Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 363, 3 March 1907 — Page 2
Page Two
I Can Cure Cancer TO REORGANIZE LEAGUE At Home Without Pain, Plaster or Operation and I Tell You How, Free. A FIRM BASIS PROMISED Set a high, standard of quality around the house. Let it be the best that money can buy. ; Then -when you are ordering, be sure and ask for Mother's and Victor's Bread. They are the best breads baked in Richmond, because they are made from superior flour, milk and yeast. Saturday Afternoon Baseball Organization Will Probably Hold a Meeting this Week Business Men as Officials.
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I Have Proven Cancer Can be Cured at Home. No Pain. No Plaster, No Knife. Dr. Wells. I have discovered a new and seemingly unfailing remedy for the deadly cancer. I have made some most astonishing cures. I ; believe every person with cancer should know of this marvelous medicine and its wonder ful cures, and I will be glad to give full information free to all who write me and tell me aboixt their case. Peter Keasau. Galesbure. 111., had rancer of the mouth and throat. Doc tors said, "no hope." Mr. Keagan wrote: "It is only a question of a short time I must die." Today. hi3 cancer is healed up and he is well. My mar velous radiated fluid did it. It has oth er Just such cures to Its credit. It is Eaving the people every day and restor ins them to health and strength. It you have cancer or any lump or sruo that you believe is cancer write today and learn how others have been cured quickly and safely and at very small expense. No matter what your , condition may be, do not hesitate to write and tell riie about. it. I will answer your letter promptly, giving you, absolutely free full information and proof of many remarkable cures. Address, Dr. Rupert Wells, Ixuis,Mo. 13S3 Itadol .Bids., St. WILL SING AT REVIVALS Ernest Naftzger Has Gone to Hartford Connecticut to Join Dr. El- ' liott, the Evangelist. Ernest Naftzger, son of the Rev. And Mrs. ll J. Naftzger of Muncie formerly of this city, left last week to join Dr, Elliott, a noted evangelist, at Hartford, Conn. Mr. Naftzger is a singer of much ability for evangelis tic work and; lie has been regularly engaged by Dr. Elliott. Several months ago the young singer made a favorable impression on the Rev. Elliott at Grace M. E. church in this city. The- resultVasthat as soon as satisfactory arrangements could be made. Dr. Elliott- contracted for his services. ANOTHER MINE DISASTER Several Workmen Injured While Many Others Are Imprisoned in the Shaft. Scranton, Pa.j' March 2. An explosion occurred in the Holden mine of the Delaware, Eackawana and Western railroad at Taylor at 3 o'clock, this evening. Several men were taken out injured, and several are still in the mine. It is not known whether they are alive or dead. Demas'S. Coe returned home Saturday from Indianapolis to remain ever Sunday. He has not yet entirely recovered from (he grippe, but will be able to continue his work until ihe close of the legislature.
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20th entury
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Fetlock and Trimming Shears. Wow is the Time to Hp.
It is almost an assured fact that the Saturday afternoon baseball league, which completed its first season last year in a most successful manner, will be reorganized again some time this month for the coming season. A meeting will probably be held this week and the exact date and place of meeting will be announced In the papers. All amateur teams in the city desiring to be admitted to this league will be requested to be represented at the
meeting by their managers. There are a number of teams in the city who will desire membership in the league. All of them cannot be admitted, but it is hoped that the league this year will be expanded from a four club circuit to an eight or ten club circuit. Last year the season opened in May i i t . i t- ii - I T r f i f entered me race, me raiiauiums, rt-iD-i beys, Pogue-Millers, Starr Pianos, . Easthavens and Panhandles and all I the clubs completed their schedules, but the two last mentioned. j Last year the league was on a very j wobbly financial basis, owing to the fact that the expense fund subscribed by the various clubs in the league was too small. This year this expense fund will be greatly Increased. The Starr Piano champions state that they will . again put a fast team in the field and expect to carry off another championship. The Palladiums, which was one of the strongest teams in the league toward the latter part of the season, will be in the field again with a team that will make a strong bid for the pennant. Substantial business men who take an interest in clean, healthy baseball will be chosen this year as officials of the league. LOCAL FANS ANXIOUS FOR SUNDAY BASEBALL Local baseball fans and there is a legion of them, are following with the I keenest interest the progress of the Sunday baseball bill in the Senate. Local fans have been writing to Repre sentative Ratliff and Senator Kirkman urging them to vote for the bill. Mr. Ratliff was one of the strongest advocates of the bill in the house. When the vote, on the motion to postpone action on the bill was made yesterday in the senate and voted down. Senator Kirkman did not vote, but it is, known that he favors the bill and