Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 177, 24 July 1906 — Page 2
Page Two.
The Richmond Palladium. Tuesday, July 24, 1906. SCALY ECZEMA 835 ...Local p pH; i JTD j g g WS General..
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Eruptions Appeared on Chest, and Face and Neck Were All Broken . Out- Scales and Crusts Formed Iowa Lady Has Great Faith In Cuticura Remedies for Skin Diseases. ' n j ANOTHER WONDERFUL CURE BY CUTICURA "I had an eruption afpear.on my client and Ixxiy and extend upwards and downwards, bo that my neck and lace wcro au Drown uu v and the lower limbs as r as the knees. I at first thought it wf prickly heat. But Boon scales or cruJa formed where the breaking out was. Instead of going to a physician, I punf iascd a complete treatment of the Cutfura Remedies, m winch I had great faith, and all wad satisfactory. A ye:f or two later the cfuption appeared yfcain, only a little lower; but before ithad time to ppread I procured anothersupply of th Cuticura Remedies, anJ continued their use until tho cure waslomplete. It is now five years sinco oe last attack, and have not eccn n nigns of a return. I have taken aloutf three bottles of the' Cuticura KesolvAit, and do not know how much of tl Soap or Ointment, as I always keep tlJem with me; probably ono half dozen f each. " I decided to give the Cuticura Remedies a trial after I had seen the results of their treatment of eczema on an infant belonging to ono of our neighbors. Tho parent took tho child to thb nearest physician, but his treatment did no good. So they procured the Cuticura Remedies and cured her with them. When they legan using Cuticura Remedies her face was terribly disfigured with sores, but she was ent irely cured, for I saw tho mme child at the age of five years, and her mother told me tho eczema had never broken outiunce. I have more faith in Cuticura llenjcdies for skin diseases than anythtfg I know of. I am, respectfully young hmma L. Wilson, Liscomb, Iowa, 0A. 1, 1005. CotnpTrf. Exnl mnt InWrrnl Ttmit for Every Cfi,.l.il..C of J.lriwKTyM ml. I. (In lorin ol Chwol.lr ('. I'l" P vl T, n,U b. h.rt of .11 dgrtr-;,'Kl' o; '' Iwug ft Chn. Curp., Sol. '!'! " ""'A';,". MooreOgborn j General Insurance In Standard t Companies. ,floney . to loan, V(e wilt bond you. Real Estate. J ; ROOM 16 I. O. O. F. BUILDING. X 'ornfiers' uiidoy Paper HE Richmond Pallai dlum Is the only pa-. per published In Rich j mono on sauiraay j which reaches the people living on the rural routes for Sunday. Mail for, rural free delivery la not delivered on Sunday, there-, fore Saturday morning's Palla- ( dlum Is the only local paper which la delivered 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 have to read on Sunday ' the day they have the most time to read. Beats the' Music Cure. "To keep .the body In tune." writes Mrs. Mary Brown, 0 Lafayette Place, Poughkeepsle, N. Y., 'I take Dr. King's New Life Pills." They are the most reliable and pleasant laxative I have found." Best for the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Guaranteed by A. O. Luken & Co., druggists, 25c. Half the World Wonders. how the other half lives. Those who use Bucklen's Arnica Salve never wonder If it will euro Cuts, Wounds, Burns, Sores and all Skin eruptions; they know it will. Mrs. Grant Shy, 1130 E. Reynolds St., Springfield, 111.', 6ays: "I regard It one of the absolute necessities of housekeeping." Guaranteed by A. G. Luken & Co., druggists. 2fc I live and let by brethren Hvo With all that's good to me: Unto the poor some cash 1 give. The balance I give Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co. Pioneers of Year 1827. The Pioneers of 1S27 Association will hold its fifteenth annual meeting in the pavilion In Glen Miller Park on next Friday at 11 o'clock. A full meeting and full baskets are expected. All born in that year are cordially Invited to attend the meeting and take part In the exercises. JOSEPH C. RATL1FF. Secretary.
