Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 85, 18 February 1913 — Page 6

PAGE SIX.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. TUESDAY.FEBRUARY 18, 1913.

ELS PUSH

MADEROARMY

INTO

PALACE

Rebels Slowly But Surely Advancing Their Lines Despite the Opposition of the Federals.

(Continued from Page One.)

activity all night and today when the marines from Boetoon and Norfolk came pouring into the city. Fully 2,000 marines were mobilized here this morning and 1200 of them under the command of Col. Barnett will leave this afternoon on the transport Meade for Guantanamo, Cuba, where a marine camp is being established.

BOILED COFFEE OF BRAZIL.

The Real Thing as the Natives Make. and Drink It. The Brazilian amid the marble splendors of his New York hotel sipped the tiny cup of black coffee that was to cost him 25 cents. "This Isn't bad," he said, "but it isn't like the coffee we drink on my father's coffee plantation in Brazil. '"There, when a coffee craving seizes you. you tnke a few handfuls of green coffee berries, and after rejecting all the imperfect ones among them you place these picked berries in an irou ladle and roast them over an open fire, '"You roast them till they begin to moke. Then before they are charred you take them off, drop them into a mortar and pound them with a pestle carefully. '"Meanwhile a cup of cold pure water has been set on the fire. When it comes to a boil the ground coffee is thrown into it a tablespoonful to a cup and the boiling is allowed to go on for about three minutes. "Now you drink the coffee. You drink it without straining it. The grounds lie at the bottom or the cup, and if you don't shake it the fluid is as clear as crystal crystal clear, black, frtgrnnt. "The French can boast as they please of tbeir filtered coffee. I tell you there's nothing like the boiled coffee of Brazil, all picked, roasted and prepared within a few minutes under the open sky." New York Tribune.

Life at Low Temperatures. Most recent experiments show that the idea that bacteria in Kenernl sin not harmed by freezing Is un:ii ' On the other hand, the elTVct low temperatures has Iwn overestimated. It has been .: that s destructive effects :;ndm eil uin bacterial life from Hie-leu pat-' imp of salt and pounded Ice as from that of liquid air. The critical point appears to be somewhat about the freezing point of water. An organism that can pass this point in safety itaay be proof against even absolute zero. A few Individual bacteria . In very culture tried were able to endure unharmed the temperature of liquid air. This is believed to have been due to the absence of water in cells. St. Loais Republic.

Knew Her Business. A weather beaten woman, dressed In new and stylish clothing, was marching up the street one Sunday morning when down came a sudden shower. The woman had no umbrella, but quick as a flash sbe caught up her dress skirt and threw it over her bat: "You'll get your ankles all wet, WaTia." said her husband, who was coming along in the rear. ' "Oh, never mind the ankles," called ut the woman as she hurried along. "I've had them the last sixty years, and I only got the hat yesterday." Harper's Bazar.

Not Amiable. "We had to let that servant go." "What was the matter? Wouldn't ce work?" "Oh. she did the work all right, but she couldn't get along with the children." "That so?" "Yes. She'd lose her temper every time one of them kicked her on the shins." Detroit Free Press.

Library Furnishings. "You have a beautiful and complete library. I suppose your husband passes many delightful hours there." "1 think so." replied Mrs. Wise. "That's the room In which he keeps his cigars and poker chips." Washington Star.

Sour Stomach Gas on Stomach Bloating Constipation Quickly Vanish with a Home-Made Remedy Hare Is the recipe: Take two teapoonfttls of ordinary baking soda, aid two ounces of LOGOS Stomach ,Tonie extract and enough water to 'make a pint. Shake it up and you have a home-made remedy that drives away all signs of stomach trouble in & jiffy and then builds up the entire digestive system. ' If you are troubled in any way with .your stomach, get busy with this tonic treatment. The rmedy is easy to prepare; It does the business and saves considerable money. ; Get busy with ' your stomach now and save trouble later on. Ton boy the LOGOS Stomach Tonic x&nmC for fifty cents a two ounce bot tie.' . If your druggist does not have it (seas 80 cents to Logos Remedy ComUtaay, Port Wayne, Ind.. and receive a Bull sisa package, postpaid.

