Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 79, 4 May 1908 — Page 4

THE R!Cil3rOXT PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGR AM, MONDAY, MAY 1. 1fK)S.

PAGE FOtlll.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM.

Palladium Printing Co., Publishers. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Daily 2c Per Conv. Sunriav 3C rsr -. y - - -- -- -- Per Week, Daily and Sunday.. IN ADVANCEOne Year .$500 Entered at Richmond. Ind.. Postoffice As Second Class Mall Matter. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATE. Govf.-rnor JAMKS K. WATSON". Uoutenan t FREMONT O. Ouvornor GOODWI.NE. Secretary of State FRED A. SIMS. Auditor of State JOHN C BfLL.HKIMF.R-. Treasurer of State OSCAR 1IADLKY. Attorney General JAMES BINGHAM. State Superintendent LAWRENCE McTL'RNAN. State Statistician. J. L. PEETZ. Judge of Supreme Court QUINCY A. MYERS. Judge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS. Reporter of Supreme Court GEORGE W. SKLF. DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM -O. BARNARD. COUNTY. Joint Representative -ALONZO M. GARDNER. Representat i ve WALTER S. RAT I. IFF. Circuit Judge HENRY C. FOX. Prosecuting Attorney CHAS L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON. Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. -Coroner L. BRAMKAMP. DR. A. Surveyor ROBERT A. HOWARD. Recorder -WILL J. ROBBLNS. Commissioner Eastern Dist. HOMER FAR LOW. Commissioner Middle Dist. BARNEY II. LINDERMAN. Commissioner Western Dist. R'OBERT H. BEESON. WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. HOWARTII. Assessor CHARLES E. POTTER. DIDN'T DREAD DEATH. s Volunteers For the Gallows In Place of These Condemned. On more than one occasion volunteers for the scaffold have offered themselves to take the place of tne condemned. Thus on the eve of the execution of Dr. Dodd. famous as the author of "The Beauties of Shakespeare," a man presented himself at Newgate and asked to be rermitted to suffer In hla stead. His request was deemed so extraordinary that he was taken in charge as a lunatic. But he was able to convince the magistrate, before whom he was brought the next day, of his sanity and so was discharged. All he asked as the price of his self pacriflee was 200, to be settled on his mother. In another instance, which happened only a few years ago, a man who said he suffered from an Incurable disease wrote to the home secretary offering himself as a substitute for a certain eminent scholar who had murdered his wife In a fit of passlou. He asked neither fee nor reward, being, as he ; explained, tired ot his lire. Then, too, there was the case of Ellla Fennlng, which created so much pity that five persons eamo forward and volunteered to suffer iu her stead. Of course no notice was taken of their requests, tha culprit, a pretty young plrl, being executed iu due course. London Chronicle. ... A Great Excuse. Mother to I'rank How is it that you're late home every night? Frank Well, no wonder; we've got pitch a big clock in our school. Mother Why. what has the clock to do with it? Frank 'Cause it's so big it lakes the hands an awful long while to get round it. If we had a clock like papa's little one I'd get home quicker. a great deal MASONIC CALENDAR. Monday Evening. May A Richmond Comandery No. s, K. T.. stated conclave. Tuesday Evening, May 5 Richmond lodge. No. 1W. F. A. M., stated meeting. Wednesday Evening, May 6 Webb lodge No. 24. F. & A. M. Called meeting Fellow Craft degree. Thursday Evening, May 7 Wayne council No. 10. K. A.- is. m. Special as - sembly R. & S. M. decree. Friday Evening, May '8 King Solomons Chapter No. i. R. A. M. Stated cpnvocatlou.

