Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 50, 8 January 1913 — Page 3
THIS KTUTTJIOITO PAIXADHTM AND SUX TELEGRA3I, WED"ESDAY,.TAXUAItY 8, 1913.
PAGE THREE.
STRIKING GARMENT WORKERS HAD RIOT Two Policemen Badly Beaten Up Before the Rioters Were Dispersed. (National Newt Association) NEW YORK, Jan. 8. Two policejnen were badly beaten up and a number of strikers were injured when 600 striking men and women garment makers attacked a party of 100 strike breakers In Cooper's Square today. Bricks and stones were hurled and a number of windows in factories were broken. Police reserves cleared the square and drove the strikers off. A few of the ring leaders were arrested. Although a drenching rain fell throughout the day 7,000 pickets were stationed around the garment factories. Private detectives and owners of the factories tried to drive the pickets away without success.
WASHINGTON AS A JUMPER." The Father of Hi Country Was a Champion In His Day. There is an athletic record of which every American ought to be pi ' although it Is not found In any su. .ug chronicle. It was made by George Washington of Virr 'a and was a runni broad Jump or twenty-two feet three inches. Exactly when and where Washington made this jump is not known, but it seems to be historical. Thackeray refers to it in "The Virginians." where he tells of the jumping match between Harry Warrington and Lord March and Ruglen. Harry wins with a jump of twenty-one feet three Inches against bis lordship's eighteen feet six Inches. In his letter to Virginia, Harry says he knows there was another In Virginia, Colonel G. Washington, who could clear a foot more. If Thackeray's figures are correct Washington must have been a wonderful athlete. He could easily have won any intercollegiate championship competition up to 1889 and most of the national championships. Then, too, it must be remembered that the future Father of Ills Country did not wear spiked shoes like the athletes of today, nor did he hare a cinder path for his "run" nor a five inch plauk for his "take-off," these improvements not having come into general use as early as the middle of the eighteenth century. Washington today would be a record breaker. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A MAN'S MOTHER. Jutt a Little Reminder to the Son Who May Have Forgotten. But your mother's life has not been easy. Your father was a poor man. and from the day she married him she stood by his side, fighting the wolf from the door with her naked hands, as a woman must fight. She worked not the eight or ten hour day of the union, but the twenty-four hour day of the poor wife and mother. She cooked and cleaned and scrubbed and patched and nursed from dawn until bedtime and in the night was up and down getting drinks for thirsty lips, coveriug restless little sleepers, listening for croupy coughs. She had time to listen to your stories of boyish fun and frolic and triumph. She had time to say the things that purred your ambition on. She never forgot to cook the little dishes you liked. She did without the dress she needed that you might not be ashamed of your clothes before your fellows. Remember this now while there is yet time, while she is living, to pay back to her in love and tenderness some of the debt you owe her. Sou can never pay It all. but pay down something on account this very nlg'at Ladies' Home Journal. WHAT IS THE USE OF CATCHING COLD? None .Whatever, Says a Prominent Physician.
S. B. Hartman, M. D., of Columbus, Ohio, sends out the following pungent and pointed advice to the reading public: You catch cold easily. You have several colds every winter. You do not exactly have catarrh, and yet there is more or less stoppage in the nose. You have got so you expect to have a cold every month or so. Your trouble is lack of resistance. You lack vital powers to resist the climatic conditions. With anything that would raise the nervous tone or invigorate the nutritive system you could go right through the winter without catching cold. It is a foolish waste of energy and a reckless risk of your life to continue in this way. I have a way to avoid all this, if yon will take a cold water towel bath every morning. It should be taken very rapidly, with a wet towel, and can be taken anywhere, in a hotel or a small bedroom. A quart of water is all that is necessary. Rub yourself until you are thoroughly warm and dry. Now, in addition to this you should take a tablespoonful of Peruna before each meal, and if you are out late at night and exposed somewhat to cold, crowds and stuffy rooms, take a tablespoonful before going to bed alIf you will follow these simple, plain .directions you won't catch cold again. 'Try it. Write me about it. It will jwork, and be worth a fortune to you. rFor men or women, old or young, strong or weak, this advice is applicable and there are no failures when It is properly followed. Pe-ru-na, Man-a-line and La-cu-pia manufactured by the Pe-ru-na Company, Columbus, Ohio. Sold at all drug stores. No.86. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST !FOR FREE PERUNA ALMANAC FOR 1913. (Advertisement.)
