Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 146, 10 July 1908 — Page 11

"PAGE ELEVEN. ONE CENT PER WORD Each Insertion CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT, 7 DAYS ,F0R THE PRICE OF 5 THE MARKET PLACE OF EASTERN INDIANA The Simplest and Cheapest AH Advertisements Must Be in This Office Before 12 Noon. Situations Wanted Will Be Advertised Free to Get What You Want

-the richmoxd paixadium and sto-telegram, Friday, .jTjivr 10, 1908.

WANTED.

WANTED To do washing and ironIng. Call 123 S. 8th St. 10-3t WANTED Position as housekeeper in bachelors or widows home by a middle aged lady. More for home than wages. Address T. E. care Palladium. 10-3t WANTED Dressmaking to do; work guaranteed; prices reasonable. 22 8. 7th. 10-7t VvAisTED Any kind of work to do by boy aged 16. Reference. Address Q. S., care Palladium. 9-3t WANTED Light packages to deliver by George Boyer, 814 North 12th street, 'Old Phone 415N. 9-2t WANTED A place to assist with housework by girl of 17; town or country; can go home at night. Address R. N. care Palladium. 9-3t WANTED Place to assist with housework by young lady. Address "T" care Palladium. 8-3t WANTED 50 laborers, 19th and Main street. Central Union Telephone Co. 7-4 1 WANTED All kinds of furniture re

TODAY'S MARKET QUOTATIONS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. (By Correll and Thompson, Brokers, Eaton, Onto. New York, July 10. Open High Low Amalgamated Copper 69 70Vs 68 American Smelting 83 84 V 82 American Sugar - 127 127 127 Atchison 83V8 83 83y8 B. & O 90 91" 90 B. R. T 49 504 49 C. M. & St. P. 138 139 137 New York Central 105 105 104 Northeru Pac 140 140 138 Pennsylvania 123 123 122 Reading 116 117 115 Southern Pacific 88 88 87 Union Pacific 149 150 148 U:' 8. Steel , 40 40 39 U. S. Steel pfd 107 107 106 Great Northern 132 133 131

CHICACO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (By COTt.il fart Thompson. Brokers. Eaton. 0. Chicago, July 10. Wheat, v Open. High. tow. Close. July 88 iX 88 8S Sept 80 01 80. 8! Des 00 02 0O 01 Corn. Open. Hign. Low. Close. July 72 74 72 74 Sept 71 74 71 73 Dec 00 02 fiO 01 Oats. Opu. High. Low. Close. July, Sept Dec 48 48 30 40 .... 41 41 47 30 41 48 40 41 Porx. Open. High. Low. Close. .$15.02 $ $ $15.02 . 15.00 10.25 15.00 10.17 Lard. Opeu. High. Low. Closs. . fO.52 $0.52 . 0.-55 0.05 0.55 0.02 Ribs. Open. High. Low. Close. . $8.87 $.... $8.S7 . 8.00 9.00 . 8.00 9.00 July Sept July Sept July Sept U. S. YARDS, CHICAGO. Chicago, July 10. Hogs, receipts 18,000, strong. Left over 6,586. Cattle 15,000, strong. Sheep 6,000, steady. Hogs Close. Light $6.10$6.62 Mixed 6.10 6.75 Heavy 6.10 6.75 Rough 6.10 6.40 Indianapolis Grain Indianapolis, July 10. "Wheat. 86. Corn, 73. Oats, 53. Rye, 80. Timothy, $11.00. Indianapolis Market. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Jest heavies $6.40 $6.70 Good, to choice 6.85 6.45 BEEF STEERS. Good to choice steers . . 6.25 7.00 Medium to good steers . . 6.00 6.75 Choice to fancy yearlings. 5.00 5.75 BUTCHER CATTLE. Choice to fancy heifers.. 4.75 5.75 Good to choice heifers .... 4.23 4.05 VEAL CALVES. Good to choice 3.00 6.25 Fair to good 2.00 5.50 STOCK CATTLE. Good to heavy fleshy feeders 4.50 4.75 Fair to good feeders 4.25 4.50 Good to choice stockers . . S.00 4.25 Common to fair heifers .. 4.00 4.65 SHEEP. Best yearlings 4.00 4.50 Richmond. CATTLK. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 lbs. 6.00 6.15 Good to heavy packers .. 5.90 6.00 Common and rough 5.40 5.65 Steers, corn fed 4.90 5.00 Heifers 4.15 4.40 Fat cows 3.40 3.90 Bulls 3.25 3.50 Calves 5.50 6.00

pairing and upholstering. Work guaranteed. Holthouse, 124 South 6th. Phone 4201. . 7-7t

