Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 93, 9 February 1909 — Page 2

PAGE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUW-TfeLEGRAM, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1C03.

Mil I'ltlER III All OVERTIME GAME - - f -- ' . , .f . Carge . crowd , Sees Locals Drop to Cellar After Hard,Scrappy Contest.

QUIGLEY WAS IN EVIDENCE VISITORS GOT AWAY WITH THE LEAD, BUT IN RICHMOND HELD THEM ON EVEN TERMS AFTER FIRST PERIOD. : ; FOLO LEAGUE STANDING. '

Won. Lost. Pet. .5- 4 .556 . 4 4 .500 . 4 4 .500 ,4.4 .500 . i 5 .444

dfsrlon .. Elwood .... New Castle Anderson Richmond With the score" horse and horse at the close of the second period in other words 6 to 6 Marion last night came out on top of a clever, lively, crappy nolo free-for-all. pulled oft at the coliseum. As the result of this same the exterior appearance of the Indiana Polo league percentage column Is, like the countenance of that Individual who called the Irish policeman a German, considerably altered. Marion goes to the top of the ladder while the locals Infest the cellar position. n The new polo -organization, with its fast hunch of state semi-professionals, is taking well in Richmond, as is evidenced by the large crowd which witnessed the game last evening. The first period closed last night with score 2 to 1 In favor of the visitors. In the second period the goal manufacturing units of the two teams got busy and; In consequence the game grew rougher and -the crowd more interested and excited.' The curtain fell on a draw score, 3 to 3. In the third period the locals and the Visitors each counted -three times and. It was necessary to pull off overtime play. Quigley, in this overtime, slapped one part Manchester after some seven minutea of fast work. Line up and summary: Marion. Richmond. First Rush , Qulgley ...e... ...,,.. "8harp Second Rush Tlbhets - Bulla - Center' .. , - , Parry Oestlng Halfback Martin Fetzer Goal ' "". Wilson Lancaster ' Rushes Quigley, 13; Sharp. 1 on book off. StopsLancaster, 32 for Richmond; Wilson," 31 for Marlon. Fjrst Period Julgley, 10;, Sharp, 8Xf7; Tibbets, 1:03. Second Period Quigley. 3:10;' Bulla, 1:2Q; , Sharp, 4: 03.. Third Period Quigley, 4:13; Sharp, 1:60; Parry, 2J Tibbets, 4:11; Sharp. 1:09; Bulla, : 40. Overtime 0dgleyv 7:04. Referee, Williams. ( iHTtlliiTo TO . : m THEOOAKERS Crcat Basketball Game Has i Been ' Scheduled for Fri- , ' day at the Coliseum. . v ;. ... '" .' THEY ARE ANCIENT RIVALS ... . . r r ' - . . -- tiARLHAM TEAM WILL 'BE SOMEWHAT CRIPrMfiD, AS TEBBETTS, 'THE BIG CALIfORNIAN, 13 ON THE SICK LIST. Wabash and Earlham! . The combination of -these three words have a jmawuB ubw iu io vumw mouio and the Earlham students like to roll If about on ' the tongue. Since the latter part of last Week when the announcement was made by Coach Vail, the stuuenta have had little else to talk about. The last gamdlh which ' the two - teams played was four years ago when Carl ham held Wabash to a low score and lad the game until about the last live minutes of play. when. Wabash surged into the lead and won the Came. ' Since then it has been the beKef over the state that the team can Mtt, hs ttsstan . fiuf Mntr. Tl.m. Aaproved that. . " ? - Hot Game Expected." , ', The . Little Giants play the Quaker acsregatlon at the Coliseum next Friday evening and a hot game is expected. Coaches Vail and Holmes will scad the men through hard practice this week and everything will be done to .have the five Jo first class condition. Tebbetts, the star California guard,' will be unable, to hold down his jsttijn as he' ha Wo taken lit with tronchlU. This' Las ut a damper on tie team somewhat and nodoubt his less will be keenly felt Cornell and Furnas will try fof this position. Outstt of this the Cuajfars will have tie usual lineup.' -V '. IM'V.--:i -n-r- i 8Lt i ir T f..Wt--", TLst wtkh cat ttft at the deck ' mm fclifl 'st-f alatssasaBaiMSBaMsssaus

