Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 71, 27 January 1912 — Page 3

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXD SUN-TELEGRAU, SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 19131 PAGE THREE.

s ru:c.iT.! ((S3m Notes! VlLjtfW , By 0. M.JC.

Statistics show that there- are fewer accidental death among dpmmerctal travelers while riding on J passenger trains than In any othef manner, hence the advisability of in accident policy that covers any klndof an accidental death, the U. C. T. A-. is that kind of a policy Here are some of the ttings which Supreme Councelor GrlfShs tells us the Order Is doing for e good not only of our Order but of the general traveling public. i "A few years ago you ilept between oiled sheets so small that irou could not get the top sheet up far inough to protect. your face from the st 11 dirtier covering. Now In some states you have clean sheets, the top one being long enough to turn down 14 Inches at the top. ) "A few years ago you tried to dry your face on a towel where 199 other men had tried to do the sae tnwg Now in some states each gueft has an Individual towel. J "In some states plenty off fire canes are provided for the safety of guests. Some states compel, railroads to pay $5,000 for a life crushed out on their road in an accident. Hotols and railroads did not Institute these reforms at their own volition. but by the efforts of the Grand and Subordinate councils of 17. C. T. to gether with some other organisations that were not selling accident insurance. Are there other, reforms needed where, you travel? Brother Griffiths says then go to your home council and register a kick. Kick with both feet If necessary; have your whole council Join you; then send the kick on to Grand Council and from there to Supreme, and It won't be long until there are "things doing" if your kick Is Justifiable. The traveling men of Missouri are trying to have a bill passed allowing them to vote even thought they are not at home at the time of registra tion. It is estimated that 10.000 of that state lose their vote because they are not at home at the time of regis tratioa. ATTENTION I All newly elected precinct commit tee men will meet at the Court House Monday morning, Jan. 29th, at 10 o'clock, to elect a county chairman, vice chairman, secretary and treasurer, and transact any other business to come before them. Francis McMinn, Vice Chairman. John E. Peltz, Secretary. T. P. A. Notes -Regular monthly meeting Saturday night January 27th. This meeting will be Important as it is the first meet lug of the spring activity. A committee will be selected to get up a ticket to be nominated in February and voted on is March. Issue No. 3 of the new T. P. A. Magazine is at hand and reads good. Mr. Williams Is to be congratulated on his efforts to give the organization something first class In a magasin. and if he kieps up Che "clip" he has started oat on he will surely be successful. Richmond is Just now in the height of a fwoat securing money to put our most; excellent Y. M. C M. on a sound footitf a most worthy cause and that the money will b raised goes witlott saying. With s flourishing Y. tk C.'A. and a building that Is a credit tajt town three times Richmond's size, a set of most congenial otneers, does the rest of the town measure ineciallT to atraveling man com- . 7 Ml?' GIRL f GIVES UP ;. i : . Vfcruji'. 4 to Ycrfx Doctc? Aixl Opcretico. R ? to Hth by X'l Ccspottisl. l4kkeepaW, N. Y.-"I run a sew. tsatthtna " huge factory and got r I all run down. I had to give ap work for I could not stand the pains in my back. The doctor said I needed an operation for f emale trouble but Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound helped mo mora than the doctors did. I hope that every one who is suffering will Ct the Compound, lfy taint, nervousness and tsknche are gone and I have gamed five pounds. I owe my thanks to your metoctne tor ft la the wotkfear cirts friend, and nil women who t3er should writ to yon for special advice."-UJes THUS PUSOQ, 3 Jay C. PofttopsH N. Y. When n remedy has Bred for over jainy years, steadily growing in popo- - samyanq innuence, and thousands upon thousands at, women declare they owe tSarfr very Uvea to ft, ia it not reasonable t believe that it is an article of treat ' We challenge anyone to show any sjaor one remeay tor a special class of wnteb baa attained such an enorI and and maintained it for so Man as has Lvtfi. R Pinkhan.'. Vsjalatla expound. .. K JinxlL?r Eats Co. (eaaJU Cfjmm.UMM. YswlsttarwUl t mnrJb road and answered av a