WANTED First class girl to do cooking, etc; no washing; good wages to right one; call 1426 Main street. 2-tf WANTED Men to Learn barber trade; will equip shop tor you or furnish positions, few weeks completes, constant practice, careful Instructions, tools given, Saturday wages, diplomas granted, write for catalogue. Moler Barber CoL'ege. Cincinnati. O. FOR SALE, FOR SALE City real estate. Porterfield. Kelley Ehck-9-tf FOK riALE Grocery stock, will invoice about $1,000. In good location. Cheap rent. See me quick. Al H. Hunt. 7 N. 9th St. 10-3t FOR SALE Wagon. Call 1129 Main St. 10-7t FOR .SALE OR TRADE One extra high two seated trap, cheap if sold at once. Call 1015 N. H St. 10-2t FOR SALERobf and-"bridge pa int, Close 68 82 127 83 90 49 137 104 138 122 115 87 148 39 107 132 Lambs 5.10 5.40 PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens dressed, per lb.. 18c Old chickens, per lb 12 to 15c Turkeys, per lb -. ,.-.18o Ducks, per lb 15o COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb 25c Country butter, per lb 13 to 18c Eggs, per doz 16 Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Roller Mills) Wheat (per. bu.) 80 Corn (per bu.).. . . 65 Oats (per. bu.) 45 Rye. (per bu.) 65 Bran (per ton) $22.00 Middlings (per ton) $25.00 Richmond Hay Market. (Omar G. Whelan.) Timothy hay (baled) $9.00 New Timothy hay (loose) $7.00 New clover hay (baled) ... $7.00 New clover hay (loose) . .$5.00 to $6.00 Mixed hay $5.00 Straw (per ton) 5.00 Corn (per bu.) 65c to 68c Oats (per bu.) 45 Richmond Seed Market. (Runge & Co.) Timothy (per bu) $2.00 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, July 10. Cattle Receiupts 100 loads. Cattle $7.35 down. Veal $7.50 down. Hogs Receipts 33 loads; $G.S5 down. Sheep and lambs, receipts light. Sheep, $4.50 down. Spring lambs $7.50 down. WANT LINE RON ON TWENTIETH (Continued From Page One.) ent line at Main and Twenty-second streets and continue north to the first alley leading west, thence to the alley between Twenty-first and Twentysecond streets and north to the E street line. One objectionable feature is apparent, however. This would throw the curve In the tracks directly across the Twenty-second and Main street entrance to the park. This is one objection to using Twentysecond street for the entire distance. The other line follows a similar course but leaves Main street at Twenty-first. It would follow Twentyfirst street only a short distance, thence west on the first alley to the alley between Twentieth and Twentyfirst streets, thence north to E streets. To adopt one of these alley routes would require the purchase of enough land off the lots at the corners to enable the long freight cars to make the curves. Several months ago, when the location of the freight line was in agitation, it was suggested North. Twentieth street be used. A meeting ot

guaranteed five years. Retail at wholesale price. Clendenin & Co.. 257 Ft. Wayne avenue. Both

phones. 22-tf-every fri. Saturday axl Monday at Gus Taube's FOR SALE Bicycle. 120 S. 3rd banL Mt 9-2t : : FOR SALE Lawn mower, 124 Hunt FOR RENT. street. ?lf FOR RENT Furnished flats, 415

