Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 269, 7 November 1907 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE KICITSIOXD PAUjADIUM AXI SUN-TEIjEGRA3I, THURSDAY, XOVErBER 7, 1907.
THE RICDMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.
Palladium Printing Co., Publisher. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Dally 2c Per Couy, Sunday 3c Per Week. Dally and Sunday 10c IN ADVANCE One Year Entered at Richmond. Ind. Postcfflce As Second Class Mail Mattiw FAIRBANKS AND ROOSEVELT. The Indianapolis Star and News are exhibiting great glee over the recent elections, claiming they show an astounding strength for their candidate, Vice President Fairbanks, and a correspondingly astounding weakness for Secretary Taft and President Roosevelt. This was to have been expected aa these two papers for the past few years have been enlarging and distorting everything they could to favor the vice president in his presidential aspirations. The Palladium Is a republican newspaper and believes in fealty to the republican party as long as that party shall be worthy of honest support, and as long as it is headed by the right kind of mon. But it can not gulp down and support any man, even though he is a republican and a native son of Indiana, who is so darned anxious to force himself by the power of a rotten and corrupt political machine, upon a people who do not want him. We can not support a man whose "holler than thou" public life is belied by the political organization he heads. The Indianapolis Star and News, however, show by their editorials and news articles that they can support such a man. These two Indianapolis newspapers at present consider that the Kentucky election, by which that state installed a republican governor, greatly redounds to the credit of Vice President Fairbanks. The vice president during the past summer, made several speeches in Kentucky for the republican party, and now that the republican party has been victorious at the polls in bo far at tha election of governor is concerned, the Indianapolis newspapers are claiming that Mr. Fairbanks deserves the credit for this. Not so. The republican candidate for governor won because the people of Kentucky revolted against the democratic governor who used his high office in an attempt to procure the conviction of a man without a fair trial. A year or so ago, during the last congressional campaign. Vice President Fairbanks tried to pour the oil of his smooth words upon Mr. Watson's troubled waters in Wayne county. Mr. Fairhanks was listened to by the smallest audience that ever assembled In Richmond to hear a republican orator, much less a vice president. And what was the result? Mr. Watson's majority in Wayno county was slaughtered from 2,o00 to less than 400. Do the Indianapolis newspapers give Mr. Fairbanks all due credit for this? We are interested in seeing the republican party at the next election come out victorious, and to do that it must have a man of, for and by the people, to lead it. If that man can not be President Roosevelt, then he must be some man whom, we can feel sure, embodies Roosevelt principles. President Roosevelt and Vice President Fairbanks represent two distinct types of men. President Roosevelt is not afraid to assail the criminal corporations and their criminal leaders. Vice President Fairbanks has trained with the corporations all his life and is favored by them for the presidency. He is looked upon as the kind of man who will follow a "let well enough alone" policy, and hence his popularity with the corporations. Our corporations as they are at present being managed are, nothing short of anarchistic in their makeup. If a law prevents them from making a profit at the expense of the people, they over-ride that law. They manufactured Impure food products because they could make a greater profit, aud that was at the expense of our health. At present they imprison thousands of little children in 6tuffy factories and foul mines in order to make a greater profit by sav ing the difference between a child's wage and the wage of a grown man. But they do not consider, nor do they even care, that that imprisoned child is being dwarfed, mentally and physically, by work too arduous for its frail and undeveloped body and mind. And tne men who do these things in the name of business, are the men who want Fairbanks for president are the men who have helped bring about the recent panic in New York and who tried to lay the blame for it on President Roosevelt, If those men are allowed, by the people of this state and by the people cf this country, to elect a man favorable to their policies, the peopie will have
received what they richly deserve. If the people of thi3 country haven't gumption enough to look out for their own liberties and keep men in power who will work for them, and not for the corporations, they deserve nothing better than to be the slaves of a precious lot of anarchist millionaires. The ultimate result, however, would be very bad for the country, rich and poor
