Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 71, 18 January 1909 — Page 7

THE BICILMGKD FAlXiDIUM AND StTXTEIEGRAM, MOXDAY, "JAXTJARY 18, 1909.

TAGE 3EVEA.

PALLADIUM' AND SUN TTELEGRAM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT!

HE (BEIT " ' ' ...The Market Place of the;PeopIe. ' IEWEI IMS 1 WOED) Situations Wanted and Greatest little satisfiers of All 1 advertise men ts must be FOR i HE Found Ads 2 times big wants are the - '.in 'this office before PR II (PIP (TTifp i EACH INSERTION. FRE ads Mow , 12 noon IrllttUttgK WT

WANTED. WANTED To pack your furniture for shipment. Holthouse, 124 South bta street. Phone 43S7. 17-tf WANTED To eell you new and second hand furniture at bargain prices. Antique Furniture Co., 519 Main. Phone 4201. 17-2t WANTED You to enter the new class in short hand at the Richmond Business Collie next Monday. 16-tf VAiVi'liD Some one to do mongram work and fancy initials. Address Box 26r, City. 18-tf fW ANTED Girl tor general housework "twp days in the week, care Palladium. Address "B," 18-2t WANTED Place to do general housework; middle aged woman. Call at 208 South 10th street. 18-2t WANTElfrf you want money in place of your city property or farm, go right to Porterfield's Real Estate office, Kelley Block, 8th and Main. . 14-tf WANTED At Mrs. Hiser's Business School, 33 S. 13th St., Bookkeeping, Shorthand and Typewriting students.. Phone 2177. Opens Jan. 4. ,. 28-tf men to learn barber trade and take positions waiting oui MEW YORK STOCK (By OorveU and Thompson, New-Torkv Jan 18. rn jasrwHwr . ...... tftmattinaw.. ... .... f Jgrft.,...........:. . LTS2WS . ,. mm .... u.s. weeipw,.. .... PeiwisiypeauHOviy, n New TorKKTOtttralS .. .. .... RaadBn" T3f ..... Canadian Paelflo- JtL.. Union Pacific Atchison .. ..... . Southern Pacific,. .... .. .. .... Cy OamUdSltosfiiiaejh, Brokers. (bUoaoAatUiSV f alpo, JHUih Low Close pp iafr' xam io 106 Patjr3ij,Wi 011., 97 97. I :; ' Corn - Close 61 61 Close 61 45 Ry yeJ 61 Par 1U i 61 i i r; Opoa Htgh Low War . M B1H 51 H 46 51 45. 46 Indianapolis Market. . INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. HOGS. Bast heavies,. .. ,...$6X$0.4O qpod to choice ... ...... 6.85 6.20 ! i?, BEST STEERS, fclnfahed. steers. . ........ 6.B0 7.25 Good to choloe steers . . . . 6.903) 6.65 pnolce to fancy yearlings. . 4.S0 5.00 STOCK CATTLE. to heavy fleshy feed ers .... .... 5.00 6.25 pair to good feedors . . . . 4.73 5.00 Good, to choice stockers .. 3.00 4.50 jCommon to fair heifers. . . 2.50(8 3.25 I BUTCHER CATTLE. (Choice to fancy heifers . . 4.85 5.50 pood to choice heifers.. ...3.75 4.25 ' .,.v. , . SHEEP. ..''..,, put yearlings.. . . ...... 4.25 4.75 DOOd to choice sheep ..... 3.50 4.25 rpring lambs.. .. .. .. 4.00 7.50 VEAL CALVES, pood .to fancy.. .... .... 4.50 &75 Plr to heavy.. .... ... 3.00 7.50 out; i Ool4' Medal Flour maka baXlnv aay. ! ' Tnaxaa. Qoing South X I To Florida? 'Tk r r a i n o w. w r. Offers Very Low Round Trip Rates Durinc the Winter f Season to I Jacksonville, Flo." "Do ln&, Fla, . . X Melbourne, Flo. . ..$36.95 ..$42.15 ..$44.65 . .143.S5 Palm Beach, Fla Pensacola, Fla. '. New Orleans, La. ..$54.25 J ......$29.60 t $32.50 I WlntAr Tj-kiiiHt Tllta t-rrA T return until June 1st, 1909. V Round Trip Home Seekers' Tickets (21 day limit) on sale st and 3rd Tuesdays of. each ? month, to the South, East and tKoxth East. J-r For particulars call on 7 'C. A. 'BLAIR, ij I : . Pass, & Ticket Agent. Home Tel 2052. Richmond, Ind.

