Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 296, 7 December 1907 — Page 2

THE RICIOIOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAJ1, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1907.

HUBBY LIVEQ ALONE, HOW WANTS DIVORCE iNDIAHA FARMER, EIGHTY YEARS OLD, IS JAILS RECEIVE MANY HHERITS TWO MILLION DOLLARS SLOWLY GOING IIP

BUILDING

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Edwin C. Taylor Charges His Wife, Mattie, with Desertion.

WIFE ALSO MAKES CHARGES 8AYS THERE IS "THE WOMAN IN THE CASE" PENALTY FOR HU8BAND DESERTION AFFORDS SPECULATION. Attorney John F. Robbins, Friday filed suit for divorce for Edwin C. Taylor, against Mattie Taylor in the Marion Circuit court, Indianapolis. Just a few months ago Mrs. Taylor tried to secure a divorce in the Wayne circuit court. Her husband fought the action anA' as" "a 'result Judge Fox refused to. -grant the divorce. Mrs. Taylor charged hubby with failure to provide and that an Indianapolis woman had surplanted her in her husband's affections. "The woman in the case'" appeared in court, but was not called upon to testify. Taylor in his suit charges his wife with desertion, lie r.ays that when he moved to Indianapolis he tried to induce his wife to move there with him. She refused, so one winter he returned to this county and spent the entire winter here with her. In the spring he returned to Indianapolis and again tried to induce Mrs. Taylor to go with him. Once more she refused and since then they have been living apart. Because of her refusal to make her home with him in the capital city Taylor avers that Mrs. Taylor is guilty of desertion. Attorneys are wondering the penalty for liusband desertion. When December's icy fingers Have shorn each forest tree, It's time to tone your system By taking Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co. IS Applications for Management Of Reds Still Coming In. Cincinnati, Dec. ".Two more appli cations for the position of marfagor of the Reds were received by President Herrmann yesterday. One came from II, R. Durant, manager of the Waterbury team, of the Connecticut league. Mr. Durant is a Yale graduate, and has been In baseball for the past H years. Two years ago he purchased the Waterbury club for .n.rH, turned it into a winner and a money maker and has received .-.", for players sold in two seasons Though rlnintr such a ennrt ! bnsiness at his present stand, he is j anxious to break into the big league, and he does not ask $12,0x for his services. Another applicant is Gus Wetherall, manager of an independent club at Albion. Pa., who would probably do just as well as some others who have been mentioned........ When baby loses flesh, looks pale. Is fidgety and nervous, the little one is not well nourished, and should be given a soothing, healing tonic. Hollisler's Rocky Mountain Tea is the best tonic for babies; purely vegetable. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co. FORWARD PASS IN DISFAVOR AT YALE Walter Camp Urges That Play Be Abolished. AGAINST ELEMENT OF LUCK New Haven. Conn.. Dec. 7. Yale will vrge the abolition of the forward pass n football before another season. Walter Camp, Yale's athletic director, opened the crusade for that reform in the following letter to the Yale News: "The American collegian, whether player or spectator, does not care for a game in which the element of chance Is paramount. He likes to see or play a game where hard work counts, and a fame where definite planning secures a well appreciated result. tor tnis reason he does not care for the unlimited forward pass, which can now be tried without sever penalty on first and second down. Throwing the ball around indiscriminately may be the last resort of a weak, or inferior team and as such is unsatisfactory." The New Pure Food and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coug.is, colds and lung troubles is not affected by the National Puro Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recommend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. A. G. Luken &, Co. It Is not generally known that the wife of Senator Lafollette took her university degree in the same class with her husband. As Miss Belle Case she vanquished "Bob" Lafollette in a joint

SWAMPED

oratorical contest at the University cf laid bare by a fall of rock at the;loaams QuicK-nrer, equipped witn a Wisconsin. Before her marriage shelpointe du Taland. Canton of Belle I bydro-pneumatic .brake. The German

had been admitted to the practice of law.

Only One "BROMO QUININ1V that b Laxative flromo Quinine Cures a Cold in One Day, Crrpln 2 Days

PEOPPLE WHO TAUNTED OLD MAN'S CLAIM FOR MANY YEARS NOW SEEK FAVOR MONEY DATES FROM SIR FRANCIS DRAKE.