PAVED STREETS FILTHY

While These Are Constructed for the Purpose of Making the Thoroughfares Sanitary, the End Is Nullified Through Neglect to Keep Them Clean.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. The senate has passed a bill providing for county tuberculosis hospitals over the state. Under certain conditions. One of these is that several counties may combine and organize and build a Joint hospital. Another is that a small tax levy shall be inaugurated to enable these institutions to operate. If the house should pass this bill the matter of a Wayne County Tuberculosis hospital seems as good as settled. Sometimes easy sailing for a bill, however, is only a forerunner for defeat. This bill, or one of a similar character, passed both houses of the last Legislature but was not signed by the Governor. It was said that this was occasioned by the rush of the last hours and that the bill was side-tracked. That it never reached the Governor. Perhaps it was deflected with an object. Conspicuously lost. Was never intended to reach the gubernatorial chamber. However that may be, whether by accident or purpose, the bRl was not signed and was of course nullified. This year the legislature seems in an amiable mood toward this bill. The senate, as just stated, passed it

without opposition, but it is hard to

lngs should not be kept in presentable condition. Standing in the lobby of the high school on the south side the other day, the writer noticed the handsome marble side-walls so covered with dust that students had written thereon very legibly. A well groomed town is an incalculable municipal asset. And, after all, it doesn't take much time, nor is it much trouble, to keep a town clean if it is done "in short shifts. That is, if streets and sidewalks were cleaned every day, or at suitable intervals, and cleaned in sections, the whole problem would be solved. American cities have a way of waiting until everything is about as bad as it can be and then having a general orgy of cleaning-up. Then after everything is spick and span, instead of keeping it so, it is allowed to lapse until necessity compels another onslaught.

LADY MARY'S DIET.It We a Entirely Too Dainty to Suit Her Italian Doctor.. That recipe of the tallest Scotsman

in London two meals a day and live

Clergyman's bon Had Tuberculosis; Now Well People who have Consumption are oftea filled with bright tiopea of recovery, only to realize that improvement Is hut temporary. Consumption is dreaded by everyone. Those who had it and used Eckman's Alterative can testify to its beneficial effects. No one need doubt it there Is plenty of evidence from live witnesses. Investigate the following: Amenta. N. T. "Gentlemen: Prior to Feb.. 1WJ8. I was located In Rochester, N. suffering; with Latirippe. which developed luto Tuberculosis. My physician gave me one month to live. 1 was having terrible night sweats and mid-day chilis and losing (fib rapidly, having gone from 155 to U5 pounds. 1 roughed and raised continually and became so weak that walking a few feet exhausted me. On my return home, my regular phjslclan gave me little encouragement. My father, who U a clergyman, beard of Erkman's Alterative and induced me to take It. The night sweats and chills disappeared, my rough became easier and gradually diminished and in a few days I developed an appetite, the first in months. I am now in perfect health, back to 155 lbs. I feel certain that I owe my life to Eckman's Alterative." (Signed! E. H. COWLES. "Gentlemen: I cannot find words to express my appreciation, of what jour remedy has done for my son. It changed despair into hope within two weeks after he began taking it. and without any doubt in my mind, it saved his life. I wish to add my endorsement to every word of his testimonial." (Signed) RKV. J. J. COWLES. Pastor Presbyterian Church. Erkman's Alterative is effective in Bronchitis, Asthma. Hay Fever: Throat and Lung Troubles, and In upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habit-forming drngs. Ask for booklet telling of rei-overles, and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for more evidence. For sale by all leading druggists A. G. Luken and Company. (Advertisement)

SECRETLY WEDDED

L7 s

(Palladium Special) FOUNTAIN CITY, Ind., Feb. 18. The marriage of Miss Ruth Rothermel to Mr. Albert Foreman was sol-

the Englishman of the eighteenth century nor yet to the man who lived

tell, of course, what will become of it. j abroad. Here, for instance, are a few Here is an opportunity to get in a j trifles which Lady Mary Montagu man-

word with our esteemed legislators j "tea to exisc on in iiaiy

forever would not have appealed to emnized some time ago, but has been

kept secret until recently. Mrs. Foreman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Rotherroel. The young people

who haunt the purlieus of the house. For if this is not a beneficent measure none can be. . The matter has been given a good deal of publicity of late, especially in this paper, and the public is aware of the necessity of definite and immediate action. With these county hospitals all over the state, Indiana should be going a long way toward stamping out tuberculosis in this section of the country. The impression seems to prevail, however, or at least a number of persons have so expressed it within the hearing of the writer, that these hospitals would be sanitariums. This is a mistake. They would be merely local sanitariums. To take care of local cases those

advanced ones which have reached the hopeless stage.

TheBe people are here now. And theobject is to segregate them from the community and give them the proper care and attention. These county hospitals would not be Eanitariums for the treatment of any piscn from the outBide who would oine here. ' .j:y institutions for the care of the 's own citizens who, by their tlisti ation over the county, infect Loth people and houses. If this is understood any faint opposition so far made would doubtless vanish.

