Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 294, 30 August 1911 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT.
THE RICHMOND PAI IiADIU3I AND SUX TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY AUGUST 5U,
WILLIAM J, BRYAH IS HEARD BY BIG INTERESTEff CROWD (Continued from Page One.)
..Was Introduced to the Audience by Mr. Shiveley as "The Greatest Orator of Them All."
render a more valuable service than lie can earn," stated the speaker. On Social Questions. Mr. Bryan touched upon the various Questions that are agitating society, referring to the drink evil, especially Jn relation to the complacent attitude wof the church toward its communicants whose bank-rolls render them i Immune from clerical admonition; to (the gambling habit, more insidious than the latter. Journalism was brought to the bar and accused of selling Its Influence. He arraigned jthe church for lethargy and the law 'for its dcviouflnoBg and delays. 1 He spoke eloquently of our duty as a nation, of the destiny which should be fulfilled that this country should jbe as "a light set upon a hill," for the ! guidance of the lesser peoples. He cited as an illustration, a meeting he attended in Brazil where speeches were made in English to the effect '.that the United States was the ideal or which the citizens of that country I strive, of the pinging of "America" in English and of the whole atmosphere Vot the affair toward emulation of our (national institutions and standards and of the grave responsibility that 'was ours.
Mr. Bryan did not, it is true, make
I any vital political references al
(though he came close to it now and
I then, veering oft gracefully. That his I audience was al've to the slightest krend in that direction was shown by theapplause that greeted every nearremark to the "political situation." Dr. Bryan's address, however, concerned Itself entirely with the moral responsibility of the individual toward eocity and abounded in epigram, homely truth, brilliant diction, and lofty sentltaient. Above all, however, was his magnetic personality. For his honesty, j sincerity, eloquence and gifts he is respected and admired but for that
, indefinable thins which draws people
to him, he is loved. It is possibly Dr.
Uryan's aura, which should be easily
photographed. It was almost visible yesterday afternoon to human sight.'
tin his peroration Dr. Bryan said:
"What a great destiny God has as
signed to our nation, to be the path Under among the nations, a' torch'
bearer to the world. We cannot fulfill
our charge unless we apply ethical
standards to public life. We as citizens
' cannot do our duty unless weanswer
i cannot do our duty unless we answer
;a man if he gain the whole world and I lose his own soul."
Bingham Entertains. Ralph Bingham gave a personally conducted entertainment last evening that delighted his great audience, the backwater from the Bryan meeting. Bingham is another funny man but,
(unlike his immediate predecessors, did (not seek to inculcate any nice little
moral precepts handed out in a joke
capsule. It was more on the order of a
vaudeville stunt than a' less secular
lone, but anyway it was highly amus
ing. Bingham is a clever comedian
rwith a 'large amount of personality as
his chlelest asset and that he can be
'Something besides funny was lnstanc-
kd by bis recitation of a pathetic story nn verse and preserving the fine line
between the sublime and the ridicunous. Not that It was particularly sub
lime but that it did not err in being
(ridiculous was an artistic triumph for fair. Bingham. Mr. Bingham is a good
Pfellow on the platform and had his aujdlence with him from the start. He
mixes up some funny musical business
with the rest and his appearance was.
altogether, one of the pleasant successes of the present Chautauqua.
Two more concerts were given by
Ittae Apollo Concert Company yester
day, this aggregation of musicians being popular with their audiences and their appearance tonight in an e labor-
late program is looked forward to with
Interest.
Susie Listens to the Music
Lh.iiii-i.-i lit nrjtn'-i' in -i -1 n -l . . . -'-I'-'n!-!-' - -i-u-jvn..-i.T.ni-u -i.-i.nr.J i . .. 1 1 g- gj f OH-lie O- (thy PlAV GCWpl this fie srr 1 0MiC- -g ----- But ; TO GOTO I -tfTk tL J SRCSoJSc1, VVRI TOATWON '" : - , l p -r ' yov j jkc azZhm C - . ' jMr vsPeuARe!b Q v v flSVv'' ' they Loofc u A; 7A t& jA&BoxfS ' '"" I . Ieb J m . :
SflEEZEFEST HOW FORMALLY OPENED Hay Fever Victims Hold a Convention in a White Mountain Resort.
