Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 314, 26 December 1907 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
TIIK UICII3IOND PALLADIUM AND SU.X-TEIiKGRAJl. Til URSDA V, DECEMIiKR 20. 1907;
OLD POLO PLAYERS BACK III THE GAME
Former Western League Stars Whacking the Ball for Eastern Fans. NEWS OF THE CHAMPIONS. 'DOG" BONE IS NOW PLAYING WITH NEW HAVEN, AND CUNNINGHAM AND CAMERON ARE WITH PAWTUCKET. Polo reigns once more in the east. Erstwhile shooters and twisters of the little red pellet in western skating rinks are now devoting themselves assiduously to the same task back in dear old New England. The Yankees are probably rooting and yelling the same old yells "Hurray for Farrell," or "Hit'em Doherty" that they did before the western magnates invaded their territory and depleted their polo resources to such au extent that the polo contingent was made up either of veterans too old to keep the pace or amateurs too young to know all the ins and outs. But since the collapse of the Western and Central polo leagues of Indiana it has behooved the former stars to go back home, work in a grocery, etc., in the daytime, don the rollers in the evening, and, incidentally, dream of the fabulous times of several winters ago. The former Western league players are scattered among the seven teams now composing the national polo league. The teams in their entirety bear little resemblance to those of the Western league. Old Western league partnerships are broken and new ones made. Among the familiar names found In the lineups are many strange ones. Three former Muncie players are now on the Waterbuy, (Conn.) quintet "Flaxen Haired' David Cuslck, Dan Daly and Tommy Holderness. The Waterbuy team occupies sixth place in the standing, the bottom aggregation being Providence (R. I.t,
among whose players being "Mary j Ann" Tibbits and the "Debonnalr" j flR WITH LA FOLLETTE. Nick McGilvray, who used to enrapture ; the fane of Madison county seat by nis i fancy twists and turns. "Long John" j Milwaukee. Wis.. Dec. 2'..-Support-Wiley, the elongated center of Muncie, j ers of Serrr.lary Taft will make an cf-
nnn Hnnnv narr K.mno inzina ! rushing partner, together with the western goal tender. Sutherland, are memberB of tho Hartford (Conn.), "second placers.' Coggeshall is also on this team. Phil Jason, ex-Muneie rush.; is on the Bridgeport (Conu. team which occupies the fourth niche in the championship standing. Jean Is a Winner. The old arch-enemies. "Wild Charley" Farrell and "Dog" Bone, who used to cause such furores in Western league times, are now team mates 011: ihe New Haven (Conn.), quintet. Mullen is guarding the cage for the Yale university town aggregation. The Pawtucket ill. L). team contains four players known to the western enthuslasts. They are Pierce, the former In-, dianapolis star; Cunningham. Mooney and Cameron. "Cunny" being a former
Richmond players. The league lead- schools. The oilier evening he was vishave but. one member who is well itlug a boy friend who has laid hi?
known to the west, and he is a player who has generally been connected with the pennant winning aggregation Fred Jean. This big former Muncie Mar is holding down the position of center for New Britain iConm. and doing it well as the percentage column indicates. Eddie Higgins is not a member of the eastern league. The fight is waxing hot and the same, old rivalry seen in the west seems in evidence in New Englaud. It is i nought though. that significant glances are cast towards the Hooskr Mate occasionally by players with j financial proclivities. It is thought j safe prophecy that effort will be made to re-introduce the great indoor j fport in this part of the country next year, and Richmond win nave a piace, In the standing. ' I True. "It isu't true, ia it" asked Rollo as tie enlshed reading "The Pied Piper of Uainelin" "it isn't true that he could j play on his pipe so that the rats would i ifo off and drown themwelves?" "Well." replied Rollo's father. "I don't know about that I think it may te true. Your Uncle George can play the flute so that it trill scare a cow into a river and drive all the dogs in the neighborhood crazy. Yes. I should say the poem is true." London Answers. The Obsolescent Honeymoon. noneymoons are going out of fasheon and will probably eventually disappear. At present they are often shortened to four or five days or even a paltry week end. Marriage is getting to be looked upon In a more matter of fact way. and it is no doubt well that the romantic girl should not expect absolutely unreachable things of wedded bliss. London Bystander. A Good Excuse. "Now. then." demanded Luschman's wlf toe next morning, "what's your: czense for coming home in that con-j dltion last nighty ' "Well, to tell you the truth, m' dear," '. he replied, "none of the hotels would ! ak:e me In." Philadelnhla Press. !
