Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 268, 6 November 1907 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE KICiniOXD PALLADIU3I AXD SUX-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 0, 1907.
NEW DEPARTURE IS EFFECTIVE LOCALLY
International Portage System, Devised Some Months Ago, Put Into Use. BLANKS ARE PUT ON SALE. QUESTION OF PORTAGE FOR RETURN CORRESPONDENCE IS NOW EASILY SETTLED MATTER IS PUT TO A TEST. The new departure in the inter national postage system, which was j devised some months ago by the high-j er postal officials of Uncle Sam's ser-1 vice, took effect at the Richmond) postoffice Tuesday when the internat-, lonal coupon response blanks were , placed on sale. In past years it has; been very difficult for people residing! in the United States to enclose the proper amount of postage for return correspondence, sent to friends residing in Europe. By purchasing the international coupons which were inaugurated for a test Tuesday the entire question is easily solved. The coupons are sold for six cents. They arc stamped at the local office and stamped by the office redeeming them in England, France, Germany, Italy and other European countries. They aro worth five cents in Europe, the amount of the postage rate from those countries to this. One cent is retained by the United States on the coupons to cover the cost of printing. As an American could not enclose United States postage which could bo used on return letters, the coupon system will undoubtedly prove successful from the letter writer's standpoint but from the financial standpoint the new system will be a loser to Uncle Sam's postal service, it is thought. BILIOUSNESS AND CONSTIPATION For years I was troubled with biliousness and constipation, which made life miserable for me. My appetite Tailed me. I lost my usual force and vitality. Pepsin preparations and cathartics only made matters worse. I flo not know where I should have beet today had I not tried Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. The tablets relieve the ill feeling at once, strengthen the digestive functions, helping the system to do its work natD rally. Mrs. Rosa Potts, Birmingham, Ala. These tablets are for sale by A. D. Luken & Co. Chapped hands are quickly cured by ipplying Chamberlain's Salve. Prie?, to cents. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Mark Twain at dinner in New York talked about the troubles of housekeepers at the painting season. He kild: "If you are a housekeeper I don't need to tell you that when a painter has taken up the parlor carpet, removed the furniture from the dining room, leaned two ladders against tha hall mantel and stacked a half dozen variegated cans of paint on the sideboard it means he is now ready to paint the outside shutters and the back fence." Let us speak of men as we find them, And censure only what we can see, Remembering that none can be perfect Unless they use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co. The youngest mountaineer who ever Bet foot on the Jungfrau summit is Ida Liechti. Slfe is only ten years old, ind is the danghter of the Jungfrau railway manager. She was born and reared among the Alps, and learned to climb like a goat when hardly more than an infant. 0 nn II In Hawking and Spitting, Dropping Into k - the Throat, Foul Breath, Cured THROUGH THE BLOOD I by Botanio Blood Balm, (B.B.B.) Is your breath foul? Is your voice husky? Is your nose stopped? Dc you have frequent pains in the forehead? Dou you sneeze a great deal? Do you have pains across the eyes? Aro you losing your sensa of smell or taste? Is there a dropping in the throat? Do you have a ringing in the ears? Is there a constant bad taste j In the mouth? Do you have a hack-j lng cough? If so, you have catarrh. . Catarrh Is not only dangerous in this -ay, but It causes ulcerations, death and decay of bones, kills ambition, of ten causes loss of appetite and reaches to general debility, idiocy and insanity It needs attention at once. Cure it by taking Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) It is a quick, radical, permanent cure because it rids the system of the poison germs that cause catarrh. Blood Balm, (B. B. B.) purifies the blood, does away with every symptom, giving strenngth to the entire mucus membrane and B. B. B. sends a rich, tingling flow of warm, rich, purs blood direct to the paralyzed nerves, giving warmth and strength just where it is needed, and in this way making a perfect, lasting cure of oa ! tarrh in all its forms. Botanic Blood Balm, B. B. B.) It pleasant and safe to take. Composed of Pure Botanic Ingredients. Sample sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Sold by druggists $1 per large bottle or sent by express. Sold in Richmond, Ind., by Alford Drug Ca Ninth and Main Sta.
