Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 212, 29 August 1906 — Page 2

age Two.

The Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, August 29, 1906.

Nature's Way Is Best. The function strengthening and tissue building plan of treating chronic, lingering and obstinate cases of disease as pursued by Dr. Pierce, is following after Nature s plan of restoring health. He uses natural remedies, that is sxtracts from' native medicinal roots, prepared by processes wrouaht out by the expenditure of much time and

money, without the use 01 iconoi, ana by skillful combination in mat the right proportions. Used as ingredients Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discover: FBlack Cherrybark. Queen's root. len Seal root, specially exert IJloodroot and Stone rod their influence in cases lung, bronchial . i . r r .. and throat troubles. mis tjioiuv r.Br" is, therefore, a vereign remedy for bronchitis, laryngiAi. chronic coughs, catarrh and kindred lments. The above native Wots also have the itronirest possible eiforsement from th leading medical wrlti-s. of all the several v ichools of practice,r the cure not only & of the diseases naifd above but also lor Indigestion, torponwof liver, or biliousness. obstin tipation. Kianey anu d catarrh, no matter bladder troi where loca You don't1 Bay-so alone haffe to take Dr. Pierce's this: what he claims for his "Disc v" is backed up by the writings of lost eminent men in the medical prof on. A request by postal sard or letter, addressed to Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for a little book ot extracts from eminent " medical authorities endorsing the ingredients of his medicines, will bring a little book free that is worthy of your attention if needing a good, safe, reliable remedy of kiujurti compfjHtlon for the cure of almost any old chronic, or lingering malady. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. One little "Pellet " is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. The most valuable book for both men and women is Dr. Pierce s Common Sense Medical Adviser. A splendid 1008-page volume, with engravings and colored plates. A copy, paper-covered, will le sent to anyone sending 21 cents in one-cent stamps, to pay the cost of mailing only, to Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y. Cloth-bound. 31 stamps. Uu. iJoclom. The learned ladies in olden times took great comfort and pride in their skill in, medicine. With true professional scorn they looked down upon the regular doctors as upon quacks. "For God's Bake beware what medicines ye take of any fyssiasyans of London. I shall never trust to them because of your father and my uncle, whose souls God Essoil." So wrote a lady in conscious pride. She knew she could have saved the lives of her unfortuuate relatives If she had only had a chance to dose them with some of ber wonderful concoctions or to Lave put upon them some such plasters as those for which Dame Margery Paston was famous. Her husband sent for one of ber plasters for the king's attorney, James XIobarst, who was suffering with an ache In his knee, and to whom Sir John Paston felt himself sentimentally indebted. "He Is the man who brought you and me together," be wrote to Margery, "and I bad leaver than 40 that ye could with your plaster part bim and his pain." . Grease la Wool Fabrics. Few persons realize when they put on woolen garmebts what a large amount of animal fats , wool contains, for to the touch woolens are not greasy. In the biff clothing shops where men's garments ares cut, however,, the floors around the tables where electric knives clip out the odd shaped pieces soon become as slippery as though they were waxed for a" dance. "Why do you wax the floors to keep the fabrics clean?" is a common query from visitors. But the clothing cutters explain that this accumulation of .grease comes from the friction, of wool cloth over the wood. The wood's pores soon become so charged with it that they feel greasy to the tonb, and even the harder woods in the cutting tables absorb from the woolen fibers so much of the animal fat that to all appearances tbey might be In steady use in the rendering department ot an' abattoir. New York A . Cartons Custom. In certain parts of India in families .where there are several daughters the youngest sisters, may only marry after the elder sister is married. Of course it "frequently" happens that no suitor appears for the elder, in which case she is got out of the way by a very neat expedient. She Is wedded to a tree or a large flower, and then the younger sister may marry. The elder Bister must be careful, however, to choose a plum, apple or apricot tree, from which she can get a divorce, for If she married an elm, pine or poplar these are sacred trees and must not be trifled .with. Murray 'F. Tuley, who gave twenty five years of continuous service a fudge of the circuit court ia Chicago xras noted for the strict Impartiality vrlth which be rendered decisions, even when bis personal bias was strongly the other way. On one occasion, havYig heard a certain famous suit, he found himself impelled to band down a decision repugnant to his own inclination, - - . , "Do you mean you think the defend ant was not at heart a swindler?" demanded ac intimate friend, who dared Complain of the finding. "Billy," said Judge Tuley solemnly, I took that evidence to Arkansas with me and studied It two weeks. Then 1 brought it borne and spent ten days more on it Then I said in my deel ion: "So far as the evidence shows the defendant is r.niuprlght and honorable Christian gentleman. So far as ttulevidence shows, repeated the juristYslowly and with emphasis. Then h leaned forward in bis chair, placed A hand on the other's knee and eiclaimfd. with an air oi Yin!ieat'on: "Cut, Liliy. I di.I.'t say I believed ? 1 WM. WAKING t Pfnmher lanit mac F!tttf 1 iu hi u v m ii. iuuj mil t . J 7 les a