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i CHICAGO AGAIN Trolley Dodgers Get Thirteen Hits Off Overall and Land a Hard Game. NO GAME AT CINCINNATI PITTSBURG DOWNS NEW YORK BY HITTING AT THE RIGHT TIME BOSTON TAKES ONE FROM ST. LOUIS. NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. PCn. Chicago 61 27 .693 Pittsburg 51 SO .643 New York 52 31 .626 Philadelphia 42 46 .478 Cincinnati 40 48 .434 Brooklyn 34 51 .400 St. Louis 31 T.6 .378 Boston 29 57 .377 Publishers' Prefsl Chicago, July 23. Outfielding and outbatting the Chicago Nationals today gave the Brooklyns a hard earn ed victory. Score: R. H. E. Brook. ..02000011 0 4 13 0 Chi 00100011 0 3 8 1 Batteries Mclntyre and Ritter; Overall and Kllng. Umpire Klem. RAIN AT CINCINNATI. Cincinnati. Ohio, July 23. Rain caused a postponement of the game today between the Cincinnati and Philadelphia Nationals. LIEFIELD WAS EFFECTIVE. Pittsburg, July 23. Battery errors and failing to connect with Llefleld's curves at the right time today gave the Pittsburg Nationals another victory over the New Yorks. Score: R. H. E. N. Y. ... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 3 Pitts .....20220010 7 9 0 Batteries Wiltse and Bresnahan: Llefleld and Phelps. Umpire's EmsHo and 'O'Day. ST. LOUIS HIT HARD. St. Louis, July 23. Hitting Egan hard throughout today's game, enabled the Boston Nationals to score an easy victory over St. Louis. Score: R. H. E. Bos 210 000200 5 14 1 St. L. ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 3, 7 0 Batteries Dorner and O'Neill; Eagan and Grady. Umpire Johnstone. Winchester Won Game. Winchester, Ind., July 23, (Spl.) Tho fast Winchester team defeated Alexandria yesterday by a score of 7 to 5. Ml NOT LEDGE LIGHTHOUSE. The Klrat One Warn Swept Away With Its Occupants. Th first lighthouse on Minot's ledge -was luilt la 1S48. It was an octagonal tower resting ou the tops of eight wrought iron piles eight inches in diameter and sixty feet high, with their bases sunk live feet iu the rock. These piles were braced together in many ways, and, as they offered less surface to the waves than a solid structure, this lighthouse was considered by all authorities upon the subject to be exceptionally strong. Its great test came in April, 1851. On the 14th of that month, two keepers being In the lighthouse, an easterly gale set in, steadily Increasing in force. Peoplo on chore, and no doubt the keepers themselves, watched the heavy seas sweep harmlessly through the network of piles beneath the house and feared no harm. On the 15th, however, the wind and sea had greatly increased and the waves were flung higher and higher toward that tower in the air. Yet all thought 'they surely could not reach sixty feet above the ledge. That night was one of k,een anxiety, for the gale still increased, and all through that dreadful driving storm and darkuess the faithful keepers were at their posts, for the light burned brightly. On Wednesday, the lGth, the gale had become a hurricane, and when at times the tower could be seen through the mists and sea drift it seemed to bend to the shock of the waves. At 4 o'clock that afternoon an ominous proof of the fury of the waves on Minot's ledge reached the shore, a platform which had been built between the piles only seven feet below the floor of the keepers' room. The raging seas then were leaping fifty feet in the air. Would they reach ten feet higher, for If so the house and the keepers were doomed? Nevertheless, when darkness set iu the light shone out as brilliantly as ever. But the gale seemed, If possible, then to increase. What agony those two men must have suffered! How that dreadful abode must have swayed in the irresistible hurricane, and trembled at each crashing sea! The poor unfortunates rntist have known that if those seas, leaping always higher and higher, reached their house It woukl be flung down into the ocean and they would be buried with It beneath the waves. To those hopeless, terrified watchers the entombing sea came at last. At 1 o'clock in the moraiug the lighthouse bell was heard by those on shore to give a mournful clang, and the light was extinguished. It was the funeral knell of two patieut heroes. Next day there remained on the rock only eight jagged iron stumps. Iter Statnn. The Captain That's a handsome wo man! Is she unmarried? The Belle Oh, yes! (Captain Indulges in pleasing reflections.) . She's been unmarried sev eral tiroes! London IH,
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Baseball -Results Yesterday. national League. New York'l; Pittsburg 7. Brooklyn 4; Chicago 3. Boston 5; St. Louis 3. Philadelphia vs Cincinnati, postponed; rain. ,.'
