Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 59, 14 April 1908 — Page 6
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1908.
PAGE SIX.
GOVERNMENT LIKES CITY OF RICHMOND
May Take a Hand in the In
spection of All Sold Here.
Milk
DEPARTMENT INTERESTED.
New Skin Remedy
CRM
EOFF
ARMHA D
HAS WATCHED THE VARIOUS EFFORTS ON PART OF BOARD OF HEALTH TO BRING ABOUT BETTER CONDITIONS LOCALLY.
Ivan C. Wold, first assistant chief
Of the dairy division, animal industry
bureau of the United State Agricultural dpnartmpnt. has notified Dr. Char
les Bond, secretary of the local board
of health, that he will be in this city some time the latter part of this week
for the purpose of delivering a lecture
on milk inspection, a question which
has been agitating local consumers
and dairymen all over the county for
some time.
This lecture will be given before the Anti-tuberculosis learue and it is expected that there will be a large crowd present. The exact date of Mr. Weld's arrival here will be announced later. The department officers at Washington have been taking the keenest interest in the fight being waged by the health officials of this city for the proper inspection of meat and milkThe agricultural department has shown its sympathy for the local Jhealth authorities in this movement by assigning federal meat inspectors to this city. Now, it appears, the Washington government intends to take a hand in the proposed enactment of a satisfactory milk inspection orflinance. Mr. Weld is known as an authority on dairy matters and what he has to eay" on the matter will probably carry great influence. He has always advocated a thorough municipal milk inspection on the ground that milk is the bestagency possible for the transmission of tuberculosis and that no
euccessful fight against the great white plague can be waged until al over the country steps are taken providing for proper milk inspection.
Creates Big Stir; Drug Stores Crowd
ed With Sufferers For several weeks past W. H. Sud-
hoff's and other leading drug stores in this city have been crowded with
persons desiring a supply of posliia?--
the new cure for eczema. This is ttio drug which has created such a stir
throughout the country since its discovery one year ago.
For the convenience of those who
use posiara ior pimpies, DiacKuenus,
blotches, red nose, acne, herpes and
other minor skin troubles, a special
DO-cent package has been adopted, in addition to the regular two-dollar jar, which is now on sale at all leading drug stores. In eczema cases, poslam stops the itching with first application and proceeds to heal, curing chronic cases in two weeks In minor skin troubles, results show after an overnight application. For a free experimental sample, write direct to the Emergency Laboratories, S2 West Twenty-fifth Street, New York City.
Enamored of Fifteen Year ' Old Girl, Man Shot Her To Death. THE CRIME IS SHOCKING.
CHILDREN UNFIT THEMSELVES FOR BUSINESS
Piles Quickly Cured at Home
Claims Work in School For Graduation.
Only
New York, April 14. Mrs. M. M. Caldwell of Ohio, in a lecture on "Life as a fine art in relation to the arts of life," to an audience composed exclusively of women, said: "Boys and girls work too hard at school, thus unfitting themselves for the real business of life. They work for the glory of graduation, and true education is lacking in them." Urs. Caldwell declared education was bought too often with an impaired physique as the price, and that a high state of mental cultivation thus obtained made a girl a detriment rather than a blessing to the race, since she was unfitted for her real mission in the plan of creation.
SPECIAL ISSUE OF
HIGH SCHOOLREFLECTOR
Will Be for the Benefit of the
Orchestra.
"OOCKED," THE FAITHFUL MESSENGERS flEWARD After Serving Fifty Years on Railroad, Man Treated Without Respect.
Phoenixville. Pa., April K Norma
Tholan, the 15-jear-old daughter of Hi ram Tholan, a farmer of West Pike
land township, was shot to death on the highway near her home by John
Miller, a young farm hand, whom her
father had discharged.
The murderer then turned the pistol
on himself and inflicted a wound which
will probably prove fatal.