FOR SALE Merchants' Delivery outfit. Clyde Edwards. 9-7t FOR SALE Two or three corner lots with gravel, inside of city; see me quick- Al. H. Hunt, 7 N. 9th St. 9-3 1 PTR SALE Antique, new and second hand furniture, cheap. Antique Furniture Co., 519 Main. t-7t FOR SALE OR TRADE-Fifteen acre poultry farm near city. Five poultry houses, 7-room house, with furnace and two good cellars. See me quick. Al. H. Hunt, 7, N. 9th St. 8-4t FOR. SALE Two modern houses, 5 and 7 rooms. 332 Randolph. 7-7t FORHSALECheap road wagon at 820 Main. 3-7t FOR SALE One seven foot, 3 spring the property owners located on this street and vicinity was held and a resolution adopted that the line be run-through the park in preference to Twentieth street. It was declared that a freight line was not wanted on Twentieth street. That was before a specific provision was made in regard to the class of freight to be hauled and the number of cars to constitute a train. Favors Twentieth Street. One of the attorneys involved in the present court proceedings said this morning: "The easiest and best way and quickest of solution would be to grant the use of Twentieth street. At the present time the street railway company may use Twentieth street but not for freight car purposes. Under the ruling of Judge Fox the company may go ahead now and build on Twenty-third street. The only way to stop it would be by injunction proceedings and it does not look as if it would be possible to secure a writ of Injunction. There is doubt if specific Injury to property could be proved. Even if it were enjoined, the company could build on Twenty-second street. This would throw a line of tracks across the mala entrance to the pack and at the same time make the city liable to injunction proceedings brought by property owners. "I don't see why they do not use Twentieth street or an alley. The people out there can have no more complaint than those on North Fifth or any other of the proposed Btreets. West Main street residents are not complaining and their homes are just as pretty and valuable as those on Twentieth street. Beside, the people out on Twentieth street are used to cars." Wants Matter Settled. The Commercial club wants the matter settled as quickly as possible. The prospect of continuous and prolonged litigation is not hailed with favor. The business interests and general public combined will welcome a settlement. It is probable if an agreement is not reached soon council will suspend the ordinance against operating freight cars on Main street. This will throw conditions into the same 6tate they were a year ago. RESIGNS AS HEAD OE LOCAL COMPANY (Continued From Page One.) recent meeting of the officials of the local independent company, he learned ot the intended combination, but of fered no objections to it. In Embarrassing Place. This combination, however, placed Mr. Lindemuth in an embarrassing position. As president of an independent company which had joined hands with one of the trust companies he could not consistently continue to act as president of the International Independent Telephone association, which was organized with the primary object of fighting the Bell interests. On the other hand, when he was appointed general counsel of the independent combination, he could not consistently continue to act as president of the Home Telephone company of this city, as he will be expected to direct the campaign which will be waged against all independent companies who have affiliated with Bell companies. Statement Issued. Today the Palladium received an authoritative statement from the International Independent Telephone association. After announcing the resignation of Mr. Lindemuth as president of that combination, the following statements are made: "Back of this resignation there Is a significance of enormous import in the telephone field. It is known that the organization has been giving serious consideration to the question of proposed mergers between the Bell Telephone company and a few of the Independent companies, first, because of their unlawful character ,and of the activity of the United States government at this time in the matter of the anti-trust laws, and within which the mergers are clearly defined, and furthermore the futheranco of the interests of an open field and fair competition In Telephony. "The latest merger is that of the Richmond (Home) Telephone company with the Central UaJoa'Telephoa