IJATEST

MARKET

jar

graduates. Few weeks completes. Constant practice furnished. Scholarship includes tools, instructions, demonstrations, examinations and diplomas. Write for catalogue. Moler Barber College, Cincinnati, Q. uovl-tf

for sale; FOR SALE See the biggest little new gas light in the world for only 35c. Brown-Darnell Co., 1022 Main Phone 1936. 16-3t FOR SALE One full dress vest, with , coat, one tuxedo coat, one Prince Albert coat with vest, one h,eavy ulster, suitable for driving. All articles in excellent condition, but cannot be worn by. owner. Call mornings at Ben Barters, 36 S. 18th St. 16-4t FOR SALE Good work -horse cheap. 519 South 13th street. ' ,18-3t FOR SALE 5 year old general purpose horse; city broke. 327 N 18th. 18-2t FOR SALE One good gentle driving mare; road wagon and harness. Call 450 S. 14th street. 18-?t FOR SALE New and second hand sewing machines for half the agents' prices,, $1.00 down. We also loan money on sewing machines, watches, jewelry or 'diamonds. J. QUOTATIONS. - Brokers, Eaton, Ohio.) Open ..125 . .143 .,"79 ..85 ..140 .. 52 -.113 ..133 ..149 ..112 ..131 ..137 ..177 -.180 ..100 ..120 High 125 143 80 85 140 53 114 133 149 112 132 138 177 180 100 120 Low 124 143 : 77 84 138 52 113 133 148 111 130 137 176 179 . 99 fins 125 143 78 '85 138' 52 113 133 148 111 130 137 17 179 99 119 119 Pittsburg Livestock. Pittsburg, Jan. 18. Cattle Receipts 100 loads, extras $6.75 Prime, $6.50. Hogs Receipts 60 loads. Heavies, $6.60. Medium, $6.50. Sheep Receipts light, $5.50. Lambs, $7.40. EAST BUFFALO. Buffalo, N. Y. Jan. 18. Cattle receipts, 300, 10 to 15c higher. Veals, receipts 700, $10.00. Sheep receipts, 26.000, $5.00. Lambs, $7.60. Hogs, receipts, 15,000, $6.75. CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK. Cincinnati, Jan. 18. Hogs Receipts lvS cars, strong. 10c, lower. , . .. .. . , ; Cattle Receipts '2.0CO. Sheep Recipts 400; top $4.75. Lambs, $9.SO. 5 to Richmond Hay Market. r (Omar G. Wheian.) Timothy hay (baled) $11 to $12 New Timothy hay (loose) ..$11 to $12 Clover hav, loose SlO.tiol Mixed hav sin mi Strom rr tnnlT - - 'e't'nA -. Oats, per bu 50c j New Corn .... . ..C5c Richmond. CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir.) Best hogs, average 200 to 250 pounds $5.50$5.75 Good to heavy packers ... 5.00' 5.50 Common and rough ..... 4.50 5.00 Steers, corn fed 4.50. 5.00 Heifers , 3.50 4.00 , .3.00'3.75 3.00 3.50 6.00; 6.50 -5.50 Fat cows Bulls .... Calves . . Lambs . . PRICES FOR POULTRY. (Paid by Bee Hive Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed per lb ...15c Old chickens, per lb.. ..12 to 14c Turkeys, per lb. .18 to 20c COUNTRY PRODUCE. (Paid by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb ....... ...34c Country butter, per lb 25e Eggs 25c Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Holler Mills) Wheat (per bu.) Corn, (per bu) , . Rye (per bu.) Bran, (per ton) Middlings (per ton) Clover Seed, per bu .. .... ..$1.05 . ..65c ,'...75c .$24.00 .I27.0C ..$4.25 Richmond Seed Market." (Runze fc, Co.) - Timothy, per bu. ........ $1.50$1. SO Clover Seed , $4.00 Hart Etxrs: Gold Sienl Flour ts the b-t fft-'TnaV-

OUOTATIDNS

J In veverythino. .''-:" ' "'