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He had a logical mind and so had she. They stripped the romance from everything and exercised the power of mind on all questions. This led to sympathy, to respect and mutual admiration and finally to marriage. They were spending their honeymoon at one of the water places. One day the husband met an acquaintance on the beach and he introduced him to his pretty bride. The husband's friend was tall.
broad-shouldered, and handsome. A ; wife. They talked of cases w here men drooping moustache concealed full ! and women married who thought they lips that, to the student of facial char-1 loved each other and, by some circumacteristics, would denote weakness. stance, discovered afterward that they He talked well and his voice was full j had made a mistake. Mrs. Pelling-
and soft. In his eyes there was a dreamy look. Young Mrs. Pellingham was interested in her husband's friend, of ; course. She often met him and. when acquaintance ripened to friendship, she enjoyed walks along the beach. He suggested to her husband one day that they go sailing with him he had a neat little sloop over in the bay. The husband could not go he was busy writing a treatise on a scientific subject. But he insisted that his wife should not be made lonesome by ; his work and persuaded her to accom-; pany his friend. I The friend, or Mr. Wharton, as he j should now be called, was attentive j to Mrs. Pellingham. They had many ' sails together, and, when Mr. Pelling-1 ham was prevented by his work from accompanying them, it must be told, they were not much disappointed. Mrs. Pellingham would have denied this, even to herself, but her enjoyment of sailing with Mr. Wharton grew unconsciously. Many times he talked with her about the beauty of the bay, the sunlight dropping and melting in the waters, the mysteries I of the clouds, where the blue kissed the rose. Mrs. Pellingham had forgotten sentimental expressions, so she was silent. Mr. Wharton, his graceful figure rolling on the steering board of the sloop, told of day dreams. He was poetic and. although Mrs. Pellingham did not at first like poetry, his voice charmed her and the fancies he related developed a fascination that was strange to her. After a while her heart beat furiously when she heard Mr. Wharton's
PELLIN
voice or distinguished his familiar foot-step. One day she reasoned it all out, and there was an aching at her heart. Yes, she loved Mr. Wharton. She loved his eyes, his voice, his poetic temperament. She loved his day dreams, his ideas of romance she loved him with a love that startled her, for at no time had she ever loved her husband with such passion. Wharton must have discerned this in her manner. One day the topic drifted to matrimony husband and ham did not know how it all happened but she will never forget the moment when Wharton, uncontrolled, grasped her hands and, piercing her soul with his fervent gaze, said: "Mrs. Pellingham Ida this will probably never happen again, but I am compelled overwhelmed by what I discern. I know that your marriage has been such an error as we speak of. But I must say to you that my heart bleeds for you. And I have sympathy for myself, for unconsciously feelings have Sj!irnir up in my heart that have stoen my peace of mind. I have no right to tell you all that I would like to words are crowding at my lips, rjt j wish I wish " "Mr. Wharton." interrupted Mrs. Pellingham. "We must stop. We must never refer to this again. I am : sorry, for now we must see each er rarely, if ever." The words sounded tunid to her and her eyes told more than she knew or wished them to. "You are right. Mrs. Pellingham." said Ir- Wharton. "I have been a ' weakling to bare my secret to you, but it is done. There is nothing now save try to forget, or, I should say, suffer, for I can never forget." Mrs. Pellingham's mind was logical. When Wharton went away, the ro-. jmantic notions that possessed her gave Place to calm consideration of the fu - ture. Her life with her husband grew ClSta&teiUl. &ne Ola not snow It. DUt she longed for sentiment, for talk of flowers and fleecy clouds and posey. Then came suggestion, followed by process of reasoa. What was the use
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ROESER,
of her deceiving her husband and i day. She stood silently behind him' making her own life miserable. There j until he noticed her presence. I was a remedy. She would tell her j "I can't go any further in these husband everything and he would not J proceedings." she said, with tears In hold her to vows that meant unhap-jher eyes. "I I cannot live away! piness for both. They would be di- from you. for I love you too much. It I vorced then she could marry Mr. : would kill me." Wharton. Her life was partly a mis-j "i knew, my dear, I knew." said' take, but that is no reason why it all; Mr. Pellingham. taking her hands.! should be spoiled. I "Your mind was working wrong that j
"My dear," said Mr. Pellingham. when she had told him all. "You astonish me." Then he pondered for n lone (imp nt thp pud of which he decided that his wife's logic was right. They should be divorced. They took up separate residences. A few weeks before the court was to consider their case, Mrs. Pellingham met Mr. Wharton. She was driving and he was walking. She drew up at the roadside, beneath a great elm tree. After general conversation. Mrs. Pellingham with well-choen words an I feminine adroitness, told him she was soon to be free- that incompatibility had arisen between she and her husband. Mr. Wharton was greatly astonishe-i. "I am sorry to hear that," he sa;,!. and he looked genuinely sorry. Then followed another conversation on the differences in temperament that prevent men and women from loving each ather. or separate them after marriage. Mrs. Wharton wondered why there was not the old tenderness in his voice why, now that she was to be
oth-jfree. he did not refer to the love hejlarity made by the modern melodrama ) nce confessed for her. Maybe it was j "As Told in the Hills." which will be I ecause there was no sailboat, no gen-: given at the C.ennett next Monday
tie breezes, no gold melting from the sun into the horizon, no music floating over the water on a moonlight night. That must be it. After a while, when she would often see him, the old beau ty would come back. He held out his hand to her. "I cannot help but again express my sorrow over your trouble, if I can so refer to it." he said. "It is all the more impressed upon me by the fact ; that I may sometime experience the l same, but heaven forbid! You have
i heard, have vnu nnt that T sm soon t.llrlav nifrht the nffprintr ia "Tho Paris.
