Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 258, 25 July 1909 — Page 8

THE RICHMOND PALIiADIUM AND dUN-TELEGIIAM, SUNDAY, JULY 25, 1909.

P&GE XCI&nT. A REINDEER POST COMPLETES CABINET A STOAY CAI1II1E USURPS THE TO GET TESTIMOIIY mmFOB THE ALASKANS (American News Service) . Paris, July 24. The acceptance of portfolios today by Gen. Brun and Admiral de la Payere successfully concludes M. Briand's efforts to form a cabinet to succeed the Clemenceau ministry. Gen. Brun will be minister of war and Admiral de la Payere minister of marine. Documents of the Thaw Case Will Be Examined on , Monday. CLMMMCE Animal Calmly Walks in and Drives Out Man and His Wife. People of Barrow Finally Hear Of the Election of President Taft.

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BED

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REPORT OF COMMISSION

HE WAS FINALLY ROUTED

TERRIFIE8 MOSKOWITZ FAMILY AND BAFFLES THE COP BUT YIELDS TO FINE NERVE OF ABE

NEHEMIAH.

- New York, July 24. The peaceful

Arnm nt Israel Moskowitz of '60

Glenmore avenue, Brooklyn, were shat

tered early In the morning. He was '. asleep In his bed on the first floor of the building when a scratching and

Iklcklng on his ribs woke him up. Mr. j jMoskowitz was alarmed. So was his I wife, and she whispered, "Israel, burglars!" Moskowitz saw something In the bed. "Sure enough," he whispered to

his wife, "it's a burglar." Whereupon he got a handy bed slat and distribut

ed a few whacks to the cauer. ine I intruder poked his head up. It was mot a burglar. It was a dog. The dog growled when he saw Moskowltz, his wife and their seven children who had gathered to see the supi posed thief get a walloping. He had Sheen disturbed and he resented it. ' "Bow wow," he barked, and rested his i bead on a pillow again. "Well, what do you think of that mongrel?" aid Moskowitz. "He gets ilnto my bed, scratches my back, kicks xae out and then growls because I 'want to chase him." They tried to coax the dog away, ' but be was intent on getting a nap and 'refused to budge. Occasionally he would growl, as if to warn his disturbers away. Moskowitz became discouraged and' went to the Brownsville Vtatlon. "Lieutenant,' he said to Lieut John Brady, "a dbg got into my bed this morning an chased me and my wife out. He wont let us get in again. He growls at us when we try to. Please eend a policeman with a gun." Policeman William Seckinger went with Moskowitz. The dog was still in bed, and would not budge when the policeman poked it in the ribs with his club, but showed its teeth an3 growled. The policeman was perplexed. Moskowitz was distracted. Finally Abraham Nehemlah, whose father keeps a hardware store on the ground floor and who has a fine nerve, . said that he would get the dog out of ted. He ordered everybody to get into I an adjoining room, and asked that the door leading to the hall be left open. Then he pulled the covers off the dog, seised it by the tail, and, with a mighty fling, hurled the animal out of 'the door.. Then came a blood curdling !vell and bark", a bang when the body

struck the stairs outside, and finally the yelping dog was seen breaking all

records down Glenmore avenue.

(American News Service) New York, July 24. All the testimony and exhibits of Harry K. Thaw's two trials, and a sealed packet containing the report of the commission appointed by Justice Fitzgerald in the first trial to examine into Thaw's sanity, will be taken to White Plains Monday. William Hanna, deputy chief

clerk of the court of General Sessions was today served with a subpoena

from the office of Attorney General

O'MaUey ordering him to produce the

documents before Justice Mills Mon

day.

The sealed report was delivered

April 4, 1907. On March 26, 1907, the

commission was appointed, Justice Fitzgerald naming Peter Olney and David McClure, attorneys and Dr. Leo

pold Putzel. They declared Thaw

sane.

HOW I HADE

HY HAIR GROW

Woman With Marvelously Beautiful

Hair Gives Simple Home Prescription Which She Used With Most

Remarkable Results.