alike. For anarchist millionaires breed anarchist poor men. Russia is a good example of the truth of this statement. CONDOLENCES SENT TO SECRETARY E. M. HAAS Reminded of His Resemblance To a Defeated Candidate. NO NEED TO RUB IT IN. Kentuckians, republicans, especially Louisvillians, are so enthused over the victory of their ticket at Tuesday's j elections, that a few of them have j gone so far as to console E. M. Faas i of this city, on his resemb'ance to the defeated democratic gubernatorial candidate, Hager. Mr. Haas recently attended the meeting of the Lutheran Olivo Branch synod held in Louisville and was mistaken at all turns for Haer, the dem-! ocratic nominee, who by the way, was fighting for a closed town. He was ' not greeted very cordially until his j identity was made know c j Secretary Haas srtys he knows ho is! no beauty but 113 Kentuckians need not rub it in by sending him condolences, because of his striking resemblance tO HltJr. Nathan Strauss was driving his mare, Ida Highwood, on the New York speedway. A company promoter, noted no lees for his unscrupulousness than his wealth dashed by and Mr. Straus said: "There is Blank. When he came to New York in the seventies he had only a dollar in his pocket." Mr. Straus paused and smiled. "However," he said, "there were other pockets." TO PRETENDERS A Wholesome Word for Guidance. Just a word to you, "Collier's" and other glaring examples of Modem Yellow Journalism and Cigarettes. Environment gives you a view-point from which it is difficult to understand that some people even nowadays act from motives of old fashioned honesty. There are honest makers of, foods and healthful beverages and there are honest people who use them. Perhaps you are trained to believe there is no honesty in this world. There is, although you may not be of a kind to understand it. Some cf you have been trained in a sorry class of pretenders, but your training does not taint the old fashioned person trained without knowledge of pretense and deceit These letters came to us absolutely without solicitation. We have a great many thousand from people who have been helped or entirely healed by following the suggestions to quit the food or drink which may bo causing the physical complaints and change to Postum Coffee or Grape-Nuts food. You are not intelligent enough to' know the technical reasons why the change makes a change in the cells of the body. Your knowledge, or lack of knowledge, makes not the slightest j difference in the facts. You can, print from old and worn plates all the cheap books your presses will produce and sell them as best you can, but such acts and your "learned" editorials are but commercial, and seek only "dollars" and much by pretence. When you branch out into food values you become only rediculous. Stick to what you know. The field may be small but it is safe. This first letter is from the President of the "Christian Nation." a worthy Christian paper of New York. New York, Oct. 2, 1907. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. Dear Sirs: I am, this morning, in receipt of the enclosed mighty good letter from one of my subscribers, which I forward to you. and which I am sure you will be glad to use. I am personally acquainted with this lady, and know that she has no object In writing, other than to do good. Cordially, John W. Pritchard, Pres. Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 1, 1007. Dear Mr. Pritchard: Noticing Postum Food Coffee advertised each week in your reliable paper, I concluded to try it, and feeling it a duty towards those who may have suffered as I have from indigestion, desire to state what wonderful benefit I have received from Postum although using only a short time, and not do. I j alone realize and appreciate its good 'effects, but friends remark, "How much I have improved and how well I ilook," and I tell the facts about Posj turn every time, for since using it I ! have not had one attack of indigestion. , It is invigorating, healthful: does not : affect the nerves as ordinary coffee, j and if properly made, a most delicious I drink. Although I have not had much ; faith in general advertising, yet. findi ing Postum has done so much better ( for me than I expected I am more in- ' clined to -Prove all things, hold fast ithat which is good." I am so thankful for good health that I want it known what a blessing Postum has been to me. You may use these few lines as an ad. if you so desin? and my name also. Very truly yours, Anna S. Reeves. 273 McDouough St., Brooklyn. Coffee hurt her, she quit and used j Postum. She didn't attempt to analyze I but she enjoyed the results. Under neath it all "There's a Reason." POSTUM CERE All CO, LTD.
