Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 198, 15 August 1906 — Page 2
Page Two.
The Richmond Palladium. Wednesday, August 15, 1906.
Bad Stomach Makes Bad Blood. You can not make sweet butter in n foul, unclean churn. The stomach serves as a churn In which to agitate, work up and disintegrate our food as it is beinj? digested. If it be weak, sluggish and foul the result will be torpid, sluggMi liver and bad. Impure blood. The ingredients of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery am jmt such as Iwm M-rve to correct and cure all such dt - iuhniirtiihta Tt. tu m.tHn un limit II
4rnn if utf,.Vi-.l In 1 1 u nnfri rf iil t.irin eheni-,4 rally pure, tripie-reunea glycerine oem jsea instead oi trie commonly employe ilcohol. Now this glycerine is oi itself valuable medicine, instead of a deieu au airent like alcohol, especially In Site i:re of weak stomach, dyspepsia andln various forms of indigestion. Prof, l-'iley Kllingwood, M. D., of liennett Mhcal College, Chicago, says of it: "In iyiD'DKia it sorves an exfelletft purpose. It Is one of tho tvnt manufactured products of the present tinjf In itaction upon unfetsblpd, disordered humachu: esiieclally If there Is ulceration oratanliai tfahtrlils (catarrhal inflammation olwtoniR 'i . it is a most efficient preparation. Olyceriii" will relieve many cases of pyrosisheart ljur; and excesttlve (rasfrii: acidify. ltflHUsffwi ciironlc intestinal dyspepsia, eftx clallv i! flatulent variety, and In certain forms of chronic constipation. Ktlmulatiiir the M-rrt tory and excrutory functions ofthe Intestinal glands." . . . When combined, in Just th right proper tlons. with Golden Seal r$t. Stone ro Black Cherrybark, Queenpt root, lilo.-i root and Mandrake root, of the extracts these, as In Dr. Pierce's ftolden Medic i' Discovery, there can bolio doubt of it f:reat efficacy in the curf of all stomach, iver and Intestinal disorders and derangements. These several Ingredients have the strongest endrseiftent In all such cases of such emineNCffnedical leaders us I'rof. R Bartholow, M. D.. of Jefferson M-5 leal College, Chicago; Prof. Hobart A. JUro. M. D.. of Medical department. Cnlvervlty of Pa.; Prof. Laurence Johnson. M. !.. Medical Department, University of New York; iTuf. Edwin M. JIale. M. I.. Hahnemann Medical College. Cbicaco; Prof. John M. Scudder, M. JJ. and frot John King. M. U.. Authors of tha American Dispensatory, and scores of ot hers aiuyritf the leading medical men of our land. Who ran doubt tho curative virtues of a medicine the Ingredients of which have torn b profexsiiiuil endorsement ? Constipation cured by Doctor Pierce' Pleasant Pellets. One or two a dose. CRACKSMEN WERE ROUTED LEFT BLOOD BEHIND THEM Station Agent-at Wilmington, Ohio, Prevent Threo Robbers from Blowing Opera the Safe in the Ticket Office of B. & O. ' Publishers' Press " T" ' Eiaattita, O.. Aug. 14. Three Jfafo Mowers wore worsted la a despef battle : with, ilobert Kennett, tho Baltimore and v Ohio agent at Wilmington, Kennett just come down to tn station Jt..Weni.up when he noticedthreo moa- making an effort to break into the ticket office. Running to hia instrument ho notified Morrow and Washington C. IL. tho nearost Junction stations, and then went downstairs out of his tower to do battle with tho yeggmen. The burglars were Just preparing to blow the safe when Kennett opened fire on them with a sawed-off shotgun. One of them fell and tho others leaped out of a window, tiring several volleys as they ran. Kennett pursued, but they escaped in the darkness. When he returned the wounded man had disappeared, a trail of blood showing that he had dragged himself to the river and swam tho stream. Tosses aro on tho