Just what led up to the tragedy is
uncertain, but it is said that Miller was enamored of Miss Norma, who, altnough she was but lo years old, was very pretty and almost a woman in appearance. Yesterday, it is said, hi3
infatuation became so marked that his
attention came to the notice of the parents and Miller was ordered to leave the place at once. The Tholan home is about six or seven miles from Phoenixville, and after Miller had been discharged he came to town and began drinking, ending up this morning by buying a pistol. Then he started back for the home of his old employer with murder in his heart. On the road near the house early this afternoon he met Norma and her 8-year-old sister. What took place is not known definitely as the younger Tholan girl was so badly frightened by
the tragedy that she could not half tell what took place, and she is on the verge of collapse. However, she managed to tell that Miller had talked to her sister, and accused her of telling on him, then he drew a pistol and shot her dead. Miller then turned the pistol on himself, and when neighbors rushed to the scene in response to the alarm spread by the Tholans, they found him unconscious, with a bullet in his body. Miss Tholan's body was removed to the home of her parents, while Miller was taken to the house of his father, Isaac Miller, who lives near Chester Springs. The Tholans are well known in upper Chester county and manage the John Patrick farm near Chester Springs.
Prof. Earhart of the high school orchestra has set a plan on foot, by which he hopes to realize several hundred dollars with which to purchase new instruments for the orchestra, so that they will be the permanent prop
erty of the school. The plan was j originated by Prof. Earhart last week. The High School Reflector next month will be a souvenir issue of the monthly paper for the orchestra and will contain its history during the past eight ears giving a full list of players during that time and their present occupation, as near as it. is possible to ascertain. Prof. Earhart will increase the size of the paper from (5 to ltJ pages with a cover, and the paper will be illustrated and have a picture of this year's orchestra. This will be the May issue of the Reflector and will sell at 10 cents. The paper rights were
secured from Paul Fisher, Robert Tallant and Glen Harsh, who published it last month. Prof. Earhart and the members of the faculty at the high school will canvass all the merchants in th,e city and have them to subscribe for any num
ber of copies they wish. Recently the teachers made a short canvass and secured subscriptions for I.4O0 copies and at the school yesterday the subscriptions justified promoters in thinking that high school will take about 2,000 copies,
Instant Relief. Permanent Cure
Trial Package Mailed Freeto AM
in Plain Wrapper. Piles is a fearful disease, but easy to cure if you go at it right. An operation with the knife is dangerous, cruel, humiliating and unnecessary. There is just one other sure way to be cured painless, safe and in the privacy of your own home it is Pyramid Pile Cue. We mail a trial package free to all who write. It will give you instant relief, show you the harmless, painless nature of this great remedy and start you well on the way toward a perfect cure. Then you can get a full-sized box from any druggist for 50 cents, aud ftenoone box cures. Insist on having what-yon call for. If the druggist tries to sell you eomethlng just. as good, it. is because he makesimorenioneyon the substitute.
The cure begins at once and con
tinues rapidly until' it is complete and
permanent. You can go right ahead
with your work and be easy and com
fortable all the time. It is well worth trying. Just send your name and address to Pyramid Drug Co., 92 Pyramid Building, Marshall, Mich., and receive free by return mall the trial package in a plain wrapper. Thousands have been cured in this easy, painless and inexpensive 'way, in the'privacy of the home. Noknife-and its torture. No-doctor and his bills. All druggists, 50 cents. Write to day for afree package.
Philadelphia, April 14. Half a century of continued services as an ex
press messenger between 1'mutaei-
phia and Pittsburg, traveling 3,640,000
miles in his labors that was the record of Jacob Parsons Gilman.
Orders to rest by his physician and, his friends say, told by some one in authority that he could have a week to return to his labors and find that he had been "docked' for his brief breathing space that was his reward. Gilman reported for duty as usual. An hour later, stricken in harness, he was removed to the hospital and there without gaining consciousness, he died. "Uremia," said the doctors. But his friends shake their heads and say "broken heart."