ALFRED SCHRUBB WHO : LONGBOAT DEFEATED

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PROTEST AGAINST PASSAGE OF THE POLLUTION BILL (Continued From Page One.) Dr. Davis wants its enforcement left optional with the board of health. Bill Was Considered. It was pointed out that Richmond la not dependent upon the river for Its drinking water supply. This comes from great springs located east of the city and the water has been declared by chemical analyses by experts to be splendid. The same water is used for fire fighting purposes and It is only when a great conflagration is threatened that water from the reservoir is turned into the mains. This is disposed of soon afterward. After a protracted consideration by the organisation John L. Rupe pro posed a motion to the effect Wayne county's representatives be instructed to oppose the bill an durging them to use all their influence to defeat it. The motion prevailed. KING EDWARD PAYS VISJTTO KAISER King and Queen Receive Warm Welcome. Berlin, Feb. O. King Edward and Queen , Alexandra were welcomed by the emperor and German authorities with great pomp and profuse decorations on .their arrival here this morn ing. The line of procession was crowd ed. Edward and Billy embraced heart ily and kissed each other on both cheeks repeatedly. Coavlct Reglmenta. At the beginning of the eighteenth century the British army had a bad reputation at home, and it was very difficult to get recruits for it For this reason it was officially proposed to find the men by an impressment falling on "any sturdy beggar, fortune teller or the like .idle, unknown, suspected fellow in the parish; or, if there be none such, then any one that has already been in a gaol or before a justice of the peace for his Idle, disorderly life." The advice was acted upon. Debtors were released from prison on promising to join the army or the navy, criminals were pardoned on the same terms, and persons with no visible means of snV slstehce were marched off to death and glory. The system worked out better than might have been expected. In the peninsular war, for instance, three new regiments were composed entirely of convicts, and one made for itself an illustrious name. ; Xew BafflMA a JValeoa. . The hostility of New .Englanders to the first Napoleon was . sincere and deep. A remarkable Instance of this feeling is to be found in the manner in which the townsmen of Boston received the news of his first abdication. The incident has been brought to notice through an interesting exhibit in the historical collections of the public library of that city. It Is a ticket admitting the bearer to a "solemn festival at the Stone chapel, in commemoration of the goodness of God in delivering the Christian world from military despotism. Boston, June, 1S14." Data Meat Well. "John's done right well up la the city, arter ail." "Do tell." ? "Yes; I've jes hearn that he's recovered from one appendicitis, two ottermobiles, - one heart failure an three business dues." Atlanta Constitution. Better the world should know you as a sinner than God know you at a hyptrite. From the Danish.

NEWSPAPER MAII ' GIVEINAIL CURE Believing , Himself Chased by Murderers, Asks Sheriff . To Lock Him Up. HAILED FROM ALLENT0WN