"I wake about 7 and drink half a pint of warm asses' milk," she wrote, "after which I sleep two hours. Then come three large cups of milk coffee and two' "hours after a large cup of milk chocolate. Two hours later my dinner, where I never fail to swallow a good dish (I don't mean plate) of gravy soap, with all the bread, roots, etc., belonging to it I then eat the wing and the whole body of a large fat capon and a veal sweetbread, concluding with a competent quantity of custard and some roasted chestnuts." Even then the day was net done. Lady Mary goes on: "At B in the afternoon I take another dose of asses' milk and for supper twelve chestnuts, one new laid egg and a handsome porringer of white milk." In these degener-

I ate days it would be thought that the ' patient had done very weN. The eighteenth century Italian was , not so easily satisfied. The parish doctor marveled how Lady Mary managed to survive with such a finicking appetite. London Chronicle.

will make their home in Ft. Wayne.

Wanted To Buy male Fox Terrier pup. Address "B Z" care Palladium.

A Dutch Ironclad. It is of interest to note that, according to some authorities, the Dutch were the first in the modern period of history to build an Ironclad and that during the siege of Antwerp by the Spaniards in 1585 the people of that city built an enormous flat bottomed vessel, armored it with heavy Iron plates and thus constructed what they regarded as an impregnable battery. This they named Finis Belli. Unfortunately the vessel got aground before coming into action and fell into the hands of the enemy. It was held V7 Alexander of Parma to the end of the siege as a curiosity, but was never employed by either side in any actios.

THE COUNTRY LAWYER.

9497 A Simple Popular ; Model.

A Legal View of Him as th Slavs of His Clients. "A professional baseball player in part bases his claim for a large compensation upon the theory that in ac

cepting service he surrenders in a great !

property of his employer," writes Almond O. Shepard in "Case and Comment." "If this was the basis of compensation for the lawyer in the rural districts he would speedily become a millionaire. For be is the property not

We have paved streets because they are regarded as more sanitary. And this would be true if the paved streets were kept clean.

Any community can tell you that j oniJ ' one individual, but frequently they are not, however. a whole community, and the greater You can't take deep-sea observa- nis success, the wider his reputation, tions in any city you may visit and the abject is his slavery. His

know that this is true. The Indianapolis streets down town at least ooze slimily. Also in Cincinnati. And so do they here. Last week's conditions demonstrated that the paved street in this town is about as nasty as anything you could imagine. Held-over ice melted half-heartedly and mixed with the filth on the streets in a sort of gluey paste. Streams and pools of dirty water interlarded the spaces made by the 6treet-car tracks. To pick your way across the street was a matter of some difficulty. Unless you cared to splash through. Along the line of hitching-racks. on streets where they are still permitted, you will find nauseous conditions. Last week the crossings along Main street were given a hit and miss scraping but the rest of the street was left in its miry wallow. Sidewalks along the south sides of streets our lovely cement sidewalks were in the same condition. Cement gutters were and are full of trash and filth. Water does not have an opportunity to run to the sewers in many places. The truth is that a paved street in an unsanitary condition is worse than an unpaved street in the same state. For with the latter, the debris can finally merge into the elements. But with the paved street it reremains an extraneous substance. If we have no rain in a week or so all this filth will be reduced to powder, blow through the streets and into the houses. Be breathed and sucked Into the human Interior. The writer doesn't understand exactly the technique of street cleaning. But the ordinary observer would say that, under such conditions, the streets should be flushed and cleaned off. Really cleaned. Not given a lick and a promise. Gutters should be kept clean and free of obstruction so that streets can be drained as was their intent when constructed. In fact there seems to be no reason why the streets, especially the paved ones, should not be kept clean. Nor the lobbies of public buildings. The post office, in instance. Half the time the ink is dried up, pens broken or gone altogether and blotters ragged and ink-soaked. Nor is the floor kept clean. The attaches of public buildings are very sure of their wages.

So there is no reason why the build- j

clients are tyrannical. They know and recognize no office honrs. The month hand on a farm has at least a few hours between late dusk and early dawn for repose, but even these are frequently denied the country lawyer. "Some of his clients are prone to consult him at his residence late at night, when none of the curious minded villagers can see them, and speculate and gossip on the question and of the nature and purpose of the call. Another class, believing in the adage that the early bird catches the worm, at early sunrise interrupts his slumbers to make sure that they retained the besf lawyer in the county to represent them In some present or expected trouble."

i ai 1 uu 11 p

j 1 1 ; i 1 1 ill

Ladies' Skirt, in raised or normal

waistline. This model would look well developed in broad cloth or serge with insert of satin and self covered buttons for trimming. It is also suitable jfor silk, corduroy, wool mixtures, linen,