MOST NORTHERN OFFICE

LITTLE CITY OF SNOW FIELDS RECEIVES UNCLE SAM'S MAIL THREE TIMES A YEAR, ONCE IN THE SUMMER.

WATERWAY OUEST

MAY BE DELAYED

Tariff Mixup May Postpone The Sailing of Congress Committee.

TO SEE SYSTEMS ABROAD

EXPERTS WILL ACCOMPANY THE INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE TO GAIN INFORMATION USEFUL IN AMERICA.

I was greatly troubled with dandruff and falling hair. I tried many advertised hair preparations and various .prescriptions, but they all signally .failed; many of them made my hair greasy, so that it was impossible to

comb It or do it up properly. I think that many of the things I tried were positively injurious, and from my own experience I cannot too. strongly cautlon you against using preparations ' containing wood alcohol and other 1 poisonous substances. I believe they injure the roots of the hair. After my long list of failures I finally found a fclmple prescription which I used with most remarkable results, and I can unhesitatingly state that it is beyond doubt the most wonderful thing for ; the hair I have ever seen. Many of my friends have also used it and obtained wonderful effects therefrom. It i not only is a powerful stimulant to ithe growth of the hair, and for restoring gray hair to its natural color, but it is. equally good for removing dandruff, giving the hair life and brilliancy, etc., and for the purpose of keeping the scalp in first-class condition;

it also makes the hair much easier to

i comb and arrange in nice form. I ihave a friend who used it two months, and during that time It not only stopitted the falling of his hair and wonder

fully increased its growth, but it prac

tically restored all his gray hair to its

natural color. You can obtain the ingredients for making this wonderful

.preparation from almost any druggist. The prescription is as follows:

Bay rum. 6 ozs.; Menthol crystals.

one-half '; drachm; Lavona de Composse, 2 ozs. To-Kalon perfume. 1 to 2 teaspoonfuls. Apply night and morning; rub thoroughly into the scalp. Go to your druggist and ask for an eight ounce bottle containing six ounces of bay rum also one-half drachm of Menthol crystals, and for a two-ounce bottle of Lavona de Composse. Mix the ingredients yourself In your own home. Add the Menthol crystals to the bay rum and then pour Lavona de Compos se, and add the ToKalon perfume. Let it stand for onehalf hour and it Is ready for use. A. G. Lokea Co.. the well-known and popular druggists of this city, has filled the formula for many of their patrons, and states that the satisfaction from Its use is so great that they have found It necessary to make special provision to fill the preseripm promptly and-carefully.

Washington, D. C. July 24. Ar

rangements hai-. I'sen made to defer

the start for Eur. we of the national

waterways commission in case the tariff legislation is not out of the way

by the time of -".he prcyosed date of

departure, which is July 31. Tentative plans have been made to accommodate the commission on transatlan

tic steamers sailing August 3 or 7. The committee will remain a'.rocd until October and In that time they

will visit the chief countries of

Europe. Two experts and two or three

clerks will be taken along. One ex

pert will be Gen. Alexander Mackenzie, chief of engineers of the United States army. Burton Heads Commission.

The committee is made up of seven

senators and five members of the house, from the senate commerce committee and house committee on rivers and harbors. Senator Burton of

Ohio is chairman of the commission

Senator Lorlmer of Illinois is a mem

ber.

One of the chief things which the

commission will study will be the re lations between railroads and water

ways. A study will be made of the system by which other countries in

Europe, especially Germany, protect

their waterways so that the railroads

do not drive them out of business.

In this country the railroads have driven river steamers to abandon their efforts to compete. In Germany

the disastrous competition is prevent ed by law.

The commission wants also to look

into the rates ot transportation on

waterways, the extent to which canals

and rivers are used, and the methods

used in their development and im

provements.

Books to Spread Information.