wagon. See or call Meerhoff the Plumber. 1-tf

FOR SALE A car load of horses every Main St. 10-2t FOR RENT New house; 6 rooms, 1011 S. E. Call 5 N. 8th. 10-2t FOR RENT Five room house, modern conveniences. Also cheaper houses. Benj. F. Harris. 8-7t FOR RENT Furnished rooms, 303 N. 7th street. 8-3t FOR RENT House. Apply to 1216 N- F. 6-7t FOR RENT Desirable furnished rooms all conveniences, 203 S. 11th. 6-7 1 FOR RENT Furnished rooms; anso office rooms, with steam heat and bath, at The Grand, for gents only. a-4-ti FOR RENT Eight room house, bath, electricity and gases; 1510 N. E St. company (Bell) in Richmond, Indiana, of which Mr. Lindemuth was also president. Lindemuth Exonerated. "The entire matter came before the officers and executive committee of the International Independent Telephone association at its meeting in Chicago yesterday and decisive and drastic action was taken. President Lindemuth was fully exonerated from any blame in the matter; but the decks have been cleared for action. His resignation was accepted: a large fund was appropriated for legal expenses, secret service and other expenses, $40,000 of which was made immediately available; instructions given to institute suits; to join others in conducting suits, and a special committee was appointed, empowered to spare nothing In conducting a warfare which shall not only nullify past and present further illegal combination, but which shall at all hazards maintain and protect the integrity of the buciness of the Independent movement throughout the country, and keep It at least clear of all charges of violating the laws of the States and the United States. "Mr. Lindemuth has resigned as president of the Indiana concern, in protest of its action, and will take active part personally in conducting these suits. The Independents have approximately four millions of telephones In the United States, and the Bell approximately three and one quarter millions. It is statod by those present at this conference that the funds subscribed will be duplicated many times if necessary." ANCIENT LIGHTHOUSES. Baeon Ltg-hta For Mariners Coeval With the Earliest Commerce. Beacon lights to guide the wave tossed mariner to a safe harbor must have been almost coeval with the earliest commerce. There Is positive record that lighthouses were built in ancient times, though few evidences now remain to us from old writers or in crumbled ruins. This is not strange, for light towers, never the most; stable architectural form, were exposed to the storms of sea and war. The Greeks attributed the first lighthouses to Hercules, and he was considered the protector of voyagers. It is claimed by some that Homer refers to lighthouses in the nineteenth book of the "Iliad." Virgil' mentions a light on a temple to Apollo which, visible far out at sea, warned and guided mariners. The Colossus at Rhodes, erected about 300 B. C, is said to have shown a signal light from its uplifted hand. The oldest towers known were built by the Libyans in lower Egypt. They were temples also, and the lightkeeper priests taught pilotage, hydrography and navigation. The famous tower on the Isle of Pharos at Alexandria, built about 2S3 B. C, is the first lighthouse of undoubted record. This tower, constructed by Sostratus, the architect, was square in plan, of great height and built In offsets. An open brazier at the top of the tower contained the fuel for the light. At Dover and Boulogne, on either side of the English channel, were ancient lighthouses built by the Romans. But the lighthouse at Coruna, Spain, built in the reign of Trajan and reconstructed in 1G34. Is believed to be the oldest existing lighthouse. The Hamming; Bird Flower. Alletedo avasisis. the wonderful so called "humming bird flower" of the plains of eastern Turkey, stands unique and alone among the many specimens of floral mimicry that have been classified by modern botanists. It is a beautiful blossom of variegated hues, the total length of the entire flower being about one and three-quarter inches. As one might imagine from its name, it is an exact image of a miniature humming bird. The breast is green, the wings deep rose color, the throat yellow and the bead and beak almost pure black. The only particular In which It is not a perfect bird is that the stem gives it the appearance of having but a single leg and foot. "Clubwomtru In Boston," said the headline. "Dear, dear, commented the nearsighted man. unable to, read., the context, "I never would have thought it possible! Why, the worst we do In Philadelphia is to neglect to give 'em a eat! Philadelphia Ledger. She Is it the amount of talking a man does that makes him a bore? Be No; it's the amount he doesn't say whilo W talks., . -