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Detroit 2; New York 4. T , i Cleveland 1; Boston 3. First game, Chicago 4; Philadelphia 0. Second game, Chicago' 0; Philadelphia 5. St. Louis 2; Washington 3, thirteen innings. AMERICAN ASSN Club Standing. Won. Lost. PCt. Columbus .. CO 35 .632 Milwaukee 51 41 .554 Minneapolis 50 43 .516 Louisville .".I. ..47 44 .516 Toledo 47 45 .510 Kansas City 41 51 .450 St. Paul 38 54 .413 Indianapolis 34 56 .378 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Columbus, 0; St. Paul 4. Louisville 4; Milwaukee 13. Indianapolis 2; Minneapolis 6. Kansas City 4; Toledp 2. TENNIS MEETING IS SUCCESSFUL Tournamentls Decided on and Opening Match May be . Played Saturday. MANY WILL ENTER EVENT PRIZES WILL BE SECURED FROM LOCAL MERCHANTS AND GIVEN TO THE WINNERS THREE CLASSES PROVIDED FOR. 1 At a meeting held last night at the Palladium office, of representative ten nis players of Richmond, it was decided to hold a tournament, the opening round of which 'will probably be play ed next Sunday The place of hold ing the tournament will in all proba bility, be at the Country Club. A large number have already entered their names, and it is expected that many more will do so before Friday evening, when the entries close. A small entrance fee is to be charged to meet the expense of balls and other incidentals that may come up. An other meeting of players is to be held at the Palladium office Friday night to make final arrangements for the event. All players are invited to be present at this meeting. At the session last night Prof. N. C Ileironemus was chosen chairman. It was decided that the same plan should be followed in the tournament as in all other such events, the losing players dropping out each time. There will be three classes of play, men's singles, men's doubles and mixed doubles Harry Thornburg, a member of the tennis committee at the Country Club was present and said that he felt cer tain the courts at the club could be secured. He, with Art Hill, was ap pointed a committee to arrange for a place to play. A committee compos ed of Will Reller, chairman, O. Har rington, Fred Wiggins, Frank Gardner and Percy Davis, was appointed to make all other arrangements for the tournament. They will meet again tomorrow night. Any person desiring to enter the tournament should hand his name to one of the members of this committee at once. DR. W . W. Z. A WINNER Product of the Commons Stock Mak Ing Money for George Castle Commons In Kentucky. Centerville, Ind.. July 23. (Spl.)Dr. W. W. Z. by Anderson Wilkes, which has been a winner right through the circuit, repeated for George Castle on the opening day at Waverly, Iowa, July 11th, by winning the 2:15 pace. Dr. W. W. Z. Is the little pacer that Lawrence Commons raised and devel oped and is also owner of the sire Anderson - Wilkes, who alreadv has three new performers added to his list and two with reduced records so early this year. Mr. Commons Is at Catlettsburg, Kentucky with this season's string af ter a successful week at Lima. O. He will be in West Virginia following this week for about-three weeks. Taris taxameter cabs. are to be fitted with small electric lamps, which will be at the service of the passenger up on slipping a. small coin In a slot The light will glow for about half an hour for each coin. ; A Paris flat owner has hit npon an Idea which is popular with his tenants, On tho door of every apartment is a number, and on the first of each month the landlord draws a lottery, and the echpant of the flat the number of which proves to be the winning one pays no renL Clapfeoarda. - To put in position a thousand clap boards requires the use of about eierht.eea Dooodj oX sjxpeuRr nails-
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AT T OUT STUNT hicago Scored First one in Double Header and Then Philadelphia Got One. BENDER PITCHED WINNER DETROIT STARTS LIKE A WIN NER WITH NEW YORK BUT CAN'T SCORE AFTER FIRST INNING AND LOSE GAME.