Information concerning the propos

ed waterway from Chicago to New

Orleans is to be disseminated among

civil engineers and other persons

throughout the country who are inter

ested. Books are to be circulated which will cost the government in

the nlghborhood of $2.50 a volume.

A resolution will be introduced in the house and senate to provide for

the printing of 5,000 copies of the re

port recently submitted to congress

by the board of army engineers concerning the survey made of the Miss

issippi river from St. Louis to its

mouth with a view to obtaining a four

teen foot channel and the consideration of the proposed deep water

ways from Chicago to St. Louis.

According to estimates obtained by

a congressman who is deeply interest

ed in having the report distributed

the publication suggested will cost

approximately $12,500.

The size of the printing bill will be due mainly to the maps and illustra

tions the report will contain. Action by Congress Necessary. One of the Chicago congressmen

few days ago ordered the clerk of the house to secure-the printing of 1,000

copies of the engineer board's report

without maps and illustrations.

The order was refused at the gov

ernment printing office on the ground

that it -would be impossible to fill it

and come within the law, which provides that extra printing to the value of only $200 is allowed the clerk of

the house on each document.

It probably will require several

months for the issuance of the expen

sive-reports after they are authorized

by the two bouses of congress.

One of the admirable traits of the people Is their wonderful self control.

They look te a Mirror and see a sign of age here and aaetker sign of age there, but It Is not on record- that they ever lot.taeir ease reach such bounds

ha.t.asr saasa the leoking glass.

Wainwright, Alaska, July 24. Many and sometimes curious, are the ways

in which the United States postal au

thorities collect and distribute tae mail. Perhaps the most curious mail conveyance of all is that which cross

es the Arctic Circle, carrying the be

lated news of a far-off world to the few white men and women who know

at first-hand the gloom, as well as the

lory, of the long arctic night of win

ter and the unsetting summer sun.

Is Most Northern. Barrow is the most northerly post-

office in the world, with the exception of an office in Greenland. It receives mail three times a year. One of these mails comes by water during the brief

summer, when the ice usually permits the ships to reach that point. The

wo other mails are carried nearly 400

miles by reindeer.

There are about 30 white people liv

ing along the coast of Alaska north of

the Arctic Circle. Seventeen of these are at Barrow. Seven more are at

Point Hope, and the remaining six are

schoolteachers and their wives, who have the bleak tundra and the ice-piled sea for company, and who do not

see a white face more than two or

three times a year.

The terrible isolation of such a life

can hardly be appreciated by those en-

oying the conveniences and associa

tions of civilized society. In this wild

world the mail that brings news from

the old home and that tells of the throbbing world far away is a thing to be yearned for and dreamed over.

Kind of Lottery.

Even in civilized society, where the

mails are received daily and some

times hourly, and where telegraphs, j telephones and other means of communication are at hand the post office has all the fascination of fairyland.

Anxious faces are pressed against the window panes along great city streets waiting for the mailcarrier. for the mail is a kind of lottery that occasionally brings a prize.

The 30 representatives of a culti

vated and complicated civilization that they have left behind, but have not forgotten, how must they feel when after long months of anxious waiting the time for the arrival of mail ap

proaches?

Telegraphs and telephones and the

gossip of distant visiting friends are

unknown. The mail must bring all the news. For days before its arrival lone figures may be seen mounted on great snowbanks or on the red-roofed schoolhouses carefully searching the

beach ice for the least sign of the on

coming mail.

Little, Low Sledge. At last it is seen three puffing rein

deer bitched tandem, a little low sled

seven feet long and 20 inches wide, and a befurred and befrosted driver fling along under the pale tints of the aurora borealis or in the dim twilight of a midwinter arctic moon.

The driver of this odd little mail

stage is an Esquimau by the name of Pavauna. He cannot speak a word of English, but he knows his business

and its significance, for the bells are

rung and the flags are given to the

chilling breeze when Uncle Sam's arc

tic mail comes in sight through' the

gloom.