trail. Revolutionist Quarters Smashed. St. Petersburg, Aug. 14. The authorities attach great importance to the capture of revolutionists at Moscow and in that vicinity during the last few days. They believe they have broken up the headquarters oi the military, fighting organization and arrested tho 'leaders. In addition to seizing their' clandestine printing establishment! and a largo supply of bombs and explosives. Including Shimose powder, the 'authorities secured r elaborate plana which were to be used In the event of an uprising. Metal Exploded. Philadelphia, Aug. 14. Seven men were Injured In. an explosion at the AJax Metal company, in the northern part of the city. All were burned by flying particles of bronze, and three ef the Injured may die. They aro John Corr, 29; Mire Getz, 42, and Jager Brososkl, 40. The explosion occurred as a 400 pound bronze casting was being lifted Into a furnace. It is supposed that water In some manner found Its way Into the casting and when the metal struck the Intense heat the casting exploded. Includes Ohio Plants. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 14. Preliminary arrangements have been completed, It is said, by which within the next few days the control of the United Sheet and Tin Plate company will pass Into the hands of a group of Pittsburg. Philadelphia and New York capitalists. The property to be transferred represents a valuation of over $500,000 and includes rlants at Marietta, Newcomcrstown, Byesville and Newark, O. Turley Expelled. Chicago, Aug. 14. The last official act of tho convention of International Brotherhood of Teamsters was to expel from the organization Edwin L. Turley, former secretary-treasurer. Turloy was a thorn In the side of President Shea and his followers more than a year. The convention decided that Turley worked against the best interests of the brotherhood. Train Searched In Poland. Warsaw. Aug. 14. Trains on the Vistula railroad crowded with passengers returning from excursions were stopped and surrounded by troops near Warsaw while policemen minutely searched the cars and passengers, arresting 50 persons. The chief of the workshops of the railroad here was shot and killed. The assassin escaped. Ate Toadstools. Hamilton, O., Aug. 14. Five members of the family of John A. Schneider were near death as the result of having eaten toadstools, which they mistook for mushrooms. Dr. G. M. Cummins worked with the victims for Bine hours before they were prolounced out of danger.
I ....Local SpOirtflGlg BOeWS General..
CAN WIN FROM BOSTON PIRATES ANNEX VICTORY Fred Tenny's Bean Eaters Don't Get a Run in the Only Game Played in National Pittsburg Make Sixteen Hits off Lindeman. NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.
Won. Lost. rCt. Chicago .. h. 75 30 .714 New York 66 35 .653 Pittsburg .. 64 39 .621 Philadelphia .. .. ...49 55 .471 Cincinnati .. :. 45 60 .428 Brooklyn 41 60 .406 St. Louis 39 67 .368 Boston .. ... 36 69 .343
Publishers" Press Pittsburg, Aug. 14 The Pittsburg Nationals easily defeated Fred Tenney's Bean Eaters today. The visitors received only four hits from Leever and were unable to tally, while Pittsburg found Lindeman for 1G hits. Score: R. H. E. Bos .... 00000000 00 4 1 Pitts ... 