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es MIGHT HAVE HAD A GOOD HEAD OF HAIR The man who wears d toupee does not like It. but has the courage of his MAS Wlt lnama Nature never intended that the top of the head should be left entirely without protection. A bald head is very , anvontlhl in contraction of colds ! and neuralgia. Wearing an artificial top piece counteracts this tendency. and, aside from the improvement in the personal appearance, is amply Justified. How much better it would have been had the man, now chronically bald and wearing a toupee, but realized earlier in life the approaching danger and devoted a little regular attention to his hair, which would have saved it. There is a remedy which will absolutely prevent baldness. Loss of hair in nine cases out of ten Is unnecessary, being due to dandruff and the germ that causes it. This germ must be destroyed and the accumulations of dandruff checked. Then the hair will not fall out, but instead will grow naturally and luxuriantly. Newbro's Herplclde is the remedy, regular applications of which will do this. It has long been known as the original remedy that kills the dandruff germ and is absolutely dependable. So reliable is this preparation that all druggists now sell the one dollar size bottles of Herplclde with a binding guarantee to refund money if unsatisfactory. Herplclde applications may always be obtained at the better barber shops and hair dressing parlors. - Anyone desiring to try Newbro's Herplclde before purchasing a large bittle will receive a nice sample and booklet by sending 10c in postage or silver to The Herplclde Co., Dept. R.. Detroit, Mich. A. G. Luken and Co., Special Agents. ing from one of our neighboring cities? Do our depots, outside of our beautiful Pennsylvania station, compare favorably? Do our street cara, and bus and cab service, measure up, and do our hotels compare to advantage? ABk some of the boys on the road that come to Richmond. We hope they are merciful in their remarks as they go to the next town for Richmond people like to have good things and Is as proud as any city when they have them. Ben Hill says the new T. P. A. management of the Arlington is going to give Richmond an European Plan Hotel as soon as repairs are completed and one that the city will be proud of. The rooms will be modern in every respect, and the Cafe will be strictly up to the minute, with service and bill of fare the best to be had. The management has Post C's best wishes for success. -Chas. O. Tooker, ex-librarian of Post C, was in town, this week. "Took" is selling a line of specialties and says "business is good." Says John to Dad. "It makes me sad To Just look on." Says Dad with tact, "Be that a fact? Bring forth a deck." Says both, "By gum! We're playing Rhum." Hasty. Superintendent Alex Gordon of the Richmond Street Ry. advises up that the Twentieth street belt" car will now run till 6:30 p. m. This news will be hailed with delight as it will greatly relieve the 6 o'clock congested condition of traffic. ' Don't fail to come to the meeting tonight. Come with something on your mind outside of your hair and hat and say that something. Then the committee to select two tickets for officers for the ensuing year to be nominated at the February meeting will be selected This committee will also select a separate ticket of candidates for delegates to the national convention at Peoria, to be nominated in February. All meetings from now on till the national convention in June will be full of interest and don't fall to attend them. . Do you "want to go to Peoria as a national delegate? If you do announce your candidacy. There will be four members to go and you may be one of the four. Here Is a remedy that will cure your cold. Why waste time and money experimenting when you can get a preparation that has won a worldwide reputation by its cures of this disease and can always be depended upon? It la known everywhere aa Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, snd Is a medicine of real merit. For sale by all dealers. Amusements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At the Gannett. Feb. 1. Polk and McGibney Recital Coming "The Gambler." v At The Murray v All Week Vaudeville. At Coliseum. Feb. tS Symphony orchestra cart. -The Gamblers' "The Gambler Charles Klein's intensely interesting drama, does not deal wita petty games of chance, but larger financial dealings In Mr. Klein has woven a of romantic situations into