M. Lacey & Co., Room 2. G. A. R. Bldg., Sth & Main. 15-T-F-S-Sun

FOR SALE Mill wood . er & Company. FOR SALE ' 19th. -Building lots FOR SALE Cook stove and heating stove, cheap. 90o N. II. 14-tf FOR SALE New Globe Hot Blast j Heater, reason for selling, have,! put in Mogul Furnace, street. 407 Pearl 13-7t FOR SALE 100 cords stove wood. David Hanagan, , Centerville, Route 12, Centerville Phone 5D. jan9-2wks FOR SALE City property and farms, merchandise stocks and fire insurance. Porterfield. Kelly Block, Sth and Main. 6-tf AUCTIONEER. H. H. JONES, Auctioneer. 1 have lots t of sales booked for spring. If you are going to have a sale of nny ki-)d. I would like to do your work. Sat isfaction guaranteed. Office Shurley's Barn. iec24-tf FOR RENT. FOR RENTand bath; -Furnished room. heat 30 N. 12th. 15-7t CENTERVILLE. GRAIN. (Furnished by Fred Schi'entz & Sv")n Wheat, No. 2, per bu .51.0?, Corn, No. 2, . per. bu COc Oats, No. 3 -.'..45c Kye,-No. 2 70 Clover Seed, reclenne:! . . . .51.7") $5 00 No. 1, Timothy, b:la:l, per tt.u $10.00 ' PRODUCE AND POULVr.Y. " (Furnished by II. I.. Jot nit ci.) Turkeys .... . -.AOs t Ducks (.r . Geese 5c i Eggs ..T. 2Tc: Country butter :-c Young chickens Old" chickens . . . ; , Country Bacon ., Potatoes ... .....7c 10 311c.; ....75c CAMBRIDGE CITY. GRAIN. (Furnished by J. S. Hazelrigg) Wheat, No. 2, per bu ......... .51.03 Corn, new, per bu ... .v, 60c Oats 45c Rye' 70c Clover Seed, recleaned.. $4.50 $5.00 No. 1 .Timothy, per ton $10.00 $11.00 No. 1 Timothy and clover hay, mixed $9,000 $10.00 PRODUCE. (Furnished by W. B. Barefoot & Co.) Country Butter ISc Eggs, per doz 26c Old chickens, per lb Sc Young chickens, per lb. Sc Turkeys, per lb 12c Ducks, per lb. ..oc Geese, per, lb. 5c ; LIVE STOCK., (Furnished by Harir.ai. Bros.) -,.;, Butcher steers $5.O0 Heifers $3.25$i 4.00 Veal calves ............. 5.00 50 Hogs .... Roughs . .P0ftD 5.50 Shew- ..... ..- i.30tf-.3.0 ' uimoa -j.uuf2; .;'j Pigs. . NEW PARIS. OHIOGRAIN. (Furnished sy-Gr-W.- I. R. Richnrdsi ' Wheat .51.0'J . . 60c ...4r.c . 70c .$1.50 .$7.50 ! Com Oata Pye Prime Red Clover Sc?d . . Alsike LIVE ST.7CK. Furnlsiied by J. Jarrett.) Butcher Steers $3.50$4.00 j Good to Choice. Cows .. 2.30 3.00 j Heifers Hogs . Roughs Sheep Lambs 3.2n Jl 3.7; I 3.50 5.50 4.00 5.00 2.50 4.00 GREENSF0RK. GRAIN. (Furnished by D. W. Harris & Co.i Wheat SSc Corn T . .-.'J. . . . . 57c 7 ,' Rye .70c Clover Seed. No. 2 ..... . . . $4.00 PRODUCE AND POULTRY. (Furnished by D. W. Harris & Co. Country butter, per lb ISc Eggs, per doz 30c Old Chickens, per lb 7c Old Roosters per lb .3c Turkeys, per lb tf .........10c Young chickens, per lb. ....7c Ducks, per lb 7c Geese, per lb ..5c LIVE STOCK. (Furnished by D. W. Harris.) Butcher steers S4.OO$5.00 Good to choice cows 3.00 3.75 Heifers . . . . . . ........ 3.00 4.00 Veal calves 5.00(3 6.00 Hogs . . .... 4.50 5 50 Roughs 4.0O 4.90 Sheep 3.003 3.50 Lambs .. .. .. ....7.... .YOOtg 5.00 FOUNTAIN CITY. (Furnished by E A. Benton Butcher Steers ........... .S1.00C$3.00

: 600 N.