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....Local CLARK GRIFFITH GETS SUSPEN Manager of Americans Put Out of Game for Persist ent Kicking. BLUES BEAT THE BOSTONS GAMES SCHEDULED AT WASHINGTON AND PHILADELPHIA POSTPONED ON ACCOUNT OF .WET GROUNDS.

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AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. PCt. Chicago 70 44 , .617 Philadelphia 64 49 .566 New York 62 48 .564 Cleveland 62 50 .553 St. Louis 60 54 .527 Detroit 54 59 .478 Washington 46 67 .407 Boston .. 35 81 .302

Publishers' Pressl Boston, Aug. 2S. The Cleveland Ameican simply toyed with the Bos ton Misfits this afternoon, winning a very handy victory. The score: R-H. E. Cle .... 4 0 2 0 0 2 1 0 09 9 1 Bos 00. 0 20001 03 C 2 Batteries Rhoades and Bemis; Dlneen and Carrigan. Umpire Hurst HIGHLANDER'S MANAGER SUFFERS. New York, Aug. 28. The New York Americans proved easy for the St. Louis aggregation this afternoon. Prior to the game Clark Grijth, man ager of the ocals was notified that he had been indefinitely suspended for kicking during yesterday's game. The score: R. H. E. St. L ... 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 03 8 2 N. Y. ... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 7 1 Batteries Pelty and Rickey; Orth and Klelnow. Umpire Sheridan. WET GROUNDS. Philadelphia, Aug. 28 The Chi cago vs. Philadelphia American Lea gue game postponed on account of wet grounds. GROUNDS WET. Washington, Aug. 28. The Det roit vs. Washington American . Lea gue game postponed account wet grounds. New Madison the Winner. Whitewater. Aug. 28. (Spl) In one of the fastest base ball games ever played in the local diamond, the New Madison. O.. team triumphed over the locals Sunday by the score of 6 to 5. The score: W 1 00140000 05 7 5 NM 00210030 06 9 6 Batteries Whitewater, Riner and Anderson. New Madison. Kelly, Hughes and Hyde. Umpire Curtis. . Ills in li Pocket. Benjamin Franklin once wore bis wig In his pocket at the court of Versailles. Wheu he was about to present himself at the court for the first time he was informed that a wig was essential. Franklin' head was so large that no ordinary vftg would begin to fit it. However, one was found sufficiently large to pass him through the antechambers, after which he was permitted to remove the ridiculous conventional appendage and place it in his ample pocket. Hard to Please. Mr. Snagjjg was accosted on the street the other day by a beggar who was covered with a very remarkable mass of patched and ragged garments and who said: "Mister, haven't-you some old clothes you could give a fellow?" Snaggs surveyed the beggar from bead to foot and then asked: "Are not the clotbes you have on old enough for you?' - : - - - Discriminating. A thoughtful hostess gave a children's party and decided It would be healthier f observe only mineral-waters. One little girl tasted of her carbonic and laid the 'glass down. "What's the matter, dear? Don't you like charged water?" "No, ma'am." "Please may ' I "have some water that you've paid foTT' TJf. snot an Actress, Butte, Mont., Aug. 28. Eli Sutherland, a bartender, shot and killed May Jackson, an 'actress, on the street in the presence of a score of people and then shot himself. He will die. The couple had quarreled. Tooth and Pleasure. Youth is not the age of pleasure. We then expect too much, and we are, therefore, exposed to daily disappointments and mortifications. When - we are a little older and have brought down our wishes to our experience, then we become calm and begin to enJoy ourselves. Lord Liverpool. Fortune. Fortune Is like the market, where many times If you can stay a little the price will fall, and again it is sometimes like a sibyl's offer, ..which at first offereth the commodity at full, then consumetb part and part and still boldeta up the price. Bacon. A proper secrecy is the only mystery Ct able men. Mystery is the only ftcrecy of weak and canning oaejs. t

pOPftjpg unJS General..