'TERRIBLY DISTRESSING. Ointments and local treatments may relieve but cannot cure Piles. Dr. Leonhardfs Hem-Roid is guaranteed to cure any case of Piles. If Hem-Roid doesn't cure you, you get your money back. Hem-Roid is a tablet taken internally, thus removing the cause. $1.00 at Leo H. Fine's, Richmond, Indiana, or Dr. Leonhardt Co., Station B, Buffalo, N. Y.
A COMMON MISTAKE Many women mistake kidney and bladder troubles for some irregularity peculiar to the sex. Foley's Kidney Remedy corrects irregularities and makes women well. Miss Carrie Harden, Bowling Green, Ky., writes: "I suffered much pain from kidney and bladder trouble until I started to use Foley's Kidney Remedy. The first bottle gave me great relief, and after taking the second bottle, I was entirely well." A. G. I,uken & Co. Photography. Practical photography first saw the light in 1839. On Feb. 21 of that year Talbot, who had obtained permanent prints and camera Images as early as 1835, published his process. Daguerre'a was published on Aug. 19, and somewhere between those two dates Ponton
in a paper read at the Royal Scottish Society of Arts made known to the world his discovery that soluble or
ganic matter in the presence of an alkaline bichromate was rendered insolu
ble by exposure to light, a discovery
the ralue of which was not recognized
for some years, but which is the basla
of all that is included in "process
work." '
So
OF STAGE NOT
WANTED IN CHOIR
Anonymous Letter Said And Chorus Girl Quit Church.
RECORDS.
In the number of his titles the Duke of Atholl, with twenty-three, holds the record. The record' bean .for costliness Is the ra&Hla, which sella2' at $12 a pound retall. The record for ham sandwich-making Is a thousand sandwiches in 11 hours 25 minutes. The record lodging house is one for pilgrims at Mecca, which accommodates 6100 persons. The record steam heating apparatus cost $1SO,000. It is that which heats the 1000 rooms of the Tatlcan. The record soprauo voice was Lucrezia Agujardi's. This lady, who died In 17S3, could easily strike C in altissimo. The record for millionaire honesty was held by the late Charles T. Yerkes, who. on recovering his fortune after his failure, repaid the claims of all his old creditors with 6 per cent compound interest.
New York, April 14. Miss Lillian Norton, a chorus girl in one of the Broadway musical plays, has been singing for some time in the choir of the Calvary M. E. church. All went well until Miss Norton began receiving letters signed "A Memberof the Church," or 'Church Member," of which this is a sample: "Women of the stage are not wanted in the choir of the Calvary Methodist Episcopal church. You would do well to resign and not sing again." Miss Norton did not sing yesterday.
Sue anne : Good housewives Flour.
prefer
Gold Medal Salome.
Dtaanadlnff a Tempter. A pompous Chicago merchant, arrogantly carrying the signs of his prosperity about him, accosted an acquaintance of his who conducts a successful rescue mission and said: "James, I'd like to attend oneof your meetings." "Cfrtaiuly," rejoined the minister, "but leave your watch and diamonds with the hotel clerk." What?" asked the merchant in astonishment. "Are not the men of your mission converted thieves?" "True," answered the mission leader softly, -but, George, you look so easy and wholesome. Really, I don't want my men to regret that they promised me never to steal again."
Don't buy a new or second-hand Fire-Proof Sale before investigating our splendid safes at lowest prices, F. O. B., Richmond. Address Herring - Hall - Marvin Safe Company, Dayton. Ohio.