15-7t i

WANT- AD

LIST The following are replies to Palladium Want Ads. received at this office. Advertisers will confer a great favor by calling for "raa: in answer to their ads. Mail at this oCTice up to 12 noon today as follows A. E. ... B B. B. .. B. T. ... K 1 M ..3 Loau .....2 ..4 ...1 ..2 . .1 Poultryman .. . 1 R. C. B 1 X. L. ..1 Z ...'....I D G. fnf1 n-tll ho Iricnt tnr 3fJ liava rv'v All mail not called for within that ! time will be cast out. h FOR RENT Furnished rooms. : heat and b.in, for gents, at the Grand. octS-tf LAUNDRY. V an i )!) make j-ch napy toastly , we can. ... Richmond Stesc Laundry I Gcod to choice cows 3.00 4.00 Heifers .4..,. 4.00 4.50 Veal calves .. 150 7.00, J . w - .. .. .. ......... T.uij, w.uv Roughs'.... S.aOiv 5-25 Sheep ...V 3.O05P 3.25 Lthius .". .. .......... 4.00 5.50 GRAIN. (Furnished by Harris & Jarrett.) Wheat - . . 96c Coru per r.wt. Oati .. . . .. '. SOC .. 43c ! 'tie . . . . . . , I'jline clover ' . .65c. .1400 Feed kagerstown: PRODUCE AND POULTRY. (Furnished by Ed Porter & Foa.) Country butter,. .. : .. . i-?S3. i ... ........ ...... .. . t icing Chic'.; t us Old Chickens.. .. .. .. .. .... -22c .27c .10c .10c .14c .14c ..Cc .14c Turkeys Ducks Geese ...... . Capons GRAIN. (Furbished by Clark Bros.) WTicat . . . . ... ...... . .-." $1.00 ICorn . 57c Oats Rye '..'..' Bran, per ton Middlings . . . . 45c 70c . ,.$25.00 ?27.0O MILTON. GRAIN. . (Furnished by J. W. Bnjmfitld & CtO Wheat, No. 2.. ... .. V heat, No. 3 . . . . . . . . Corn .. . Oats.. ... .. '.,.. Bran, per ton Middlings, per ton ......... C. Corn, per cwt Eread Meal . .$1.03 .$1.00 . . . G2c ..47c. .$25. (!C .$270 . .?2.o0 .$40." i ' PKOOUCF ANL SEEDS. J (Furnished by Y. M. Jcacs' r Co ... u, ; V.-1 LOlUClJ UllllCI ....... 1 jj-gs ; Potatoes, per bu "... -jr.,, ri, :- a n-,,, c..,; 1,.. LLIU 11CU VjIU v. . UU. . ' -'

-- - ; There are, too. oft recurring errors Tie Churn of a Sn.Ile. male Jn the bnk of the orb. An A boaiUif'.-.l smil:.- is as potent in the Amorican. nstronomer amused himself rDoiu as on th? staa. Every bT monsuring the moons in a number v. or.mi) can -count ainon her actjualnt-' 0f paintings. lie established the fact ar.cen the Livarcnl fen- t-u possess the Uiat hy rockoninf? from the satellite's rift-not n studied. eoj.ve:tiouaI smile 8ize the aTer3ge height of the hills in that sl-.r-ply ti?h;r:!: the ncrpss the these landscapes .was- forty-three teeth, butahe ivrlcli. re -no amy cspres- nolles. One of the mountains, indeed, siou th;U sprhis i Qrst vMj th? eyes and nad the. stupendous altitude of a hnnthc.i to th lips. Another uoticca'jle died miles. "; r feaune of thin m- -ot snnsb'.nc, , Artists of old time were often out-whk-h tm: if forms tha- !:!aht face and ratreously wrong, sometimes necessarian trausn-r'.-rf th.m-jst -j.uuj;iplace j- by reason of the limitations Imposed sarronadius:'. i: that it leaves the lea- by the Ignorance of. the period. . A tures as qukily as It uppe.irs.v i ; Dntch . artist painted the garden of - ' Eilen. with well clipped borders and Ho wn a Man. j Tew trees trimmed into fantastic A.Scot or routes satd ta his friend bapes. . ne wrought In all innocence. MaeAndrew.. -51ac. I boar ye have fail- ftU. of Bucn 6crt wore tne oniT gardens en in lave v.T l.ouuy Kate McAHster." ! 0; jjjs experience. But the - excuse "Weel. Sanders."- Mac rej.lieJ. "I was does not apply to a Dutch painting of near verry near ilne:n' it. but the bit 1794 This showed Abraham about to lassie had nne siller. ?o. I said to my- slaughter Isaac by'means of a Tjlunderself. 'Mac; be a uiou.' And I was a j buss the 'product of an age 3.000