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AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. PCt. Philadelphia 51 32 .614 New York 49 33 .597 Cleveland 48 34 .5S5 Chicago 46 39 .541 Detroit.. 44 39 .530 St. Lords 42 41 .506 Washington .. .. ..31 51. 378 Boston 21 63 .250
Publishers Press! Philadelphia, uly 23. The Chicago and Philadelphia Americans took turns today in shutting one another out. In the first same it w?s the White Sox who ' administered the whitewash, while in the second con test Altriock was easy for the Athle tics. Score: First Game. - R H. E. 7 1 7 0 Chi.. . .. 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 04 .. .0 0000000 0 0 Phila . . Owen and Sullivan; Coombs Umpire Sheridan. and Powers. Second Game. n. h. 00000000 00 6 E. 3 Chf. . Phila. .100000 3 1 x 5 11 0 Altroek and Sullivan; Dygert, Pen der and Schreck. Umpire Sheridan. 4 COULDN'T SOLVE HOGG. New York, July 23. The Detroit Americans started off with the lead in the first inning today, but after that Hoe;s held them at his mercy and the New Yorks won an uphill game. Score: R. H. E. Det.. .. 20000000 02 9 0 New Y.. 00201010 x 4 11 1 Killian and Warner; Hogg and Mc Guire. Umpire O'Loughlin. DINEEN PITCHED WELL. Poston, uly 23. Dineen pitched one of his best games today and received faultless support, winning his came from the Cleveland Americans. Score: R. H. E. Cleve .. 100 0 0 0 0 0 01 6 2 Bos. . .. 00000021 x 3 7 0 Townsend and Kittridge; Dineen and Armbruster. Umpires Evans and Connolly. THIRTEEN INNING GAME. Washington, July 23. Fast ball today went for thirteen innings be tween St. Louis and Washington Americans, the Senators winning out in the last inning. Score: R. H. E. S 000002000000 02 10 2 W 010000010000 13 9 0 Powell and O'Connor; Falkenburg and Heydon. Umpire Hurst. NOTICE MERCHANTS. I the undersigned do hereby notify all exchanse merchants that I shall not be responsible for any bills contracted by my wife, MRS. JOHN II. KELLEY, unless authorized by my signature, John H. Kelly. ' 24-2t PLAYS AND PLAYER& E. S. Willard is soon to return to England. Will Archie and Adele Cox are the midgets who impersonate 'fthe babes" in "Babes In the Wood.". Maxine Elliott is now appearing with the added prestige of a London success won both dramatically and eo cially. Harrison Hunter of Viola Allen's company received news recently that he was the recipient, through his brother's will, of $100,000. Charles Frohman has made arrangements with Mi3s Maude Adams by which she has agreed to play the title, role in "Peter Pan" for the next two years. Viola Allen said to an interviewer lately: "I know I should have done just as Betty Singleton did every moment of the play. That speech before the curtain! I feel every word of it, and I know bow she felt it." Electricity has done marvels In stage presentations of latter years, but it is doubtful if this powerful force has ever been utilized more effectively than it is in "At the World's Mercy." a new and powerful play by Owen Davis. While in St. Louis recently Dorothy Sherrod, leading lady for Tim Murphy, bought six sample dresses of a Paris firm who had exhibited them at the world's fair. She will wear them in a new production Mr. Murphy has In view. FACTS FROM FRANCE. The president of France. receives a salary of $120,000 per year. He is, besides, entitled to a private car and all his expenses. The cabinetmakers of France are artists, but they keep reproducing year after year the style which-, their forefathers have made for centuries. ; . Having been married in 1SS2, at the age of sixteen, the wife of a mechanic at the French arsenal ia Eochefort recently gave 'birth to her twenty-third child..