when it is presented to the Senate for final action local fans are posi tive that Mr. Kirkman Will vote for the passage of the bill. If this bill is enacted into a law it is practically cer tain Richmond will be represented this coming season either by a strong min or league or independent team. Games at Garfield. Friday night at Garfield school there were three games played. One was between the Senior polo team and high school freshmen, with a score of 7 to 3 in favor of the freshmen. The second game was between the Junior polo team and a team composed of players from the Smith school and city schools. The third game was between the Junior basketball team of Garfield and the Starr school team. This was the nly game of the set in which the Garfield boys camo out victorious. The score was 2 to 11 in Garfield's favor. A Corbett-Britt Fight. Reno, Nev., March 2. A return battle between Young Corbett and Jimmy Britt, a fistic engagement which has been hanging fire for three years, is now an assured thing and Reno, Nev., is to be the scene of warfare. ' The men are to battle for a $lo,000 purse, split sixty and forty, at 133 pounds. Bearings"
Mother's .as Victor's Bread
A VEBY SPIRITED CONTEST OVER SHIP SUBSIDY BILL Democrats Attempt to Defeat Measure by Filibustering Indications Pointed to Deadlock Until Argument was Reached Postponing Consideration. Washington, March 2. A spirited filibuster against the ship subsidy bill developed in the senate this afternoon. For over two hours the democratic members emphasized their opposition to the measure by preventing consideration and defeating the efforts of its friends to have an hour fixed when it could be taken up. Indications pointed to a deadlock that would continue until noon on Monday when congress dies and when leading senators feared an end of the effective work had been reached. But an agreement to postpone further consideration of the measure until 5 o'clock cleared the atmosphere and enabled the leaders to effect a truce. After the passage of the deficiency appropriation bill, the last of the great supply measures, Gallinger, (New Hampshire) in charge of the subsidy bill, suggested that action be deferred until tomorrow at 11 o'clock. This was agreed to and the senate , took a recess with the understanding that tonights session was to be de- j voted exclusively to eulogies in mem
ory of the late representatives, Rixey. j am ls Practically a new one throughVirginia and Adams Wisconsin, and s out. Tickets purchased for Friday
that a recess then be taken until Sun day morning. Friends of the subsidy bill are to night conferring with democratic sen ators in the hope that some basis for compromise may be reached. The ef fective work done by the enemies of the measure in the ' house has left very few features objectionable to the minority. O Bears ttd Sigsatare of Iba mi Yos Haw Always Bought
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CUNNINGHAM ON TEAM
He, with Another Richmond Player, Thompson, Help to Make up tha Kokomo Polo Lineup. Kokomo, Ind., March 2. Soxy Lyons has reported the lineup for Kokomo in' the post series of games as follows: Mercy-, first rush; Cunningham, Jr., second rush; Hardy, center; Lyons, half back; Cusick, goal. The utility man will be Thompson, a rush from the Interstate league. The men will report a few days before the opening of the league for team work practice. The Alhambra is receiving a thorough cleaning. WILL REPEAT PROGRAM IT IS PRACTICALLY NEW Choir at the First M. E, church to Give Another Concert for Benefit of Those Who Did Not Get to Attend Last Friday. Tuesday night the choir of the First M. E. church will repeat the program given Friday evening at the church, although a glance at the numbers given In full below will show that the pronight will entitle one to attend the concert Tuesday evening. Mr. Paris will sing again Tuesday night, and the complete new program is as follows: Grand Fantasia de Concert ....Thayer Mrs. Lewis C. King. The Stars and Stripes Forever . .Sousa By the Choir. (a) Three for Jack Squires (b) Mary Old Scotch Mr. Paris. (a) The Linden Tree Schubert (b) Bend Low, O Dusky Night, (re quested) ..Kroeger (c) The Land O the Leal ....Scotch Miss Karolyn Karl. Trio I Wait for Thee Bailey Mrs. Gormon, Mr. Paris, Mr. Harris. (a) With a Violet (by request).. Grieg (b) Happy Birds Waltz ........Hoist Dorothy Dignam. The Violet and the Bee ....Caldicott By the Choir. (a) A Dream (requested) ...Rui frock (b) The Woodpecker (requested) .. ..Kevin (c) Dess Hold My Hands To-night (requested) ... .Carrie Jacobs Bond Mr. Paris. (a) Genevieve ....S. Coleridge Taylor (b) Ike Walton's Prayer Riley (c) Uncrowned .. . .. .. ..Burnett (d) Spring.. Burnett Mr. F. G. Burnett. (a) I Would that My Love .. Mendelssohn (b) The Angel Rubinstein Mrs. Elmer Gormon. Mrs. Ray Longnecker. (a) When Song Is Sweet ..Sans Souci (b) Molly Malone Old Irish (c) Thy Remembrance Ruifrok Mr. Paris. Spring-Tide (by request Strauss-Palmer By the Choir. Fort Wayne Bill Passed. Indianapolis, March 2 The house today, under suspension of the rules, passed the Fort Wayne track elevatlon MIL - Over 200,000 pounds weight of paper Is used In this country yearly for the manufacture of cigarettes. Six thousand, nine hundred and ten vessels were employed fn United Stat fishing in 1906. Use artificial gas for light ana neat.