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We Want Every Pile Sufferer to Test This Great Cure at Our Expense. Send Your Name and Address For a Free Trial Package. We want to send you a free trial of the Great Pyramid Pile Cure at once, so you can see with your own eyes what it can do. You cure yourself with perfect ease, in your own home, and for little expense. Pyramid Pile Cure gives you prompt relief. It heals sores and ulcers, reduces congestion and inflammation, and takes away pain, itching and irritation. After you have tried the sample treatment, and you are satisfied, you can get a full, regular-sized treatment of Pyramid Pile Cure at your druggist's for 50 cents. If he hasn't it, send us the money and we will send you the treatment at once, by mail, in plain sealed package. Send your name and address at once for a trial of this marvelous, quick, sure cure. Address Pyramid Drug Co., 90 Pyramid Bid?., Marshall, Mich. BULLIES IN BATTLE. The Barroom Typo of Rowdy When Put to the Test of War. "The barroom bully is an arrant coward when put to the test of war." With this saying of the late tJeueral Rosecrans as his topic, a speaker at a civic betterment meeting discoursed on the ways of the average "bad man" of the modern cities. He read from a writing of General Rosecrans, familiarly known as '"Old Rosy." in which that otflcer describe1 a regiment of men from Cin cinnati iu the civil war in which there were many of the barroom bully class w ho had been pressed into the service or entered as substitutes to earn a few hundred dollars. When these men came face to face with the grim fighters in gray of the Confederacy and they realized that in warfare the rifle makes the puny weakling a match for the muscular giant, the bullies just turned pale and flunked. They couldn't stand rifle fire any more than they would the steely bayonet. Big. brawny bruisers who had been wont to swagger about town with chips on their shoulders looking for some weaker vessel to tackle found In the fire and smoke of battle that, while their frames and muscles were large, their real courage was mighty small and of the cravenly coward sort. "Better take the pale faced, modest mannered Sunday school lads when you want real soldiers men who can face the bullets or the bayonets of the enemy rather than the brawny red faced bullies of our cities, who, when they are outdone in an argument, want to resort to brute force to settle the question in dispute," wrote General Rosecrans, and he should have known. Washington Star. CHANGED THE TYPES. The Story of a Vengeful Wife and a Bible Error. In the famous library of Wolfenbut tel. in Hesse, is an old Bible which is ' greatly treasured. It appears that Id that passage In Genesis where God : told Eve that Adam shall be her mas ! ter and shall rule over her the German ; translation is, Lnd er soil dein nerr sein." "Ilerr," which means master, does not occur in this Bible, but Instead there appears the word "narr," whlcfc means fool. Thr prrnr tvas rnni1 hv n nlinrrl between the printer and his wife In the J year 15S0. The wife was vengeful I and in the silent watches of the night ; she entered the room where her hus-1 band had been setting type and mall-!
clously changed "herr" to "narr." The : K'Ving tfcem morn trouble than thr; printer was arrested after the booi scarcity of freight cars. Motive powhad been printed and the mistnke dla- er officials of the various roads ,ro covered, but his apprentice testified now making a thorough inspection .if that he saw the wife steal Into the , their shops and locomotives, and in composing room and alter the word. ! some cases special committees have
The woman was imprisoned for blasphemy and died in prison. Orders were given that all the coplei of the edition should be destroyed. This was done, with the exception of the one copy in the Wolfenbuttel library. Commercial Term In Law. The plaintiff was stating his case: "Your honor, I was walking alongside of the waiting train when this man, who is a stranger to me. and without any cause whatever, reached out of the car window and planted a couple of powerful blows upon my face." "Your honor," expostulated the defendant, "I was so enraged by the delay of that train and the miserable service of that road in general that I just had to give vent to my feelings in some way. I couldn't restrain, myself." "I feel for you," admitted the judge, who had had occasion to travel on the same road, "but I am compelled to fine you nevertheless. That pair of hand me downs will cost you just $10." New York Press. Tha Solemn Scotchman. A Scottish parson was attending a funeral in his own churchyard. The service over and dust given to dust, the green sod smoothed down over the narrow bed, the company departed. But a worthy man remained behind and approached the parson with a solemn face, as though for serious talk. "Din ye ken what 1 aye think at a funeral?" Many serious reflections have come to one there, and the clergyman expected some befitting thought. "No. What is it you always think?" The answer was. "I aye think I'm desperate gledd it's no me." The incumbent of that parish was mortified. Dundee Advertiser. When you are sick, out of sorts, take Holllster's Rocky Mountain Tea. The most effective remedyi Relieves when others fail. You be tha judge, try it. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co.