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"The Gamblers" comes to the Genoett theater soon. At the Murray. Tonight is the last opportunity for seeing the excellent bill presented at the Murray this week. This afternoon the house was packed from pit to dome and this evening should see another record-breaking crowd. ApJ - w - a n rew wr jr imriuruwuv ui uc Tom Gillen, the Celtic Star, in his famous talk on Finnegan's is easily one of the hits of the bill. This ca pable performer in his own original manner told, as only he can. these funny stories relating to Finnegan, bis friend. The stories are witty and as told by Gillen are enough to send any one into laughter. Gotchell "and Medora have a little singing sketch, telling of the little squabble between husband and wife and the reconciliation. Garfield and Denham have a singing and dancing act that is most clever. Mr. Garfield is an excellent singer and a clever comedian while Miss Denham is one of the neatest dancers here for some time. For next week the Alpha Sextette, four young ladies and two men singing anything fsom grand opera to rag time,, will hold down the head line position and promises to be one of the real bills of the season. SPAIN'S NATIONAL ANTHEM. "La Marcha Reads' Waa Composed by Frederick the Great. Frederick the Great was the cou poser of the Spanish national anthem Frederick's ambitions were varied. Hiperformed on the flute. He desired t be thought a poet. He quoted Latin but his quotations would have mad. Cicero stare and gasp. During that remarkable friendship which existed between him and Voltaire the authoi of the "Henrlade" exclaimed with de rision, "See the dirty linen I have t wash," holding up Frederick's manu script, which had been sent him to re vise. In the field the great warric. carried about his own poems in hb pocket and a bottle of poison, so t babe should not be taken alive. Menzel': picture depicts the king with his flute and Bach dedicated to him one of hb compositions. The story of the composition of th Spanish national anthem is full of in terest. A little while after the conclu sion of the Seven Years' war Frederic: at a court reception to the surprise o. every one produced a march which h had composed. The Spanish ambassa dor, both a musician and courtie: asked for a copy to send to his royo' master, Charles III. That monarcl admired the piece, and it was oftei heard at the Escurial. After a time i: was laid aside and almost forgotten. In 1869, after the deposition of Isabella, Marshal Serrano instituted a competition among composers for a national anthem. Some 500 compositions were sent In, but none of them was so Inspiring as Frederick's march, which had been exhumed from the archives. This was chosen and is today known as "La Marcha Ilea lie." London Globe. SCHOLARS IN CHINA. They Rule the Country Where All Foreigners Are Called Boors. The scholars rule China today. Dress Is of more moment there than In nhy other country, yet the scholar, al though poor and meanly dressed, is received with honor by the, highest ir the land. - "The superior man" of the classic is the equivalent of the "good man' with us. This man. his character an his conduct are the constant them of approbation. His virtue, his bono bis soc'al relations, his manners ' public and private, are carefully d fined. His dignity is among his hlpl est qualities and must be maintains fat any cost. In contradiction to the popular ide of dignity, however, the superior mar will play battledore and shuttlecocl with his feet and fly kites, while tht boys, like old men, stand sedately by and look on. This he does as a method of instruction and to show the children how the superior man can re lax when his high purpose is to entertain and educate the young. To the Chinese the foreigner is a boor and a barbariaq, It seems a hopeless task to teach him politeness. The Chinese wonders why the foreigner leaves his own country at all. "Is it too small for him to make his living, or has he come to observe the superior people? If so he is to be commended. But, alas, what a boor he is! National Geographic Magazine, Tennyson's Bird 8ounds. Perhaps the best word for the cry of the cricket is that of Tennyson. "Not a cricket chliTd." he writes in "In Memoriam." But Tennyson was always curiously exact in his vocal rendering of the songs of birds. What could be truer to sound than "the moan of doves In Immemorial elms?" Then, foo, the linnet, the robin and the thrush "pipe," the woodpecker laughs" and "mocks.." the lark and the plover "whistle." the jay "scritches." the parrot "screams." the peacock "squalls," the blackbird "warbles, while the ocean fowl rshrlek" and the eagle "yelps." London Graphic High Finoi "What makes him look so solemn? He gets bis month's salary tomorrow." "Tbafs Just the trouble. His wife and his mother-in-law allow him SO cents a week out of it and he's trying to make up his -mind to strike for a dollar!" Atlanta Constitution. The United States spends every year $11,500,000 for education in art alone. CHICHESTER S FILLS