Apply to Mrs. M. A. Kielhorn, 74 S. 17th. 2-tf

LOST. LOST A brown purse containing three baby rings, valued as presents $5 in bill. 5c change. Finder return to Rosenbloom, Buntin & Co.. and receive reward. 8-3t MISCELLANEOUS. FOUND-Ladies Black silk Jacket on Liberty pike. Call at R. Greulich. 313 S. 6th St. Party can have same by paying for this adv. 10-lt LOST Linen table clotn on Main St. between 9th and 15th streets or 15th or N. A. Please phone 1240. 10-lt Try a Palladium want ad. They pay. The Palladium will take your ad over the phone. NOTICE Miss Newman's out door sketch class begins next week. Those wishing to join, register before Tuesday at Studio, Room 30 Kelly Bldg. 10-lt We grind razors, cliears, knives and THE CODE OF HONOR. Daelina- aa It Was In France la the Time of Rlcac-llea. The passion for dueling, which had cost France, it was said, between T.OC-Aid 8,000 lives during the twenty yeai?jf Henry IV.'s reign, was at its height when his son came to the throne. The council of Trent in 1543 had solemnly condemned the practice of single combat, impartially including principals, seconds and spectators in its penalty of excommunication. In 1602 an edict of Henry pronounced the "damnable custom of dueling introduced by the corruption of the century" to be the cause of so many piteous accidents, to the extreme regret and displeasure of the king and to the irreparable damage of the state, "that we should count ourselves unworthy to hold the scepter if we delayed to repress the enormity of this crime." A whole series of edicts followed to the same effect, but it was easier to make edicts than to enforce them. Degradation, imprisonment, confiscation of property, loss of civil rights and death were the penalties attached to the infringement of the laws against dueling, and still the practice prevailed. In 162G Richelieu published a milder form of prohibition. The first offense was no longer capital, a third only of the offender's property was to be confiscated, and the Judges were permitted to recognize extenuating circumstances. A few months later the Comte de Bouteville thought fit to test the minister's patience in this direction. The Place Royale had long been a favorite dueling ground, and De Bouteville traveled from Brussels to fight his twenty-second duel here, in the heart of Paris, in deliberate defiance of the king's authority. The result was not encouraging. Montmorency though he was, the count went with his second to the scaffold, and the marked decrease from that time in the number of duels may be attributed either to the moderation used in framing the law or to the Inexorable resolution with which it was enforced. Macmillan's Magazine. RUSSIAN PROVERBS. - s Roguery is the last of trades. J Without cheating, no trading. Every fox praises his own tail. A debt is adorned by payment. A good beginning is half the work. Every little frog is great in his own bog. Trust in God, but do not stumble yourself. Go after two wolves and you will not catch even one. If God doesn't forsake us, the pigs will not take us. The deeper you hide anything the sooner you find It. Be praised not for your ancestors, but for your virtues. Send a pig to dinner and he will put his feet on te table. Dr. Holmes Revenue. When "The Last Leaf" was published by Oliver Wendell Holmes a critic attacked it savagely and cruelly. Dr. Holmes, though importuned by friends, did nothing In revenge. He waited for time to avenge him, which time did liberally. The critic fell upon evil days and ended his existence with suicide. The only morceau of personal revenge which the good doctor allowed himself was to cut out the paragraph about his enemy's career and paste It in his scrapbook on the same page which contained the original criticism and the announcements of the successive editions of the poem. This was a mild revenge, but even this was unworthy of Dr. Holmes. Seemed to Have Him Cornered. The teacher was discoursing to the class on the wonders of nature. "Take the familiar Illustration of the sting of a wasp," he said, "as compared with the finest needle. When examined through a microscope the sting is still sharp, smooth and polished, while the needle appears blunt and rough. "It is so with everything. The works of nature are infinitely superior to those of art. Try how we may, we cannot improve on nature. "It isn't so with my eyes, teacher, said a little girl in the class. Why, how is that. Nellie r he asked. 'Cause nature made me cross eyed, she said, "and the doctors fixed my eyes all right. Brazen Theft. During (he South, African war an lav