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That so ThatU ;eda JAMES W. WADSWORtH. Jfotert Sew York CoDRreiiman ind the History of His Family. Congressman James W. Wadsworth of New York has become a figure of prominence since the agitation on the subject of meat inspection began, for he is chairman of the committee on agriculture of the house of representatives, to which the Heveridge meat inspection bill was referred by Speaker Cannon when It was received In the house from the senate. Mr. Wadsworth comes of a family which has followed farming and stock raising on a biji scale for generations. The Wadsworth family has been conspicuous in the affairs of New York since the settlement of the western part of the state. The first James Wadsworth obtained large tracts of land from the Iroquois Indians and from the Holland Land company in 17JK), making his home in the Genesee valley. He was a Yale graduate and a believer In education, and It was he who established the famous Temple Hill academy, where Marshal Oyama of Japan many years 'afterward studied. Since his time the Wadsworths have beei deJAMES W. WADSWOBTH. voted to farming, war and politics. They have been represented In every war the country has bad since the original James W.'s time except the Mexican war. The son of the man who established the family in western New York was James S. Wadsworth, and be was a successful farmer and a leading advocate of the antislavery movement. He ran for governor against Horatio Seymour, being defeated by the latter for the office. He and his three sons all fought in the Union army during the civil war, and the elder man was killed at the battle of the Wilderness. One of these three sons is the present representative In congress, James Wolcott Wadsworth, Sr. He was born in 1S4G, left his studies to fight for his country, graduating from Yale on his return from the field, has been an assemblyman and comptroller of the state of New York and has served in the house of representatives for twenty-four years, with the exception of two terms. His son, James W. Wadsworth, Jr., is speaker of the New York assembly. In days gone by the Wadsworths could travel for forty miles without leaving their own lands, and even at the present time the various branches of the family own about 33,000 acres in the Genesee valley. AMBASSADOR LEISHMAN. The diplomat Who Represents Uncle Sam In Turkey. John.G. A. Leishman, our representative at Constantinople, who has been raised from a. minister to an ambassador,, will now draw a salary of $17,500 a year instead of $10,000, asheretofore. This Increase of $7,500 a year in salary will not be of special conseAMBASSAPQB JOBS O. A. LEISHMAN. quence. as he Is a multimillionaire and has been accustomed to spend a good deal more -than his income as a diplol mat. He is a- graduate "of the eteel
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esyou many trutns:
rrackers are the best of all food made from flour.
Biscuit are by far the best of all
That U need a Biscuit are always fresh, always crisp, always nutritious. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
i'&jjUiliiltrr WANTED. WANTED At once, a dining room girl at Brunswick hotel. 24-lt WANTED Dishwasher at Windsor Hotel. dlt WANTED A young girl to help with house work at 227 N. 10th street. 24-3t WANTED A position doing any kind of labor by a good man. Call 1016 North H. street. j4-3t WANTED Small house or part of a house by a carefull, permanent party, between N. 7th and 13th streets and North E and Main streets. Address K. M. B. this office. 24-2t WANTED At once 5 men "of good address. Wages. Call 424 S. 14th St. 20-2t WANTED A place a3 nurse or companion. City or country. Address Martha. 20-3t MARTHA Please street. call 225 N.12th WANTED A 408 S. 15th. Girl for housework, 26-tf WANTED A girl at 46 outh 8th St. for housework no wasl g. 20-tf FOR SALE. Richmona property ,a peclalty. Porterfleld. Kelly BlociC tone 52. tl FOR SALE Cheap a good lot on N. 16th street O. G. Porterfleld, Kelly Block. 