s no puny in its construction and is thereQueen Taitu the consort of Menelik .r! irlei?t,nd,t n times under perfect yuwu lauu, tne ronsort 01 aieneuK, control is Cole's Hot Blast. It requires but Is an elderly and dignified woman, half the usual amount of fuel and keeps hard good looking according to the Ethic SSSSt Ato 'SSr plan point of view, and a great stickler tor eucttav 1 Bawcnbiisch 505-507 Main SL
PASSENGER AGENTS MEET AT CHICAGO
Probable Improved Service on Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville Will Result. C. A. BLAIR IN ATTENDANCE. HARRY MILLER HAS MADE A FINE SHOWING WITH THE CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS OTHER NEWS OF THE RAILROADS. Chicago, Cincinnati and Louisville passenger agents are in session in Chicago. It is the first meeting of the kind ever held there. CLaiics A. Blair, local passer.ger r.s:.nt. i.-. autr.ding. Affairs pertaining to the road'.i passenger regulations were to i.uve been discussed, probably the mcst important change being in the passeusr r train schedules. Armed with the many complaints that have been registered against the lack of passenger , trains in Richmond. Agent Blair, it is thought, will use all of his iufiu-1 ence in securing the adoption of a ' passenger schedule which will better fit the needs of Richmond. It was understood previous to the meeting ! that hip rhani'cs would he mnrip in ! the schedules of all trains. The meeting is being held in the offices of General Passenger Agent T. H. Gurney, who is presiding. Among other passenger agents who were to be present are F. E. Landmier, Cincinnati; A. E. Yardley of Chicago; John H. Bauer, Peru; C. E. Hudson, Muncie; G. M. Kennedy, Marion. The entire office force were also to be in attendance. COMMISSION IN CITY. The Indiana State Railroad commission were in Richmond a short time Wednesday The commission had just completed an inspection of the Grand Rapids & Indiana railroad. It did not remain in Richmond long, leaving immediately for Indianapolis over the Pennsylvania. MAKES FINE SHOWING. Harry Miller, son of Col. John P. Miiler of this city, is doing things with the Chicago and Eastern Illinois railroad, of which he is rreneral superintendent. The road earned over one million dollars during the month of October, decidedly the largest record ever made by that line. In fact the record is unexcelled by any of the smaller roads of the country having about the same mileage. O. E. VINCENT INJURED. O. E. Vincent, a G. It. & I. fireman, who makes regular trips into Rich- j mond was painfully scalded at the Ft. i Wayne roundhouse Wednesday. An j injector burning on the engine which! he was firing was responsible. His f cald is a very painful one, his arm bping vertfobly cooked by the hot. water. He will be off duty for several j days as the result of h'3 Injuries. SHORT ON MOTIVE POWER. In addition to the frpight car shortage and the congested condition of certain railroads considerate twib!) 13 be3nR ePenenc!d en somo roads on omt of the lack of motive pow-; er to handl tfce enormous busHes. j Officials of some of the lines admit t5-at the shortage of motive power is been appointed to devise mpans of getting the motive power in better condition. NO SMALL INVESTOR. The Pennsylvania is feel'ng thp power of the small investor as nvjch as any corporation in the country, p has been compelled to double te office force of its transfer agercv in Xew York during the past mrr.th, nnd in addition most of the clerks anworking until a late hour every evenHOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN COUGH MEDICINE. " More effective than any of the patent nostrums for curing coughs or colds is a simple remedy which you can make at home in five minutes at very small expenae. Use Granulated Sugar Syrup 134 oz. Pinex 2V oz. Take three-quarters of a pound of granulated sugar, add water, heat and stir until you have a ! thick syrup. Any druggist will sell you enough Pinex (2 oz.) for 50 cents. Mix in a clean pint ; bottle and shake well. Keep well I wui last me iamny I T foLmanr m6nths' i'mex, as you probably know, is the most concentrated form of No'way White Pine Extract. The bests results from this prescriptioa are to be had only by using the pure Pinex. All druggists have it or can get it easily on request. How Stove Potty Affects Health. Hckness ususlly starts with s cold tbi result of an uneven temperature in the room, ftove putty falls out of the seams, causing a lack of control of the fire, hence the beat cannot be kept uniform. The stove which
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your rj.Tnr-ri-e- '.-r, ierecutiV I rccvsiiu thf-n to my fi-i'ivds T-u!tii.(t thin ).i?r vri'.l fulfill ry nromiu to you ar c be all that yo i rcqiara, rem it. Y. . r -ry tr.ij.