be married to Miss Elleston'r" ian Princess." Special interest is being taken in the production oi SarA repentant, logical, little woman dou's play, "Divorcons," which will entered Mr, Pellingham's office next be presented Thursday night. Thl3 is
was an. n s evolution. Ah, I knew "("i would come hack to me." j lld her close and kissed her. Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. NEW PHILLIPS. Week of Nov. 4 Vaudeville. GENNETT. Week of Nov. 4. North Bros. Stock Company. Nov. 11 "Tcld in the Hills." Nov. 12 "At Cripple Creek." Nov. 14 "The Darling of the Gods." Nov. 25 Francio McMillen. Dec. 3 Ezra Kendall. "As Told in the Hills." One of the strongest bids for popuj night is that there is no objectionable ; features to the performance. It is ; true that there are villains, two of them in fact, but their fate is a striking exar pie of vhat their villainy deserves. Repertoire at the Gennett. Liberal patronage is being accorded the North Stock company at the Gen i net t Tuesday night's audience again : being a very large one. "The Gypsy j Queen" was presented and Wednes-
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AVVg e table Prep aration ror As -similatirvg djcroodandRei?ulatng lh Slcoaiks andLkPistki of Prcmotcs Diestion,Gcrrulness ard Rest.Contalns neither Opimn.MorpbJne nor &acL Sot Nahcotic Mx.Jtnna A-st Smd - ) 1 throt Seed it Apofecf Remetly forConstipation. Sour S to cue h. Diarrhoea. Wcrmr ,Conxilsions,FeTrishacsi and loss OF SLEEP. Yac Simile Signature of new Voi?k. the play in which Grace George has so successfully appeared and the North company is paying a big royal- ! ty for the privilege of presenting it. "At Cripple Creek." Lovers of melodrama will be given a treat at the Gennott next Tuesday, when E. J. Carpenter's scenic production of "At Cripple Creek" will be presented. This story of Western mining life is said to be in all respects superior to the classic plays of this nature which have been presented heretofore. Vaudeville at the Phillips. One of the good turns at the New Phillips this week is put on by Equili lo, equilibrist, who has muscles that are well worth seeing. His arms appear almost like solid knots. Kquillo makes a high jump for which he claims the world's record. This is made from a platform, seven feet high, , to a table below, on his hands, and he preserves his balance while performing the feat. To say the least, it is no mean stunt. I Birds when perched on trees or bushes, are natural weather cocks, as - invariably turn their heads to the wind.
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Women Who Wear Well.