ELEVEN GIVE LIVES ON ALTAR OF EIRE DEMON (Continued From Pago One.)

portion of the fire b'-ape. Then he dropped his son into the arms of his wife and he followed them in this way to the ground in safety. Other similar narrow escapes were numerous. Leaped From Window. When the file was at its height. E. M. Matthews, (if Columbus, O., was seen wildly waving his anus at u third story window. lie shrieKeu lor lieip in vain, and then leaped from the window and went swirling to the pavement, below. He was desperately hurt. It. S. Lewis of Chicago, was driven from his room on the third floor to the window ledge. The flames were leaping out above him and lie swung down from window lo window. Firemen hoisted a ladder to aid him, but. it became entangled in wilt's. I.owi.s became exhausted, his grasp loosened and he dropped just as the ladder was raised under his feet. He seized a round of the ladder and eseaped unhurt. A. Jt. Saliot of New York had a similar experience. The flames were in his room after he awoke. He groped his way through the smoke to a window ami crawled out on the ledge and hung there precariously, edging away an inch at a time as the flames curled from the window. He was just about to take chances in a leap of four stories to the asphalt pavement beneath when a hand wa.- thrust down lo him from the roof of an adjoining building, and he was pulled to safety. Frenzied Women. A score of women employed in the hotel were in the upper rooms In the rear of the hotel. Most of them escaped without, injury but some in their frenzy leaped to the alley. During the first, excitement many were accounted dead that were later found to be safe, j That there arc several bodies still in the ruins is the belief of Fire Chief Filbricht and Chief of Police Anehen-! brack. Chief Anehenbruek placed his estimate of the dead still in the ruins as high as twenty. J Aged Women Missing. Among the missing are two aged wo- j men, Miss Hathaway and her companion, of Mishawaka. Ind. They came: here to receive some children from an j orphanage with which they are con-j nected at Mishawaka. Their bodies are j still in the ruins. Traveling men who. escaped are searching for acquaintance i es, who were known to be in the hotel. I In this way only can it be determined j who some of the missing are. The New Aveline hotel was a six-story building of brick in the business center of the city. Its erection was begun in 1S.M', but. it. was not completed until! several years later. In sfX building was extensively remodeled and two stories were added. The hotel and furnishings were valued at. $so.- j (MM. Throughout, the framewrk of the interior was of wood, dried like timber from half a century's seasoning and it burned with great rapidity. Within a quarter of an hour from the time the fire was discovered in the elevator shaft, practically the entire building was wrapped in flames. The whole interior became a roaring furnace and from basement to roof all was- blazing . at once. In rapid succession the floors fell to the basement, carrying their toll of dead. I i Occupants and Losses. j Other occupants of the hotel block j and their losses are: ! Jones Stevens, proprietors of the; hotel, personal, S..)x. j G. II. Brown, saloon, :j!lo,ono. C. B. Woodsworth & Co.. druggists, Sti.OUO. Postal Telegraph company, .,:.'.O0O. Straus Bros., bankers. .S'-'.ono. George Streicher. barber shop. S-.-z . Lee. Ivins, cigars and news stand. Bass Block, adjoining the hotel, $1,rno. All losses in the hotel block save the Strauss bank, were total. The bank vaults are intact. Losses are fully insured. John r. Strohecher. of New York, after a thrilling escape from death in the flames, reached the ground almost raked. He had no time to gather any of his apparel, the flames having burst into his room before he was awakened. Scores of men and women reached the ground, some of them with nothing on bnt thei,. nighI ,.lo,hos. None of tluguests had time to save their effects. Dry goods and clothing stores were thrown open to man ami women and air w ho needed apparel were supplied without question. Mayor W. .1. Hosev, w-ho lives withing four blocks of the hoiel, personally d't'eeted much of the rescue work. He organized searching parties under direction of Fred W. Froese and Commissioner K. .1. I.enmui of the board of public works. "The cause of the fire and any possible m gleet on the part of the hotel management w ill be in est ica tod fully." declared the mayor. "When the 'fire department arrive.', it was met 'billows of flames am! was unable by t 1 enter the building. The corridors were ( masses of flames. The people were unable to escape except through the j windows. The elevator had stopped running and nearly ivery avenue of escape was shut off. "Alter the arrival of ihe firemen they did good work, having a dozen streams (if water p'aing on the building and saving the adjoining structures. Blames Hotel Management. "But the hotel people, instead of calling out the fire department promptly, simply sent fer the chemical engine. This resulted in the loss of ; many lives, 1 am certain. The fire i department was ten minutes late in arriving in consequence of this oversight. "The fire probably will result in