Of High Degree. ! "That's because he's green yet." "What kind , of a "dog have you ft! 4,1 don t sre with either of you. I there, roy boy?" 'found him rather blue this morning." 'Dafs a mouse hound, mister." ! "h- that Avas for a personal reason. Judge. ..1- ! is sensitive about turning gray so I 60on." Baltimore American.
Oihr On MlAMn Of TfiuTAnr t.. a. Laxative Bromo Quinine CoM in On Day, GHp in 2 Days
LOSES SON AFTER BITTER
VI 5 . Mrs. Louis Drowne and her Henry, whom she lost after a most bitter and sensational battle in the New York courts. The boy's father, who is a wealthy woolen merchant, was awarded custody of him. When tho announcement was made in court, the mother reproved the judge and hysterically protested. The boy mingled his tears with those of his mother.
WISCONSIN MAY"
GO FOR TAFTjEASTHAVEN HAS
Supporters Will Try to Capture Delegation. ! fort to capture- Wisconsin's delegation to the national republican convention regardless of the tight planned by Seni i. .it ,.t t n: ,inl, o-tinn can be taken until .Ian. primary law. but on tnat date the Taft imen will begin circulating nominating1 petitions in every district, in the state and also for delegates at iarge. Some d1-'' . - -wf-orrMn" to the Taft men , probably will be for La Follette, but ! . . ... - vi lioo.-.fcveii s candidate! believe they can show that Wisconsin j nut. stand unanimously for the radical ideas of LaFollette. Advanced Arithmetic. Kn.mt, i ti,.. nn, nf r,vi t,0.
tnmJ vushiugtou lad who Is as stu-! (ilous as nnv of his cmpauion. but ne;MQ FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENT ,-H yoUug y,t and has not advanced very far in the grades of the public
plans for serving iu I'ncle Sam's army iu the future and contemplates graduating from West Point some day. The two were talking about mathematics when a young lady sought to test Kenneth's knowledge of 'rithmetic. "If lemons are X cents a dozen," she asked him, "how much are cast iron lamp posts apiece?" With a perfectly serious expression on his face Kenneth replied: "I don't know, Yuiss. I haven't got that far in 'rithmetic yet." Washington Star. Opium From Lettuce. A sort of opium is obtained from the common lettuce. The scientists give it a long name, which no doubt means something very learned and profound and declare that they find important differences between the opium of tne i lettuce and the opium of the noony. ' but for all practical purposes the one is identical with the other. Many a man who has eaten lettuce knows how sleepy it causes him to become an hour or so after dinner, and the older the lettuce the greatev the sleepiness, for; in mature lettuce the milk juice is well developed and all the properties of the : opium are pi-esent. London News. No Place to Die. The soldier of the legion lay dying In Algiers. A committee of citizens who wanted to boom Algiers as a health resort waited upon him. "We want you to change your headquarters," announced they. "You're hurting business here."' Pittsburg Post. Bright Boy. j "What is the worst thing about rich, j es?" asked the teacher of the juvenile I class. j "Their scarcity," promptly answered I j the bright youth at the head. Chicago : NW9. ! Truth is as impossible to be soiled Ay any outward touch as the sunbeam. -Milton. I tell you for a modern business man Black is white." cn every
AND SENSATIONAL BATTLE.
-V rtA s'5 a NEW DIRECTOR John W. Honan Appointed by Hanly. REPRESENTS DEMOCRATS. As a member for the board of tru.wpR OI Ine "' , . ViceiPital. Governor Hanly has appointed Mr.