Boonville, lnd., Dec. 7. The happy experience of a man of eighty summers to be assured that he is to receive a share aggregating two millions of dollars, is "what has come to the person of William Matthews, a farmer of Warrick county, living near this city. The story of hi3 sudden fortune would be mere fiction were it not for the facts in the case which prove that there is money behind the movement and that the estate is a reality. Some time ago Mr. Matthews received papers to be filled out and which were to prove up his claim to his heirship to a large estate in England left by the famous English explorer and navigator, Sir Francis Drake. During his residence here Mr. Matthews has always alluded to the money in question and has maintained that some day, even though it. would be in his extreme old age, he would be the proud possessor of money that would be due him then. The origin of the money dates back to -the year 1572 when Sir Francis Drake, the explorer, disregarded the laws of nations and began to prey upon Spanish Merchant ships, thereby enriching himself with enormous wealth of gold and precious metals. The histories say that he enriched himself by a process little different from that of piracy, and that after PUBLISHERS MAY E Indiana Associated Dailies, May Be the Name. COUNTY PAPERS AFFECTED. The Indiana Associated Dailies will likely be the name of a new organization of newspaper publishers to be formed within a short time in Indiana, with headquarters in Indianapolis. Preliminary steps toward bringing i the owners of "country dailies" into one organization for "social and business" purposes were taken Friday at !a meeting held at. the Denisori hotel in Indianapolis by a number of newspapers publishers. X. M. Moss, publisher of the Linton Daily Call, presided at the meeting. Frank T. Singleton of the Martinsville Reporter was secretary. Some time ago letters suggesting an organization of the publishers were sent out. Out of forty-five replies received forty-three publishers favor an organization. A committee was appointed to adopt constitution and by laws and a general meeting of publish ers will be held within the next few weeks. If the organization is formed it is probable that a press service plan will be adopted by which all of the papers may be supplied with state news at a nominal price. ENTRIES ATTRACT MUCH ATTENTION Mrs. Meredith's Entries at Live Stock Show. NOW ON IN CHICAGO. At the live stock show now on exhibition at Chicago, Mrs. V. C. Meredith of Cambridge C'ty, one of the best known stock raisers in the state, is represented by a prize bull, and two cows. Her entries are attracting attention. Many of the exhibits come from Illinois, Indiana and Iowa. Indiana is especially strong on cattle. One of the few "freak" exhibits at. the show is the cattle exhibited by W. S. Vanatta, of Fowler, lnd. The cattle are a cross among a buffalo, a Hereford and a Jersey, and the one on exhibition at the stockyards is the only one in this section. Th a animal is strined like a zebra and hM been attracting much atten. tion of stockmen, few if any of the visitors ever having seen. the strange hybrid. The crossing of Buffalos with cows was first tried in Salt Lake a fewyears ago on the buffalo farm at Antelope island, where the largest herd of buffalo in the country now is. There are said to be four cattalos it Antelope island at present. The Fowler animal is the only other cattalo in this part of the country. C, C. Jt 1 ticket aeec; will sell yo sleeping car tickets to Chicago for their 11:15 P. M. train. Call on him. aprS-tt During the last few mouths in Swit zerland and France there have been

00

ORGAN Z

brought to light several caverns inirs irom oDiaimng any acquaintwhich petrification of water had ?nce with their new field artillery, but

wrought marvellous e line decoration The be announced is a magnificent grotto j Isle-en-Mer. ,at low tide. The grotto is accessible on every x. 25c

getting untold wealth in South America waters, he sailed up the western coast of the Americas and later circumnavigated the globe. He now holds the distinction of being the first