QUIT CALOMEL! Thousand Are Turning from This Dangerous Drug.
A Safe Vegetable Substitute Is Olive Tablets for the Liver. Dr. F. M. Edwards, a prominent physician of Ohio, has discovered a new laxative and liver toner in a combination of vegetable materials, mixed with olive oil, which is in effect almost exactly like the old and untrustworthy calomel, except that there are none of the bad after effects of calomel. Dr. Edwards has long been a foe of calomel, though he recognized its value along with its dangers. His distrust of the uncertain drug eventually started him years ago towards experiments with the view of discovering a substitute, and he is today in possession of the long-sought-for combination, which is in the shape of a little sugar-coated, olive-oil colored tablet. The results of 17 years' experience and practice are embodied in theoe marvelous little tablets. They are called Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. They oil the bowels, and their effect on the liver has been the means of relief to many of Dr. Edwards' regular patients as well as to thousands of others who have suffered and were afraid of calomel. They are gentle in their action, yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be enjoyed by everyone, by toning up the liver and clearing the system of harmful impurities. 10c and 25c per box. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O. Advertisement) A musements At the Murray. Vaudeville Matinee and Night. Jan. 12 Charity Concert. Charity Concert. Tickets are selling rapidly for the Charity Concert to be given at the Murray theater on Sunday afternoon at three o'clock for the benefit of the Tuberculosis Hospital fund. The program will be presented by Madame Lawrence, former harp soloist with the Thomas orchestra, and the song numbers will be given by J. Louis Shenk, a well known concert baritone. The price is uniform for the whole house, fifty cents, with no extra charges for reserves. . The plat will be open Thursday morning at nine o'clock at the Starr Piano company. The Murray. Rain, sleet and snow, waB unable to keep a goodly sized audience from witntssing the bill now filling a week's engagement at the Murray. Dick Ferguson carried off the honors as a dancer and humorist. His comedy as well as his dancing is delicious, and above all things he posesses the brains to know when he has given his audience all they care for at one sitting. The Mother Goose Girls repeated their great success of the opening night, while the balance of the bill proved all that the large audience expected. For the benefit of the school children of Richmond, two matinees will be given Saturday that all may have an opportunity to witness the celebrated "Mother Goose Girls in Nursery Rhymes." The Murrette. For today at the Murrette, a two reel Broncho feature will be presented in the form of a Military Drama. It has been acknowledged to be one of the strongest dramas of its class ever produced and as this film corporation is unusually popular in Richmond, it is reasonable to suppose that an unusual large crowd of photofans will be on hand to witness this production. In connection with the above there will be an excellent Thanhauser comedy offered that is refreshing. The program is said to be one of the week's best offerings. Thursday has been set aside as Kay-Bee day and one of their famous features will be presented complete in every way. A KayBee day is never missed by a Murrette patron and "there is a reason." The Curious Guanace. "Amura!" (guanacot whispered one, as they crouched low in the boat "Kill" and he pointed to the rifle beside me in the stern sheets. The gold en brown of the white breasted, deerlike animal stood out. a little note oi color, complementing strongly agalnsl the verdant green of the dark, wet forest side, but well out of range. I had seen the Indian guanaco skin capas (cloaksi sold by the fur dealers of Punta Arenas, but this was my first glimpse of the animal itself, many thousands of which I saw later during my expeditions through Tlerra del Fnego and Fatagonia. "You are a queer animal, indeed," apostrophized an Argentine lieutenant as be and Captain Musters once viewed a solitary guanaco. "You have the neigh of a horse, the wool of a sheep, the neck of a camel, the feet of a deer, and the swiftness of the devil." Yet withal a graceful animal and at a distance not unlike red deer, though larger. Outing. Jarred Her. A Chicago woman was traveling in the orient. On a trip through a desert i she was carried by four stalwart blacks in a chair suspended on poles. The natives started out with great cheer, but as the journey progressed ami the sun beat down upon them they began to chant a prayer to Allah. It was melodious, though a bit mournful. Its constant repetition was soothing, and the lady dozed. "Ou awRkening. the prater, grown more mournful, almost despairing, was still being intoned. Turning to her interpreter she asked the meaning of the mysterious words. The Interpreter pretended not to hear, but being pressed for an answer finally bowed low and said: "Madam, since you insist, they pray that the great Allah may make you lees fat" Chicago Tribune.