son TBfjfc lAi-V 'M,2S"f V S
fri'
'.) under the',lonn vv li)UiL"- l" ljny' 1 a Ufe
Honan is a democrat. CANDIDATES FOR ASSESSOR PLENTIFUL Four Men Have Been Considering the Matter. Thomas Golding, circulation manager of the Palladium is comsidoring making the race foi the republican nomination for township assessor. For this office three other well known republicans have already taken the field. They are CharLs Bulla, Joseph Elliott and Township Trustee Charles Potter. G. 0. P. IF) KISSFEST AT CAPITAL Cim Indiana Republicans Have Big State Meeting. Dipij niniu n RICHMOND REPRESENTED. Several local republicans went to Indianapolis this morning to at tend the biS Part !(,VCk feast- which will be held there today. 1 he pipe ot peace wni be smoked by all hands and after a kissfest. everyone will return home happy. Republican leaders from over the state will be in attendance all Stranger What sort of a man is your neighbor, John Braggs? Native Oh, he's all right, but he has a telescopic imagination. Stranger A telescopic imagination? Native Yes. He can t even tell the truth without getting it at least two sizes larger than it is. Chicago News. STREET FIGHT ON CHRISTMAS DAY Battle Was Between Black And White. THE SCENE WAS CHANGED. A street fight took place yesterday afternoon between a gang of boys. A white boy and a young colored boy, both of them fighting drunk, started hostilities on Main street between Ninth and Tenth. The fray soon de-
veloped into a battle and the scene of habit will soon be broken. The troaoperations was rapidly transferred j ble Is usually brittle nails tiiat are confrom Main street to North Ninth tinnally developing jagged edges. Such
street and adjoining alleys. Several 1 rr6ts will be made by the police.
PUGILIST TO TAKE
UP HORSE GAME Big Tom Sharkey Has Engaged Curt Gosneil To Drive Two Horses. VERY PROMISING TROTTERS THE ANIMALS WILL BE REMOVED; TO CAMBRIDGE CITY AFTER ; JANUARY 1, WHERE THEY WILL BE WINTERED." Cambridge City, Ind., Dec. Jt! Curt Gosneil has 1.' -en -image(i by Tom Sharkey, the ex-prize tighter of New York City, to cainiiain two of his ; proniising voung trotters this enmiu 'l season. The hordes are Lillian 1 Strangle, 2:1."U and Klondyke : 1 S 1 a, . ; The horses will be shipped here some j time after the first of the year to be i wintered in .Mr. C.osnell's stable. i ALL READY FOR GAME OF POLO Eiwood Plays Richmond, Friday Night. A PRELIMINARY GAME. The second polo aiiie of the season will be pulled off Friday night at the Coliseum. The local live will mejt the fast lilwood team and it is expected that the contest will be witnessed by a large crowd as polo is on the boom once more in Richmond. The two teams will lineup as follows: Kit LmoiH Stevens . . . Van Ft ten . Edwood. 1st Rush Boone ''d Rush Parsons l'arry Williams . Alexander Dickerson Center Huston j Half Bad . Met arrol ... Smith floal . . . Extra Barker ! At 7:.' the -Kibbey and High School teams will have a game. At N:" the Richmoiid-Klwood called. game will be MEN ENTOMBED 20 DAYS IN DEEP MINE Have Phoned to Those Above Them That They Are Doing We!. ALL ARE IN GOOD SPIRITS. AS EVIDENCE THEY SANG SEVERAL POPULAR SONGS INTO THE TELEPHONE TO IMPRESS THEIR HEARERS. Ely, Nov., Dec-. Utj. Tho rescuers working to reach liailey, McDonald and Drown, miners imprisoned since Dec. 1, LOW feet down in tho Alpha shaft of the tJ irons mine here, got through about twenty-five feet of earth today. There is still nearly live hundred feet of earth, rock and nterlaced timbers to be removed beore the men can bo released. If tho excavating is continued at the same rate of progress the entombed miners will be reached in twenty days, when they will have leu forty days in their narrow prison. The prisoners, talking today over the telephone installed at the 1,000foot level, said that they had enough food on hand to last them three weeks, and that as there is plenty or j room for exercise in the chambers' they are feeling fine! v. All are in ' good condition, and as evidence of! their light spirits they rendered sev-! eral songs through tho telephone to j those ;'bove. . j Water and food have been sent down to the men through a six-inch : pipe, and, if necessary., more can bo I ' sent at any time. Air is constantly . j forced in to them. j j The mine, in a shaft of which they ; j ar( imprisoned, is on? of the Gironx 1 Consolidated erouo. The walls of the ' Miiwi. cueu in ai a uepin or 1,100 ieet. C. W. Turner and Michael Constant! were caught by the falling earth, knocked to' the bottom of tbe shaft and drowned. At the first intimation of danger, Peter McDonald and Frederick Drown made a dash for the lad der and oegan to c!irrr. Before thev had reached the 1 """ foot station the compartnicat partition j above began to fall. The men were j knocked off the ladder, but fell only at short distance, as ito shaft filled' with debris behind them as they as-! cended the ladd It seemed an ace. they said, before they traversed the ninety and odd feet, to the 1,'0 foot station. Everything was dark and full of dust, and they estimate that it was au hour before they reached the station, where R. A. Bailey, who manned the. pumps was a prisoner. If the services of a professional man leure are enlisted frequently for the child who bites her finger nails, the nails should be kept short and the child given plenty of olive oil er cream.