I! .tl Wjc1-..-; Yc-4 can vr.w-ve cr.-w" that you: 1...1 (- !csi;.-r .v..'. -i?et,
Alter visiting: E. IThm's .-i; .t tpautihir:- e?;;.h; -fr; yoa will realize when you see a well-groomed-woman that she is prrt-ctir. ? and :'. v. -roving h?r t-rrcr? by x'.-.t use of E. Burnham's toilet requisites. Thousands are dc:n this to-day. Why don't you? Ail f-.?:t-c.v, c caii supply you. Free sample Hair Tonic, Cucumber Cream, ir.cludia? botkir.'liow to Become Beautiful," by calling, or mailed upon receipt cf 10c to E. BURNHAM, 70-73 Stete Si., Chicago, 111. The Largest Manufacturer in the World of TotUi Requisites and Hair Good. For Sale by
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E. Burnham will have a demonstrator in this city from Nov. 4 to Nov. 9, for the purpose of teaching the ladies how to use E. Burnham's toilet requisites with equally as good success in the privacy of their own homes, as if they had visited his celebrated toilet parlors at 70 and 72 State St., Chicago, III.
ing preparing certificates frr delivery. The number of Pennsylvania stockholders is much the largest in its history. CASE IS TRANSFERRED. It is stated that just before the supreme court of Pennsylvania adjourned on Monday, Chief Justice Mitchell made a verbnl order transferring U c appeal in a 2-cent rate railroad case from Philadelphia to Pittsburg and fixing noxr. Mcr-dpy as the time for the nrgumnf. It will be remembered that this is the euit the Pennsylvania railroad entered against the coun:y of Ph-lnclelr'hia to prevent the enforcement of the railroad rate bill passed at the last session of the legislature. BRAKE ALL RECORDS. The p.-Id win locomotive Works last morvLo hroV.o all previous records for or.tp'tt. t-.irning out 267 locomotive in thf! 'hirry-nne days. A majority o(! them are of the largest type of Inco-rr.oK'-e?, constructed, a large per cent being freight engines. Bears tlia THE MOOrrS VOLCANOES. Causes of the G'gar.tio Craters and Great Fissure Eruptions. It is eviucr.t to nny one who glances upward at thp mocn that Its volcanoes are on an immensely larger scale than those vr-iich su-.I our globe. One ex-placaik-a. now abandoned, is that the force of gvavitatio 1 being there only oue-s'.iuh that of the earth the matter ezpc'-'cd frm a crater would be spread f:.;- ore widely, and explosions would te g?: e?al!y on a far more magnificent Professor Pickering quotes this thvery or.ly to refute it in some comparisons which he made between the great volcanic region of Hawaii and oue of the smaller craters of the moon. The facts 8feia to him to be that the larger craters on the moon came into existence when the thin, solid crust covering the molten interior was. owing to the solidification and contraction of the crust, much too small to contain the liquid material. The craters were therefore formed by the lava bursting through the crust and so relieving the pressure. Later, after this relief had been found and the cru3t had thickened, the interior regions by cooling shrank away from the solid shell, which was now too large and. being Insufficiently supported, caved in. permitting the great fissure eruptions which produced the so callei lunar sens. These exteuslve outflows of lava dissolved the original solid shell whenever they came into contact with it much as they do In the present day in Hawaii. Had the moon been much smaller these eruptions might not have occurred at all. and if the moon had been much larger their relative size would have been greater. Most probably on the earth similar outbursts were greater, and our original gigantic craters were destroyed by the outflow of the earlier archaic rocks which completely submerged and dissolved taem. JLonaon rost THE ESKIMO BABY. How the Little One Is Carried and Cared For by the Mother. The arrival In the world of the youthful Eskimo is not greeted by the orthodox cradle and swaddling clothes. Practically till he can shift for himself he lives absolutely naked inside his mother's sealskin blouse, skin to skin keeping him warm. . This arrangement allows the mother
of -jr jzsc&m
TO THE
AMES You Are as Younj As You Look