It is astonishing how great a change a few years of married life often make in the appearance and disposition of many women. The freshness, the charm, the brilliance vanish like the bloom from a flower which is rudely handled. The matron is only a dim shadow, a faint echo of the charming maiden. Few young women appreciate the shock of the system through the change which comes with marriage and motherhood. Many neglect to deal with the unpleasant pelvic drains and weaknesses which too often come with marriage and motherhood, not understanding that this secret drain is robbing the cheek of its freshness and the form of its fairness. As surely as the general health suffers w hen there is derangement of the health of the delicate womanly organs, so surely when these organs are established in health the face and form at once witness to the fact in renewed comeliness. More than a million women have found health and happiness in the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. Ingredients on label contains no alcohol or harmful habit-forming drags. It is made wholly of those native, American, medicinal roots most highly recommended by leading medical authorities of all the several schools of practice for the care of woman's peculiar ailment?. For nursing mothers, or for those broken-down m health by too frequent bearing of children, also for the expectant mothers, to prepare the system for the coining of baby and make its advent easy and almost painless, there is no medicine quite so good as " Favorite Prescription." It can do no harm in any condition of the gyntem. It is a most potent invigorating tonic and strengthening nervine, nicely adapted to woman s delicate system by a physician of largo experience in the treatment of woman's peculiar ailments. Bad Symptoms. The woman who ha3 periodical headaches, backache, sees imaginary dark spots or specks floating or dancing before her eyes, has gnawing distress or heavy full feeling in Etomach, faint spells, dragging-down feeling in lower abdominal or pelvic region, eaeily startled or excited, irregular or painful periods, with or without pelvic catarrh, 13 sun?r.rg irora wesncresra uu uerangemente that should have early attention. Not all of above symptoms are likely to be present in any case at one time. Teglectd or badly treated and euch ca-js often run into maladies which demand the surgeon's knife if they do not result fatally. No medicine exunt has such a long and numerous record cures in sucn cages as Ur. P:erce's tavonte resenpj TTnT .No medicine has such a feirong professional indorsement of each of ita several ingredients worth more than anv number of ordinary non-profes-. sional testimonials. The very beet ingredients known to medical science for the cure of woman's peculiar ailments eater into its composition. 2?o aioohol,
For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Use or over Fhirty Years J The King can do no wrong, but thert Us one innocent thing that no sover eign ever does namely, to stand with his back against a wall. At the roya! stand at Newmarket or elsewhere his majesty leaves ample room for per sons to pass behind him. so that h may escape having perpetually to re ply to their salutations, which hi would be bound to notice did those people pass !n front of him. London Chronicle. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Proposals for supplies for the use oi ihe Eastern Indiana Hospital for th Insane for the month of December will be received by the Hoard of Trus tees at tha Hospital before 3 p. ni Monday, November 11, 1907. Specifl tntions may be seen at the Second National Bank or at the Hospital. By order of the Board, o-2t S. E. SMITH, Med. Supt. The richest woman in Great Britair is Miss Emily Charlotte Talbot, whe owns two magnificent etsates whict she inherited from her father, wortr. about $7.mmk". Another rich womar is Miss .lie de Rothschild, who it very charitable and has a great hobbs for gardening. harmful, or habit-forming drug is to be found in the lictof its ingredients printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested under oath as complete and correct. In any condition of the female system Dr. Pierre's Kavonte Prescription can do onlv kikkI never harm. Its whole effect is to strengthen, invigorate and regulate the whole female ryFtern and especially the pelvic organs. When these are deranged in function or affected by disease, the stomach and other organs of digestion become sympathetically deranged, the nerves are weakened, and a long list of bad, unpleasant symptoms follow. Too much must not be expected of the " Favorite Prescription." It will not perform miracles; w ill not cure tumors no medicine will. It will often prevent thern, if taken in time, and thus the operating table and the surgeon's knife may be avoided. Doctor's AH Agree. The most eminent writers on Materia Nediea, whose works are consulted as authorities by physicians of all the different schools of practice, extol, in the moft positive terms, the curative virtues of each and every ingredient entering-. into Dr. Pierce's (Jolden Medical Discovery. In fact it is the only medicine, put up for sale throrgh druggists for the cure of all diseases of the mucous eurfacce, as nasal catarrh, throat, laryngeal, and bronchial affections attended by lingering, or hang-on-coughs that has any such jirofessional endorsement worth more than any amour.t of lay or nonprofessional testimonials. Do not expect too much from the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It will not work miracles. It will not cure consumption in its advanced stages. No medicine will. Nor ia th "Discovery" so good fovsudden attack of acute cougb. byt for the lingering, obstinate hgn-on-coughs, accompanying catarrhal, throat, laryngeal and broncb;aI anections, it is a most emoacioua rennnTy In cases accompanied with wasting of flesh, m'ghteweatp, weak stomach and poor digestion with faulty assimilation, and which, if neglected or badly treated are apt to lead to consumption, the ''Discoverj;" has proven wonderfully successful in effecting cures. The formula is printed on every wrapper of " Golden Medical Discovery," atteeted as to correctness under oath, and vou can't afford to accept any subft'tute of unknown composition for this non-secret remedy no matter what selfish interests may prompt the dealer to urge such upon yea. In fact it is an insult to your intelligence for hirn to do 30. You know what you want and it is bis place to supply that want. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the original "Little Liver Pills" first put up bv old Dr. Pierce over 40 years ago. Much imitated, but never equaled. They cleanse, invigorate and regulate stomach, liver and bowels, curing biliousness and constipation. Little sugarcoated grannies easy to take as candy. Dr. Pierce may be consulted by tetter fret of charge. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids' HcUd and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, ?. Y. Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser (1000 pages) is sent free era receipt of 21 onecent stamps for paper-covered, or 81 stamps for cloth-bound cqp- -Andrei Dr. iWoe m above. '
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