METAL MAGICIANS. T The Wonders of Labor,Saving Device. In Machinery. When McCormick built his first hundred reapers in 1845, he paid 42 cents for bolts. That was in the mythical age of hand labor. Today fifty bolts art made for a cent. So with guard fingers. McCormick paid 24 cents each when James K. Polk was in the White House. Now there is a ferocious machine which with the least possible assistance from one man cuts out 1,300 guard fingers in ten hours at a labor cost of a cent for six. Also while exploring one of the Chicago factories I came upon a herd of cud chewing machines that were crunching out chain links at the rate of 56,000,000 a year. Near by were four smaller and more irritable automata which were biting off pieces of wire and chewing them Into linchpins at a speed of 400,000 bites a day. "Take out your vatch and time this man," said the superintendent of the McCormick plant. "See how long he is in boring five holes in that great casting."
"Exactly six minutes," I answered. "Well, that's progress," observed the
superintendent. "Before we bought
that machine it was a matter of four hours to bore those holes."
In one of its five twine mills a mon
strous bedlam of -noise and a wilderness of fuss, which is by far the lar
gest of its sort in the world there is enough twine twisted in a single day to make a girdle around the earth.
Everybody's Magazine.
SCIENCE AND ART.
A Storm as Pictured by the Weather
Bureau and by a Poet.
In commenting on the fact that a person may be thoroughly equipped on
the scientific side of music without
being sensitive to its beauty as an art Gustav Kobbe in his book "How to
Appreciate Music" quotes the witty
distinction which Kdiuund Clarence Stedmaa draws in his "Nature and
Elements of Poetry" between the indi
cations of a storm as described by a
poet and by the official prognostica
tions of the weather bureau. Mr. Stedman gives two stanzas: When descends on the Atlantic the gi rantic Storm wind of the equinox.
Landward in his wrath he scourges the
toiling curses. Laden with seaweed from the rocks. And this stanza by a later balladist The east wind gathered, all unknown, A thick sea cloud his course before. He left by night the froaeri sone And smote thfe cliffs of iMibrador. He lashed the coasts on either hand.
And betwixt the Cape and Xewfoundland.
Into the bays his armies pour.
All this impersonation and fancy are translated by the weather bureau into
something like this:
"An area of extreme low pressure is
rapidly moving up the Atlantic coast, with wind and rain. Storm center now
off Charleston, S. C Wind N. E.
velocity, 54; barometer, 29.6. The disturbance will reach New York on Wednesday and proceed eastward to
the banks and bay of St. Lawrence.
Danger; signals ordered for all norta
The Dark and Bloody Ground. Before the white man began to ex
plore Kentucky, about the middle of
the eighteenth century, the region was
vast hunting ground for many large
tribes of the south, north and east,
and between these tribes there was continuous conflict Xor the possession of the rich game privileges. Later on,
when the white people settled in the
territory, their struggle with the red
men was more bitter and persistent than in almost any other section of
the continent; hence the sanguinary name that was given to the territory,
"The Dark and Bloody Ground." New
York American.
Neil & Nusbaum's flllS Opening Tonight. 1 v81S 7:00 to 10:00 l5r Music Souvenirs. m The Shoe Corner mf fSp'' Neff & Nusbaum ifc
BUSY AS CAN BE Members of Richmond High School Graduating Class Preparing Themes.
ORATORS NOT CHOfN.
Whist. An acquaintance of Talleyrand once
remarked to him that he did not think it worth his while to learn the game of
whist. Talleyrand's reply has been re- ed.
membered uatil this day: "Not know whist, young man? What a dismal old age you are preparing for yourself!"
Never Tested. "You have a great many friends." "I don't know whether I have any friends at air or not" "You don't?" "Nope. I was born rich and bar. never been broke." Houston To;t.
Members of the graduating class of the Richmond high school are busy in preparation of their commencement orations. In accord with the customs of,the school, however, it will not be necessary for any but the salutatorian and the valedictorian to deliver their orations on commencement .day. The school board now is considering the selection of a speaker for the occasion and as yet have made no choice. It is very probable that the class will hold a meeting In the next few days for the purpose of suggesting some speaker. The graduating orations this year have a very wide range of subject matter and from the present outlook there will be some very interesting themes written by the members of the class. Miss Mering stated to the class yester
day that the themes would be expected to be completed by the third week in May and be ready to be grad-
Biographies, timely public ques
tions and books, will be dealt with in
the final compositions.