Englishman to sail around the world. Shortly after his return to England Sir Francis Drake invested his money. A part of it was placed in a certain enterprise for a period of over three hundred years, which time has just elapsed. It is this money that Mr. Matthews is partly an heir to. It is said that the heirs have never lost sight of the invested money, which, though small when invested, has now reached into the millions. Owing to the fact that the heirs have kept closely in touch with the money and have always known that it would be due them at this time, most of them have been located and have been asked to prove their title. Hundreds of old people in this county are veil acquainted with Mr. Matthews and have heard him tell many times of his fortune which was to come to him. And hundreds of people have as many times discredited his story, but at this time they are being astounded by the facts in the case which confront them. Mr. Matthews is a widower and a soldier of the civil war. He has a son and several daughters living. FOOTBALL TEAM WELL PLEASED BY PICTURE Pompadours Are Very Much in Evidence. VARIETY OF THE VIEWS. The members of the high school football team have received proofs of the pictures taken of them some time ago and are very well satisfied with the (results. On the whole the pictures are unusually good and the pompa dours, of which the boys are so proud, are present in all of their freshly cut y . AUULUCl pitiuic plucky little quarter-back shows the Eddie Cox, and the half-back, "Happy" Wann, Jr., standing with the ball between them in a very realistic manner. PRODUCTION PLEASES A LARGE AUDIENCE The Red Mill Proved to Be Beautiful and Picturesque. THE STARS CREATE MIRTH. A fairly good sized audiefe, the best of the season, witnessed an excellent musical production. "The Red Mill," Friday evening at the Gennett theatre. "The Red Mill," was one of the most pleasing productions of its kind ever seen in this city. The stage settings were particularly beautiful and appropriate, the quaint Dutch cos tumes were most picturesque, the lines by Henry Blossom are naturally clev er and witty. Victor Herbert has sup plied numerous and catchy musical numbers. There is actually a lot to the play and the big cast is a particuuarly good one. M. P. Coakly and Harry McBride were very amusing In their parts of two homesick New Yorkers, stranded in a little Dutch village. Louise Brackett as the barmaid was pretty, dainty and graceful. She carried her part splendidly. All the other princi pals could not have been improved up on. McBride and Coakly furnished two novel and exceedingly entertaining character sketches. At the opening of the second act they entered as Ital ian musicians. This sketch included a grind organ and a monkey, which ! climbed all over the "organist" and j pilfered sweetmeats from his coat; pocket. In the latter part of the same j act these two clever comedians ap-j peared as Sherlock Holmes and his friend. Dr. Watson. The takeoff on, these two celebrated characters was a. i scream, especially when Holmes in-: jected "dope" into his wrist, with a hypodermic syringe the size of an automobile pump. Richmond amusement lovers would be pleased to welcome "The Red Mill" back any time. The Knnrtso Of Life. Infants and children are constantly needing a Saxative. It Is important to know what to civ them. Their stomach and bowels are not strong enough for salts, purgative waters or cathartic pills, powders or tiliiets. Give them a mild, pleasant, gentle. laxative tonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at ths small sum of 50 cents or SI at drag stores. It ia the joe great remedy for you to have ia the bouse to ,'ive chilarea when thev need it. Great pains are taken by the German military authorities to exclude all for-

or water naa;r ---j. effects of crystal- i!- bas Decome known that its caliber last of these to ' ls "miu-- or -mm. higher than is usual

! for field snDS- U is of urse a breech name for the gun is "Ruesklaufgescheuzte. Profits to the state from the tobacco monopoly in France amounted last ytar to SSO.OOO.nx as compared with $2,SOO.uta in 1S11, the first year of the monopoly,

Foundations for the New Y. M. C. A. Home Will Be Completed Soon.