These ingredients are accurately combined. Then THE BAKING IS DONE THE RIGHT WAY, giving a loaf of fine texture. EVERY PARTICLE OF FOOD PRINCIPLE IN IT EASILY DIGEST-ABLE.
ALBERTA GALLATIN GOOD HER , COMPANY ONLY FAIR Version of "Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall" at the Gennett Yesterday Failed' to Follow the Lines of Chas Major. By far worse and by far better companies have visited the Gennett theatre during thej present season, than Alberta Gallatin's company play ing "Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall" at matinee and night performances, and that was In the personage of Miss Gallatin. Her work characteriz Ins the head strong impulsive, but nevertheless loving Dorothy was decidedly pleasing and her deliniation of the role pleased immensely. r It was a pity that Sir John Manners taken by Walter Pennington, was not stronger. His work could be characterized in the word "sissified." The other characters were weak. The play did not follow the orig inal book as many patrons of the theatre expected and the deviations were many and far fetched. As a play "Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall" would have .been good but as a play following the lines of Charles Major's popular work, it was weak. Needles. Steel needles were first made about 1545, when to make ten was a day's work for a man. Oats. Oats sometimes escape from cultivation and grow from year to year so persistently as to seem wild. They have been found thus in regions as widely separated as Algeria and Japan, the Pyrenees and north China, the Hebrides and the desert of Mount ! Sinai.. A Grewsome Catch. A man's hand, with three valuable rings on its fingers, was found In the Interior of a twenty-flve pound pike caught at Staad, on the lake of Constance. Addison's Wife. Addison's wife, the famous Conntess Dowager of Warwick, would not allow him to go to the inn at all unless he sat by the window, where he was in plain view from her front room. Every absence from his post had to be accounted for. Finger Lines. Line markings on the fingers have been found distinct and unimpaired on the fingers of Egyptian mummies. The Human Hand. Aristotle termed the human hand the Instrument of instruments, which enables man to make all others, to manage and apply them to divers uses and to produce the most powerful and most delicate efforts. Dean Swift's Recreation, Desn Swift relieved his tense and tragic moods by harnessing his servants with cords and driving them up and down the stairs and through the rooms of the deanery. Baton Rouge. Baton Rouge. La., was named from the fact that for many years after the town was established a gigantic cypress, the bark of which was red, grew on the" site. The name means red stick and was bestowed by the French settlers. Merino Sheep. The merino sheep has the peculiarity of living to a greater age than other breeds of sheep. The House Fly. . "The common house fly is of tn literally devoured by parasim, and it has been proved that these parasites axe also Infested with minute creatures
GREENSFORK AGAIN WON
A Team from Earlham Fell Down to the Farmer Lads Last Evening in a Rough Game. , Greensfork, Ind., March 2. The Greensfork basket ball team added an other victory to its list this evening by defeating a team from Earlham college, in a decidedly rough game. Both teams plashed hard and put more force into their actions than is supposed to be necessary in a basket ball game, but the Greensfork men showed their superiority, and won the better of the melee by the score of 3i to 24. The teams lined up: Greensfork. Position. Earlham Nicholson Forward White Ridge Forward... Mitchell Ellis Center Henley Schaeffer Guard Winslow Wise, Bish Guard Elliott Minute Writing., Thackeray considered callgraphy one of the fine arts, and sometimes, to puzsle his correspondents, be would write In so small a band that the note could not be read without the aid of a magnifying glass. The Eldest Child. In most countries it ls believed that the eldest child Is superior in stature, strength, beauty, wisdom, virtue and even in good fortune. Certainly among men of genius we find an undue proportion of eldest sons. But against that fact we must place the other that an undue proportion of criminals are eldest eons. Zino and Learf. ' A cubic foot of cast zinc weighs about 429 pounds, but a cubic foot of lead weighs 709H pounds. Flight of Bullets. A bullet which was fired by a charge sufficient to give ft an Initial velocity of 1.700 feet a second in dry weather would travel 'at no more than -1,300 feet through moist air. : . r ' Detroit.