The last mail arrived here Jan. 7,

but none of it was dated later than

Oct. 5. The presidential campaign was

then on in the home land; but until

the next mail arrives, in April, the

loyal arctic Americans will not know

whom their countrymen have elected

and inaugurated president.

Silent Lies. There are silent lies in addition to those spoken aloud. And these are equally despicable. Living a lie. turning life Into a deceptive machine, is not only desjQcalteiag. but It Is always a confession of weakness. The strong, balanced mind does not resort to subterfuge. It can afford to be transparent, open, because It is conscious of strength and does not need to bide anything. Great minds are open to the light with no dark corners. With them nothing is hidden or veiled. Everybody is afraid of the opaque mind the mind that acts in the dark, underground. Nobody trusts the man who is always covering his tracks. We all lore a transparent mind. Exchange.

"Think, lover said Mrs. Gobso Golde. "I ordered a dinner gown, and that tiresome dressmaker has sent me a traveling suit" "Well," what are you going to do about It?" Gobso Golde demanded. "The only thing is for us to go abroad again," she sighed. Exchange.

BEVERLY AH

BV HOST BEGGARS

Alms-seekers for All Kinds of

Charity Besiege Summer Capital.

CITIZENS TO THE RESCUE

BUSINESS MEN'S ASSOCIATION

WILL INVESTIGATE EVERY SO

LICITOR TO DISCOVER IF HE IS

A FRAUD.

(American News Service)

Beverly, Mass., July 24. A horde of

alms-seekers soliciting gifts for every conceivable charity has swept over

Beverly since the arrival of the presi

dent's family. Believing many are

frauds, the Beverly Business Men's

association, has volunteered to invest!

gate the charity represented by each

solicitor and if the charity is found

worthy to issue certificates. The association has sent a warning not'to give money unless solicitors show

their certificates.

Charlie a Fisherman.

Today was Chirlie Taffs fishing

day. He made a trip to Wenham lake

with Captain Williams of the Sylph

and Captain Robinson of Beverly.

Robert Taft and Vicomte de Cham

brun played golf at the Essex club

nearly all day yesterday. Charlie attended an open-air bazaar given by

society women at Prides Crossing. Helen Taft is seeing Newport under the guidance of her chum, Eleasor Roelker. Yesterday they sat in an automobile and watched the surf. Miss Taft returned to Beverly tonight.

Tortured On A Horse. "For ten years I couldn't ride a horse without being in torture from piles," writes L. S. Napier, of Ruglees, Ky., "when all doctors "an- Other remedies failed, BuckleVs Arnica Salve cured me." , Infallible for Piles, Burns, Scalds, Cpts, Boils, Fever-Sores, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Corns. 25c. Guaranteed W A. G. Luken & Co.

A Card and a Beggar. J "It's a good rule never to give your card to a beggar who promises t$ return your loan of 50 cents or a doiar." remarked a New York clergyman the other day. "Not long ago," he, continued, "a man in clerical clothes called on me, presented the card of a minister out on Long Island and borrowed enough money to get home on. He asked for my card, promising to return the amount promptly' and that was the last I beard of him until I learned that he bad been arrested and sent to jail in a nearby town for swindling. As my card was the only one found on him. be was docketed in my name. I discovered In the newspapers that 1 was behind the bars without knowing it." New York Tribune.

Tree Killing Like Murder. A tree which has stood in every weather, spreading its multitudinous bands in benediction over a neighborhood, comes to be looked upon not as merely so much potential cord wood, the raw material for the mast of a ship or household furniture, but almost as a personage to be revered and cherished like some venerable judge or doctor who has a kindly salutation for every one, whose smile every one is glad to see. whose very aspect Is beneficent and benevolent. To cut down such a tree sometimes seems akin tc manslaughter. Philadelphia Ledger.

Try Our HARD COAL 0. C. Bollerdick & Sod. Phone 1235.

ZVVISSLER'S

Tbere Is Nothing to Equal

QUAKER BREAD For sale by all grocers

.