nion. aad noo I pass her by wi' silent contempt.' TrI!v t Her Sex. "Oh. she's not at all nice." said little Elsie. "She's always wishing she was a boy." , "Well," replied Mabel. "I -wish I was too.".. ,;. , .... . ; , ..' "I know, bat she wishes it out loud, so the boys can hear her." Philadelphia Press. . " - . "- 'Tii Battle of Lite. , No man lives without jostling and . , , . . . being jostled. In all ways he has to ZvLZ, lt-,ir h,1-r, ," rr elbow himself through the world, givjm ... . battle In oo f ar as It Is an entity at 1L Carlyle. . A Dlpleaiat. Th rhiM Mother- which had T Vt.

ter do. go to school in the rain and get ' 11118 beam one of wood, rectangular soaking wet and probably .catch cold In section and several feet In length I and die or just simply get an absent The matter of costumes ofTern vast oiark against my oamet-Exchange. i oppprtnnlty for flaws, which the polnt- ; - j em have not foiled o seize. In tha - J national gallery at Edinburgh - PhaThe telephone, the telegraph.' the i raoh's daughter and her accompanying post card, 'motoring and other modern i women are exhibited garbed In the

things are rapidly doing- away ' with long phrases and pretty . speeches. Terseness Is . the general, rule nowadays. ... At this rate men will speak In telegraphic style a century hence. i aUdcid Hand

MOVING VANS.

calls the large Emir Moving Vans with sober, reliable and experienced- whit men "oaiy. Al. Wintersteen. 30 N. 6th St. ll-tf Miscellaneous. Dr. E. Simmons will receive a limited number of patients for treatment without charge at his office on Tuesday and Friday of each week. Dr. E. Simmons, 626 Main Street, between Sth and 6th St. on north side of Main St. 18-lt FOUND. FOUND On South 12th street, glove, owner call at 417 S. 14th St. 2t FOUND-Gent s kid glove last Friday night. Owner call 1400 N. G street, any evening. 16-3t LOST. LOST Child's gold" chain with set cross. Return to 215 S. 7th and get reward. ""!. ' " lS4t LOST Nose-glasses on Eighth or near Eighth and Main; -reward; return to 216 North Sth. 17-lt LOST Lap-robe between 124 N. 6th

PITERS

BLUNDERS

of Issus" displays the women of the Reckless Pranks Plaved With gTOUp ln the PInted wateu and toflatneCKie55 rranKS riayeu Wlin skIcta that made the familiar dress HeaV6nlY Bodies. lof Venetian women In the painter's j time. I Errors thot have to do with armor IMPOSSIBILITIES IN NATURE, j mar be more readily pardoned, though the artists QUI lamentably ln ksowlI edge as to the earlier forms of metal A' Rainbow Depicted Wrong Side Out 1 protection. Thus ln some paintings and Moons In Positions and Forms showing the time of Christ the wer'That Could Not Occur Amusing rlors are seen clad In "beautifully daAnachronisms by Old Time Artists. I mascened mall, yet this form of armor did not come into actual use until half That artists, like authors. , should ' a thousand years later. commit many errors of fact is hardly j similarly, in other pictures of Chrism a cause for wonder. - Rather, it is as- time, monfcs are "-portrayed hi their toulshing that they are not found of- robes, with tonsures. In fact, howtener at fault in view of the great evcr; tneT did not extat !n ta, church variety, of .knowledge required, io their . prior to tntf fourth century A: D.' "' 1 work.. Despite this, however, there is A curious illustration of the limitsno manner of excuse for certain ab-. ttons et on genioa by circumstance Is surdities. ' . exhibited In one of the world's most For example, there is the case of an famous paintings. 'The Lsst Snrper." English painter who depicted an elab- jxeonsrdo da Vine! - simply dld not orate rainbow. . Unfortunately he know tbat the table, the clothe the painted It wrong side out. But we ; pat,s the knives and forks and salt forget amazement at such stupidity In j j,., impossibilities la the admiration for the artist's magnificent h .ilimiMl to nortrsv. Th

audacity when we learn that he charged 20 additional for repainting tne ramuow cotorea in accoruuuee with nature's arrangement. Painters are very prone to distress the , astronomers by ; their ' reckless pranks with the heavenlr bedies, particularly with the moon. One artist presented a scene ln which : was a crescent mqon low -in -the -eastern ky directly opiioslte a setting 6un.- Moreover, this genius disdained the critl : Jisms pf the learned. He insisted that this arrangement was nceesairy for the cou3iosltion, inasmuch as-the rest ot the picture would be destroyed by a full moou the. only one possible ln -such a situation. ': Otljer. artists , have trifled with the

