Lord Digby's plain words, and so the people cry 'God save the kingT and revile Lord Digby. The girl stood aghast at this intelligence, remembering the scene at the trial, when royalty in the person of Charles Stuart, and the people in the person of John Pym, opposed their wills to each other. Then royalty had faded from the sight of men. and the strong champion of the people held his ground alone and triumphant. "Trust in God and the king," wrote the prisoner. What a conjunction! Almighty power, and a bending reed! "Neverttiftless I irtU se theing,'". she . said.

On Sunday the Immensity of the swaying crowd, shouting and moving like a slow resistless flood through the streets, daunted her. There was no employment that day to keep any one within doors, and it seemed as if that labyrinth of human warrens called London had emptied itself into the narrow thoroughfares. She hesitated like a timid swimmer on the brink of a raging torrent, yet if she was to win access to the king she must trust herself to the current, which had this advantageit set toward the direction In which she wished to go. If the streets could be compared to sluggish streams, the broad avenue or square of Whitehall might be likened to the lake into which they emptied. It was a packed mass of humanity, surging to and fro, as if influenced by mysterious tides, but making no progress. Way through it in any given direction might well seem an impossibility, but an alert atom, by constantly watching opportunity, could edge here and there, through chance openings, and, by a constant devotion to a given direction, ultimately attain any chosen point. Thus the girl, buffeted abut, often well nigh exhausted and breathless, came by the entrance to the palace that stood next the banqueting house. The gates, however, were tightly closed and guarded on thQ outside by a double row of soldiery who stood the hustling of the mob with great good humor, being evidently cautioned not to exasperate the populace by any hostile act. Tiie crowd itself seemed good natured enough, although constant fighting took place here and there along its choking surface, but the great bulk of those present appeared to be out on a larking holiday, although they all riotously lent breath to the unceasing roar, calling for justice on Strafford. Occasionally there were shouts for the king and demands that he should speak to them, but the windows of Whitehall palace

were blank an"d gave no sign of human occupancy. Suddenly Frances fouivl herself in new danger through one of those unexplainable heaves of the many throated beast at whose mercy she stood. "To the gates!" went up a shout. "We will make the king hear." And a great human wave, Overwhelming the soldiers, struck against the shuddering portal. The mere pressure of the multitude was deadly and irresistible. There were shrieks and appeals for forbearance, but the unreasoning mass behind pressed on, unheeding, cheering and shoving. A crash of rending timbers and the gates flew inward. Then the mob, as if frightened at what it had done, paused, giving the soldiers time to collect themselves and help the wounded. There was as yet no malice in the crush; it was more like a conglomeration of irresponsible children bent on mischief of any kind, but temporarily scared at the breaking of something. This fact seemed to be recognized by a man in authority who came through the gate and with some difficulty secured a precarious footing on one of the stone pillars which stood in a row between the pathway and the road, thus giving him a position which towered over the heads of the assemblage. He held up a hand for a hearing, and the crowd clieeVed him, not in the least knowing who he was or why he was there. Comparative silence followed the cheer, and the nobleman spoke. "My good people," he said, "there Is little use in the breaking of gates that the king may hear you, for the king has heard and is taking the requests of his faithful subjects into his august consideration." "Where is the king?" demanded an auditor. "His majesty Is In the banqueting house, where, as you know, he is in touch with his people. 'Tis a prayerful subject he has to meditate on, and I beg of you not to disturb his devotion by further" "Is the queen at her devotions too? In that hail she began masked revels on a Sunday, and six good men were done to death for protesting against the desecration, each life more valuable than the wicked earl's. Let the king say that he will sign, and we will disperse!" These and other cries more or less to the purpose baffled the orator, and the air quivered with denunciations of Strafford. The man on the stone post had cast his eyes behind him several times, as if to see what progress was being made with the readjustment of the gate, and from this his bearers quickly divined that be was but deluding them to gain time, which was more than likely his purpose, so the shout went up to move through the breach and surround the hall, Meanwhile re-

enforcemeuis uau been summoned from within, and a hand to hand fight en sued with the encroachers. Frances, panting and nigh worn out in the struggle, nevertheless saw her opportunity. There were few women in the throng and such as came near them the soldiers sought to protect. She attempted appeal to the officer, but that harassed dignitary could barken to none and thrust her rudely but effectually through the opening, saying: "You will find egress at one of the other gates. Take care of yourself. I cannot help you." Breathing a sigh of thankfulness, she cowered and ran along the end of the banqueting hall, turned at the corner, then down the side, entering an archway that let her into a passage. She knew that she must turn to her right, but where after that she had not the slightest notion. The tumult at the gate was so frightful that she expected every moment to hear the victorious assaulters at her hee.ls. Her joy at finding herself thus unexpectedly within the precincts of the palace. unimpMled, caused her to overlook the fact that this was scarcely a propitious moment In which to implore the king to disregard the lusty giant rudely beating at his doors. A frightened waiting maid came hurrying aiong the corridor, and to her she directed inquiry regarding the entrance to the banqueting hall. "T'irn to the right and up the stair." "Tr.ke me there, I beg of you." "I cannot. I bear a message." "But I bear a message to the king, eo yours must wait." At this the maid turned and conducted her to the door of the hall, saying to the man at arms: "This lady has a message for his majesty." The first thing that struck her on entering the great painted chamber was that the nobleman on the stono outside had not spoken the truth when he said the king heard the demands of his people. A growl as of an angry lion penetrated the closed windows, but the words spoken were not to be distinguished. The king was sitting at a massive table, his head in his hands. Behind him were grouped a number of bishops In their robes, and it certainly seemed that his majesty was engaged in devotional exercises, as had been stated by the orator. But if this were the case they were of a strangely mixed order, for behind the lady who was talking volubly to the king stood two Capuchin monks with folded arms. Excepting the bishops none of the English nobility were present, but seyerai Frenchmen, among whom she recognized De Courcy, held aloof from the cluster at the table, so the girl quite correctly surmised that the lady bearing the whole burden of the conversation was no other than the queen herself, and that these foreigners were members of her train. Her majesty spoke sometimes in French, sometimes in English, the latter with broken accent, and her eloquence was rather puzzling to follow, for the flow of her conversation was of extreme rapidity. Palpably she supposed herself talking in English, but whenever she came to a difficulty in the choice of a word she made no attempt to surmount it by any effort of thought, but swam swiftly round it on the easy current of her native tongue. Translated, her discourse ran thus: "These good men have made it per

fectly plain; for, as they say and who shall question the dictum of the church in such matters you have two consciences, the conscieace of the prince and the conscience of the man; and where the conscience come into conflict that of tho prince mast of necessity rule, as is the axiom iu all civilized courts. Is it right that you. a king, should jeopardize yourself in a useless effort to save one condemned by his peers, because your private conscience as a man urges you to keep a promise which be himself has relieved you from, holding you guiltless before God and tlie nations, and further advised by these good men, lords of their church, that such action would not make toward peace of the realm. It is not a subject to be hesitated upon for a moment, the good of the ruler being paramount always" "Oh, my lord, the king, listen not to such sophistry, be it from the lips of priest or woman! The given word is the man, and he stands or falls by It. If the foresworn peasant be a cringing craven, ten thousand times worse is the perjured prince. You pledged your faith to Lord Strafford, and now in his just heaven God demands the fulfillment of your word." (Continued Tomorrow.) (eitheV phone) We fake your Want Ads byWhone and Charge Them Palladium Want Ads Pay.

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Page Three.

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DR. J. A( WALLS THE SPECIALIST At Home Office, 21 S. 10th YMonday, Tuesday, Friday Vid Saturday each week.