Miss Mering urged the members of
the class not to copy information out
of book, but should be original.
"I observe," said Herlock Suolnies of New York, "that you have recently taken up your residence in Brooklyn." "Who told you that?" asked the other, visibly startled. "Nobody, but I notice that you blush whenever any one asks you where you're living." Philadelphia Press.
Jones I'm going to marry an English girl. Bones You will never again hear me say the English have no appreciation of a joke. Town Topics.
"No, I'm not very well Impressed with the house," said the prospective tenant "The yard is frightfully small. There's hardly room for a single flower bek" "Think so?" replied the agent "But er mightn't you use folding flower beds ?" Ex oh a n go.
Katherine He says that a lie has never passed his lips. Kidder I suppose you noticed that he talks through his nose. Illustrated Bits.
SMDIMAY AT YOUR GROCERS THOUSANDS OF 15c PACKAGES FREE Watch for big ad with coupon in Fridays Palladium and Sun-Telegram.
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Willing to Help. Young Mr. Sibley was making a protracted call upon the object of his affections, Mies Evans, who was a pianist of considerable ability. She had Just completed twenty-flvt minutes of Bach in the hope that he would get tired and go home. "Oh. Miss Evans." he exclaimed, "I could just die listening to your playing!" "Would you like to have me play some more, Mr. Sapley?" asked Miss Evans innocently.
Talking Machines. "Everything lovely down at the house?" "Yes. We are leading the quiet life these days." "How do you work it?" "Well, you see. we have a phono
graph, and it alternates with my wife
after supper." Nashville Banner.
Pretty Slow.
Slow Waiter Have I ever been In the country, sir? No, sir. Why dc you ask? Tired Customer I was Just
thinking how thrilling you'd find it to sit on the fence and watch the tor toises whiz by. Harper's Weekly.
Stung. Mr. Jawback That boy gets his brains from me. Mrs. Jawback Somebody got 'em from you, if you ever had any. That's a cinch. Cleveland Leader.
Plan for Summer Comfort Don't add the heat of a kitchen fire to the sufficient discomfort of hot weather. Use a New Perfection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove
and cook in comfort. With a "New Perfection" Oil Stove the preparation of daily meals, or the big weekly "baking," is done without raising the temperature perceptibly above that of any other
room in the house. If you once have experience with the
NEW, PEBfECIlON
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be amazed at the restful way in which it ou to do work that has heretofore overheated
kitchen and yourself.
"New Perfection" Stove is ideal for summer
Made in three sizes and all warranted. If at your dealer's, write our nearest agency.
The
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Wick
you will
-enaDies
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f A
Lamp
gives perfect combnition whether hi eh
er low is therefore free from disagreeable odor and can
not smoke. Safe, convenient, ornamental the ideal light. If not at your dealer , write our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL, COMPANY CIXCOKFOKATE
FflDIF miles onus .- - J-22
Great suffering is the lot of all women, who neglect the health of their womanly organs. No reason to do so, any more than to neglect a sore throat, colic, or any other disease, that the right kind of medicine will .cure. Take
Wine
f Ca
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for all your womanly ills. It can never do harm, and is certain to do good.' Mrs. Sallie H. Blair, of Johnson City. Term., vrites: "I had suffered from vomanly troubles for six teen months, and had four doctors, but they could not help me. until I began to take Wine cf CarduL Now I think I am about velL" At all reliable druggists. In $ l. 00 bottles. Try it
Write today for a tree envy of vahubte 64-eare Blustrated Book far Women. H yna nei Medical
miFP tie i rrrrn
In I I t IJ A I I I I IK Adv-lce, descrfba ymon. itaflfc ate. and reply wrll be lent tn iain aeaiad eovope.
UajitkfiMtsV