. .23c moon, by turning, Its convexity away v..,'': rrom tlio run,. which Is, of course, im23c Possible in nature. In one. picture the :..T;.c'mooD was .placed near the constellaVl Co t,on or-tDe Oreat Bear, though as a

matter of fart the satellite never venturos into - this pnrt of the heavens. j years after the time of the patriarchs! Yt this mistake occurs again and again. There have been elaborate paintings ''of the children of Israel crossing the Red sea with muskets on their shoulders. A beautiful Ivory tankard, an Augsburg Tarring of the earlv . seventeenth centnrr. was sold for a high price ln London not long ago. The design, which Is exquisite in workmanship, shows the good Samaritan, with his attendants, ln the ! Jef ?oad. u One , of the servants c gTm' Many a child as well as some older . . .. persons has puzzled over that "beam" . .mw . t.. ln the eye or which the New TestaBtood that tns mMn3 , beam pf lisaL But It was left to Solomon Bernard, In his woodcuts Ilinstrating the Bible, published at Lyons In 1553, to picture long waist ed bodices and hooped skirts of Europe in the sixteexUn century. The national collection in London has a picture of Joseph and his kindred in I-STpt. whore the LuU! ts shurn axc.ij. aL.s.'IJLsjDthu vi their

Return to S2 S. th. 17 It LOST Belt pin with green stone, between 9th and Main and 4th ' and ' South D street. Reward if returned to 331 S. 4th St. . 16 St FUNERAL DIRECTORS. Doan & Klute New Headquarters. 1106 Main. Phone 4223. Removed from 14 S. Sth SL 5-tt DOWNING 4 SON. 1 N. Sth. Paone S178. augl-tf UPHOLSTERING. J. H. Russell Removed to 16 S. 7th from' 14 S. Phone 1793. 7th. 6-tf See Holthouse for Upholstering, Phone 4367. 1J4 S. 6th 8L !7PLUMBING, HEATING AND LIGHTING. ' JusTcaTf 1236 ' MEERHOFF will re pair your Plumbing, Heating and Lighting. ' 6-tf ARCHITECT Geo. W. Mansfield, rr tect. Phone" 1595. 'K ' archi.3. 18-7t stjle Xt a-.'chlteelre, tfut aTsTlBctly Italian. - In the -same gallery Paolo Verouese's "The Family of Darius at the Feet of Alexander After the Battle eastcrn people of that sge who were his ,ubjecta no tabl, no chairs. no fork bnt aiuatted abant a commen dI(sh af f-o- ,t wtth thb. Pittsburg Post. fcugsne' due's Vanity. i Notwithstanding, the extraordinary literary success which he enjoyed when his' works were the vogue. Engene Sue posed much more as a man of fashion than a man of letters. After his dinner at the Cafe de Paris. he . would gravely stand on the step smoking his cigar and listening to 4he conversation wtth an air of superiority .without attempting to take part ln it. His mind was supposed' to" he far away, devising schemes for the social and moral improvement of his fellow creatures. Those philanthropic' mus ings did not prevent him front paying a great deal of attention too much perhaps to bis personal appearance, for even in those days of beaus, bucks and dandles, of Counts d'Orsay and others, meo could not help thinking Eugene Sue overdressed. Umbrella Etiquette In Turkey. In China ladles are attended byaerrants -who hold umbrellas over their beads. The Chinese and Japanese In troduce both the umbrella and parasol Into their decorative work and athletic sports. In western Turkey it 4s necessary to close an umbrella on meetlag people of high rank, and a European traveler who was passing one of the palaces of the sultan was nearly, run through by the guard before ,heco prehended that be most pnt.dVwli.the open umbrella bo carried. Every one passing the actual residence of the saltan lowers his umbrella as a salutation to "the brother of the sun and the moon." An Old Idea. Macanlay was not the first man to frame the famous image of the man of a new civilization standing amid the ruln ot that -which we know today. Long before be wrote of bis traveler from New Zealand meditat ing upon London bridge Mrs. Barbauld J had used the same image, with the difzerence mat sne appnra 11 10 tsiacafrlars bridge. An earlier reviewer had used it in an article published ln 1767, we are told by on English commentator, and Horace Walpole says ln one of his letters. "At last some curious traveler from Lima will visit England and give a description of the ruins of St. Paul's." . , . Tho Perfect Woman. There Is a quaint old tavern sign In Kent. fThe, . Perfect . Woman" a . wot man's head without a month. This signboard - was once quite common, and aa late as 1818 a "silent woman' stood ln St. Giles. In what Is now New Oxford street, bearing beneath the picture of -a headless1 female the following stanza: A silent woman how can It bT Patient traveler, do not scoff. Drawn from the very life Is she i And eaitt became her h a is oft. "' London Chronicle. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.