(National News Association) BETHLEHEM, N. H., Aug. 30. Sneezers, for whom sneezing is a com-
?mon interest, rounded up in this fam
ous White Mountains resort today for the annual meeting of the United States Hay Fever Association, which derives its name from the fact that all its members sneeze in June, July and August and as much longer as they are afflicted with hay fever outside of the regular hay-fever season. Hey fever is not a pleasant disease, and it makes its victims suffer and de
stroys their good temper. But it is by far the best organized disease in America. So far as is known the jaundice sufferers have never held a convention, and no one has ever called a convention of those afflicted with ingrowing toe-nails. But for many years the hay fever victims have gathered here each summer to discuss their common troubles. Every member of the association pays annual dues of fifty cents, and this payment entitles him to receive all of the many pamphlets and other forms of literature that are issued each year on the disease and methods for procuring relief. Rev. Clayton E. Delamater, of West Bridgewater, Mass., occupied the chair at the opening of the convention today. More than a score of States were represented in the attendance. The initial session was given over to a symposium discussion in which veteran sneezers and physicians told their associate sufferers of all the new discoveries in the line of remedies and preventives. Tomorrow the members of less experience will be given an opportunity to tell what they have learned about the ailment.
PAY BIG DIVIDEND 69,000 P. R. R. Stockholders Get $6,700,000.
"UPLIFTER OF THE HUMAN FACE?" Dedicated to Byron W. King, who In his Chautauqua Lecture Expressed l dsslre to be known as the "Uplifter !ef the Human Face." BY ORAF DRAW. "Uplifter of the human face," May your mission here on earth Help to shorten much the space Between our sorrow and our mirth. Uplifter of the human face," May your forte of doing good Ehow the world the saving grace Of gladsome heart and smiling :. mood. "Uplifter of the human face," God give you power now unknown, - To leaven earth with joy apace And reap the grain which you have ' '; sown. . "Uplifter of the human face," Oh, may the years be many still So you can In a measure place - m . a i f I
Tne seal or pleasure on me wiu.
"upiuter or tne numan race."
' . Ood of Heaven make your power. Where'er you go from place to place , As forceful as a summer shower. "Uplifter of the human face," n... k w - -1 ..i
. ii vi nau uui luir mums v vii. Wilt be crowned with love and grace
. When your work on earth is done.
(Palladium Special) F1TTSBUFIG, Aug. 30. An indication of the number of people dependent for the whole or a part of their incomes upon the prosperity of railroads is afforded by the compilation Just completed of the holdings of Pennsylvania Railroad stock on August 5th, 1911, the date of record for the August dividend which amounts, to $6,764,610.75. The total outstanding capital stock of the company on that date was $450,974,050, divided into 0,019,481 shares. These shares were held
by 69,760 persons, the largest number
of stockholders in the history of the company. The average holding of each of these persons was 129.29 shares of
a par value of $6,464.50. The ten per cent stock allotment recently made by the company increased the capital stock $38,357,850, to August 5th, 92 per cent having availed of the privilege of paying in full instead of in two Installments. The number of stockholders prior to April 12th, when the allotment was made, was 66,046, showing an addition of 3,714 share holders in the past four months. The figures made public by the Railroad Company today disclose the fact that on August 1st, 15.65 per cent of the entire capital stock was held abroad by 10,000 shareholders, with average holdings of 141 shares each. In this country, there were on the same date, 21,545 shareholders located in the State of Pennsylvania, with av
erage individual holdings . of 108 shares. In New York State, there were 12,006 shareholders. The number of women shareholders was 32,801. When the total number of shareholders of Pennsylvania is added the many thousands of shareholders in other companies controlled and maintained by the Pennsylvania Railroad, not to speak of the other thousands of bond holders in the parent and subsidiary companies, the intimate relationship of the earnings of this railroad to the lives of a very large number of people scattered all over the world, will be appreciated.
On the golf links in Essex, England, a player recently drove a ball which killed a skylark at a distance of two hundred yards.