0 0 X00003 x 4 16 1 Batteries Lindeman and Needham; Leever and Gibson. Umpires Johnstonne and Conway. m KiiUINIUni ALMrttVI. JTott a Brave Man Lost Ilia ferre la a Lonely House. As he is six feet two and Is fully up to the America standard of physical courage, it is sf musing to hear him tell about it. "The folks went away on a three weeks' visit." be relates. "That's an awful big house of ours, you know, and I remained there as the sole custodian. It had been burglarized twice within my memory, but I own up right now that I used to feel a little squeamish when I turned in anywhere from 12 to 2. "One night-it was just after 1 when I clicked off the electric light. The wind was blowing half a gale, and even when there Is a dead calm late at night you can hear all kinds of sounds and imagine as many more. I had a miniature howitzer uuder my pillow, and I recall that I grabbed the gun three different times, sat up in bed, heard my heart bounding and was ready to turn loose as soon as I made up my mind where I ought to (shoot. "By 3 I was in a doze and had ceased to strain my ears for noises when there came a 'biug' that raised both me and my hair. Honest, it was the most startling thing I ever went against. I forgot I had a gun. I rolled from the off side of the bed and dropped to the floor like a ton of pig Iron. I made as good as a mile in 4 minutes 110 seconds yoh my hands and knees, reached tho hall, went downstairs In threo Jumps aud a fall, went to the i , . . ... i , . . . . , 1 1 vuiuvr vjlu un buna oei., met u. iiuuLtf f man, and together we hurried back. "He carried his revolver in his hand, and I seized a $400 vase as a weapon as we passed through the hall. Just as We reached the top of the stairs there was that blood curdling 'biug' again. I dropped the vase Into the hall below, aud he dashed into my room, turned on the light and Investigated. What do you think he found?" "A burglar." "No. I had left my banjo keyed up taut, and two of the strings had snapped," Detroit Free Press. Fin In the Parlor. Wheu you seo a young man sitting In a parlor with the ugliest four-year-old boy that ever frightened himself In a mirror clambering over his knees, Jerking his necktie out of place, ruffling his shirt front, pulling his hair, kicking his shins, feeling in all his pockets for coppers, while the unresisting victim smiles all the time like the cover of a comic paper, you may safely say that the howling, boy has a sister who Is In a room not twenty feet away and that the young man doesn't come there just for the fun of playing with her brother. What He Said. And what did he say to my singing?' she asked. "There was pathos In It, don't you think?" "Yes, Indeed," was the reply. "lie seemed to feel ft, too, for he said it made hirn think of the plaintive appeal of a suida beneath the bars." "How lovely of him!" exclaimed the singer, for how could she know that the reference was to a pig under a gate? Chicago Post. Better Still. Little Girl-Please, Mrs. Neighbors, ma sent me over to borrow a little flour, two eggs, a cup of sugar and a pint of milk. Mrs. Neighbors Well, you go back home and tell your ma to come over in about an hour and take the cake. Detroit Tr.'b'jr" Cheap Dressing. The contract system of supply, the London Mall remarks. Is being extended to every branch of the public's necessities. A Ixmdon firm for $100 a year, received in installments, if detired, will supply one dress suit, one lounge suit, one morning suit, one flannel suit, one frook coat suit, two overcoats, one winter, one summer. A Manchester firm supplies other clotlilns, hosiery, shirts, gloves, etc., for a fixed qurvterly snm. Safe and Warm. Antiseptic methods are Incoming popular with the country barbers in England. A man dropped into a village shop the other day and was shaved. Then cane a wash by a sponge whose odor suggested the morgue. The victim's face was burned like fire. "What on earth have you got on that sponge?" he demanded. "Ah," answered the villager proudly, waving the sponge In the air. "That's carbolic aM Tf an aataV
Results Yesterday. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Boston 0; Pittsburg 4.