YOUNG FELLOW BECAME MENTALLY UNBALANCED AND LEFT HIS HOME WILD STORIES WERE AMUSING. After a stay of two days in the Wayne county Jail, during which time the sheriff sent a numtvr of telegrams to locate his friends, John P. AveriU, of - Allentown, Pa., has been released and left the city. Averill's business card declared him an advertising solicitor on the Allentown Daily City Item., "Give your business a tonic"' it says on his cards. The rest In the jail proved Averill's real tonic. Has Good Reputation. The young man- appeared at the county jail Saturday evening and asked to be locked up. He told the sheriff he was being pursued by 500 men who were intent on taking their lives. He had an idea he was about to be murdered and wanted the sheriff to put him behind the bars for safety. Ha was accommodated and while locked up, the sheriff telegraphed to Allentown and to a friend at New Ha ven, Conn., whose name Averlll sup plied. The replies were to the effect Averill bore a good reputation and must be temporarily unbalanced mentally. The stranger was well supplied with money and had a .valuable gold watch in his pocket. The sheriff was of the opinion, his derangement had resulted from dissipation or some other cause. After remaining In the jail until yesterday afternoon, Averill appeared to regain his mental strength and was released. His wild stories proved a source of amusement to the other prisoners at the jail. r DRESSOF THEESklMd. Mad hr tUm Waaiea From (he Bklaa f Xartaera AalataM. The chief material of the clothing of the Eskimo is the skin of the reindeer, which Is nsed in various stages of pelage or tanning. Fine, short haired summer skins, especially those of does and fawns, are used for making dress garments and underclothes. The heav iest winter skins furnish extra warm jackets for cold weather. The white spotted skins of the tame Siberian reindeer are especially valued for full dress jackets. - The Skins of the white mountain sheep, white and blue fox, wolf, dog. ermine and lynx are sometimes made Into clothing. Underjackets of eider duck skins are often pressed into service. Sealskin dressed with the hair on Is used only for breeches and boots, and for those rarely. Of late years drilling and called have been introduced into the makeup of some Of the minor garments. The dress of the men consists of. a loose hooded frock without opening ex cept at the neck and wrists. This reaches just over the hips and very rarely to midthigh, where it is cut off square and usually confined by a girdle at the waist Under this garment Is worn n similar one of lighter skin and sometimes without a hood. The thighs are clad In one or two pairs of tight fitting knee breeches, rather loose, but fitted to the shape of the leg. They are very low la front, but are much higher behind, sometimes as high as the small of the back. They are held in place by a girdle or thong around the Waist and are usually fastened below the knee over the boots with a drawstring. On the legs and feet are worn, first, a pair of long deerskin stockings, with the hair inside, then slippers of tanned sealskin, in the bottom which is spread a layer of whalebone shavings and out" side a pair of close fitting boots, held in place by a string around the ankle, which reaches above the knee and ends with a rough edge covered by the breeches. Dress boots often end in an ornamental border, with drawstring just below the knee. The boots are of reindeer 7 skin, with white sealskin soles for winter and dry weather, but In summer waterproof boots of white whaleskin are worn. Overshoes of the same material, reaching just above the ankles, are sometimes worn over the winter boots. The women wear tight fitting deerskin pantaloons, with the hair next the skin, and outside of these a similar pair made of the skins from deer legs, with the hair out, and having soles of sealskin, but no ankle strings. The women's pantaloons, like those of the men. are fastened with a girdle just above the hips. It appears that they do not stay up very well, as the women are continually hitching them up and tightening their girdles, like some old sailor. . ;: Until they reach manhood the boys wear pantaloons like the women, but their jackets are cut Just like those of the men. The well to do Eskimos generally own several complete suits of clothes and present a neat appearance when not engaged In dirty work. ? The poorer classes wear one suit for all occasions until it becomes shabby. , New clothes are seldom put on till winter. The outer frock is not often worn In the lglu. or hut home, being usually taken oft! before entering the room. At present there is no such thing as an Eskimo tailor, for the women of each Eskimo household usually make the garments of an the members of the family. Not only this, but the Eskimos are extremely conservative in the matter of changes in the style of their raiment and respond very slowly to the thodernlsihff influences in tola particular waJclh have reached their neihor-

Hippopotamus Being Treated at N. Y. Zoo.

1.-' .ry . . . J BLANCH KIRKMAH . GBAHTEDA DIVORCE She Was a Former Resident Of Richmond. Blanch May Klrkman, a former resident of this city, has been granted n divorce from Neal Kirktnan in the Rockford, 111., court. Mrs. KIrkman's maiden name was Hamel. The cause of action is not known. THE QUEST OF BEAUTY. What Ob Won a gaaTee4 Far t.IB Sake of Her Appearance. You mast suffer to be beautiful, according to a French saying. There seems to be some truth in the statement, if a lady's maid is to be believed. She has revealed the secrets of her mistress' boudoir, or,' rather, torture chamber. The lady herself is now beautiful, but one wonders that she is still alive. For months she lay flat on her back on the floor, motionless, with her arms close to her sides, during several hours every day. This was, it appears, to improve her figure. During the rest of the day, for the same period of time, she sat on a high stool, giving and rocking the upper part of her body backward and forward and from side to side unceasingly. By this process she is said to have acquired a statuesque throat and a Sylph's waist The lady's nose, having a soaring nature, was corrected and made Grecian by the constant application day and night for months of a spring bandage. One nostril was originally larger than the other, so she wore a small sponge in it for a year. Her cheeks have been filled out and rounded by injections of paraffin. Her ears for months were compressed against the sides of her head by springs, while heavy weights were attached to the lobes to produce the required elongated shape. Which has been successfully achieved. Having suffered this complicated martyrdom for a year, the lady, as already stated, is now beautiful. Paris Letter. YOUR GRIP ON YOURSELF. Retain That Thaaarh Yoa Hava ta Lt . Everything- Else Go. Some people get along beautifully for half a lifetime perhaps while everything goes smoothly While they are accumulating property and - gaining friends and reputation their characters seem to be strong and well balanced, but the moment there is friction anywhere, the moment trouble comes a failure in business, a panic or a great crisis in which they lose their all they are . overwhelmed. They despair, lose heart, courage, faith, hope and power to try again everything. Their very manhood or womanhood is swallowed up by a mere material loss. This Is failure Indeed, and there is small hope for any one Who falls to such a, depth of despair. There is hope for an ignorant man who cannot write his name even if he has stamina and backbone. There a hope for a cripple who has courage, there Is hope' for a boy who has nerve and grit, even tbougn be is so hemmed in that he has apparently no chance in the world, but there is no hope for a man Who cannot or will not stand. up aftere falls, but loses heart when opposition strikes him and lays down his arms after defeat. Let everything else go if you must, but never lose your grip on yourself. Do not let your manhood or .womanhood go. This is your priceless pearl, dearer to you than your breath. Cling to it with all your might Give up life itself first Success. , PANAMA HATS. Vaey Arm State Press the Tadevelop- : e4 Leaves ef the Bontaoaaje. The panama Is a leaf hat made in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru from the undeveloped leaf of the "bombonaje," which is a screw pine rather. than a palm. The trunk of tbe lant is only a yard in height but the leaf stalks are two yards long. 1 ' iThe leaf before It has opened is prepared for the manufacture of hats. It then - consists of a bundle of plaits about two feet long and an inch in diameter called a "eogollo." The green outside is stripped off,- and by means of a forked instrument it la cut into narrow strips of uniform sise. f ; The eogollo is next boiled to toughen the fiber and hung" In the sun to dry and bleach, when the strips shrivel into cordlike strands ready for use. It takes sixteen cegoUes for an ordinary hat and twenty-four for the finest, and t single hat is plaited in from four days to as many months, according to its texture and quality. Mexican Herald.

