Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 172, 24 May 1912 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PAlAADItm AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1912.
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iLiiLnHuLL nuLLn IS LAID TO REST i . King Frederick of Denmark in Famous Riskilde Ca- ... thedral Today. (National News Association) COPENHAGEN, May 24. The body of the late King Frederick VIII.. of Denmark, who died May 14, was interred today in the magnificent old gothic cathedral at Roekilde, the burial place of Danish kings for upwards of a thousand years, with a ceremony the lmpressiveness of which was accentuated by the widespread evidences of popular sorrow. , The presence of numerous kings and queens, princes and princesses, grand dukes and other members of European royalty, together with scores of dazzlingly attired diplomatists and military and naval officers, made the scene within the cathedral one of unusual brilliance.' Christian X., the new king of Denmark, with the Dowager Queen Louisa, sat nearest the altar. -Then were seated the German Emperor, the King of Greece, Queen Alaxandria, the Dowager Empress of Russia, the King of Norway, the King of Sweden, Prince Waldemar, the Duke' and Duchess of Cumberland and the Duke and Duchess of Macklen-birrg-Schwerin, all of whom were closely "related to the late monarch. The funeral service was one of impressive simplicity. The primate of the Danish Church officiated. Eight officers of the Danish army carried the coffin to the chapel of Frederick V., where the remains were entombed beside those of the father and mother of the deceased king. The conclusion of the service was marked by a salute of 21 guns and volley firing by a party of infantry. The burial service was none the more Impressive than the scenes enacted in the capital before the departure of the funeral party for Ros- . kilde. Every bell in Copenhagen tolled throughout the progress of the funeral. Business and work were at a ELttnuaiiii mrougaout me ciiy, wane emblems of mourning were displayed everywhere, the little half-masted flags and shreds of black bunting being as conspicuous in the poorer quarters of the city as the rich and solemn draperies that were displayed on the facades of public buildings, commercial establishments and. handsome residences in other sections. The enormous crowds of town people, garbed in black, swelled by thousands, of arrivals from the country districts, thronged the square in front of the Christianborg church, while thousands of others stood bareheaded during the passage of the hearse and mourners from the church to the railway station. Both sides of the streets traversed by the funeral, cortege were hedged with lines of troops. The windows and roofs of buildings all along the route were filled with spectators. A HASTY MARRIAGE. And the Bride Was Not the One the Wooer Sought. Oliver Cromwell was so great a man that be dwarfed his surroundings, and It is singular how little the majority of people knew about the family and family life of this "the most typical Englishman of all time." He had three daughters, the youngest of whom was Frances. Her attractions must have been considerable. The young woman had several Ave affairs, but certainly the ne that had a most amusing termlnatton was her fllrtatlofa with her father's chaplain, Jerry White. One day the protector surprised Jerry on "his knees in the very act of kisslug the lady's hand. Cromwell coldly demanded the meaning of the scene, and Jerry, with a pretty wit, exclaimed that he had long been courting "that young gentlewoman, my lady's woman," although without success. He was now thereby humbly praying her ladyship to Intercede for him. Cromwell tnrnea at once to the waiting woman and requested to be informed why she refused the honor his friend, Mr. White, would do her. The young Woman, fully equal to the occasion, replied magnanimously that If Mr. White intended her that honor she would not be so churlish as to deny him. ' "Call Godwin," returned Cromwell,' and the pair were married straightway. ' Feminine Strategy. Her name is Amy. and she Is one of the nicest young misses living on the npper west side. Her father concluded last week he would do something to encourage Amy in habits of industry. Therefore he offered to give hef f5 if she would trim a hat for herself. She accepted the proposition and two days later appeared before her father wearing a hat of her own creation, and a very pretty hat it was too. Her father was ' delighted and handed over the $5 with real pleasure. The next day Amy. wearing another and still handsomer hat, met her father on the street. And did you trim that one, too?", he asked, with manifest pride. "No,"! wasihe reply. "I bought this hat with the $5 you gave me and presented the other one to the janitor's little girl." New York Fress. ; Setting an Example. "Whether- the hotel proprietor I lunched Tvitlr.the other day Is a hero publicly maintaining his sincere convictions as an encouragement to others or a slave in his own domain I cannot determine." said the gray headed man. "I met him in the street not far from his hotel, and at hit suggestion we lunched together. We ate in his own dining room. He tipped the waiter. We bad checked our hats, and be tipped the boy In attendance. "'Do you tip in your own hotel r I gasped. AlwayssaId he. 'It is aa much trouble to wait, on me a a anybody else.' "New York Sun.