Results YesterdayNATIONAL LEAGUE. PhiladelDhia 2: Pittsburg 0: second game; called In seventh innins to-permit players to catch train. Cincinnati 0; Chicago 8. No other games scheduled." - AMERICAN LEAGUE. St Louis, 3; New York 1. Chicago ys. Philadelphia, .postponed; wet grounds. Cleveland 9; Boston 3. , t Detroit vs. Washington, postponed; wet grounds'. Philadelphia 3; Pittsburg 5; , fiTst game. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.. Toledo 3; Milwaukee 5. Indianapolis .0; St- Paul 7.. . Columbus 2; Kansas City 1. Louisville 2; Minneapolis 7. AMERICAN ASS'll AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. PCL Columbus 81 50 .611 Milwaukee 74 58 .561 Toledo 69 60 .535 Minneapolis 68 63 .519 Kansas City 64 66 .492 Louisville 62 69 .473 St. Paul 58 71 , .449 Indianapolis 46 85 .351 AT MILWAUKEE. R, H. E. Toledo .... 3 9 5 Milwaukee 5 11 1 Batteries Camnitz and Abbott; Bateman and Roth. Umpire Egan. AT ST. PAUL. R. H. E. Indianapolis ........... 0 8 5 St. Paul 7 12 2 Batteries Fisher and Holmes; Mor gan and Drill. Umpire Sullivan. At KANSAS CITY. R. H.E. Columbus 2 6 1 Kansas City 1 8 1 Batteries Robertaille and Ryan; Durham and Leahy. Umpires Ower, and Kane. AT MINNEAPOLIS. v R. H. E. Louisville 2 7 4 Minneapolis .79 1 Batteries Kenna and Shaw; Ford and Graham." Umpire Werden. The I'nder Side ot Fish. Experiments have been made with flounders in order to determine whether the whiteness of the under sides of those fish is due to the exclusion of light, and the presence of color on their upper sides to exposure to light. The fish experimented upon were kept living in a glass tank, having a mirrorplaced beneath, so as to reflect light upon the under sides of the fish. One of these prisoners survived for three years under conditions so strangely different from its ordinary habits of life, and all of them exhibited the development of spots of pigment on their lower surfaces. The experimenters concluded that It is exposure to light that causes the coloration of the upper parts of the bodies,-not only of flounders, but of other fish, and, conversely, that it is to the comparative absence of light that the whiteness of under sides of fish is due. They extend the same principle to explain the colorless condition of the skins of many animals that pass all their lives in caves. Bird Sona-a. Naturalists have long been puzzled as to how birds learn to sing. Does it come natural to a bird of a certain species to sing the song common to its kind or does it learn to imitate whatever song it most hears during the early days of its life? Experiments made by a well known student of bird life proved that most birds simply learn by imitation. Hs placed young linnets to be reared by skylarks, woodlarks, titlarks and other breeds, and in every case the linnet learned the song of his foster parents. Again, a number 'of linnets were reared where they bad no chance of hearing the song of any bird at all. In due course they began to sing, but their song was entirely original. The cuckoo, however, seems to be an exception, for although it is almost Invariably reared by foster parents of any species but Its own. It always sings to perfection Its own peculiar song, quite uninfluenced by the vocal efforts of Its guardians. THINGS THEATRICAL. Helen Bertram is appearing In vaudeTille. "The Danites" Is to be revived by McKee Rankin. Maude Fealy is to 6tar In the "Illu sions of Beatrice." :t Blanche Ring Is to star In "Dolly Dollars" In the fall. - . : . Charles Klein's latest play is called "Daughters of Men." A new play of life on the plains h called 'The Coyote Doctor." ; , Frank Norris "McTague" has been dramatized for Wilton Lackaye. The sum raised for the jubilee fund for Ellen Terry was over $40,000. A. H. Woods will have fifteen attractions on the road in the coming season. Julia Sanderson may be featured, in a new piece called "The .Motor, GirL",. Olga Nethersole has .announced her Intention of playing Portia next, season. ' . ........ ' There will be two companies, presenting "The Gingerbread. Maa the coming season. " ' ;; Fay, Davis Is to be starred next sea son in a dramatization of Mrs. Wbar K ton'a noveL The House of Mirth-"