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CASCARETS INSURE

INSIDE CLEANLINESS The millions of Caeca ret users never have Headache, Constipation, Biliouaneos or Sick Stomach. It ia more necessary that you keep your Bowels, Liver and Stomach clean, pure and fresh than It is to keep the sewers and drainage of a, large city free from obstruction. Are you keeping clean inside with Cascarets or merely forcing a passageway every few days with salts. cathartic pills or castor oil? This Is important, Cascarets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system the decomposed waste matter and poison in the intestines and bowels. ? No odds how badly and upset you feel, a Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning. They work wnile you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your entire family feeling good for moaths. Don't forget the children their little insides need a good, gentle cleansing too. . The Scrap Book Willing to Help. "When I was a young fellow, just beginning the practice of law." said Magistrate House, "two of the oddes: characters about the courts were tli Cohen brothers. David and Philip They bad a habit of ayper ring on tb. opposite sides of the same case. On day when Chief Justlee Shay called the calendar in the city court David Cohen answered 'Ready' for the plain tiff in one case, and immediately Phlli; Cohen answered 'Ready' for the d fendant On the second call Dark? again answered 'Ready.' but Philip an swered 'Not ready.'- This caused Jus tice Shaw to say: 'Why. Philip Cohen, fifteen minutes ago you were ready How Is it that you are not ready now?' "'May It please your honor.' replied Philip Cohen, 'I was ready when you first called the calendar, but since then I have learned that my brother David has fifteen witnesses in court, and 1 have only twelve. I should like an ad journment so that I may be able to go out and get three more witnesses.' "Whereupon up spoke Brother David, saying: 'May it please your honor, if that is all that is worrying my brother Philip the case can go on. I will lend l him three of my witnesses.' "Mew York World. Sorrow. affliction, whether Heht or Count each grave. God's messenger sent down to the. bo thou With courtesy receive him. Rise and bow And ere hti shadow pass thy threshold crave' Permission first his heavenly feet to lave. Then lay before him all thou hast. Allow No cloud of passion to usurp thy brow Or mar thy hospitality, no wav Of mortal tumult to obliterate The soul's marmoreal calmness. Grief should be. Like Joy. majestic, equable, date. Confirming:, cleansing, raisins, making free; Strong to consume small troubles, to commend Great thoughts, grave thoughts, thoughts lasting to the end. Aubrey de Vera. A Familiar Warning. Mrs. Jones' favorite warning to her young progeny when they were in mischief was that she would tend to them in a minute. "Tending" was accomplished b'y applying her open hand where It would do the most good. When Harry was four years old he was sent for the first time round the corner to the grocery. In a few minutes be came trotting soberly back with the nickel still In his hand, but no bag of onions. "What's the matter 7" asked his mother. "I'm 'frald of the man," he said solemnly. "Oh. be won't hurt you," reassured Mrs. Jones. "Bun along and bring the onions. I'm in a hurry for them." A second time Harry disappeared round the corner and a second time returned without his purchase. "I'm frald of the grocer man." he explained aa before. "Well, what makes you afraid of him?" demanded bis mother impatiently. "Why," answered the little fellow, "bofe times when I goed in he looked at me an' said. 'I'll tend to you In a minuter " A $1,000 industrial fellowship has been given the college of agriculture of the university of Wisconsin for the purpose of studying pea diseases with a view to their prevention Nofcfc COLLAR off, easy to'te'Ss tie fas. nktsfy CMs9nsr mtasBWs T&vy V T RAIOHEA

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RARE VALUES S5fe Co.