A Night Rider's Raid. The worst night riders are calomel, croton oil or aloes pills. They raid your bed to rob you of rest. Net so with Dr. King's New Life Pills. They never distress or inconvenience, but always cleanse the system, curing Colds, Headache. Oenstleattoa, Malaria, 25c at A. G. Lufcan Ce.

Razor (Guaranteed) Strop Shaving Soap

$1M

The only razor with a guarantee Including 6trop and shaving soap, sold for 1L00.

Clem ThisUetbwdte Phone 1445 4IStf!.2 SL

hj

Fine Swiss and Nainsook Materials See flie Waiiows 1500 Yards Fine Swiss Flouneings 18, 22 and 27 Inch, worth to $1.00 per yard, Monday 49c Yard 2500 Yards fine Nainsook and Swiss Flouneings and Corset Cover Embroideries, worth 50c to 75c, Monday 23c Yard Come Monday. We Promise Great Emb. Savings. ..LEE IB. MJSBAUM..

is

us

n

''a

PLANTS Potted Flower and Garden Plants good assortment. Bug Killers "Slug Shot" or "Bug Finish" will do the work. Also have sprayers. Wool Wanted Bring us your wool and get the top price. The price is right af Garver& Meyers 911 Main St.

FOR

Small tract of Ism near Ike city suitable and espnloped lor gardening aad chicken raising W. II. BRADBUBY SON 1 and 3. Wcalcotl Block

BAKED HAM, POTATO CHIPS, . BULK OLIVES, v PEANUT BUTTER. ' HADLEY BROS.

1909 Dagerstown Fair.

F. S.

JULY 27, 28, 29, 30. W. C. ABBOTT, President WALKER, Secretary.

Are You Pinched For Money? Do you need a little assistance temporarily? The proposition is easy. Call at our office and state your wants to us confidentially. We can help you out without any embarrassment or publicity." " Our system is simple and easy easy to get and easy to pay. Money Loaned On wagons, pianos, household goods, horses, or any personal property of value without removing them from your possession. Loans made anywhere within 40 miles of Richmond. $1.20 is the weekly payment on a $50 loan for SO weeks. Other amounts in proportion. If you need money, call or write at once. Private Dellafcle RIC?"D LOAN (XV Room 8, CeleniatfBMo

Atrteaus&Mthene 1545.

Suits ..Positively..

$15 Values.

NO MORE

NO LESS

re

El

710

Main St.

.. Henry 17. Dacier ..

FANCY GROCER

Hl3b Grcs

Coffees en

Cor. Cta St.

FLWafMatt

.1234

EataMlamcd 1374

F O.U N ED AN IRON DRAY PIN Also the Best Horse Feed on the Market. Just the kind for summer. A cool and invigorating feed. This is no bluff. We have all th? roods; call and see

RICIIMC

24

11-13 N. Mk

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.

DR. J. A. WALLS, TOE SPECIALIST

21 So.Ui Teat SL. Ol

Offle

Saturday ol cadi week. Consultation and one month's Treatment

TREATS DISEASES OF THE THROAT. LUNG SI, KIDNEYS, LIVEK and BLADDER. RHEUMATISM. DYSPEPSIA and DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. Eplleosv (or falllna- fltat. Cancer. Private and Nervous

Diseases. Female Diseases, loss or vi taiity rrom indiscretions, rues. Fistula, Fissure and Ulcerations of the Reetum, without detention from business, RUPTURE POSITIVELY CURED AND GUARANTEED. ,

SMALL DEPOSITORS

When we tell you that the accounts of hundreds of our LARGEST depositors were at one time our SMALLEST ones, why should you delay opening a Savings Account until after you have accumulated a large sum. Start an account today with what you have and we will help it grow by adding 3 per cent interest compounded semi-annually.

I 3I.C0 WILL DO IT gix5 This bank's large CAPITAL and SURPLUS, its

complete equipment and strong personnel, makes it the Ideal . depository for small depositors who expect to bo bigger ones.

BIcIiInsonTraca Company