REDS OUTCLASSED BV CHICAGO TEAM

Spuds Finds Ewing for Ten .'Hits and Eight Runs While Cincinnati. Gets None. ; PIRATES LOSE. AND WIN PITTSBURG WON FIRST GAME OF REGULATION-LENGTH AND LOST SECOND ONE OF SEVEN INNINGS. " '

NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost, ret Chicago 83 31 .741 New York 73 41 .641 Pittsburg' .; 73 42 .635 Philadelphia 51 6S .428 Cincinnati 51 6S .428 Brooklyn 44 69 .3S9 St. Louis 45 73 .3S1 Boston 3S 79 , .331

.Publishers Press Chicago, Aug. 28. The Chicago Nationals simply outclassed the Cincinnati's this afternoon and won as they pleased. Score: R.H. E. Cin .... 00000000 0 0 8 3 Chi .... 10001411 x S 10 1 Batteries Ewing and Schlel; Brown and Moran. Umpires Emslie and Johnstone. EACH GOT A GAME. Pittsburg, Aug. 28. The Pittsburg and Philadelphia Nationals broke even in a double header this afternoon. In the first game the visitors batted Willis hard, but good fielding behind him kept the score down, and by bunching their hits in the first and sixth Innings the locals finally won out. The second game was called in the seventh to permit the team to catch a train. Richie was invinci ble while the visitors found Lynch when hits meant runs. Scores: (First Game.) R, H. E. Phil 00000200 13 12 3 Pitts ... 3000 0 200 x 5 9 1 Batteries Lush and Dooin; Williams and Gibson. Umpires Conway and Klem. (Second Game.) . ... ... . ' . R. H. E. Phil o:o o x o 1 (h-2 8 o Pitts . J, 0f Q, 0 0 0-7-Q 4 0 ' Batteries Richie V " and - Dooin; Lynch and Gibson. ; Umpires Conway and' Klem. " V "Every cloud has a silvery lining. 'Not after a grafter has been under It" Doubtless. "What havo you to lose In this deal?" "Nothing." "What have you to gain?" "Nothing." "Humph! Must be in training to serve on a Municipal league committee." I Flattered Them. "I don't see why she dotes so on baseball when she doesn't understand a thing about the game." "Then you don't understand human nature. It makes the men swell up like a balloon with importance when they explain the game to her." Had Use For Her. Could you recommend a hired girl to me?" "I have one here," said the suave employment agent, "who is a brick." "Well," said the lady doubtfully, "I might try her on scouring the knives and forks." . Bright Idea. "What would you do If you were engaged to be married to the rich Miss Oldun?" "First thing I'd do would be to borrow money of her to hire a substitute." Free "With lb "Miss Suffrage has a fine mind." "Ever sampled it?" "What do you mean?" "Wait till she gives you a piece of it and you will know." Plain to Them. The little fishes in the brook Are wise to many Seep designs. They never learned to use a book. But they can read between the lines. Tlie Ballooa Craie. "The highest ambition of some met Just now,"", remarked the observer oi events and. things, "seems to be to gc up in a balloon." Yonkers Statesman. . T a Bowler Girl. Our hearts the pins. oh. bowler fair. How oft it is you make & strike! But if by chance you leave a spare The pin boy, Cupid., etarxilng there , - - Rolls back the bail , f That the rest may fall And cur hearts may all t Score up, in thrall , T 0 ob, bowler fair! - - - - - - -Friacf $9 TuceSkJ