Gallant Unto Death. Rnd ?thr wash fabrics. The fronts When Sir Ralph Abercromby -was are wlth tuck seams over a mortally wounded hi the battle of narrow Insert or panel, and at the Abonkir he was carried on a Utter on bck the side portions are stitched ovboard the Foudroyant To ease his pate r " Panel in tuck effect. The skirt a soldier's blanket was placed under 18 ct n prevailing slender lines, with his head. He asked what It was. comfortable fullness provided for in "It is only a soldier's blanket," he the plaitB at the back. The pattern was told. is cut in 5 sizes: 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 "Whose blanket Is it?" he persisted, Inches waist measure. It requires S lifting himself up. j yards of 44 inch 'material for a 24 inch "Only one of the men's." j size. "I want to know the name of the I A pattern of this illustration mailed man whose blanket this is," the dying to any address on receipt of 10c in sil-

commander Insisted. i ver or stamps

"It is Duncan Roy's of the Forty-second. Sir Ralph," said his attendant at last "Then see that Duncan Roy gets his

blanket this very night," commanded , the brave man, who did not forget j

even in bis last agonies the comfort and welfare of his men. Of such unselfish stuff are true soldiers made. Youth's Companion.

Name

Size

Address

" am an old man ami many of my trouble never happened." ELBERT HUBBARD

rE white hair and wrinkled faces of our busy men and women tell of doubt, fear and anxiety more than disease or age. Worry plays havoc with the nervous system so thatdigestion is rained and sleep banished. What oil is to the friction of the delicate parts of an engine - DR. PIERCE'S (golden flffedical jpiscovery is to the delicate organs of tha body. It's a tonic sad body builder because it stimulates the liver to vigorous action, assist the stomach to assimilate food thus enriching the blood, and the nerves and heart in turn are fed on pur rich blood. Neuralgia "is the cry of starved nerves for food." For forty years VGoldra Medical Dlaoovry in liquid form has given great mtltffrion as a tonic sad blood maker. Now it can be obtained in tablet form-' from dealert in medicine or eend 50 one-cent Uampe for trial box. Write R,Y.Pierce,BnffaI.

DR. F1KKCETS PLEASANT

Relieve coatatlpattosw recvlate tbe liver.

M oowets. my te tiure s caay.

L

it

3

SEE OUR WINDOWS

BJUSBAUM'S

SEE OUR WINDOWS

Begins

nlF IFaini, IHInIhi n-sril &mmIbfiDdisiHi3 The like of which you have never seen before. Fine embroideries that are exquisitely beautiful at half price and even less. Hosts of women will remember our great AirniniTUi5i.il IFslbirtuisursr

and doubtless hundreds are expectantly waiting for a similar event. We are glad to announce that we are going to offer an even more-attractive line, more extensive and greater values than ever before. All we ask is a look! See our windows and be convinced that there were never such Embroidery values before. Other stores imitate our Embroidery Sales, but fall far short of duplicating. Otxr Embroidery Sales Are Exceptional from IS very Viewpoint WE BUY DIRECT FROM AMERICA'S GREATEST IMPORTERS and succeed beyond our expectations in the number of desirable and special lots secured, choice designs, many thousand. Goods all greatly underpriced. All Arranged for Quick and Eaoy Selling

TimwiMiiDATr

One lot Fine Cambric and Swiss Edges, some matched sets, worth up to 35c yard, ZV"d 10c $1.50 45-inch Flounces, per yard TKn only OK, One lot Fine Swiss Flounces, 18, 27 and 45 inches, easily worth up to 75c, including Swiss All-Overs to match, per yard 29 C

$2.25 27-inch and 45-inch

Flounces, at only $2.50 values, inch Flounces only

II1S 111V1 $1.25

27 and 45 $1.50

One lot, 1,000 yards, Fine Swiss, 27-inch Flouncings,

worth up to $1.25 a yard, Special .

v 59c

One lot, 1,000 yards Fine Swiss 45-inch Flouncings, worth up to $1.50 KQ a yard, Special . . . Oa O

One lot 45 Flouncings, per yard only

$1.50 All-Overs, eyelet designs, per yard only. . .

and 27-inch worth $2.00. $1.00

beautiful 75c

One lot Fine Cambric Edges, from 7 to 18 inches wide worth up to 35c, 1 (T per yard only .... AOO

$3.00 Fine Wide Flounces, .r.y.:..$2.oo

$3.50 Flounces, per yard

only $2.50 and

$2.75

27-inch $1.00 Baby Flounc

ings, All-Overs to match, only .....

59c

One lot 25c Corset Covers, and Flounces, per " Q yard, only Xtls

27-inch $20.0 Baby Flounc

ings, All-Overs to match, only

98c

27-inch $2.00 Baby Flouncand Flounces, 25 C

IT BEGINS THURSDAY! This great opportunity for Exquisite Embroideries. For Confirmation Dresses, Graduation Dresses and Fine Summery lingerie Dresses at Half Price and Less. You can't afford to miss it

Si

B.' MSBA11 0,