THE GAY 10 IMPHGEI1T GERM
Btff It One Before It Estatlishes a Strangle Clutch by Way of the Pantry Window or It Will Soon Occupy the Best Bedroom.
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Look out for the germ. This is the bugaboo that confronts you at every corner. That peeps through the key-bole. That grabs you in the offing. That boos .you in the sink. That chases you cross lots and nails you to the board. No doubt there are plenty of germs and bad ones. Mean, disgusting, impudent germs, that pry into your bodily habitation and make themselves at home whether they're wanted or not. And there carouse at will. To say nothing of nervily inviting in other germs for a night of it or to join an indefinite house-party. Germs will walk in and crowd you right into a corner, elbow you up the stairs, pursue you to the attic and there lock you in so tight you never will get out. No attempts at escapes across the roofs or falls through tie chimneys or drops onto adjoining ledges or leaps from the eaves follow. When a germ has got you, he's got you. The great thing is to give him a solar plexus blow before he lands you an uppercut in the jaw. For a germ is insidious. He will crawl in through .the pantry window rather than boldly make an entrance by way of the front door. And then before you know it, he's sitting !n the best chairs, eating the choice bits, wearing your Sunday clothes and entertaining all the callers. A germ is a fearsome thing and an ungentlemanly. He has none of the finer feelings that animate his enemy, Monsieur Serum, but is a blatant, impertinent, insinuating, bullyragging little beast. He is said to perch upon the rim of the communion cup and to hang to the discard of the kiss. To minimize romance. To create bodily discomfort. To rend society, disrupt families and generally "play the devil." Anyway you look at it its a bad case for the germ. Is it not the truth, however, that you oftner than not squelch things by ignoring rather than by eternally fighting and trying to circumvent, if not entirely annihilate them ? .Organizations thrive on persecution. Martyrs invite it. , Religions are built on its foundations. Demagogy flourishes on opposition. Hypocrisy grows fat ph it. False prophets batten off Its vitals. It is the rigging that bolsters up the shams of the world. There is nothing more crushing, more annihilating than to be ignored. Unless it is to be forgotten. "To be ignored may be complimentary. To be forgotten humiliation," says a certain sage. But this is by the mark. Although, for that matter, its all by the mark. It is the truth, however, that, while some attention should be paid to sidestepping the agile and wiley germ, there is a point at which you may capitulate by excessive zeal in eluding. Your determination to evade this horrid little interloper may result in a run Into a blind alley. About
istait Pad
No boiling
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This new table beverage tastes much like rich Orientaljava coffee, but is free from caffeine, the drug in coffee and tea. Put a level teaspoonful in cup, pour on boiling water, stir, add sugar and cream to taste, and you have instantly a palatable, nourishing, hot table beverage. Tins containing sufficient for about 100 cups cost 50 cents at grocers. Smaller tins at 30c make about 50 cups Coffee averages about double that cost
Ilinisflaiimfl ; PaDstamm Healthful Satisfying Economical Made by Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Pure Fuod Factories, Battle Creek, Michigan.
No doubt there is danger lurking in the public drinking cup. Especially if you see it. The writer recalls referring heretofore to the hideous hour at the Chantauo.ua when those in search of moral.