HEW YORK FILLING WITH BRYAN MEN

Nearly One Hundred of the Visitors Called on William R. Hearst. JUDGE HOWARD'S SPEECH TELLS YELLOW JOURNALIST THAT DEMOCRATS HATE REFORMS AND DO NOT LIKE JEROME FOR THAT REASON. IFubll&hers' Press New YorK, A us. 2S The town is filling up with Bryan welcomers and other excursionists. From now until the hour of the reception delegations from all over the country will be arriving almost hourly, and they will bring with them a lot of others. The program for f the reception at the Battery Thursday will be the simplest possible. Mr. Bryan will be met as he steps off the boat by Acting Mayor McGowan, President William Hoge of the Commercial Travelers Anti-Trust league; Lewis Nixon, chairman of the plan and scope committee, and one or two others. Mr. McGowan will extend the freedom of the city to Mr. Bryan, who will be escorted to a carriage, in which the acting mayor, Mr. Hoge and Governor Folk will also ride. A few other carriages with members of the reception committee will follow. After the ride to the Victoria hotel Mr. Bryan will be received in the hotel by a committee of five distinguished Democrats from each state. Nearly 100 of the visiting Nebraskan delegation paid a visit to the Gllsey House and were introduced to William R. Hearst. The greetings were cordial. Judge Hr vard, one of the delegation, in speaking to Mr. Hearst, said: "We appreciate the position you have taken and for the reforms you have brought about." Mr. Hearst remarked that Judge Howard spoke like a reformer. "Not at all," replied Judge Howard. "We hate reformers. We loathe them. They are too much like Jerome." During the talk with Mr. Hearst Judge Howard said he was not prepared to believe the stories that had been circulated that Mr. Hearst was hostile to Mr. Bryan. In reply Mr. Hearst said he knew of no reason why he could not meet the friends of Mr. Bryan with the utmost cordiality, and he expressed his gratification at the call of the delecation upon him. '-. ' : Tfj Two Plants Destroyed. ! w. ; St. Faul,"Mlnnf.?Aug. '28. f Fire which started in the warehouse of the Heinz Pickle company on the west Bide destroyed the plant of the company, the large factory of the American Can company and a 3-story frame tenement building. The total loss is estimated at $355,000, of which $300,000 is on the American Can company's plant. Shortly after the firemen had gotten the tenants, 30 in number, out of the frame bi-ilding, the walls of the can factory fell, crushing the tenement house to the ground. Origin of the Strike Fnnd. The earliest mention of a strike funG occurred in the strike of the Farlsian stocking weavers in 1724, when a crown a day was subscribed for every striker and all blacklegs were mercilessly boycotted. But the biggest strike under the "ancient regime" was that of the eilk factory hands at Lyons In 1744, when 12,000 men went on strike and so alarmed the mayor that he conceded everything they asked and wrote to his brother that he bad "la tete cassee par cette vile canaille." The "vile canaille," however, bad had their moment, and it was no longer theirs. Two months later the king sent down 20,000 soldiers "pour remettre l'ordre dans la bonneville de Lyon," and we hear no more of strikes till the supreme ?tri';e of 1789. . . j : ,1. i We Ads

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' . ' wanted. : : ' M t 4 V : WANTED A girl at 50 South 13th SL Call at once. " 27-3t " WANTED Two drivers. Address Tom Mertz, or call Both phones 103. 29-tf WANTED A good girl for general housework, out of city, good wages, no washing. Call at 59 Bridge Ave. 2a-3t. WANTED To rent small store or one half store room including window on Main street, between 6th and 11th streets. Men's furnishing store preferred. Addess J. V. J., care Palladium. 29-St. WANTED Man with two or more boys. Steady work in bottle factory. Address Woodbury Glass Co., Winchester, Ind. , 29-3t. WANTED A place by young girt to assist in house work, town or country. Address Nettie Tiffany, Richmond. R. R. No. 6. 29-3t. WANTED A six or eight room house in nice neighborhood. All conveniences. Address L. care of Palladium. 2S-6t WANTED To buy a good livery horse, S24 North 11th. . 2S-2t. WANTED Your cider to make. Orders taken for sweet cider. Phone 1095 A. W. W. Dilk's. cor. 16th and S. E. St. 2S-2L WANTED The Palladium - will pay 10c for copies of the Richmond Palladium of the dates of January 1st and 2nd, 1906. 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. A Snail'a Scnae of Smell. Professor E. Yuug of Geneva discovered that the keen sense of smell attributed to the ordinary snail Is distributed over the entir body not covered by the shell, the two pairs of tentacles, the lips and the edges of the feet being particularly sensitive. In the experiments made a brush dipped in various odorous substances In turn was brought near the different parts of the body, and responses were noted at distances of one twenty-fifth of an Inch to several Inches. Only in exceptional cases was odor perceived as much as fifteen or twenty inches away, showing that smell cannot guide these creatures to food far removed. The Mulberry Tree. Silk is the great industry of northern Italy, and the plains of the quadrilateral are dark with mulberry trees. ' Tbe raulberry tree is the hardest worked piece of tinfber ithe wof!d. ' First fts leaves are skinned off for the worms to feed pa, then the little branches are clipped for the worms to nest in, then the large Ifcnbs are cropped for charcoal, and the trunk has not only to produce a new crop of leaves and limbs for next year, but must act as trellis for a grapevine. . .kJ Mm Ilia Bucolic Bnaineas. "That was a perfectly lovely gentleman I met last night," declared the pretty milliner. "He has a good, reliable business too." "What 13 it?" asked her friend. "Why, he sells farm Implements," continued the pretty girl. "What kind of farm Implements?" "Buckets nothing but buckets. He told me he kept a bucket 6hop."Detroit Free Press. Ptomainei. Ptomaines, according to Quain, are alkaloids produced by the decomposition of animal substances. The word ptomaine wa3 at first restricted to alkaloids produced by cadaveric decomposition, but it Is now also employed to designate alkaloids of animal origin formed during life as a result of chemical changes induced by some agency or other acting within the organism. 3 ime Lnime sff e Your