22-7t FOR SALE About 600 feet in length business, in which he made his millions, and was president of the Carnegie Steel company from 1S94. to 1S97. It was Mr. Leishman who in the year of the Homestead strike was with H. C. Frick in the Carnegie .company office when Anarchist Bergman made his murderous assault. Bergman attempted to kill Mr. Leishman as well as Mr. Frick, but succeeded In injuring only the latter. Mr. Leishman Was, born In 1857 and was left an orphan at an early age nd placed in an orphan asylum. When he left the asylum he became messenger boy ia a doctor and from the doctor's office got into the Schoenberger Steel works. One day he put tip the fight of his life with a robber who tried to snatch from him a bag in which he was carrying pay money. He was beaten about the bead, but saved the funds and presented himself at the offlee bleeding, but triumphant., This led to his first promotion, Two Carton Tale. In 1875 a miserly old lady was found dead in a fence corner a few miles south of Blaise, France. When found she was lying flat on her back, with one arm around her head grasping a sunbonnct. Since that time not a spear of grass has grown on the spot where her 'body lay. The outlines of the form, limbs, etc., are as plain as though they had been made by a person lying down in snow or in plastic clay. Just back of the great British museum, London, there is a little plot of ground known the world over as "the field of the forty footsteps." The old legend concerning the place ia to the effect that two brothers, in the time of the Duke of Monmouth's rebellion, took different sides and that they engaged in a deadly duel on this little plot of ground. They stood off twenty steps from a certain line and at the word met at that line and killed each other with knives. The forty impressions made by their feet while advancing were ever afterward bare of grass and were still pointed out 123 years ago at the time when the lot was covered by a large stone building. THE STREET CAR. The noisy street car must go;also the filthy street car, and eke the overcrowded street car. Johnstown Democrat. Here is a question for a debating society: Would an American rather hang to a strap than wait for the next car? St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A prophet says the street car of the future will be noiseless, clean and comfortable. By that time the present sufferers will probably have wings and will be independent of all mechanical systems of. transportation- Washington Star, t FrUadium Want Ads Fax
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of soda crackers. stone curbing. West cot t, 14 15 Apply to J. M. East Main street. 20-2t. FOR SALE A splendid 1 aero tract with good brick house of 8 rooms, barn and fine orchard, situated In an Improved eastern part of the city. Address Lock Box 68 city. Everybody buys property from Woodhurst, 913 Main St. Telephone 401. JuneS tf FOR IT. FOR RENT East eI coal yard. En quire 400 South lh street. 20-7t RENf Furnished foms at the Gram) for gentlemen only. tf FOR RENT A flat of 5 rooms, centrally located. Call Dr. Walls. 21 S 10th street. ' tf LOST. LOST Wednesday afternoon In front of Knollenberg's store a package containing 3 yards of lace from Nusbaum's store. Please .return to ..Nusbaum's or call 134 R, old telephone. LOST A Mackintosh cape Thursday evening between Richmond and Mike Grace's Farm; "Northwest of Richmond. Return to Humpe'a Shoo store. 22-3t FOUND. FOUND Gold watch fob. Ci at In terurban Station, South 8 Btrect ; FOUND A purse. Owner may call at 314 North Ninth street and identify property. r Black HO R ICED. Their aboolu purity gives them a distinct individuality. They preserve this distinction even when weakened by the addition ice. Are sold looce or In ets by Great Atlantic & Co.. 727 Maim seaied packPaciflo Tea Londoners use on an average thirtyfour gallons of water per head per day. A total of $3,070,000 is annually paid by the British people for the support of the royal family. " Last year's output of new ships In England (steam and sail) was 513, with a tonnage of 1.353,736, as against 403 ships In 1904. with a tonnage of 1,049,800. . - At a recent political meeting In England the speaker made a Jest and, finding that his audience had missed the point of It, said playfully, "I bad hoped, gentlemen, that you would laugh at that." A plaintive Tolce came through the silence. "I laughed, mister." Then everybody did. Of books published In England last year there were 8,232 of them 1,731 were novels. -The works connected with education numbered 694, and of theological books there were 568. There were 540 historical and biographical works. Poetry and the drama figured not so largely. , MODES OF THE MOMENT.-. The empire gown will be more popular than it was when introduced hist autumn. Lace flounces are in the highest esteem for trimming gowns to be worn after dark. Velvet . covered buttons are being used in quantity for all sorts of trimming devices. Black and white are to be much worn In the coming season, as they have been this winter.
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