-- - Detroit took its. name from the river, which was called by the French 1 De Troit, the narrows. . The settlement was originally called Fort Pontchartrain. The Indians called the locality Wawaetunoug, the, place of the windIn river, i: T V ' 1".' " . Mecca's Black" Stone. The Black .Stone, at Mecca; is undoubtedly the oldest idol In the world. It was one white, bat has been worn black by the kisses of the faithful. , "Jamaica. ' Jamaica Is more populous In proportion to. its size than Spain, Turkey, Russia and some other European countries. The white people, however, are outnumbered by the black and colored by nearly fifty to one. Petrarch. Petrarch spent his crazy life penning sonnets to the eyebrows of a portly married woman, the mother of a large family, while be utterly neglected his legitimate wife and would not permit his daughter to live under his roof. First Newspapers. France published the first newspaper In 1805. The first English newspaper appeared In 1622. Meat For Dogs. The coarser parts of meat are much better for dog pets than the better part of the steak. A dog should not be allowed to eat chicken or mutton chops, as the bones of both splinter and are bad for him. U set ess Tusks. The curious piglike animal known as tho babiruaM has most remarkable tasks, which have long perplexed all students of animal life. As far as can be discovered, these tasks are useless to their owner. On the other hand, by collecting tufts of straw, grass and littsar of ail feted. tb?
FOR GALE BY ALL GROCERS
RICHMOND BAKING CO. SECT STACEY IS COMING A HAHfc I HfcA I rnUMidcD Four Thousand Tickets Will be Distributed to His Lecture in Behalf of the Y. M, C. A. -To be Illustrated by Stereoptlcon. - The following statement, authorized by the executive committed of tho city Sunday school association, and readily agree to by the Y. M. C. A. committees, has been issued: "My Dear Fellow Christian Worker: "We are bringing E. E. Stacey, state secretary of the Y. M. C. A., to Richmond, in conjunction with the Sunday School institute in this rlty, the second . t 1 m A AAA k ween in Aiarcn. ,uuu tickets have been printed and will be put In tho hands of people Sunday, March 10. Your Sunday school and church service will be asked to aid in getting these properly distributed. "Mr. Stacey will bring an almost unlimited number of slides for the stereoptlcon and give Richmond a most In structive and interesting stereoptlcon lectures. Tho pictures will show every phase of the Y. M. C. A. work. as carried on in our own country and some phases of the work abroad. "Please announce this lecture on two Sundays, March 3 and 10, in Sunday school and from the pulpit. "During the first six years of tho 20th century, the progress of the Young Men's Christian association has been as great as all it measured in tho entire preceeding 56 years of its organization. "Why? "The association is the child of tho church, maintained to a great degree, and managed -by church people; it Is therefore a flower upon the stem of the church. It has 6hown to the hard, common sense of the world that it can do a certain work and do it better than any similar organization; and it is now receiving its reward In the Inflow of those Immense stores of moral energy which the religion of Jesus Christ, through His church creates.'Rev. Dr. Frank Crane. "Sincerely, "W. S. IIISER. "Chairman of Young Men's Y. M. C. A. Committee." and Beauty Beauty is the external proof of health; with failing healthcomes failing beauty. Woman's delicate organism is frequently over-taxed by arduous household duties, and the demands of society. The constant drain upon her vitality weakens her nervous system. The penalty is a tired, wornout, "exhausted conditioWwhich destroys her appetite, robs her of rest, and at intervals causes much suffering and distress. When these conditions exist, the weakened nerves must be strengthened. Dr.Miles'Nervine will do this. It stimulates the action of all the organs, brings refreshing sleep, and drives away that look of care. 1 have takes Dr. Mile Restorative Ker)ne for years, a did try mother before me. Whenever I feel tired, wern-out. or have hea4aefce, I always take tb Nervine antf le streiurthen soe. X ooaeWer It a great remedy for nervousae or elebiUty." MBS. C. I FRaTDERTCfC . Canton, Ohio. Dr. MHeV Marvfne la seU by your arusgfet. who wfM avarantee that the ret battle will benefit. If It falls, ho will refund yewr money. Ililes Uedical Co., Elkhart, In