THE DEVIL'S HOLE IS

A MOST Eight Young Women Sent to m ur the Palladium

The Devil's I b... is a weird spot. and was at "tie time a mighty cavern, famed in tin; legends of the red men a tin- abiding ; lace of the Evil Spirits, which gave it the name. History tells us thai the French explorer. La Salle, was the first wnite ma n to see this cavern, in f.s. Not quite a century later, on September 11. l"t',;:, this same cavern was the scene of a blood-curdling ma.v-.a'.-re soon after the bloody French find Indian war. A' t lv too of the bank an English provision train, guarded by a com pan of regulars, was ambuscaded by a horde of Seneca Indians. They swoop down on the unsuspecting Knglishir.en, and. our of about !m m.-n, all bu' three' were either butchered or

thrown over the awful brink -t horses, the cliff. One drummer lim. named M to a tree and being caught in the bran the others to escape was the officer in . wlio broke tnrouirh the am nn.seade. m contains many i n 1 i-resi inji features, r. r'ave. and the bed of llloodv Kun Cren the blood of rlie artful massacre in 1 The Devil's Hole is but one of 111 win no snown trie eig.it women wno m pense of the 1'alladium. Miss Jennie of contestants again lodav. Sue lias by 11, nun. Miss Goldie Meis has jum I tent on runs third. Ida Beeson. Hut one vote tepa The regular ballots will appear in tVir lo one vote. Iieiuemlier ou can to, so "get busv and ke-ep lins." The

lows : CONDITIONS. One year's subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 2,500 votes One six months' subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 1.000 votes One fifteen weeks' subscription, paid in advance entitles the lady voted for to 500 votes

One month's subscription, paid in advance

Jennie Wine, 1117 N. G street Lucie Benton, Fountain City Maude Pettibone, 409 N. 16th street Charlotte Young, 724 N. 8th street Goldie Dadisman, 402 S. 12th street Adda Study, Williamsburg, Ind Rosa Kuehn, 17 South 8th street Estella Coates, 201 N. 8th street Goldie Myers, Centerviile R. 1 1 Elsie Wyatt, 1114 N. G street Ida Beeson, Greensfork R. R. 22 Hattie Lashley, Centerviile Ruby Hodgin, 25 South 7th street Lena Cornthwaite, Cambridge City Anna Freeman, Cambridge City Nora Holthouse, 23 S. 8th street Marie Hodskin, Cambridge City

This Ballot Not Good After 5 p.m. May 11th. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Niagara Fails and Canada Voting Contest.

ONE VOTE NAME ADDRESS

Carrier Boys are not permitted to receive Ballots from patrons; put the name of the lady of your choice on this Coupon and bring or send to this office before the expiration of the above date or it will not be considered a legal vote.

! Rnllnls Denosited Todav Will ADnear In To-1

morrow's the passage of more stringent building j laws, bith for this city and the state ; in general." .lohn McAlvey, one of the proprietors of ihe hotel, declared an investigation would show the management fre.-i from blame. "1 was tip until "J:1' o'clock this morning." said he. "and everything about the hotel was safe at that hour. i yjy wife, son, and I had a room on the 'third floor. A little after 11 o'clock 1 i was awakened by the elevator boy. who told me the elevator shaft was on fire in t'.ie oente- of t.ie house. Says Guests Lost Heads. "If the guests had kept their heads lhere would have no danger. There are fire escapes on three sides of the hoiel. and William A. Pitcher, one of taose killed, was witliin tlnee feet of one of them, by which he would have been abb- to nmke his escape in absolute safety. "The exits to the ho'el ail were marked with red lights and explicit directions to t.'.e fire escapes were posted in every room. The hotel was an old one and bio-ned much slower, in my belief, than a more modern s' ructure."' CORONER TO INVESTIGATE. He Will Look Into Causes of the Into Fire. Ft. W Kesh sc. ind.. Mav 1. -Coroner A. . who aid ever! lung pos?ihie to facilitate the recovery and iden - tificatiou of the burned bodies from , the Aveline hot 1 ruins, says that he j will begin at once an investigation imp ;o the causes of the fire. 1 "It may be said that there tiro no building laws in this city or state that give us such a basis to act on as was had by the Chicago authorities at the time of the Iroquois fire." said the. coroner. "Kverybody m ihe town' knew that the hotel was a fire trap. It needs an object lesson to wake people up sometimes. I will do all I can ; to promote new building laws." j Kdward J. lx'nnon. commissioner of ' public works, spoke similarly. j "It is not too much to hope that this j fir will bring about some important changes in the legal supervision, of