all kinds of edse tools. Brown-Darnell Co., 1022 Main. 10-3t

MONEY LOANED On easy terms. Thompson's Agency, 710 Main St. June 12 fri&sat tf DEAD STOCK removed free of charge Cash paid if delivered at factory. Telephone charges paid. Automatic phones Factory 4134; Manager's Residence, 4034. Factory on Union Pike. 1V miles north of Richmond. Clendenin & Co.. Richmond. InU. Manufacturers of High Grade Ferti lizers. mayll-mon&fri tl FIRE. Life. Accident and Health. E. B. Knollenberg. Room 6. Knollenberg Annex. junl6-tu. fri. sun-tf If you want your vault cleaned and thoroughly disinfected telephone me and 1 will give your orders immediate attention. Only reliable vault cleaner in Richmond. Thonifs Morehead, 93S Butler. Phone 3177. 67t FOR HIRE Automobile carriage; special attention given telephone calls. Pleasure parties and sight seeing. F. M. Miller No 12 N. Tenth street. mense stone monument was removed at Cape Town during the night, and no one knows to this day by whom or why it was taken. Some years ago. In broad daylight, a clever and bold gang of thieves carried off a valuable fountain fourteen feet high from Uxbridge without exciting the suspicions of any one and quite recently an omnibus was calmly removed, horses and all, while standing unguarded outside a public house In London and has never been seen or beard of since. It would seem, indeed, that It Is often far easier to steal a big thing than a little one. London Telegraph. Flaring: Him. "Ydung man," began the dignified gentleman in black dress, "have you fully considered the future? Have you made provisions for the hereafter? Is it not time" "Pardon me one moment, please, but are you a minister or a life insuranct agent? Milwaukee Sentinel. Safer. Patience It's a very bad sign to tumble upstairs. Patrice Even so, I'd tather do that than tumble downstairs. -Xonkers Statesman. MAN'S HEADGEAR. From the Primitive Cap to the Glossy High Hat of Today. Earliest of all forms of headgear was the cap. The hat did not really come into common use till the seventeenth century. In the time of Charles I. the queer high sugar loaf shaped hat came into fashion. It was wound with a rich band and trimmed with a feather. Constant balancing of the head was necessary to keep it on. The hat was taken up by the Puritans, who satisfied their bitter consciences by discarding the frivolous band and the wicked feather. Charles II. brought the French periwig into England, and the tall hat went out to make way for a low, broad brimmed thing, gorgeous with feathers and gimcracks. These broad brims became broader and broader. At last it became necessary to turn them up. First this was done at the back, finally according to the wearer's Idea. Out of this extravagant style of headgear grew the cocked hat The footmen and the liveried coachmen of many European nations still wear this style of headgear. During Queen Anne's time the cocked hat was the hat of the gentleman. The correct fashion was to carry it under the arm as much as possible. The French revolution, which took off so many heads that had worn the cocked hat, took off the cocked hat too. In its place the crescent shape became the style, partly by force. The direct ancestor of that dreadful thing, the high hat of today, was the noble and sturdy beaver. Beavers went out of fashion largely because the supply of material became exhausted. London Answers. NATURAL SOAP. The Queer Fruit of a Tree That Grows In Algeria. Soap grows on trees in Algeria. Tbs soap tree is ornamental and reaches a height of fifty feet. It begins to bear fruit when six years old. The wood Is close grained, takes a good polish and is admirably suited for furniture. The average Income from a tree is $10 to $20 a year. The composition of tbe fruit consists of a nut shaped hull In which is a seed. In the hull exists the soapy matter in the proportion of 30 to 40 per cent of the bulk of tbe hull. The 6oap principle is set free by the shredding of the bull and using it with water Just as if It were a piece of soap. A, beautiful lather is the result, and the cleansing qualities are such that there is no soap made by human process that can compare with. them. For toilet purposes the same applies. The hull can be made into a powder and tbe powder into a cake, so as to make the use of it easier. It can also be made into a liquid for hair wash, dentifrice and various other preparations. Seeds of the Algerian, soap tree have been Im ported to the United States, and soap trees hare been discovered in Florida Indigenous to the soil. The seed has kernel which contains a fixed oil in ev ery respect preferable to the best Im ported olive oil, either for eatlnr or culinary purposes, and also for all kinds of Industrial prodacts 1a which the olive on Is used. . The yield in oil Is twice that, of the lira fruit Balti more American. A Chinee Superstition. -Wins a' CTete. baiT takes, nap