Our Trees Their Relation to Water By Prof. John F. Thompson City Forester

ARTICLE III. Abouthree-fourths of the land surface of the earth is covered with' wa ter; besides this, it exists over the earth in clouds, and through the earth as rivers, in the earth adhering to soil particles and under the earth as "The Water Table." Prom fifty to ninety per cent of the weight of living plants is water. Such plant tissues as wood are fifty per cent water; fruits, like peaches and apples, are from seventy-five to ninety per ceqt water; while some water plants' have only two per cent solid material in their entire bodies. It may be Interesting to note that about sixty-six per cent of the human body by weight is water, varying all the way from two per cent in the enamel of the teeth, to seventy-five in the blood and ninetynine and & little more in the saliva; and what is true of the human body is practically true of all animal bodies in the same classification. Water is bo abundant that we are apt to overlook its importance in the lives of both animals and plants. It is unlike any other liquid known, in that, it is at the same time colorless, tasteless and chemically neutral, which makes it a fluid especially adapted to the uses of both animals and plants. Every one has noticed how oil will rise in a lamp wick to feed the flame. The force that makes it rise thus in the threads of the wick is called capillarity. If such a wick be placed in water instead of oil. while it will not burn, the water will climb higher than oil or any other known liquid. If water bad no greater capillarity than oil, our trees could not grow so tall, for this is one of the forces that causes water to rise in the tissues of the trees, to the leaves where it escapes. If water had no greater capillarity than oil, it couldn't spread to such great distance in the soil, nor rise from the lower subsoils to supply the roots of plants. No other liquid possesses this property equal to that of water. If one will take the trouble to consult a table of densities in any work on physics, he will find that water does not behave like any other liquid when it freezes. Any other liquid gets denser and therefore heavier as it gets colder, but water does not. When its temperature is lowered toward the freezing point, it does get denser and heavier until it reaches 39" Fahr. or the point of its greatest density, and therefore its greatest weight. If one calls this point 1.000, then when the temperature runs down to freezing point the density is only .928 and, therefore ice is lighter than the water upon which it rests, although it is colder. Now oil does not behave that way, nor does any other liquid. When oil gets colder and approaches the freezing point, the t cold oil on the top set tles to the bottom and when it freezes, it does so from the bottom. up. So alcohol in freezing, freezes from the bot tom up; but water freezes from the top down. Now it is easy to see how plant and animal life are thus benefited by this astonishing behavior of water. If it acted like any other liquid, our lakes would freeze from the bottom up, and in severe winters would become solid ice from bottom to top and during the Bummer would never thaw out. Now if we again consult a text book on physics and look up the tables of specific heat, we will find that water is taken as the unit of comparison, and Prof. Lamar tells me that it is because it requires more heat to change its temperature than any other known substance liquid or solid: That is, for example, if one applies the source of heat equally to a pound of water and a 'pound of iron, the iron will show a rise of temperature first. In other words, the water will take up as much heat as the iron but will not get so hot. On the other hand, if the temperature of a pound of water be raised to 100" and the temperature of a pound of iron be raised to the same degree, in cooling the iron will show a loss of .a degree much more quickly than the water. Every one knows some of the facts resulting from this remarkable characteristic of water. There are some countries in the world whose mild climates depend entirely on this power water has of taking up great quantities of heat and of giving it up alowCniLDHEQ Ui.3 ARE SICKLY Xotheni who vmloe their own costfort uid the welfare of thrirrhllrtrea. should sever be without a box of Mother Gnj'u Sweet Powder for Children, for Me tteoasboat the mm. Tbey Break ap Colda, KaUereYOTarishrMM, Coaatipatian, Teething PUoraiiHcaoWheepdHtninorhTronhtea. Head by Mothers for IS years. TIIB8H POWDKKS XKVEU rAlU.BMMIUWKBUrHLtie. M'l wyaOMMt, Sample buIM .K.Y. E. C. HADLEY SCI IT) FuRcaiscsr caivY niadss - We are now making up sets et .heavy harness for delivery. It's to your interest to. investigate. Miller's Harness Oil, best on the market today. Call and lot us give you prices.