WEIRD SPOT

Niagara Falls at the Expense ; ... . ! will See This wonaer. wagons and ail driven pel! m.-!l over t thews, escaped death by falling ins by the snap of ais drum. One of large of the train, named Steadmaii, nped on a fleet ho-se. Tae e irreat Council Hock, the My: , so i mined front its ru lining lcavern I I t (Tlollri .-.I with i.an places of unusual interest, that ii,r the trip to Niagara rails at the t xtrip to Niagara Fall; Wine of this eit y is loading th-.: group eased the number of her votes -d into second place and -Miss Lucie Miss ; oldie Dadisinaii and Mh each issu, enter ih.. eondilioiis enii'liim the holy voteil eouie-i uny lime you wis'u of the contest are as fol100 votes .8,349 .5,115 .2.724 1.474 .1,510 611 271 220 5,250 169 2,509 106 101 101 100 100 100 COUPON Count. the com building: (ruction and ; in Indiana." maintenance ho said. of TOWN IN MOURNING. Prayers in Churches and Amusements ?re Stopped. I Fort Wayne. Ind.. May 1. Fort j Wayne is a city in mourning. The ' helocaus' of the Aveline hotel v. a ! tiie uniwrsa- theme in the local pul- ; pits Sunday ar.d in every church pray -i H's were said for tie- l'i Covefy of the j injured. I The Majestic and Temple theatres. ; le. ordMS of the respective manaueI'unts. were not opened Sunday night. The Fort Wayne-Wheeling- base ball ; game was cal'. .1 elf. IDENTIFYING DEAD Ail Called Upcr, to Task. Participate in Fort Wayi; Ind.. May 1. .bm in il;. women wl.ii escap.-c fated hot, 1 were ca police to assisi in lii a 1 1 1 Upon by the nt ificat ion ru id. the hi niies of the victims as thev were remove.: from the ruins of the struc- : -;re. The six under: aking csiabiisl.aieni were crowded throughout the day by these v ;o wislled to satisfy themsel ves their friends or relatives bed not i t ' """'..! I Alt.t dght of tl . - , ..... .. , . i i. .. . tin lh u lies had coroner ordered iu clear of e very- : tj,,, morgues to bo one. even relatives. Mirth Turned to Sorrow. Traveling men who Ind the night pr vious told si ones a.n I laughed toget he morg t ion Main over jOKes wen through each e and helped in the identificaof their former companions, of those saved from the burning structure broke down and cried in the i.i.ieri akitig roon. when they of their frb ran mis. .cross dead bodies RICHMOND MAN A LOSER. George Brown. Saloonist, Suffers from Ft. Wayne Fire. One of the losers in the fire which : desTmvo.i the Hotel Aveline nt Fort j Wayne is George Brown, the propria -

(tor of th saloon. His loss is estima-1 led at $10,000. Mr. Brown is a form- j i er Richmond man. Several years ago ; I he was associated with Bernard Moorj man in the liquor business in this city, j ! He left here and became a bar tend-' ; er later taking up 'he promotion of I 1 race track seh-nies and pool sellinc. i

Woman's Delicate Hands. tho ir h rei. roars ;:nl 'v some women ab use 'low soaps make tlu hard a sots-.c- of .;:tnoyanc- and ! soap, the whi' and d tih'y as 'U take our dish, s always imilia'ion. Easy Task Kind, keep.- t hem soft th y should lie. Won': suites! n Iu washing use Kasv Task, our ban you ills! improve in appearance an i OS.) see a difference in the w ; KELLEY STILL ALIVE

AND DOING WELL1!

Rented,!