religious and literary sustenance were ajlke seen to defile to the first spring and there line up to take turns at the capacious, if battered, tin vessel so securely, if unnecessarily, chained to the trunk at a hardby tree. It was a grewsome and revolting sight. Old, young, black, white, babies, children, mothers, fathers, preachers, dramatic readers, commercial clubites, people from Qreensfork and New York City, tired business men, sleepy teachers, bad boys, policemen, lawyers, merchants, chiefs, if not literally the beggar-man all draining the cup to its rusty dregs. The deponent returned to town and wrote an article about it. Individual drinking cups were argued. The germ held up and dangled before the public gaze as the destroyer of social, physical and civic equilibrium. Everybody advised to wash out their mouths with some sort of purifying acid and the Chautauqua management arraigned for permitting such aquatic orgies. Still, it is a fact, that later, strolling through the park one glorious day after the Chautauqua tents had been folded up and more or less silently pitched into the merchant's delivery wagon, the writer being athirst, quaffed heavily from this same germ-ridden cup. Quaffed yet again and with enjoyment. If you don't see a thing its terrors or its joys are an unknown quantity. The cup and the writer were in solitary, yet sociable, propinquity. What more natural than that the latter should be solaced by the former? And in no less a publication than the Bell Telephone News i3 it recorded that the legend to the effect that the telephone transmitter spreads disease is but a legend. That it has no basis in reality. What good news is this? How have we not been harried by bottles of purification and swabs placed at a convenient angle wherewith to 8 wipe the germ? How have we not been loaded down, or up, with dire warnings, a gainst the use of the public booth? How tormented with visions of tubercular germs squeezing through a crack in the teeth while the latter abutted upon the mouthpiece! And with what glee will we not now paste up, cheek by jowl with the irritating but useful telephone, this clipping from so authoritative a source. List to this: "Ever since the telephone came into general use, fussy folk have been worrying about its disease-spreading powers. The mouthpiece of the public telephone is talked into by all sorts of people, sick and well. It may readily come in contact with mouths full of disease germs, varying from diphtheria to tuberculosis. Strange to say, however, a series of careful tests begun as far back as 1905 and carried on In both this country and England, particularly aimed at the transmission of the newest i i 0 ft ?5 4
II BMi
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EVERYBODY'S FRIEND
The old family doctor, of whom so few are now seen in this age of 'special lets" waa the valued friend and ad viser of bis patient. They depended j on him to keep them in health, and j cheer them with his counsel. He taught them the wisdom of preventing illness by watching closely after the health of the family. Mrs. 8. H. DuBols write from her home at Hempstead, I I.: "Vinol is an old friend of our family. We have used it for years whenever any of us need a tonic on account of being in a rundown state of health, and it al ways gives perfect satisfaction. We have used nine bottles this winter." There are thousands of families who could and do say the same thing. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron preparation without oil, has proved its value by bringing back rugged health and strength to vast numbers of weak, rundown men, women and children. That is why we sell so much and guarantee it to give satisfaction. If it disappoints you, you can have your money back at once. Leo H. Fihe, Druggist, Richmond, Indiana. MRS. HARRY LEHR The society leader of New York and Newport, says: "Mrs. Mason's hair treatment preserves and beautifies the hair and greatly increases its growth." Mrs. Mason's Old English Shampoo Cream is now obtainable. Leo H. Fihe and other Druggists, 25c. tuberculosis, have, without exception given negative results. That is to say, no case against the telephone as a transmitter of tuberculosis could be made. Despite previous failures to convict, the British Post Office has completed another series of tests. It examined not only the ordinary public telephone, but had one set up in a tuberculosis sanitarium and used by consumptives in all stages of the disease. Here again, the telephone came through the laboratory with a clean bill of health." Bah! you say. What'd you expect to read in a telephone magazine. You look toward the bottom of the page and point triumphantly to the little words "New York Press." Written by some one on a common newspaper and copied into the technical magazine to bolster up its case. But let us make a grand salaam to the telephone magazine. At least it did not steal the article, hair, root6 and all, and make believe it had written it itself. All honor to the Telephone Magazine. Read it regularly. For from this can be deduced its celebrated "policy." Indiana papers please copy. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS The . Foster . Construction Co.. have opened a factory for the manufacture of Cement Blocks, Coping3. Porch Columns, Caps Sills, etc., at Tl.e Old Mill Works. They have a complete outfit of modern machinery and are using nothing but washed and graded macerial3 in all their worK. If you are a contractor it will pay you to use the best materials obtainable. If you are going to build it will pay you to insist that your contractor use the Foster Construction Co.'s products. Would be pleased to have call at Factory and inspect their Products or call phones: Res. 2529 or Factory 3406. food drink
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BROKE HER PROMISE.
She Hated to Do It, but Then She Flt - That She Waa Justified. A widely known motor racer waa asked by a friend if be would be so kind a to allow three yeung women to accompany him while he was trying out a new racing car. "Why. I can't be bothered with Psengent at a time like that, and especially with women. They always talk to me. and I can't have my mind distracted. It might prove dangerous, you know." "But these girl won't bother yon. Ill tell them not to. One of them la my sister. They are craiy to go; want to say tbey have ridden with yoo. You know how girls are." "Well, If you will tell them they mustn't speak to me while I am drirIng they may go. Tbey mustn't moTe around or do anything to distract my attention. You Impress this upon them. If they are willing to do this they can go." The promise was made, and they started. At one place the driver ran over a water guard and there was a tremendous bump. He did not try to look around, as he was going at a rapid rate of speed, but presently he felt a timid touch on his shoulder. "What is it?" he growled. A weak little voice answered him: "Really, I hate awfully to bother you. I know I shouldn't and promised not to. But I feel I must tell you Helen isn't with us now." Harper's Magazine. There is nothing worse than an offensive breath; it comes from a bad stomach, sluggish liver. Hollister's Ricky Mountain Tea removes the cause, cleans the stomach, stimulates the liver, sweetens and purifies the breath, makes you happy and free. Try it tonight. S5e. Tea or Tabs. A. Q. Luken. Misunderstood. He I am crazy to kiss you. SheWell, if you think so you needn't. Exchange. 9 0VVVB A
Three hundred Wolverfne Furnaces heated three hundred Richmond home during eva winter just past. These furnaces have been manufactured and Installed by th Marshall Furnace Co., for thirty-two years. We do not experiment. Ask the man wio ha n. FULL LIST OF CUSTOMERS ON REQUEST. Get your furnace in early; nothing to pay until fall, then one-half of contract pHoe, th bat. ance to be paid when YOU are satisfied that furnace is satisfactory, with a written -wra. tee to take furnace out and refund your money In the spring If w fail te heat year ha. We live In Richmond.