I Received by Lp

and ollecft Later.

-1 Kir T . . . w.. . . RichmoJ nroMrtt . sw snedalty. Porterfield. Kelly Block. Phone S2v. FOR SALE Nice cook 1609 Main street. stove. Call 29-7L FOR SALE Household goods-at 224 North 17th street. Call at any time. -,-it..i :: I rr.ili'- It. FOR SALE 2 fine male Scotch Collie Pups. Address Leo Amsden, Now Paris Pike.olf phono 327. 2V3t FOR SALE eap a Square Piano at 42 South th street, r 26-7t Everyb buys property from Woodhurs 913 M St. Telerhotia juneS tf 491. RENT. - RENT Fuxniahed rooms at the Grand for gentiljeu only. tf FOR RENT Desirable room, 207 N. ..12th street. 29-3L LOST. LOST Pocketbook containing $5 bill, 1 silver dollar, some change, trading stamps and door key. Finder return to Mrs. Wm. Kimble. 319 North 19th street and receive reward. 29-3t. LOST Necklace of gold beeds with cross attached. Finder return to 210 North 9th street. 2S-3L FOUND. FOUND Lawn Mower. Call at No. 121 North 10th street, and Identy property. GOING FISHIlNlQ. ' If you're waking- in the mornlnar, cart ui early, mother, dear. Peanuts Fink and Spider Brown and ; Bricktop will be here. And we know where the fishrs swim and ' where the shade, la cool And where's a dandy diving place besias the swimming pool. Tve brungr the kindlings ia. mother, yo . wanted me to chop; Tve filled the woodbox till the wood is' 8pilllng o'er the top; Tve curried all the horses as m father bade me do; Tve milked the cows and slopped the pigs ' and fed the chickens too. I've weeded out the onion bed and banked the celery, . , And I've transplanted cabbage plants and propped the apple tree, And I have salted all the sheep and fixed chicken coop And fun all the errands, mother, till X felt , y6plritjdroop.J- ( J3o, If you're Waking early, call me early, : v mothrear,------ ' i-i For I know where the graylings play and where the poola are clear, - ?' And I've dug all the worms I want and. cut an alder pole, . ... : . , And corks will ',ob tomorrow morn In that old fishing hole. 1 J. M. Lewis in Houston Post. t -v, 't Jealousy Prompted, Deed. New, York, Aug! 2t8;-Martin Winterstelni 30, a fireman on the' steamer Colon, shot and killed Mrs. Annie Lar sen, 29, in her apartments. ' Mrs. Sallie Prussian, 29, a cousin of Mrs.' Lar sen, was shot and seriously wounded by the fireman. Wintersteln was arrested after a hard struggle. He was infatuated with Mrs. Larsen and said that Jealousy prompted the deed. The Idea of wearing one plain coloi over another. Is a very pretty one and will prevail with evening frocks for th coming season. Framboise over appU green makes a charming combination also, one darker shade over another. Gold and sliver tissue ribbon rut through lace headings, lace bands bor dered with bebe velvet ribbons, festoons of tulle held dowifby wee clus-' ters of artificial flowers or knotted al regular Intervals, all form favorlt modes of trimming the necks of after naou and evoninir dresses. New" York Post. c Looses

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