K SW ImI T-f . KtUt Cr Trtml A GREAT miny of our leading ladies throughout the United - t:.:os have lost their beauty through neglect. Any YTov n cm maintain her youth and improve her Beauty hv the of E. BURNHAM'S CELEBRATED TOILET REQUISITES. These preparations have been on the market upwuTc-. cf thirty-seven years; have been used in their famous c-a'c-;' ..-; ;: at 70 and 72 State Street, Chicago, during this t'. ni T::c i.are improved them until absolute perfection has b:c t a-tjl ar,d it is the fault of any woman to-day if she does . -.tajs of these treatments which are offered to her by i: b'JPxNIAM, the most perfect and largest beautifying b '.-hr.i .nt in the world. These treatments with the different
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'i nd those who have used them will tell you that it is a . 1 t- , . i a -. r r
An- ,,' tact t;aT ii. tsumnam pih ?U i?y daim tor them. vnh. Ua- V' eaJ-, pimples, fill up '.o o.',. .t.'.f ?d by a FIHE, DRUGGIST, RICHMOND, i" gv ottiu oer wars simor immediately, and 6he can gisr trnvel and hunt without a peraLabulitor and without having to leave any ono at home to "mind" the baby. The mother's dress is almost exactly like the father s, except that it has a long sort of tail reaching nearly to the ground, embryo, no doubt, of the modern "train." ypnred the miseries of soap and water and early weaned to the readily swallowed diet of blubber and row peal meat, the Infant rapidly develops that Invaluable layer of subcutaneous fat wh!ch. while It enhances the "Jolly" appearance of the lads and the shapellnesR of the maidens, assists materially In economy in clothing. Thus In their frigid clime, once In their skin tent, the whole family will divest themselves of every stitch of clothing, unembarrassed by the fact that so many families share the tent with them. Sociability is early developed when one's next door neighbor on each side is only separated by an imaginary line between the deerskin you sleep on and the one he nses. The winter deerskin serves as bed and bedding at night and as parlor furniture during the day. Community of goods is almost imperative under this arrangement. Thus when one kills a seal all are fed. and likewise when he doesn't all go hungry together. American Missions ry. Magnetic Mediums. "You've got a pretty bad headache, sir, haven't you?" asked the barber, giving a dry shampoo. "That's just what's bothering me." replied the man in the chair. "But how did?you know?" "Tell it by my wrists and hands," explained the barber. "You and I are what they'd call magnetic mediums. And the eVctricIty in my fingers takes the pain out of your bead. But I get it. Thafs why I know. My bands are aching no-. I don't often strike a
JWOBt ICS 3Miven M
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it so plain that any lady can visited Burnham's Beautifying s iouci icquisun win suiuthe hollow places and bring back IND. J customer tifce you. nowever, or ra have to fro out of business. I'll bet my arms sc-Le for a half hour after you're gone." New York Post ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE. The Difference Between Instinct and Reasoning Power. Most animals have little self con sciousness. and their reasoning powers at best are of a low order, but in kind at .least the powers are not different from reason in man. A horse reach er over the fence to be company to another. This Is Instinct. When It leta down the bars with its teeth, that Is reason. When a dog finds Its way horn 3 at night by the sense of smell, this may be instinct; when be drags a stranger to his wounded master, thst is reasou. When a jack rabbit leaps over a bush to escape a dog or runs in a circle before a coyote, or when It lies fiat in the grass as a round ball of gray, indistinguishable from grass, this is instinct. But the same animal is capable of reason that Is, of a distinct choice among lines of action. Not long ago a rabbit came bounding across the university campus at Palo Alto. As it passed a corner it suddenly facet two hunting dogs running side by side toward it. It had the choice of turning back, its first instinct, but a dan gerous one; of leaping over the dog or of lying on the ground. It chose none of these, and its choice was Instantaneous. It ceased leaping, ran low and went between the dogs just as they were in the act of seizing it, and the surprise of the dogs as they stopped and tried to hurry around was the same feeling that a man would have In like circumstances. "Eroluand Animal Life." Nearly all railway stations In Germany are equipped with restaurants, and as a rule the restaurant is the only waiting room. i-ii 17 1 . - . J ana mutei. every neaiei waiiaiuca.
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