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Washington 8; Cleveland 9. No other games scheduled. HAS ANOTHER CHALLENGE The Winchester Baseballists Want the Richmond Giants to Meet Them at Early Date. Winchester, Ind., Aug. 14. (Spl) The fast Winchester team won another victory Sunday afternoon by defeating the Muncie Athletic Club by a score of 7 to 1. The local man ager would like to hear from Richmond Giants if they have nerve to cross bats with one of fastest independent teams in State. the the the the BASE HITS. Cy Seymour's batting Is a big help to the New York Nationals. Hess, Hhoades and Joss are pitching great ball for Cleveland this season. President Ban Johnson of the American league is keeping mighty quiet these days. Bert ' Dennis, late of the Anderson club, has signed to manage Marion, O., the new member of the Interstate association. Catcher Eddie McFarland has settled his differences with ManagerFielder Jones and has rejoined the Chicago American team. Leroy Taylor has been appointed manager of the Pine Bluff club of the Cotton States league, succeeding S. Reeves, resigned. Patsy Donovan might have had Pitcher Beebe early in the season for Gessler, but at that time Brooklyn was not ready to let the latter go. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. St. Petersburg is to have a free university for women next autumn. John David Rodeffer, at present connected with the library of congress, succeeds Dr. F. IT. N. Dalnter to the chair of German and French in Roanoke college. The four new lecturers for the Columbia Law school next yer as announced are: I'rof essor Nathan Abbott of Leland Stanford university, Goldthwalte II. Dorr, Charles II. Ayres and Alfred Ilayen, Jr. Lawrence academy, one of the oldest of the old country academies, founded In 1702, will have a new head master this fall In William S. Gaud of New York, chosen to succeed II. II. Bingham. Gaud was born in Toronto of English and Scotch parentage and was educated in Illinois. PROSPERITY. The country was never so rich" as Just before the panic of 1857. The country has never been so rich as It is now. So let us be conservative. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. With a bumper wheat crop on the way, a surplus In the treasury, despite the drain at Panama and several frew reform laws on the statute book, Uncle Sam is entitled to look cheerful. New York Tribune. Insanitary Carafes. Undoubtedly it was the purpose of the inventor of the carafe to provide a vessel admitting of ready covering. But how few persons In control of either private or public dining places avail of this easy opportunity of excluding dust from the water decanter. It Is comparatively rare, even at the better appointed Manhattan hostelries, to find the aqua bottle stoppered, although the neck be adapted to accommodate an ordinary size of cork. In fashionable restaurants use of water pitchers on tables has long been considered vulgar, principally from the viewpoint of style, but partly because of the idea that they serve as dust accumulators, yet the carafe goes unlidded without attention. New York Press. Fiber of Silkworm 1,105 Tarda. Authorities and popular works differ greatly In their estimates of the length of the fiber in the cocoon of the domestic silkworm, Bombyx morl. Published statements of the length of tins fiber could be cited which range all the way from 1,100 feet to eleven miles. Even so good an authority as the Encyclopaedia Britannlca places it at SCO yards. Recent measurements made in the division of entomology show that with certain Milanese yel low cocoons raised In the United States from eggs purchased from France the fiber varies in length from 8SS to l,lu5 yards. One Pure Being. In these days when there is so much talk about the meat supply that Is disconcerting to the stomachs of particular people we turn with confidence to the American hen, knowing that the corrupting influence of commerce has never touched her and that we may partake of the soft yellow egg without the least fear that adulterants of any kind have been squirted into it. To be sure, In some boarding houses they may lay it around In a hot place until it is overripe and not what might be called an ideal food, but that Is not the fault of the hen who originally turned it out. Too much cannot be said In praise of the hen in these days when we have learned to distrust every one. She Is never seen sneaking in the back way to a drug store to get a can of yellow paint to Increase her output. She Is always content to do the best she can with such material as she can find in the neighbors' gardens. The move to make her the great American bird in place of the eagle deserves the boosting: along of all who eat.
NAPS WIN IN THE EIGHTH
SCORED EVEN RUNS THEN Cleveland Team Looked to be Doomed to Certain Defeat Yesterday in Game with Washington, But Batted Out a Narrow Victory. AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING.