iPOfiTOGUESE TO ELECT
Government Issues Call to End , Dictatorship. j h Lisbon. J c. 26 A decree Mas is- j! sued trwftijr frxtrts'theirtugirese eleo- 1 Hons for April' 5. This i. in line with! t he government's promise to terminate : the dictatorship at au early date in j view of the continued calm. Members; of the chamber of deputies: will be j chosen. j GOLD COINS. Why O.-nkers Don't Like Thorn and Prefer to Hand'e Paper. "Of the different kinds of American i money now in circulation the g coins of all denominations are the iuos disliked in rr.v biisini'ss " s:iid n rirviminent .W'w York banker. "Take a greenback, a silver or a goM certificate or a national bank note to your .k and it is received and placed to jour credit without u moment's delay. Not so with gold. A few days ago a gentleman brought to our bank upward of So.OOO in gold of different denominations and was much provoked leeause we would not receive it-and give him credit with the amount tho face of the coin represented. This we could not do. because the law reo.uires that gold shall be redeemed only ut its actual value. - Coins carried in the pocket for nny length of titue naturally lose something by abrasion probably but a fractional part of a cent on a ten dollar ploce, but it is a loss nevertheless and therefore bankers cannot give credit for gold deposits until the coiu shall have been weighed, lu the case mentioned my friend took his gold to the subtreasury and was compelled to wait there nearly an hour before he could get notes for it. "Every coin had to be passed through the scales, and after the weighing process had been completed three of the coinstwo five dollar pieces and a ten dolar piece were returned to him as short iu weight. Before returning short weight coins the department stamps on the fp.ee of each coin a cross. The owner is either left to send the coins to the L'nited States mint for redemption or again put them into circulation. Eventually the coins with crosses on their faces will go to the mint and be redeemed at their actual value. In many instances there may not be more than several cents' shortage en 550 worth of coins. Business men. however, naturally object to the incouven ience and get rid of their gold as fast as possible." New York Press. KEATS ON MARRIAGE. Barrier Against Matrimony In Which the Poet Rejoiced. Notwithstanding your happiness and your recommendation, I hope I shall never marry. Though the most beautiful creature were waiting for me at the end o a journey or a walk, though the carpet were of silk, the curtains of the morning clouds, the chairs and sofa stuffed with cygnets' down, the food manna, the wine beyond claret, the window opening on Winander mere. I should not feel, or, rather, my happiness would not be so fine, as my solitude is sublime. Then, instead of what I have described, there is a sublimity to welcome me home. The roaring of the wind is my wife, and the stars through the window pane are my children. The mighty abstract idea I have of beauty in all things stifles the more divided and minute domestic happiness an amiable wife and sweet children I contemplate as a part of that beauty, but I must have a thousand of those beautiful particles to fill up my heart. I feel more and more every day os my imagination strengthens that I do not live in this world alone, but in a thousand worlds. No sooner am I alone than shapes of epic greatness are stationed around me and serve my spirit the oflice which is equivalent to a king's bodyguard then "tragedy with Bccptered pall comes sweeping by." According to my state of mind I am with Achilles shouting in the trenches or with Theocritus in the vales of Sicily, or I throw my whole being into Troilus, and, repeating those lines, "I wander like a lost bouI upon the Stygian banks, staying for waftage," I melt into the air with a voluptuousness so delicate that I am coutent to bo alone. These things, combined with the opinion I have of the generality of women, who appear to me as children to whom I would rather give a sugar plum than, my time, form a barrier against matrimony which I rejoice in. "Poems of John Keats," by Walter Raleigh. ' Troubles of an Amateur. "I thought you had gone to raising bees," said the man from the city. "I don't see auy sign of them around here." "I had half a dozen colonies of tho finest bees I could get," answered the suburbanite, 'and a whole library of literature on bee raising, but they swarmed one day, and while 1 was looking through my books to find out w hat was the proper thing to do when bees swarmed the blamed things flew away, and I've never seen 'em since." j Chicago Tribune, I 1 In Nameless Graves. Not far from Hamburg, on the island of Westerland, is a small graveyard to which pathetic interest attaches. Here the bodies of those washed up by the . - 1 1 . . 1 I n I . .-. 1 Bca Douies uamuuaueu auu uuviaiui- ; ed aro buried. The cemetery was dedicated to this use in 1S55. and from then up to now over sixty nameless ones hare found their rest In 1SSS a stone was raised bearing the dedication "The Home of the Homeless.' and each little mound bs further marked by I a simple black cross. ! Like the Parrot. ! "Thumper occasionally says things that are wonderfully apropos," said one statesman. "Yes," answered the other; "he's like our parrot at home. . It doesn't know; much, but what it does know it keeps ; repeating - until some circumstance arises that makes .the "-remark seem marvelously apt" - X good way to get on ia the world Is to make people think you are doinj It New York Press.