Not Dead as Was Sunday. Mrs. Kelley, who is r.ot living with, her husband, was also notitici. While j Hoiiiiih-niaii Voueisoni: was trying to h cal in K Ten the 'body " a te! Hoys sister, Mrs. egfalil was st tit KlingeiibR 1. at ing the "death" Isong in the 1 Kelley peaceboarding house, hastilv sent to Haute, atinoun. of ,er brother, meantime had Vol icate 1 ! i 1 1 A t. sleeping at his '.grant was then Airs. Klin br. it her's ;enbiel inl'ormiiu "return to life." her of her LAST DAY FOB PAYING TAXES Long Lines of People Before Treasurer's Office Today. MANY NEW TAX PAYERS.! THEY ARE VERY LIABLE TO LEAVE THE COURT HOUSE THINKING THEY ARE SQUARED UP WHEN THEY ARE NOT. Today was the last tor the payment i of the spring installment of taxes. All! i day long constant crowds poured into i the office of the county treasurer audi made their semi annual deposits. The j i line t l.i al'ttrnoon extended from th j treasurer's office across the corridor lo within a short distance of the i clerk's office. The office will be open after supper this evenin supper for those seeking the las! chance. : There are many paying tax ihis yean who never have done so before and some of these will leave the office with a mistaken impression. They ask the amount they owe. knowing themselves; to be delinquent for one year or more. They are told the amount and pay it. : However, this sum represents only the: curient. installment and does not, in elude any arrears. One young man, j twenty-five years old. called at the oflice this morninig. He was told Ids tiil!" :l n paid that amount nnd left under the impression he was square with the county. It was the first, lime he had paid any tax. although In- is married and a house holder. The treasurer and his depu-j lies do not mention the delinquent taxi except on request, as that sum does not 1 appear on the duplicate fiom which: the figuies are obtained, and they are' rnaware d' conditions unless they look 1 the matter up. Pcunds and Weights. Here is a question that will tax the! arithmetical powers of a youth. Sup- i nose tli nt fiir koi no re;esoii nr nnntlmr a, shopkeeper wdio sold go.xls by j pounds and half pounds, but never in i quantities exceeding twenty pounds at' a time, was told, that he must transactnil this husint'c& with four weights only, what must these four weights be? The answer is half pound, one and a half p mud, four and a half pound and thirteen and a half pound. With these it will be readily seen that any weight from ltaif a pound to twenty pounds may be determined in pounds and half pounds. lateway Magazine. , Pleasant Anticipation. The llev. 1 r. (.'. M. I.amsoii, once president of the American board of for- . eigu missions, was called as a pastor over a parish and was undergoing examination before a council when the I i':e-ti 'ii was asked him. "Do you be- ' lieve in a hell?" The retiring clergy tmm of the parish, sat beside h:::i and. gb. ir g hl;.i a nudge. : said: "Tell them .V''S. If j o-t .1 .li't Mow j vou will before -.on have been here six I r months." Arg .-.taut. Just the Other Way. Fortune" Telier-Ih ware of a short, dark wotwn with a tierce eye. She is waiting to give jou a check. Visitor .despairingly No. she ain't. She's waiting to sret one from tne. That's mv wife. B.iltimuri American. Carries Weight. "Fa." said Freddy, -what is a social scale?" "Generally speaking." replied pa. "it's a place where they weigh money. "--K.'hemian Magazine. Vd-Usins: 's easier iJchef oucauhl than helping. i Eb: j Mj' some sPlenl1 W'ts. Eetti.

..... . . J! mm

ist. was lepi,!:, ,i toh.ne .'.ropj . d .b ad Q

on e. ' 1 i I I 1 rut M s l ' e 1 , tuiMil. v 1 1 - ( in. 'I'lie ,(,!,, ( were p.otilied and

I HI SPECIAL STAMP H

I S!SALETHlSWEEKi

i si i i

fi ?i STAMPS with one

60 STAMPS with oil.' In o:. can of A. m P. Bakinc Pow,:ef a: ;.t'e a

"53

STAMPS with .;' Coffee at :'."o. 15 STAMPS :' Coffee a w i'h

20 STAMPS v ol.t 0 botth A .v P. K:i C'.st mae.ei -he a holth'.

10 STAMPS with lie cakes ot A. A: 1 Soap at lo a cake. 10 STAMPS with two box. s of A. A P. G. hi tine at "c a bo. 1 0 w i ' A

STAMPS . P. Jain al .1 la' .