Won. Lost PCL Chicago 61 43 .5S7 Philadelphia CO 43 .5S3 New York 57 41 .52 Cleveland 5t 43 .5t'.t St. Louis .. .. 53 49 .519 Detroit 50 53 .45 Washington 39 62 .36 Boston 31 73 .29$
Publishers' Press Cleveland, Aug. 14. The home team seemed certain of defeat today by the Washington Americans, but by magnificent butting in the eighth inning, squeezed out a hard earned vic tory. Score: R. H. E. Wash. . 22220000 0 8 10 2 Cleve. . 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 7 x 9 12 3 Batteries Falkenburg and Wake field; Joss, Bombard, Bemis and Buelow. Umpire Evans. SIRES AND SONS. The father of Stanford White, whosa murder is causing Harry Thaw some trouble, was the celebrated philologisfRichard Grant White. Secretary Root has a formidable string of LL. D.'s to his name. Hamilton. Yale, Columbia, Williams and Princeton unirersltes have contributed. Clifford W. Ilartridge, Harry Thaw's attorney. Is au expert whistler and n famous oarsman of "Old Eli." He hailed from Savannah originally and his family is one of the best known in that state. Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace has gone to Russia, on whose history and present condition he is a great authority. He acciapauled the present czar when, as czarowitz, he made his eastern tour In 18'JO. Michael Divito of Waterbury, Conn., although only nine years old, Is conductor of a regularly organized orchestra of young players. He has studied music for five years and plays the piano and mandolin. William John Roberts went to prison in England the other day for forgery, lie was rich, but his doctors told him he had little time to live. He squandered his money, and then, when poor, recovered his health. Toverty led him into crime. Accurate tab has been kept on Baron Rosen, the Russian ambassador, since he arrived in Washington, and nobody ever saw him without a cigar iu his mouth or In his baud except when he was at a state function or dining, and then he always smokes between courses. Justice Brewer of the United States supreme court says he spends the whole vacation period loafing. "From June to October I am absolutely no account to anybody In the world, and I don't make a single unnecessary move from the time I leave the supreme court till I get back to it." John Burns, M. P., says that with his own hands he built the first electric tram car In Great Britain and exhibited it at the Crystal palace, London, In 1881. At first people would not ride In the novelty, so Mr. Burns induced first the future Mrs. Burns and then his future mother-in-law to take trips as decoy ducks. THE WRITERS. George Bernard Shaw will shortly invade the land which he rebuked for Its "Comstockery." lie expects to see the first production of his new play, "Caesar and Cleopatra," in America in New York in October. George Moore, the novelist, who has been writing for the last thirty years, is now fifty-four. He Is of ScotchIrish blood and is the squire of Moore Hall, County Mayo. He is 6a id to own 12,500 acres in that Irish county. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell in writing trusts but little to dictation, writing nearly all he has to say, then submitting the manuscript for a typewritten copy. Four or five clean copies are nothing unusual in the preparation of a manuscript. An effort will be made In Rome to purchase the house in which Keats, the poet, died and to establish therein a permanent memorial not only to Keats himself, but of Shelley, whose dust lies buried only a stone's throw away from his brother poet's grave. Improved. "Do you think the automobile has come to stay?" "No, sir. I used to think so when :t was uecesary for me to walk home about every time I ventured out, but I am now convinced that it has come to go." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Strong: Men. Miss Touriste You have some strong and rugged types of manhood out in this western country, haven't you? Stage Driver Yaas, miss, we hev men out here that don't think it's nuthln' to hold up a railroad train. Ohio State Journal. Source of Inspiration. "How did you like my article In the Joyklllers' Review?", "Very fine Indeed. Yon must have been talking with Tommy before you wrote It." "No. indeed; it was original. Tommy who?" "Tommyrot." Usual Place. searching for "I am a lost gold mine." "Where have you been looking?" "So far where It isn'L"
PALMA'S LIFE IS III GREAT DANGER