Have you Ordered Your Printing For 1908? Be prepared and start the new year with a lull supply and the right kind ol stationery. II you want the best at THE RIGHT PRICE, we can furnish it. Let us lurnlsh samples and submit a bid on your work. Our motto is: Good work at Right Prices. We will save you money. We prini Candidate Cards on short notice. Quaker City PrMtingfCo. "rZX s.t. Phone 4215
CONFLAGRATION 111 F Two Million Dollar Loss That City This Morning. in IN A BUSINESS SECTION. i San Francisco. Cal., Dec. 20 Fire , this morning destroyed almost the entire block bounded by the Mission. Jessie and First streets. The burned district is the business section. The estimated loss is placed at two million. It was f"ared that the fire would communicate itself to surround-! ine propei t y. DECAY OF STONE. Even the Densest Siliceous Rocks Succumb to Time. Whoever expects to find a stone that ; will stand from century to century, deriding alike the frigid rains ami scorching solar rays, without need of reparation will indeed search for "the philosopher's stone." There is scarcely a substance which after having been exposed to the action of the atmosphere for a considerable time does not exhibit proofs of weathering. It may even be observed on the most densely compacted siliceous rocks. The fullest extent of this inquiry can only be to elucidate relative duration and comparative labor of appropriation to useful or ornamental purposes. : Ry examining the various productions of nature we find evident proofs , of her industry in all ages. Changes i have been going on from the remotest antiquity to the present time on every 1 substance that comes withiu our observation. All the actual combinations of matter have had a former existence in some other state. Nothing exists in nature but what is likely to change its condition and manner of being. No material Is no durable as always to retain its present appearance, for the most solid and compact bodies have not such a degree of impenetrability and so close a union of the parts which coinpose them as to be exempted from ultimate dissolution. Even in the great globe w hich we inhabit nothing is more evident to geologists than a perpetual series of alterations. There can be discovered no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end. In some bodies these changes are not so frequent aud remarkable as in others, though equally certain at a more distant period. The venerable remains of Egyptian splendor, many of thorn executed iu the hardest granite between 3.'0 aud 4.000 years since. ; exhibit large portions of exfoliation and gradual decay, thereby following the primitive, immutable and universal order of causes and effects namely, that all objects possess tho materials of which they are composed only for a limited time, during which some powerful agent effects their decomposition and sets the elementary particles at liberty again to form other equally ierfect combinations. Thus by divine and unerring laws Order is restored amid apparent confusion. Exchange. EAST INDIAN SERVANTS. An Amusing Complication Over a Dose of Medicine. The experiences of an English householder in India are often amusing. An instance of one of the amusing experiences is given. Th old gray bearded, butler announced at luncheon one day that the dishwasher was ill with fever, but that if I would give him some medicine he would soon be able to resume his work. I happened to have none by me, but the matter was urgent clean dishes being Important. "Can he go to the chemist's, do you think, for some physic if I give him a letter?" I asked. "I don't know what to write for." "Oh. yes," he taid; "he is quite able to go that short distance." I thought that was much the best way, and then the chemist could give him what wus proper. So I wrote: "Please give the bearer a dose of medicine. He says be has fever." I forgot to inquire about him till two days after. "How is the dishwasher?" I said. "He is much Letter, your honor. "Ah, then he took the physic?" "No, your highness. The bazaar cooly took the physic" "The bazaar cooly!" I exclalmed. "What for?" The diiwasher said: Cooly goes errands. He may fetch me the physic' So the cooly took the letter. Shop j master prepared physic, then told ba zaar cooly to drink it Cooly said: j 'Not for me is the medlciDe, but for another man. I take it to him. 'Not 1 so.' said the shoo master. 'The mlstress has written, "Give to bearer." and she means you must drink It here.' Many times the cooly said be was not the man, but they would not listen, and they made him drink it" Exchance. I Tie Stom&rb SlMpensablet An operation for tie removal cf the stomach ia CbJceao hospital recently, promoted discussion amass: Um sorseons whether the stomach could be removed and the patient be ttoee the worse for it. Before the dteciusion bad wet lied out. the tatieot bad died. It demonstrated ;e could not live without bis stomach. To beer r.e stomach in good ccaditioa. and cute cons ti &tia. mdirestioa, te-. ase the neat herb laxacrva aomsoaBi Dr. C&ldw2t Svnm Pesaim. 1 Orcgglsu sell it at39 ccr-aad tVa bottle.