Veteran Educator Takes Rest
i t. &
Prof. David W. Dennis, of Earlham college will not be at that institution during the winter term, having gone to California for a vacation.
RAILROAD NOTES COLUMBUS, Ind., Jan. 8. John W. Spaulding, who is employed by the Pennsylvania Railway company, is recovering the sight of one of his eyes, which was destroyed by an injury twelve years ago. The sight began returning on Christmas day and is steadily getting stronger. The sight of the eye was destroyed by a cinder at the time Spaulding was firing a switch engine for the Pennsylvania company here. RAILWAYS OF MEXICO. ! A reduction in the ratio of cost of conducting transportation to total operating revenues is hardly what one would expect to find in the last annual report of the National Railways of Mexico. In the fiscal year ended June 30, 1912, conducting transportation, which includes traffic expenses, amounted to 25.12 per cent of gross earnings, as compared with 27.68 per cent in 1911. A reduction in the ratio of transportation expenses to gross is an invariable sign of better opera tion. PERKINS PROMOTED. E. D. Perkins has been appointed general freight and passenger agent of the Bartlett Western, with office at Bartlett, Tex., succeeding E. J. Fitzgerald, promoted. TRANSFER OF PULLMANS. The New York, New Haven and Hartford has announced the transfer of its parlor and sleeping car service to the Pullman cdYnpany under a contract dated January 1, 1913, and running twenty years. The Pullman company will take over the parlor and sleeping cars owned by the New Haven, paying, it is understood, about $1,500,000, and will gradually introduce steel cars, the first replacement being on the limited trains. All of the employes of the New Haven service will be retained, their pay and relative positions being unchanged. STATE COMMISSIONS. The Arkansas railroad commission has adopted "reciprocal demurrage rules, to become effective January -, providing for penalizing the railways at the rate of $1 per car for the first and second days, $2 for the third day, $4 for the fourth day, $5 for the fifth day, and each additional day, for failure to furnish cars when ordered by shippers. The Lion's Share. "The lion's share" embodied the sarcasm of old Aesop, in whose fable, at the conclusion of their Joint feast, the animals announce their wish to divide the booty, the Hon claiming one-quarter by reason of kingly prerogative, one-quarter for his superior courage, one-quarter for his dam and cubs. "As for the fourth quarter." said the Hon, "let who will dare dispute it with me." get new life and vigor by taking Scott's Emulsion after every meal. It revitalizes the watery blood and furnishes Nature with new nourishment to make r4 octree, healthy blood and fd thm nerve cenfers. Scott's Emulsion strengthens the bones and clothes them with healthy flesh. Scott's Emulsion assimilates so quickly it conserves energy and compels health. Scott & Bownt, Bkmnfietd. N. J. U-T4 K1URR ETTE Today Only A Great Military Drama "THE RANKS" 2 REELS 2 and "A POOR RELATION" KAY-BEE TOMORROW.
THE FIRST AST0R.
A Daring and Resourceful Operator In the Fur Trade. John Jacob Astor was born In the little village of Waldorf, in Germany, In 17G3. Just as France at the close of the Seven Years' war was ceding Canada to England. He sailed to our side of the Atlantic in 1783. when George III. in the treaty of Paris was acknowledging our independence and when the merchants of Montreal were establishing the Northwest company. He became a fur dealer, gradually gained control of the trade south of Lakes Huron and Superior, except that which was in the hands of the Mackinaw company, and won a reputation as a daring and resourceful operator, which made his name known in Montreal, St. Louis. London and Canton. He had a doien vessels afloat, representing a capital of $1,000,000. carrying furs to England and China In 1S00, and at the time that the purchase of Louisiana in 1803 pushed our boundary to the Rocky mountains he was the -wealthiest and most successful merchant in the United States. North American Review. Juice from a freshly cut white potato frequently applied, often will remove an obstinate wart.