Young Lieutenant Discovered Plot of 7 Soldiers to Kill Cuba's Ruler. EVIDENCE IS CONCLUSIVE WHEN SOLDIERS WERE FOUND, THEY WERE CLEANING THEIR REVOLVERS AND HAD INCRIMINATING PAPERS ON THEM. Pub-ishers- Press Havana. Aug. 14. It has developed that the life of President Estrada Palma, of Cuba, was in the gravest danger yesterday, and that but for the prompt action of a young lieutenant of artillery the island republic would probably be today without a ruler. For some time the report has been circulated that certain members of the army were plotting against the present government, their announced grievance being that tho president was not sufficiently impressed with the necessity of a large and "up to date" military force. Yesterday, while a lieutenant of artillery was about his duties in Cabanas fortress, near which the president is spending tho summer, he was approached by an artilleryman who informed him that seven members of his company were planning an attack upon the president for that afternoon and that they had their plans so far perfected that tiey were assured they must succeed. The officer secured the names of the seven men, and then, calling a sergeant and a squad of men, he set off for the barracks where they were reported to be. The seven men were found cleaning their revolvers and placing them in condition for use. They were promptly arrested and are now locked up in the guard house It is reported that when they were searched documents were found proving absolutely that they had plotted the life of president and also indicat ing that the affair was an outcome of the uprising of rebellious Havana policemen last winter, when they attacked a force of rurales and killed a sergeant, a corporal and two men and wounded a half dozen. MORE ICE MEN INDICTED IT'S BOSTON THIS TIME Grand Jury of Old Suffolk County Re turns Indictments Against Seventeen Ice Dealers and Six Ice Companies Advanced Price. IPublishers' Pressl Boston, Aug. 14. Indictments against 17 ice dealers and six ice companies were returned by the Suffolk county grand jury. The ice dealers are charged with having unlawfully conspired "te regulate, advance and fix the price of ice for public sale, and the ice companies as corporations charged with conspiracy. The dealers indicted Include Lewis G. White, president of the Massachusetts Ice Dealers' association, and Charles W. Kallustram, secretary of the association. The companies indicted are the Boston, Independent, Union Fresh Pond, Cambridge and Highland cooperative companies. The dealers when arraigned pleaded not guilty, and wore held in bonds of $ 1,000 each. Palladium Want Ads Pay. IS n
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WANTED. WANTED Four lady canvassers. Call Wednesday i today) before 11 a. m., 122 South Sth street. WANTED Work of any kind, by boy of 15 years. Call 026 North loth St. ' 15-3t WANTED I have three customers for o.", 4 and 50 acre farms. See me puick. Al. 11. Hunt. 7 North ?th street. HELP WANTED Immediately two men good drivers. Call Tom Mertz. Phono No. 103. 12-Ct WANTED To trade a Smith Premier Typewriter In good condition for a Remington or Fox or any other shift key machine of equal standard. Call at the Palladium office. 19-3t. WANTED A 40S S. 15th. Girl usework. 26-tf at Rich-2S-10t WANTED Oats and Cor mond elevator. FOR SAL Richmond propei specialty. Phone 32S. tf Porterneld. Kelly FOR RENT Fine furnished room, modern furnace boat, bath, electric FLOWER AND TREE. Some flowers, like those of the yeast plant or of th. common mold, produce seeds in a few hours after blossoming. Great heat is evolved by all the plants when flowering. Arums In particular have been noticed to rise to 121 degrees when the a!r temperature was only GG degrees. E. F. Field of North Paris, Me., has a tree in his pasture which is a cross between a spruce Rnd fir, the bark being that of a spruce and the branches resembling fir cljsfly. It is quite a large tree, surrounded by ten to twelve smaller ones of the same species. One of the curiosities of South Africa is the "sneereland" tree. No one can cut it with a saw without sneezing, as the fine dust is very irritating. Even planing the wood will sometimes cause sneering. No insect or worm will touch it. it is very bitter to the, taste and when placed in water it sinks. CHURCH AND CLERGY. Allhallows' church. Exeter, England, 700 years old, has been torn down In order that a street may be widened. His holiness the pope has granted the aged