Her Age. "How old would you say she was?" "Well, let's see. When we were iv high school she used to snub me because I was a kid. Now I'm thirty seven, and well, I should say she was about twenty -eight by this time."
A man in California has patented a device which generates electrical energy from the horizontal impetus of ocean waves. Hitherto such power has been obtained only from the vertical or perpend idular motion of the water.
Palladium Want Ads Pay.
To strengthen the muscles and gather renewed energy, take Nyal's Nutritive Hypophosphites it nourishes the body tissues and its continued use means a complete restoration to health. Quigley Drug Stores.
DERMA VIVA, the Ideal Face Powder Makes face, hands, arms and neck as white as milk and does not show or rub off. Pimples, Black- ' heads. Freckles, Moth or Liver Spots cured in a few days. Have handled this preparation for years and recommend it. Price 50c. LEO H. FIHE. ADAMS DRUG STORE.
Newspaper Advertisement Points Way to Health
I can truthfully say that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is a very good medicine, not alone for kidney trouble, but also for weak and sore back, as well as for rheumatism. About a year ago I became ill and unable to work, my trouble being a lame back. I read of your SwampRoot in the newspaper and in an Almanac. Believing it would do me good, I went to my druggist, Mr. Skinner, and purchased a bottle. Finding relief in one fifty-cent bottle, I purchased several more and in a short time was able to continue with my work and am to-day feeling well and strong. I always recommend Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root to my friends as I believe it is as good a medicine as can be found. AUGUST STRONG, 3412 Second Street, No. Minneapolis. Minn. Mr. Skinner makes affidavit that he sold the Swamp-Root to Mr. Strong.
Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Binghamton N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton. N. YM for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable Information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Daily Palladium. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drag stores, .
(SET WELLE
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IIP SPINAL CORD - ' -i I. i . ! i. Went Surgeon's Knife Cure Expected.
NEW YORK, Aug. 30. An announcement came from Beth Israel hospial last night that the surgeon there had performed an uncommon and delicate operation on a man who had for five weeks been completely paralyied below the waist as the result of a fall from a scaffold. It was discovered
that three of his vertebras had been fractured and that the fragments of bone were pressing upon the nervous fibres of the spinal cord, cutting off all sensation and motor impulses from the man's lower extremities. The doctors exposed the spine and were obliged to remove the greater part of the three fractured bones. The patient was Jacob Mchlman, 30 years old, a Russian, who lives at 357 South Third street, Brooklyn. Five weeks ago when he was working on a building in Hoboken he fell several
stories to the ground. He was badly hurt but did not. lose consciousness.
When he was lifted up he was unable to stand and had to be carried to his
home. The physicians who first examined the man were unable to dis
cover that he had a broken back nor did the X-ray pictures which they took show any such injury. The neurologist at the Beth Israel Hospital, where Mehlman was taken a few days ago, decided after he examined the man that there was a fracture of the spine. Dr. I. S. Hirsch, the radiographist, confirmed the diagnosis by a number of X-ray pictures. It was then that Dr. Richard Lewisohn, the attending surgeon at the hospital, was asked to operate. When Dr. Lewisohn had uncovered
HOME MADE BREAD Received Daily Both whole wheat and white H. G. HADLEY
the three vertebrae which had suffered from the accident he found the plates of bone enclosing the spinal cord on either side and connecting the large mass of the vertebrae with, the processes at the hack, splintered in such a way that they pressed in upon the cord. It was necessary to remove the greater part of the three boneleaving only the columns in front of the spinal cord for support. During the operation the cord Itself was exposed. - The first indication that the operation had bien successful was noticed when the man began to recover from the anaesthesia. His legs moved spas
modically and the organs which had been paralyzed resumed their normal functions. The .physicians now believe that Mehlman will recover and that he will bo able to walk.
Easily Romombored. Waiter Bog pardon, sir, but the gentleman at this table usually remembers me. Mr. McTavish I've nae doot o that, ma maunie. Why, you're quite a' comic London Telegraph.
Who has deceived thee as often a thyself? Frankiin.
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