The Great V& Pacific 727 Main tVOIdPhone53 W. LOUNGERSjN LUXURY The Life of the Gilded Youths of Great Britain. FADS OF MODERN SYBARITES. They Surround Themselves With the Highest Products of Civilization and Make Idols of Their Bodies, These Twentieth Century Epicures. In a case that came before the bankruptcy court recently the debtor, a young man In the early twenties, gave iu his accounts an item of i.om1 which, bo said, was the amount he ha.l lest owing to the compulsory sale of the furniture in his tl.it. The original cost of the furniture In question is left to the imagination. The truth is that our "golden lads" do themselves remarkably well (to use their own ex pression) and think that nothing in the world is too good, for them. We are always reading in the papers allusions to the luxury and extravagance of women of the smart world. Now and then we may come across some reference to the elaboration of self indulgence in which the young men of our wealthy class luxuriate. Some years since we had a description of t he wardrobe of n New York "dude." It appeared in an American paper, nnd much of it had been communicated by the young man himself, especially some information as to the prices of the garment he affected. Not long

; S3 : lr-l-

after a paragraph went the round of tioii is not merely receiving, but giTthe papers about a certain Italian M.ct jug; not learning alone, but doing. The and the little comforts with which he educated man is open eyed and oui loved to surround himself. They were minded, oiii.-k lo respond to intludescribed as in no way inferior to ; ernes from w ithout, learning from all those of the New York young man It hi experiences and growiug in power is not alone in Kngland that the dandy !1S he grows in knowledge. Charles surrounds himself w ith the highest Kingsley said of his father that "he products of civilization nnd makes a possessed every faculty but the faculgod of his body. ' tv of using his faculties." He was

The luxury of a woman of fashion 1 pales almost to insignificance when compared with that, for instance, of j her brother in the guards or heir to

the family estates. The young man w ho manner or degree. They respond to w as f..(M) to the bad in consequence of different influences and grow in dlffer"the bankruptcy sale" of his furniture ent wavs. One becomes educated by

! is a case in point. lie probably lavished between PbKH) and 10.OX on the ; plenishing of the rooms. This is not much beyond the usual with young i men of the kind. Carpets alone make a large hole in 1.kh). Something very special in wall hangings is proportionate iu cost. Kneh piece of furniture is a gem in its way. The tradesmen know the kind of customer they have to deal with and that for the present there is plenty of money. They bring forth their richest and rarest and not iu vain. The high ambition of the young man is to "go one better" than any tuber fellow he knows in every detail of his surroundings. The civilized world is ransacked in order to provide him with the latest refinements of costlppofntments '-v llix"'","sl,ss i!! as 1,0,1 bath. gla china, orna - i ments. silver and dexterousiv shaded lights. His florist's vearlv bill would keep two or three poor families As to dress, a single fact may throwSome light on the relative values of the young man's wardrobe and that of the smart woman. "Ihe valet of one such gilded youth having complained to Lis master that in his large and luxurious west end flat there was no .roper accommodation for hN clothes, the resource of renting a second flat equally large for the housing of the wuirdrobe was suggested and at oikv adopted A small r ...ru js !evofe.l to clothe and brushes .-Mid 'rt.-iin preparations for the treatment f shoe :;nd kid nnd oot leather A la rgr room i given to the boots and shr.es themselves and their fumiii'ir tree, aral soon with the more Important articles of dress. Country !'. tl.es Lav e spacious i; ;;r'ers devoted to them TL.-v include ruling gear. Cricket and t.-r:TS si;js, spo-t;ng getUp ar.d traveling kit Here are hN p .-t:iia'i"e1:us ;.a,i traveling bags, an j .1..; o ::g .-, r v. .v. large w ii-ker basl;.-r 1 standing :.i...,;,g them elicits toniiing j Inquiry from the interested nda'ive whom he has invited to tea and to j whom h is showing his new "diggings." -Oh. that?" he ays. "That I basket ought to know i' way to France alone. It goes every fortnight with my washing. English laundries rnln silk things. We trid 'em. Tore them to pieces and made tue sheets yellow in no time." "Silk sheets?' "Oh. yes! No one ever Las any other now." "And you send this huge basketful once a fortnight?" "Every week," he corrects us. "One is on js way back r.w." It is interesting to see the youn; men of the d:-v at our smart restau rants, each seated alone at one of the tables. latent on dofna- himself tboroujrh'jr His w.bole mind seem

50 STAMPS with one l!v of Tea at 70c a lb. 45 STAMPS with one '.! of Tea at t.'.'c a lb. 40 STAMPS iili one lb. of Tea at h"c a He 10 STAMPS with one pkc. of M,i.;i'iii or Sp.mheHi at l''c pi-.i;. 10 STAMPS with one box of Shaker Sal' at !"e a box.