MONTHLY MASS MEETINGS. DIRECTORS OF THE ASSOCIATION THINK THESE WILL DO MUCH TO KEEP UP INTEREST IN WORK. Foundations for the new Y. M. C. A. building have about been completed. and it is said that the plans for the super-structure have been about com pleted at the architect office of Kaufman and Son. The plans have not been materially changed since the first blue prints wewre struck off. The contract on the superstructure will be let just as soon as the building committee deem it advisable. The work on the walls of the building will progress as fast as the weather conditions will permit. It has been decided to appoint a committee to have charge of mass meetings to be held monthly at the Gennett theatre for the purpose of arousing interest in the Y. M. C. A. work. This committee will be appoint ed later. A monthly meeting of the directors of the Y. M. C. A. was held Friday night at which time Secretary Goodwin was to have made a report of the National Y. M. C. A. convention which was convened at Washington, D. C, last month, but owing to the small attedance it was decided to defer the report until some subsequent time when a more public meeting could be held. BLUEBEARD. Two Different Stories to Who Tni the Original. Like many of the other heroes of the nursery tales, Bluebeard once lived In the flesh anJ blood, if the old chronicler. Holinshed, from whom Shakespeare got so much of his material, is to be believed. According to that writer, the original Bluebeard was Giles de Retz or de Raiz, marquis of Laval, who became marshal of France In 1429. He Is described as an impious and debauched man, a devotee of the black art, who enticed young men and women to his castle and killed them In order to obtain innocent blood for his magical enchantments and who also murdered six or seven of his wives. His crimes were discovered, and he was burned at the stake in 1440 at Nantes. According to an old French legend, however, the original Bluebeard lived in Britanny in the sixth century and was known as Count Conomer. After , eeven wi uis wives naa disappeared ne became enamored of Triphyna, the daughter of Count Guereck of Vannes. The wedding was celebrated at Vannes, and Conomer took his bride home. Before a year had passed Triphyna noticed a change In her husband's manner, and, fearing the same fate that had met her predecessors, she fled from the castle but was overtaken by Conomer, who struck off her head with a single blow. St. Glldas, by whom the unfortunate wife had been educated, happened to pass the spot soon after, and, seeing the body, he tenderly replaced, the head and by prayer restored Triphyna to life. The story does not relate the end of Conomer. PHYSICAL EXERCISE. Effect of BoxinK on the Mental and Moral Faculties. Boxing Is an exercise which is not only of the most marked benefit In a purely physical way, but it is of the utmost value as a means of training the mental and moral faculties. One of the most unfortunate whimsicalities of our very whimsical day is the prejudice against boxing as a sport and exercise. There Is no sport n "which there is provided such splendid exercise for body and mind and spirit as in boxing. The physical influence of boxing is superb. Every muscle and organ is brought Into active use. So far as mentality is concerned, the perception, imagination, judgment, discretion, self confidence, aggressiveness and will are all brought into active and rapid use. The boxer who fails In perceiving his opponent's intention, who misses in t judging the power or reach of his blow, who is lacking in self confidence, will power or aggressiveness, who fails for one moment to remember all the weak r.nirt th mn oo-Jnt trhnm h ia working that boxer is likely to fall, to lose what we all value that is, reputation, public confidence and income. Among the many sports and games

which are of value in training theials and institutions which it has been

mind I place boxing as by all means the most valuable. W. R. C. Latson, M. in Outing Magazine. An Extraordinary Mlarration. One of the greatest mysteries to scientists, one for which there seems to be no reasonable explanation, is that concerning the migration of the lemming, ot Norway rat. Instead of taking place once a year, these migrations occur only once in eleven years. When the time comes for the exodus, the little animals journey .westward, from Scandinavia, allowing nothing to stop their movements, which virtually amount to a headlong flight. They swim the lakes and rivers and climb the highest mountains in incalculable numbers, devastating the -whole country through which they travel. Naturalists attribute the movement to some Inherited memory of a flight to escape an expected cataclysm, but thla seems somewhat fu fetched. Have you noticed the improved service to Chicago via the C. C. & L? Through sleeper leaves Richmond at 11:15 P. M. dally, arrives in Chicago

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Statistics Show That During j

Past Year 14,361 People Were Arrested. NO DRUNKS IN 2 COUNTIES. THE ANNUAL COST FOR THIS CLASS OF OF CARING PEOPLE INDIANA COSTS THE STATE OF $42,976.65. In the past six years the jails of Indiana, according to figures compiled by the Board of State Charities, have received an average of 1 2,624 persons annually because of drunkenness. The sheriffs receive. 40 cents a day for boarding each person committed to their care, and this burden upon the taxpayers has averaged $;:5,973.22 annually in the period given. The figures for the fiscal year just closed, which included only eleven months, are higher than the average 14.;:t1 ' prisoners because of intoxication, and $42,976.63 for their board. There are but two counties in the state which report no drunkards in jail Brown and Ripley. In the past six years Brown County has had but four commitments for intoxication, and Ripley but nine. The most striking thing is the record of Vigo County. With its 62.035 inhabitants, it ranks fifth in population among the counties of the state. The combined population of the four next larger counties Marion, Allen, Vanderburg and Madison is 416,736. Vigo County's jail in the last eleven months received 1,634 persons for intoxication; the other four counties 3,102. The proportion to population was one in every thirty-eight in Vigo County, and one in every 134 in the other four counties. BLACKMAIL PLOT SAYS DR. ATTRIDGE Man Shot by Affinity Holds Hypnotical Powers. WANTED WIFE OF ANOTHER. Detroit, Dec. 7 Dr. James Attridge, shot last night by Mrs. James E. Griffith, his affinity, who afterward shot herself, declared today in an ante-mortem statement to the prosecutor, that the tragedy was the result of a plot to blackmail him. It is discovered that the woman naa engaged counsel to br, suit against Attridge, who had also engaged counsel. Prosecutor Yerkes said that Griffith had tried to compel the doctor to protect Mrs. Griffith by marrying her. Griffith, questioned by the police, said that he had first met Attridge four years ago; that soon afterward Attridge became his physician and treated him for typhoid fever. Attridge, he said, seemed to exercise a peculiar influence over his (Griffith's) wife, who acted as if hypnotized when in his presence, and as soon as he left the house, regained composure. At the times when she seemed to be under hypnotic influence she detested her husband and confessed to him that she loved Attridge. When Attridge was absent her love for her husband returned, and she seemed stricken with remorse. Both Attridge and the woman are thought to be dying. SOLD FOB BIG SUM Allotment of Paper Confined To Small Subscriptions. BIDS FROM ALL SECTIONS. Washington, Dec 7. The secretary of the treasury has accepted bids for the Panama Canal bonds to the amount of $25,000,000. The average price of all the bids accepted is 103. Under the terms of the law the secretary's acceptance of these bids, the i allotments of bonds to individuals and institutions will, be confined to the! small subscriptions from $10,000 down ; to ?20. The amount of bids from individu-i possible to accept will, as heretofore not be large. The remainder of the acceptance will be bids of national banks. The bids accepted have come from every section of the country andt are mostly in small amounts, OSCAR IS GROWING WEAKER Aged Monarch Shows Steady Decline. CROWN PRINCE IS REGENT. Stockholm, Dec. 7 The latest bulletin from the bedside of King Oscar says that he is no better. His strength is steadily failing. The j crown prince has been appointed re-j gent and is managing the atfairs of the!