and 33 S. 6'b. Reward.

RECORD 0F7HE TURK

Has Won and Lost More Land Than Any Other Nation. ,-5Rk ONE TIME A WORLD BUGBEAR. Then the Tide Tumtd, and On Great Misfertuno Followed Another Till Ho Was Almost Swept Out of Europe by e Treaty of Berlin. i-a The 'Terrible Turk." who mar be taken as typifying the empire of the cult as. bold oue record at least which he U not likely to be deprived of. n has won and lost more terri tory than any other nation. " , There was time when the sultan was the bugbear of thejworld-.Even little children In England shook In their shoes when they heard his name mentioned, and those people who lived anywhere near him dared not call their Uvea their own. Bat at last the tide tamed. The, Turk began to lose, and one great misfortune followed another. Spain was ..the first 'big bit of the TnrkUh empire to ' break free.-: The Moors, ' who -were subject and paid tribate to the saltan, ware driven from province afjee rjr since until at length wWjCp'toJbe lollttry la BoabdQ the rnhMky.InlS3! an iHfiMH, 'ine jjjnafi aqaeen or Aragon and' Oastfle datla r flwar on - . . l . . . ... - . m - Mm, and lnU4Kwhe hoAto nireader everythiag.-' VSJV Hungary. whJeh now .forms' half .of the eVaa- mewmcKn othepperor rsncis josepo. waa a ronncoror tne alta zor SQt yes 1 mi VTfjen It was torn front hlntAtB IhsaaftiiTfca l After tMay n4jtaTBjr off1 tho dofPtoed. FOMr-enenkhs.-TaT5h him. "r , -TSt" Petor tho Great waa nt, en layr tloreasqqful in ni wars agcxnoA Moafemyt A Catborteo tharafataih CU-han from the-naaCUi7tbJFh lewad., ThaHkr iC&kpirtanltj lair U the .pirate -.! kxMwksdrosl H rala..brwate reaar4oalL aaiavKh thsViSaiarcs, tart t otV thOT' : Whan, subject freehahi liftat. bocaa took. . 81neo aaaare : ratfjoct to .1 Than camav Russia maaArJri Iran mdm vrovlnsaZ-Chi vears. raSnalfSd. J8ewtowa beantoqieUa-i-w; tTeat,paJarftwCM "sfcaC-.t seoSaasa toatsty n ftXifiiJ ed on'sOgrTg.rs'esasgT lln.1 handed over to Aastria sn7kepnnrder. - Roams sl geistaand Montenegro were declared sbWtaary4n4epadent of fatm..Bnlgarlsr waa created Into a principality, nomraalry aadertho saltan's enacrainty. but In raolttr tree. . And then. Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina. Pearson's Weekly. - ' '"' Tho Trio "A true boh nUro la 1 rows a dollar and than invites yoa to lunch with It.' i "Wrong again. A traa bohcmlan ta a man who latMns hloaoeit to Inncb with yon and then borrows a dollar." Kansas City Star. . . . I think there Is success In oil honest endeavor and that there ta some victory coined ln every gallant struggle that Is made. Charles Dickens. . . Hot Poods Hurt Our Teeth. " There 'ta no dodbt that most people rain their, teeth and digestive systems by taking food at too high a temperature. One cannot .get Into a hot bath if It ta over 112 decrees: 10G degrees ta daxgerona.' and even 100 degrees Is warm. Bat from experiments made It appears that -we eat meat at 115 degrees temperature, beans at 132 decrees, potatoes at ISO decrees. . The average temperature.-; ef tea taj125.de-" creesvand lt,oay:be stppedbat cannot be swallowed -to- large quantities. If It exceeds 142 desrae Xew York American.

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