Pi Atlantic Tea Co.f Street New Phone 1215 e-cupled Willi lUe U.V11U MUu lt COU1p.uient pat's. Iu a tioe! writun by n man the opening chapter shows us a ruined youth :oni:g I on leu for Monte Carlo. He g'es the gourd .". sinkings to heop the re-t of tile u or' 1 o;jt of his first class en rr hi nnd tem.rds with satinfaction three sum;, hampers with which he has provisioned himself for thf journey. One inntaius his dinner for that exenlng. another his luncheon for the next day. and the third holds I he wine lh.it is to accompany these two meals aud a neat coutrHanee by the help of which he makes himself a 'up of superlatively excellent after dluner coffee He has left London to escape his creditors. Such Is the golden youth of our day. lie denies himself nothing, and his expenditure upon the luxuries of existence far exceeds that of the tnot extravagant of the women of the fashionable world London Queen. THE EDUCATED MAN. ' Not All of His Knowledge Comas From EooWs and Schools. The most important part of edii'".11. m comes from intercourse with people. From this side eomes the education in love iiml duty ami service. The actions of people siimulate imitation and emulation. By these meii grow in power and skill. I"roni observation of the diameter of jop!e men form Meals of character for themselves and are transformed thereby. Herein lie the consummate educative power In Christianity - the transforming power of the di ine man. According to this new idea, oducanot an educated man, although he was u very learned one. Education is au individual matter. No two men can be educated alike In way of schools nnd colleges and life, another by life alone. The measure of a man's education is the measure of Ills use in the world. tieorge V. Martin iu IJostou Globe. A COSTLY NAP. Slumber That Led to the Death King Charles I. Iu the middle of Iloiliorn once stood an iun, the George and Blue Boar, and there tok place au incident which entirely chuiigM the whole tale of England's history. As twilight was faldiiK in October. 1'A a very tired post boy nioun'ed on a sweating horse pulled up outside 1 the old Inn. The lad knew nothing of 1 ' !l impoiianee .11 iu? iruro u.vu lis post bag. His orders were tc in " ojiey them to a point on the Great North road, where he would be met by other messengers. But Cr .mv. ed's spies had follow ed him from .he so. oh coast, for Engand' !i!er'y depended uon his dis1 patches miscarry dig. The boy h'l s -iiie sripp. r and afterwnrd fell asleep, his head pillowed on his j-ost bag. While lie slept Cromwell's men took the bag rod found in it a letter from King Charles I. to the Scottish genera,s arranging for bis rescue, an irniiediate advance n-i London and the arrest and execution of Cromwell and Ids friends That same evening Cromwell had the fatal b-iter and determined on Charles' ill:. - I.-u.do-J Tit-Bits. Fish. Pen and Ink. ;,,,, 1 f..;nd .-1 .ot ..f cuttlefish u i.,t til" s-i;f." sr. id a worker ..r uiit'oiioj U-acLes. T 1 l:g a'otig ti.e b ;i h. and I got and roi" ii.to them and killed t v. etj'y. I guefS Some were "One that r, on .!! :t eight or teu fet long. I hauled them up and showed them for four or fire iIhjs in iuy whale tent ; then I sold them to th tisluimeu. who salt-d them p.wii f..r biit, taking .. the l.il's. eyes a'l iens, which I o.d as c ;rios. Igi'.ij ctitt.e, I-e&Ides a stj: of ir.d'-.d.e ink. end a pen a foot '.org. a beautiful object, as delicate and fragile as a f'e.it her pen. Ihe eyes when hardeie-1 looked like pearis, and they are mounted pins. The bills ar ehevTuut color and look like a parrot' bid." . The Til-tan hfgh.'ands of Asia bar i an area of TTo.() n.piare mi:e an5 ; rsnge from 13' to I-I'mi above V sa. i j A Yoilrm-.th i I You can t find 'better Don t try. Matha.