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INSPIRED AUTHORS. Ideas Come to Them, It Would Seem, In Spite of Themselves. Bernard Shaw has stated more than once that he is "inspired." "1 am pushed," he says, "by a natural need to set to work to write down conversations that come into my head unaccountably. At first I hardly know the speakers and cannot And names for them. Then they become more and more familiar, and 1 learn their names. Finally I come to know them very well and discover what it is they are driving at and why It is they have said and done the things I have been moved to set down." Other writers and painters, too. have described their processes in a similar way. William Blake was positive and emphatic in describing himself as a mere amanuensis, writing down the words that were audibly spoken to him. and he painted in the same way from a model set before his eyes and visible to him alone. Rodin, the French sculptor, gave his assent to the same Idea of models visible to the eye of the artist. Dickens said that his characters were actually visible and audible to him. and it will be remembered that "Kubla Khan" was dictated to Coleridge while he 6lept London Spectator. Pains AH Con Dowker, of Johannesburg, Mich.,
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BIG WIRE STRIKE NOW IN PROSPECT
(National News Association) CHICAfco. Jan. S President S. J. Kokenkamp. of the Commercial Telegraphers Union, has sent out a circular to the members of the order urging a strike against the Western Union Telegraph company. The officers of the Union some time ago gave out statements saying that a strike was under contemplation. The circular refers to the discharge of five members of the union who had been employed by the Western Union at Sioux City. Ia. The circular urges a strike as the only means to end the "persecution of those who seek to hold membership in our union." SLAVES OF THE DESERT. A Lashing Taken With Gratitude by the Emir's Servants. Abd-er-Rahtuan wore a heavy scowl that boded ill for some one, and bis An gers careseod bis rawhide koorbag a lie watched tlie camels being laden. When all was ready to start he called out four names, and four dejected looking Arabs uuswe-ed shamefacedly to the summons. The emir spoke to them dispassionately, as oue inibt speak to one's dog, and then, tossing tils koorbag to the nearest of the four culprits, he bade him lay on a dozen of the best, while he watched and criticised each stroke with grim earnestness. It was not a pleasant sight to watch, and I thought it policy to turn aside, but the rest of the caravan thoroughly enjoyed the exhibition and greeted each well laid blow with approval. When the punishment was completed each of the culprits in turn came forward and kissed the emir's feet, thanking him for his mercy and calling Allah to witness that they were hi dogs to do with as he wished. From their subsequent conduct I have no reason to believe that they did not mean every word they said, though at the time I was skeptical. It is not every day that one Teams such an object lesson in humility and feudal service. Wide World Magazine. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Hare Alwajs Bough) Bears the Signature of MURRAY TODAYMOTHER GOOSE IRLS In Fantastic Fancies from Nursery Rhymes 4 OTHER BIG ACTS 4 SPECIAL SATURDAY TWO MATINEES 2 P. M. and 3:15 P. M.
"The Week ol the Thirteenth" 1913
CdDLHSEHJM Tuesday, Thursday and -Saturday Morning. Afternoon and Evening
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ENTHUSIAST Mrs. Lena Gresham. of CEntan, Miss., Has a Few Facts U Tell Our Readers About Cardui. Clinton. Miss. "Thanks to Cardui " writes Mrs. Lena Oresham. of this place, 'l have been greatly relieved." ! suffered for three years from female inflammation, and had taken medietas from four different physicians without much benefit "I have received more benefit from seven bottles of Cardui, than from all the physicians." Just try Cardui. That's all we ask. It speaks for itself. It has helrd so many thousands, it must be able to belp you. Trying Cardui won't hurt you. It is safe, harmless, gentle in action, and purely vegetable. If vou are weak, tired, down and out, try Caidui. If you are sick, miserable, and suffer from womanly pains, like headache, backache, dragging feelings: pains in side, arms, legs, etc. try Cardui. It is the medicine for ail women. It is the tonic for you. N E-Vn'te .- Ladie' JUNrienrr De4 . OdM . octa Medicine Co . Chanaaoeaa, Twv. ter Svttai j Ivtraet-on. and 4-pare book. "Hrwne T't,nt TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sale at Cooper's Grocery. TO BEGIN The New Year Sit down and sum up your bills, putting those of the butcher, grocer, rent roan, Insurance agent, etc.. etc.. all in one amount, then come and fee us and give us an opportunity to explain our plan for relieving your financial pains." We loan on furniture, pianos, teams, etc.. giving you weekly, monthly or quarterly payments, in which way you do, not miss the money. If in need of money, fill out this blank and mail to us. Phone 1545. Your Name Address . . . Richmond Loan Co. Colonial Building, Room 8. Richmond, Ind. , call City Ticket Agent
The Best Way