HUM

BONDS

KING

government-

-rSi J Capitol Dome Aon Naval 'yvi ' V-Jt4jVl f Monument Washington IH

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Fop Medical Use J2S2KS?2S Genuine Article, combining rich flavor with absolute purity, SonnyEirook THE PURE FOOD WMskey is all natural whiskey, distilled and aged in the old Kentucky way. Age, Proof and Quantity attested by the Government "Green Stamp" which seals every bottle. All First Class Dealers Sell It. SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO., Jefferson County, Ky. WAYNE SUPPLY CO.

Distributors, Richmond,

A ROYAL TRAGEDY. The Secret Murder of the 111 FateU j Ducheaa of Worltrmbrrs. j About the same period at which . Queen Caroline was earning notoriety I for herself there resided in a smell town In the north of Germany a man j noted for his skill ns a public exeeu- j tioner. Late one evening two men in military uniform called upon this per-1 son and requested him to accompany them, as hi services were required lit some distance and would be liberally rewarded, but that he must consent to , be blindfolded. To this, after some de mur, he consented and entered the carrlnce hrnnirlit hv the two officers. An- ! - n e. . - pureuuy iiiey .uu u13 au,; and at last by the sound he Judged that j they had crossed a bridge a.d entered j a paved courtyard. ; iiuaKe uawus olt. assisted to alight and conducted along corridors and upstairs till at last, the bandage being removed, he found" himself in a large, gloomy room, in the center of which stood a block with a heavy sword laid on it. A door at the far end of the room opened, and a tall and very handsome woman entered, led by two men and gagged. She was forced to the block and the executioner ordered to do his office. With some hesitation he obeyed. Instantly he was again blindfolded, hurried downstairs, placed iu the carriage and driven oft" at full speed. To all his inquiries and remonstrances his escort remained obstinately deaf, but on reaching his home a very large sum of money was given him, with a warning that he would do well never to attempt to solve the mystery or tell of that night's work. Shortly afterward he heard that the Duchess of Wurttemberg, sister of Queen Caroline, had died suddenly on that very night. She was a woman of great beauty and known to be an object of great jealousy and suspicion to her husband, who was said to keep her in enforced seclusion, and, from Inquiries he made, the executioner felt co doubt that this ill fated daughter of the house of Brunswick had been the gagged lady who had been thus secretly done to death by his hand. Temple Bar. HEART ACTION AT SEA. How It Im Affected br Vibration on Ocean Linen. "All hearts sound alike on these modern ships," said the surgeon of a transatlantic liner. "Although the hull of the average modern steamer is bigger and supposedly less subject to the violence of the sea, the machinery to drive the enlarged hulls has been increased In size. With the Increase in the size of the engines there has followed greater vibration. "It Is this vibration which makes It Impossible for us to read truly the action of the average human heart I have tried repeatedly by all manner of means to overcome the Influence of the vibration on the heart, but I find that by even swinging a patient in a hammock, where the shaking up is not greatly felt, the result of the heart reading is far from satisfactory. "The first day at sea in this ship on her maiden voyage I had occasion to treat an Englishman who was en route to Canada on business. I was startled to hear his heart. Yet he had the finest kind of cardiac action, as I ascertained once the ship's machinery stopped. I have since found It to be an Invariable rule that the engine's vibration makes it appear as though the heart of the average man was golng to stop before I could get the stethoscope away from his breast. "Vibration does not hurt the heart any. Do not make the mistake of supposing that it does. It just sounds as though the end was positive, and, while the patient's heart is beating in regular form, the shaking of the ship deceives even the practiced ear." Washington Post. The Snowdrop. In the northern United States the snowdrop is the only garden flower that we can count on year after year as' the earliest sign of spring. Its pendulous white blossoms, with "heart shaped seal of green" sung by Rossettl, often appear before the last snow h&a gone. Luckily, even city families need not be without snowdrops, for they have been known to thrive in narrow passageways between tall houses. Most bulbous plants like the baking hot su of midsummer In order to ripen their bulbs, but the snowdrop thrives best In partial shade. It blooms earlier if It has a chance at the March sun, but ls one of the very few that will Cower regularly, though less freely. In dense shade and with a northern exposure. Country iJfe In America.