and enfeebled archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Richard, who sought to resign his high position, the privilege of celebrating mass seated in a chair. Bishop W. F. Oldham of the Methodist Episcopal church In Asia is visit ing this country in the interest of tho work of the church In the Philippines. One of the bishop's assistants organized the Moral Progress league in Manila recently. The Rev. Wesley Borders of Harrison is the oldest voter in Indiana, having passed the century mark. He cast his first vote for John Qulucy Adams In 1828, and from the time of Fremont until the last presidential year he has cast his ballot for the Republican candidate. JAPAN Japan professes to have learned many valuable lessons from this coun try, but she certainly has never been taught by the United States govern ment to extend a warm welcome with one hand and bar the door with tho other. Portland Advertiser. There Is no reason to believe that Japan will manifest a notably unself ish character In any mutter closely affecting both Its commercial aad Its political interests. It did not willingly surrender Its hope of territorial aggrandizement in Manchuria, and it may yet nullify the Portsmouth treaty by refusing to comply with all its provisions. Den er f; : iicn. jnreLiine or off
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light. Call at 217 North 7th streeL 10-7t. FOR SALE The only china, queensware, and racket store in growing town of S,000. Invoice about $2500. Other business demands owner's attention. Address Hox 1463, Tulsa. 1. J- SSL Everybody buys property from Woodhurst, 913 Main SL Telephone 491. june5 tf FOR SALE t full blooded Scotch Collie pups eligible to 'register. R. H. Harold, R. R. No. 5. 7tf FOR RENT. Fern RET Good farm, sr acres. Well improved. Call 1114 S. H street l0-7t RENT-Furnished rooms at the Grand for gentlemen only. tf FOR RENT A flat, or 5 rooms, centrally located. Call Dr. Walls. 21 S. 10th streeL tf LOST. LOST A rope-like stick pin with small diamond. Return to Forest Shook, 4S South 10th st. 15-3t LOST An Oshkosh breast pin. Finder return to 425 South 4th street and receive reward. "I l-i ! Hen Greet Is to give several "command" performances before King Edward VII. and Queen Alexandra at Carlsbrook castle. The first performance of Stanley Dark's new society comedy. "The Man and the Angel," will take place at the Lyceum theater, Rochester, N. Y. Miss Florence Roberts will be seen iu "Giacouda" next season. Miss Roberts gave the first English production of tho D'Annunzio play In -San Francisco iu 1004. There are only two Bostock animal arenas in America this summer. One Is at Dreamland, Coney Island, N. Y., and the other Is at Paragon park, Nantasket Beach, Mass. James T. Powers has been selected as the star of "The Bine Moon," which is one of the Lyric theater (London) successes. Ills wife, Rachel Booth, will 1m? in the company. Arthur Wing Pinero recently went on a vacation to celebrate bis twentyfifth year of successful playwritlng. "The Money Spinner," his first long play, was put on twenty-five years ago in London, with the Kendals and John Hare in the cast. I lis only previous work had been three one-act pieces. THE ROYAL BOX. Tho romantic and poetical people of Spain have fallen captive to the charms of their new queen and call her "the golden haired farry of the eleepinrr palace." 1 The German emperor owns the most valuable draughtboard In existence. The light and dark squares nre made of silver and jvold, and the draughts are also made of silver and gold, each having a diamond or a ruby in the center. The waist of Queon Maud pf Norway measures but seventeen Inches, and t;he is r;o ethereal in nppearauce that even In England, where the cult of thinness has as worshipers practically nil the women of the realm apd many of the men. she Is called rather too frail and delicate in appearance. Princess Victoria, the kaiser's only daughter, is now a well grown girl. She is tall for her age aud uncommonly plain in feature, but what be lacks In beauty is made good in sprlghtllness. For one thin.?, she stands In no awe of her nire and puts etiquette to flight when any whim seizes her. The Sunflower. The sunflower takes its name from its shape and general resemblance to the sun. It Is not a true heliotrope. It does not turn toward the sun In spite of the poetic assertion of Moore. Lines
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