ly. Countries that are inland are colder in the winter and hotter in the summer because they are away

from bodies of water. Every boy j knows that the water of a swimming I hole seems warmer after sundown) in summer, but he should know that! it isn't. It is the land that Is cooler. The water retains its heat while the land gives it up. j This of course, is the explanation of j the land and sea breeses, the breeze blowing from sea to land In the day time and from land to sea at night. The earth is full of results that are brought about by this ability which water has of controlling heat. But to come back to the relation of plants and water. As was stated in the beginning, from fifty to ninety per cent of the weight of plants is w; ter. This time of year the trees on our streetB contain the minimum of water, but that amount acta as a pow erful protection against the cold which they have to endure. When warm days come in winter, the water in the trees takes up great quantities of heat, and when the cold days come, the heat is given out slowly and plants are thus protected against sud den changes of temperature. It acts in the same way in protecting animals. If horses are given plenty of water, they are able to endure more cold because the heat of the body is absorbed by the water and retained in the body. Water also acts as a powerful regulator of temperature in the bodies of plants and animals in the hot season of the year, because of the great amount. of heat it requires to change it into -vapor. It requires three huu-J dred times as much heat to vaporize water as alcohol, and no other liquid requires nearly so much, and therefore in . the summer time when the hot rays of the sun beat down on the folliage leaves, if the plants have a water supply sufficient, the evaporation from the leaf surface prevents the sun's heat from burning up the leaves. It is just as true in the case of animals. If an animal irespires freely, the hot sun's rays- do not enter the body, but the heat is used up in vaporizing the presplration on the surface of the body. Hence it is easy to see that a deficiency in water supply is bound to cause damage to plants both in winter and summer. We may therefore conclude this article by saying concerning .water what Mephistopheles said to Faust concerning blood, that it is "Altogether a very special kind of Juice." Fish That Eat Oysters. As a result of recent investigations the fishes most destructive to pearl oysters are those commonly known as the globe fish. Another fish belonging to the group, known as pagrina, is seldom or never found without oysters in Its stomach. -The larger species of rays are suspected of committing great ravages in the oyster beds. IF YOU HAD A HECK AS LONO Aa THIS FCLLOW AND HAD sonE THROAT TOfJSILIfJE WOULD QUICKLY WW euos it ' wjf ap w are bbb ej m am be bo is to be protected against

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Many People Cannot Pronounce Name of World's Most Famous " Catarrh Remedy. High-o-me that's the proper way to pronounce HYOMEI the old reliable remedy, that has rid tens of thousands of people of that vile and disgusting disease. . HYOMEI is made of purest AustralIan eucalyptus combined with thymol and other effective antiseptics and is guaranteed to be free from cocaine or any harmful drug. HYOMEI is guaranteed to end the misery of catarrh, asthma, croupcatarrhal deafness, bronchitis, coughs or colds, or money back. Breathe it that's all. no dosing the stomach. Complete outfit, including indettructible inhaler, $1.00. Extra botties of HYOMEI, if needed. 50 cents at Leo H. Fine's and druggists everywhere. Admitted His Foolishness. It was In Corse Tay ton's younger days aa a manager, when his highly interesting eccentricities were beginning to distinguish him. lie bad appeared in a small city with his company and was already Indulging his habit of making speeches before the curtain. The editor of the leading paper In the town attended the performance, after which, in the sapient manner of Ma kind, be went forth and wrote a bttlpg piece for bis paper, which may bo called the Herald. "Core Payton," wrote the editor. "It a fool. He looks like a fool and act like a fool." This, thought the editor, will embarrass Corse Payton. who will be careful hereafter how he acts. Yet the next day. the billboards bore bills In this wise: "Corse Payton is a fool. Herald. "Of course Corse Payton Is a fool for givinsr a dollar show for 10. 20 and 30 cents." To Got Its Ikndfcbl Effcsts Abays fey ha Ccnv:no Sold tp ell leasing OneSizeOtobtftOi a Deft! CYCIOEScd WILL COME DCUGAri,JEriIaITiSGC0. Will Protc t Yea Against Loss From Them. PHONE 1330. Room 1, I. O. O. F. Bulldinfj EHI.RRAY'O WEEK JAN. 22 APD ALE'S ZOOLOGICAL CIRC US OTHER FEATURES accident or sickness oy a policy la THPC"

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