WEDDING BELLS A-PLENTY. Marry Young and Often Seems to Be the Rule !n Egypt. According to information given from authentic sources to a correspondent of Leslie's Weekly while in Egypt, "there are few men in Cairo past the age of twenty years who have not been married at lenst twice, and the majority of women over sixteen have made a half dozen or so matrimonial experiments." There is uo disgrace attached to divorce in Egypt. If mutual admiration wanes with the honeymoon, there is nothing more natural to the ' Egyptian mind than that the dissatis fied party takes steps toward anothet trla, Marrlage is universal in Egypt, There are nQ Q,d maids widow, re. main witlows but a snort tlme and as a rue QO younj? man Is con8iderea fitted for businef! or entitled to the confidence of the community until bo is married. These numerous marriage and their attendant celebrations make it extremely Interesting for the stranger from the west who journeys through Egypt. Toward the end of the tourist season, when money is considerably more plentiful than it is just before the travelers invade the country and begin to scatter plasters a Ion;; the Nile, there are hundreds of marriages. In Cairo they average during the month of April from ten to twenty a day of the elaborate ones with brass bands, processions and feasting and any number of less showy oues. A LONG DRIVE. Th Expert Lumbermen of the Canadian Rivers. One of the most interesting sights the new arrival In Canada can strike Is to witness a log drive on one of the rivers there, especially should there be several rapids to navigate. The expert river man Is a clever athleteclever and nervy as any flrcns rider, his steeds probably cutting more antics than any horse could think of. lie will jump from one log to another quickly as they swirl around until be reaches the one he wants; then he will make for the center and stand perfectly upright and still, balancing himself with a long pike or peavy, sometimes running down stream miles without landing. Die also guides other logs into the channel in passing, at times jumping from one to another in marvelous fashion, although the logs are twisting and turning in every direction. Probably the cleverest piece of work one could observe out here Is when the logs get jammed in passing the rapids. Then you see the expert at his best. lie is here, there and everywhere until be gets things as be wants them, when he will calmly stand and ride down among the heaving, grinding mass as though there were no danger at band. This scene, so full of excitement, once witnessed ould never be forgotten. London Tit-Bits. j " Leather trunks were used in at the time of Caesar. Rome MQRPHinEqApiijqpEP' Quick, vttiwvt M. n4 M ataaMt vttboot rfttr-efftctt Ws ears all Bru hatrio to "m enrec." EfOTttMaf ateMl tattth 4 tot 1st. atMP"Fay as a reasonable fee after res srt car. - WRITE US. on. STEwm-HMO lurruroa S89 FrMklis kn. tixtrrrill, M. A CHRISTMAS SUGGESTION that will be valuable to the housewife who wants her Xma cakes, bread and mince and pumpkin pies to be a success is that she use high, grade, clean coaL You can't bake fine bread, cakes, or pies unless your oven la heated properly with good coal such as you will find at our yard. - O. D. BUIXxUDICK J 5Z9 S. dtli rl rnonc um.

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