-ist iMnat taaS OeM XteAsl Visor a

AyX .V "Pi 4 f J -jT ' iXOs

CLUB CHANGES NAME Driving Organization Will Be Known as Wayne County Driving Club. NO SITE YET SELECTED At the meeting of the Richmond Driving club members last evening at the office of Joseph H. Mlllsthe organization decided to substitute the name Wayne County- Instead of Richmond and thus widen the scope of the organization. A committee Including Joe Stevenson, T. J. Butler, Charles Hodge Dr. Zimmerman and George Mashmeyer was appointed to draw up rules regulating the club. Permanent headquarters will be established in the office of George Dougan, Odd Fellows building. Mr.' Dougan granted the club the privilege of using his office free of charge. The question of securing a site was also discuessed, but no action was taken. , ROYAL MESSENGERS. They Carry Other Tataa-e Goveraateat Dlapatefcee. " Very odd are some of the errands done by the royal messenger service In Great Britain. At an English seaport for Instance, a sealed packet which was being conveyed across the channel to Windsor in care of the Bdtlsh foreign office became accidentally unfastened In the custom house, and a quantity of cigars tumbled out As the packet In question was Invoiced as containing "important confidential government dispatches," no little amusement was caused. Nothing serious, however, came of the Incident tor' It Is a recognized rule that "the king can do no wrong," and neither, therefore, can the king's messengers. Besides, it is well understood that the service is maintained for other purposes than the nominal -one. During the later Queen Victoria's reign these messengers used frequently to carry to the continent Ifi sealed, bags supposed to contain dispatches shirts and collars of a special make and pattern for one of the British ambassadors, hats and bonnets tor her majesty's female relatives, all sorts of English knickknacks tor the late Empress Frederick at Berlin and even barrels of native oysters for the embassies at Paris and Vienna. ' For many years, moreover. It was the practice of the messengers to call each week on their wsy back to England at Brussels, where they received from tbe court kitchens a box of special biscuits of which Queen Victoria was very fond and which she believed nobody could make as well as the head pastry cook of King Leopold's kitchen. This box of biscuits was solemnly Seal' ed up at tbe British legation with the official seal and then conveyed With Infinite care to Windsor by way of Dover and London. Chicago News. THE LAKE SHIPPER. How Be Taoskt Salt Water Teteran ta Haetie. There waa a salt water captain who, for reasons of - his own. accepted a berth aa first mate In a big passenger steamer on tbe great lakes. He was a capable seafaring man, but he did not know what "hustle" meant until be went aboard at Buffalo. The lake skipper to whom bs reported for duty remarked la the most casual manner: ' "Just give her a coat of paint this morning, and. If the sun stays hot and she dries In good shape, give her a sec end coat this afternoon. The salt Water mate staggered In hU tracks ard made amazed protest This wss a 5,000 ten vessel, and giving- her two coat or paint was several days work by his reckoning. Tbe Iske skip' per was a person of. discernment wherefore be had pity on his new mate and forbore to deal harshly with him. explaining with a tolerant grin: v "All right 1 suppose you'll have to learn to move livery after snooting around silt water all your life. - Ton Just pass that order along to the bos'n and tell him it's got to be done, and then you sit up and take notice." The bos'n took the. order calmly, as If It were in the day's work, and by nightfan the big steamer was spick and span with two coats Of paint from her water Una to ner guard raTL The sailor from deep water had. learned his first lesson la the ways of the great lakes during: the navigation season, when the hard driven shipping: saust he forced to do twetre ntosrfhs wet to 1 o year.