SAN
RANG
FIRE LAOOIES PROVE THEMSELVES HEROES
Carried Five Seriously Injured From Apartment House. THREE OF THEM WILL DIE. New York. Dee. Cf Five persona were seriously injured, and it 1 thought three will die as the result oC a lire in an apartment house ut Out Hundred Thirty-Fourth street today. Two firemen. McKiuna and Russel of a hook and ladder company. No. 30, carried all of the injured out through the flame from the lop of the build ing. Tin- injured are Jeremiah Colliins wife and son, Emma Distlcr audi Ehinehatt Craft'. Collins and Craft in a v recover. HUSBAND AND WIFE. The Pathetic Sequel to a Tragedy of trie Alps. Many years ago I road a pathetic stfry, which is constantly recalled to mind as tho duties of this compilation, compel me to read the records of past years and rcperuse the long closed letters of my beloved and live over again the happy dajs when we were all In all to each other. 1 do not remember all the details of the incident which o impressed me, but the chief facts were these: A married couple were crossing one of the great glaciers of the Alpine regions when a fatal accident occurred. The husband fell down oue of the huge crevasses which abound on all glaciers. The rope broke, and the depth of the chasm was so great that no help could bo rendered, nor could the body be recovered. Over the wife's anguish at her loss we must draw the veil of silence. Forty years afterward saw her. with the guide who had accompanied them at the tiais of the accident, staying at the nearest hotel at the foot of the glacier, waitlDg for the sea of Ice to give up its dead, for by the well known law of glacier progression the form of her long lost husband might be expected to apiar. expelled from the mouth of the torrent about that date. Patiently aud with unfailing constancy they watched and waited, and their hopes were at last rewarded. One day the body was released from its prison in the Ice. and the wife looked again on the features of him who had lon so long parted from her. But the pathos of the story lay iu the fact that she was then an old woman, while the newly rescued body was that of quite a youug aud robust man. so faithfully had the crystal casket preserved the jewel which It held so long. The forty years had left no wrinkles on that marble brow. Time's withering fingers could not touch him In that tomb, and so for a few brief moments the aged lady saw the husband of her youth as ho was iu the days which were gone forever. C. II. Spurgeon's Autobiography. A Flarebac.lt. j "Brudder .Tones, if you didn't smoke 1 you might ow n a brick house like what ' I does." I "Look here, man, don't you come ' pesterin' wit' me like dat You didn't git dat brick house by not smokln'. i You got it by borrowln' man newspaper to read an mah clothes to wear an mah vittles to eat You may be a fly financier, but dat don't gib you no license to set up fer a human copy ; book!" St Louis Republic Discipline. A Frenchman was teaching in a ' large school, where he had a reputa- ' tion for making some queer mistakes. ; One day he was taking a class which was rather disorderly. What with the ; heat aud troublesome boys he was i very snappish. Having punished sev- ! eral boys , and sent one to the bottom ! of the form, he at last shouted out in a passion, "Ze whole class go to ze bottom!" London Scraps. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. There's a Happy New Year coming to those who procure their coal from our yard, for they will secure satisfaction and comfort from every ton of coal we eell. Our coal is of the best grade mined, and we don't send you part dirt and part stones, but put food, honest, clean, well screened coal O. D. BULLERDICK 529 S. 5 til St Plum 1225.