E. M. CATHCART, 519 So. 7th. Phone ke
I That Ma
JANESVILLE TWO-ROW CULTIVATOR Botle Pin and Spring Brake, Balance Frame, Three and Four Shovel Gang. It Is Without a Doubt the Best Two-Row Cultivator Made.
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THE ONE-LEVER CULTIVATOR EXCLUSIVE JANESVILLE FEATURES Which Make It the Universal Favorite of the Farmer: One lerer only, to operate that's all. One simple movement raise tie shovels in or out of the ground and automatically balance the cultivator. How does this compare with the three operations necessary on others? Easy on man and horse alike. The Janes ville Cultivator is in balance all the time. The pole never flies np on the horses' neck. . The lift is hish, easy and adjustable. The simplest, strongest and most easily operated cultivator ever offered to the trade. It really ha no competition. OUR MOTTO: WE SELL NOTHING PUT TOE PEST JJ oiiiies -MsiFdw aire Ce
Seriously Busy. The Earl of Elgin when he was viceroy of India was not - Ood horseman, and he was always rather uneasy and Custered when riding. One day when be was riding near Simla and devoting all hi attention to keeping his seat, an aid-de-camp came galloping up with some Important news. He told bis excellency what h had come about, but the earl rode on wit boot replying. The aid-de-camp rode alongside and. after a few minutes, thinking hi message had not been heard, repeated it in a rather louder tone. The eart Jurned upon him indignantly. "Great Seett. ma n !" be exclaimed. "Don't you seeM'm buay rid'og? Don't interrupt mer
OUR TURN OF SERVICE. There t so much to be set right in the world, there are o many to be led and helped and comforted, that we must continually come in contact with such in our daily life. Let us take care that we do not miia our turn of service. Elizabeth Charles.
The Kind You Havo Always Bought. : THIS is the caution applied to tit puWio announcement cCjtorU tka has txen manufactured uader the upRrrUion of Ghaa, H. .JHetcheaefor over 80 year the genuine Oastori. We respectfully ojCI th attenaloa of fathers and mother when purchasing Caateri to that th wrapper bean his signature in black. When the wrapper t rmTd th aaaaareppear on both side of the bottle in red. Parent who fcuar maad Cya i for their little one in the past year need no warning against oouaUstet mmd imitations, but our present duty ia to call tb attention of theomafar gwnur ation to the great danger of introducing into their famiUa psBrtaa itadxss. It i to be regretted that there ara people who are) now engaged inta) nefarious business of putting up and seliinjr. all eert-of 'Mbatttost, or wtat should more properly be termed couaterfeita, for medio! prepajpatlo' i- iA " . Aiiii.Mi nuduiiiui. atkurtmn dawwtJ a
on the mother to scrutinize closely that Tor themselves, dui ine cnuu Gennine Castorla always bears the
"WOLVERINE" OR WARMTH
Supt. Installation. B. W. WELCH, 1693. 25 S. 17th. Phon Honey for
LEMEMTS
Freckle - Face
New Remedy that Removes Freckle or Cost Nothing. Here a chance Miss Freckle-Face, to try a new remedy for freckles with the guarantee ot a reliable dealer that it will not cost you a penny unless it remove the freckles, while it it does give you a clear complexion, the ex pense Is trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength from Leo H. Fihe and on night treatment will show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beautiful complexion. Rarely Is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask Leo H. Fihe for the double strength othine. a this la the only prescription sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckl?. The Proper Missile. Judge-Aid what did yea do t curb his passion? Prlsoaer Hit him with a piece of curbtne. what ahe give her child. Adults caa-d mm w to slfaatmr of' Leeal Representative. 739. the Farmer 0