THE DOOM OP VENICE

It MAY BK TO LIE IN THI BOSOM Of THE ADRIATIC. 1 ttae Fanom Cells of St. Mark. Kay Toll aa Oeeaa's Depths Like Those at Ola Fart RoyaVTae Saakea Cities of the World. p I labels. i sinking ; waters ered by many tbat Venice Into the Adriatic and that dually will disappear beneath of the great lagocn from which ter palace crowned islands arise. Other cities have gone that Tray before her. und ships uow sail over spots which were once teeming wit'a a populous Hfe. . At thb cutrauce to the harbor of King-1 toa. Jamaica, tli original city Of Port KojaJ fathoms de?p beneath the blue and sunlit waters of the Carib bean sea. A narrow strip of land, on j which are a small settlement and a fort Is all that Is left or what was once tbe richest and wickedest town In the West Indies. It was the resort of pirates, who rested there from their depredations and made the city hideous with their revelry. But these pirates brought great stores of their loot to the city, and Its commerce grew and flourished. Palaces and cbnrcbeawere built a pirate often striving by a rich endowment of a church to square his accounts with heaven. Throughout the greater part of the seventeenth century no town In . the western world was so magnificent as to Us buildings or so Insurious as to Its habits as Port Royal. Then one day In 1093 the anger of the Lord shook the Island of Jamaica, and the greater part of Port Royal sank beneath the sea. carrying with It hundreds of Its In- j habitants. Towers, churches, palaces and forts went down, many of them not tumbling In ruins by the shock, but sinking bodily beneath tbe waves. On a bright day, sailing over the spot where Port Royal once stood, one can look far down through the clear water and see the remains of the city still standing there on tbe ocean bottom, with fishes swimming about among Its towers and great tropical seaweeds wavlug from Its sunken walla. , ' The negroes of Jamaica and some white people, too will tell you that before a storm the sunken bell of the great cathedral which went down with the city on that awfnl day in 1692 can be heard distinctly tolling below the waves, rung as a warning by the ghostly bands of the spirits of departed buccaneers which haunt the submarine city. People who do not believe in ghosts, but think they have heard the tolling of the bell, say the explanation la that when tbe city sunk the great bell of the cathedral was not thrown from Its place, but still hangs as It originally did. The coming storm before It reaches Jamaica stirs up tbe waters of the Caribbean and sends in upon the shore deep waves, which roll through tbe sunken city, and set the bell atolling. Another sunken city of renown Is Balae, that splendid resort on tbe Italian coast where Nero and Caligula "reveled and drank deep." A straggling village and heaps of marble ruins still stand upon the shore and bear the name of Balae. bnt the greater part of the city lies beneath the waters of the Mediterranean, and tourists from Na pies go out there to gase down Into tbe waters and try to catch a glimpse of tbe submerged city. The resort of all the wealthy nobles of Rome when Roma was mistress of the world, Balae was a marvel of luxurious splendor. - Palace after palace was built on the shore, and architects designed magnificent structures extending ont Into the sea. When Rome decayed and the Goths ravaged ihit, uaiao was sacaea uj 1 ir Dl"?ZZ: gaa to sink. First tbe buildings which ; had their foundation in the water sub-1 loea ocneaui we waves, ana men tbe sea made an attack on the land. vraanaiiy tne snore line receoea. ana i the Mediterranean flowed through the Imperial chariot and Horace had walk ed thinking of his next poem. These promontories, crowned with grand towers and gorgeous palaces were undermined and toppled Into the deep until at laat tbe major part of tbe splendid city was submerged. Its i disappearance was not sudden, like that of Port Royal, and due to some convulsion of nature, but Balae went down to Its death gradually, as Venice Is said to be going. In Holland . the subsidence f the land has brought It about that many towns once populous are now covered by tbe sea. The old Roman camp at Brlttenbnrg. after sinking beneath the waves, emerged again in 1520. onl7 to disappear, and its remains now lie in deep water opposite the town of Katwijk. The original Katwljk itself now Is beneath the water, as also are tbe original towns of Schevenihgen, Domburg and Egmond. In fact a succession of towns bearing these names is now at the bottom of the sea, for they, repeatedly have been rebuilt farther Inland as the land sunk and the wives cone in to take possession. The Goodwin sands, large and dangerous shoals off the southeast coast of England, were once above the water and formed a flourishing: estate, the property of Earl Godwin. There was no city on the Godwin jtstate when It subsided beneath tbe sea, bnt several small villages went down to the deep when the tract of country gradually disappeared beneath the. waters. There are legends which may or may not be true of lost cities sunk at the bottom of Swiss lakes. Mew York MalL Obllrkm Is the flower that lest on graves. George Band.