Telephone 2273. Terms reasonable. 9-?t SCHOOL Now is the time to begin your course at the Richmond Business college. S-7t rnstantenouiVater Heaters of ill kinds. See them In operation at Meerhoffs. S S. 9th. Let us figure on jour plumbing, heating and lighting. l-tt

LAUNDRY. V e can heifc mail ycu nappy honestly we can. Richmond Steam Laundry. I am sure I do not knw what will become of Bessie." said Bessie's mamma. "She came home from Sunday school yesterday crj lug. When 1 asked her what she was crying about she said: " 'Because poor Eve never had any mamma.' "New York Times, De Style On what side does appendicitis come? Doctor (Jokingly) On the Inside. New York Press. people think Its oul Is'havlng a ret going out for n long walk perhaps. If the nap is a very long one the mother is f rightened. She Is nfi aid that her baby's soul has wandered too far away and cannot find its way home. If it doesn't come I wick, of course the baby will never awaken. Sometimes mcti' are sent out Into the streets to call tbe baby's name over nnd over again. n4 though it were a real child lost. The.v hope to lead the so;il back home. If a baby sleeps while It is Ulug carrIM from one place to another the danger of losing the soul along the way is very great So whoever carries the little oao keeps saying Its name out l-ud, so that the soul will not utray away. They think of the soul as a bird hoppiuj along after them. A Fox's Strata gam. A fox Is bound to be a thief whenever he has half a chance to steal, say London Answers. He can no mora help taking a goose than a badly trained cat can help taking a chop from the larder. There was a tame fox that was chained in a ysrd to keep him out of mischief, but he soon hit upon a plan for Belzing a stray duck or fowl. At the very farthest point to which his chain would reach he used to place a portion of his food and then hide himself la his kennel. In due coarse a silly chicken was sure to- spy the bait and begin pecking st it Before It bad had time to enjoy Its meal, however, the fox would ponnce upon It and the stock of poultry be reduced by one. , When Not to Smoke. . It Is quite certain that much may be done to diminish tbe risk of tobacco amblyopia by paying attention to certain points of personal hygiene. For Instance, a rule should be made never to smoke upon an empty stomach, but as far as possible only a fter meals. It is absolutely bad to smoke before dinner and equally bad to smoke late at night to keep awake at one's work. It should also be forbidden to chew the cigar between the teeth, as many smokers are wont to do. Hospital. Qualified. Xlesd Astronomer I want a man to figure eclipses, calculate the distances between various stars, fix tho orbits of , certain comets and. in fact, be a sort of handy mathematical man around the heavens. What are your qualifications? Applicant (proudly) All last year, sir, I was tbe official score keeper for t woman's bridge club. Life. 'Home, Dwrrl Heme. Tlome. Sweet Home." Payne's song was originslly a number in the open "Clari, the Maid of Milsn, a produc tion brought out In 1923. The opera was a failure, and nothing is now known of It save the one song, which became instantly popular. Over 100.000 copies were sold in the first yesi of Its publication, and the sale in on form or another has been constant ever since the first appearance of tbi beautiful theme. The melody is a Sicilian folk song and was adapted to the words by Payne himself. Arab Steede as Ckarst, The noble An Wan steed Is some times put to ignoble uses. A traveler with iconoclastic Ideas ssld: "You havs. heard of tbe Arabian horse's beauty, its docility, its Intelligence, its endurance. Did you know that it churned tbe family batter? Among the desert tribes when butter is needed the milk is put in a sheepskin bag and tied by a short rope to the horse's saddle. The boras is then nrgd into a trot, and this gait Is kept up until the milk in the sheep skiu is Joggled into butter. A fle firm, smooth butter It Is. Am Eye For an Are. "Mr. Speaker. said tbe congressman, "I bsve tried vainl7 to c&tch your eye and 'Sit down! thundered the speaker. "I have tried vainly to catch your aye several times when it was needed.Philadelphia Ledger. So Ther Do. "Some men are born great Yes, ESt gracious, bow some of them do shrink London Tit-Bits. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY The Great Blood Purifier. Fw sail at all drag stores.