excursion Llatoo. 021.SC Resmsl Trip to WcshtaQton, D. C. On account of Presidential Inauguration. Selling dates Feb. CSth. March 1st tad. and 3rd. Final return limit March Sth. $23.45 Round Trip To New Orleans $22.05 Round Trip to Mobile and Pcnsacola, Fla. On account of Mardt Gras Celebration. Selling dates Feb. 1C 17, IS. 19. 20 and 21. Final return limit March 13th. For particulars call C. A. BLAIR. P. T. A. Home Tel. 20C2. Richmond.

Tcnre Ccs. r "i& Etra TrcIca Co. (Time Table Effective Oct ST. ltCT.s t Trains leave Richmond! tar tnCaav spoils and IntarmadlSKS) ststlons aft 6:00 a. nu 7:S. SmO. :U. 10: CX ;i:00. 12:00. 1:00. S:ll. S:t, :t. 5:15. 0:00, 7:3 : 11:10. Limited trains. Last car-to Indianapolis, 0:40 a, SV Lost car to New Castle. 10:00 p. am. Trains connect at IndlaaapsSa tar Lafayette. Frankfort. CrawforslavCla, Terre Haute. CUatoa. CuUlvaa, rarla din v TV,., sntd through , SCC2DU1S5 Cc: Lv Chlcaco At Pru ... L.V Peru ... tv Marlon . . . 1 . S.lUmllS.SSpas 1 llnml S.iaankl l.ISpial StSaml CSOass S. It ami s.ieata 7.( I IV HUIKI. ... it ellchmond. SLSlamt 4.1 San 7.1 .sepat S.tlaaM a. 4.fSpm a.tsaaal -t.Seai T.lltN lw Ct Grove.. Af Cincinnati. Lv Cincinnati. Lv Ct Orove.. L,v Richmond. L.V Muncte ... L.v Marlon . . . Ar'Peru ..... Lir Peru ..... Ar Chtcaare .. .IianVie.Mpm .am!ii.: ls.seam iz.e ll.Staml l.Z lS.tenml 3.1 l.tle s.esatni as: S.4epa I. Htn St. Station). All trains run telly, onday same aa on week days. ThMnh Vestisslsd Tratas bsti Chlcaco and Cincinnati. Donate dally service. Throus sloeaera on trains Noa. S an 4 between) CbJcace and CAaclnnaU. . Fine Buffet eervlee en tralaa t andt. For train connections sad ether as formation call C A BLAIR. P. 4 T A. . , Home Phone S0M. Rlelunond, tod. ' Ta were summarily - la oU England. For Instance, the records of tbe company snow that "en Monday. July i 30. 1422. Robert Cnkfjele, tbe mayor of London, sert for the I tweiv f the pany to appear at no guusnau rsr selling deer tie. After much dfc?ute about the price and ouauttry of ntat, wherein- Whityngtone, the late assyer. . declared that the brawars rand rUis? into the country and tocestallefl O malt to raise its pries, they were convicted In the penalty of G3 which objecti? to. ta Blasters ordered to bs kept in prison n chamberlain's csstfsdy unta psy It or find security for the : Soap Is randy sa a new facts fta -the world's Ul. kf est of ear sspulirs were filthy and dlssisnhUi the fact fcy tbe one of sttflng psafiuses. VTasUas one's benda, which waa eady dene fey the very best people, sseant fiSag . the fingers In rose water and tbem on a napkin. Even the of the decatfeBos. who wars (tta , cleaner as s cospntsalty tasa any be fore or since, bathed la wan bed themselves wtth 3. It nasty to us, but ttea so does. ample. Chinese ousSc, wllch ss: of human bet C'.zi tSSsL VcciEcd Fci. 7 Entire ohange of Thursday 7 Cdzz U.J Z2 AdnMsSJoa lo esata ta c3 the house.

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