Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 245, 12 July 1909 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXT SUN-TELEGRA3I, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1909.
PAGESEVEH. :
Branch:
Branch offices are located in every part of the" city and county towns. Leave your want ad with the one nearest you. Rates are the same.
- For Your Coeveiraleinice LIST OF AGENCIES. Branch offices are located in every part of the city. Leave your WANT ADS with the one nearest you. The rates are the same and you will save a trip to the main office.
8outh of Main. BRUEN1NG & EICKHORN, 13th and S. E street. A. W. BLICKWEDEL, 8th and S. F. HENRY ROTHERT, 5th and S. H. North of Main. QT7IGLEY DRUG STORE, 821 N. E St. . ' CHILES & SON. 18th and N. C St. WM. HIEGER, 14th and N. G St. JOHN J. GETZ, 10th and N. H St.
RATES
1 cent per word 7 days for the price of 5 days. We charge advertisements sent in by phone and collect after its insertion.
WANTED. WANTED At once, an experienced ex-bench man on casket shells. Call Paul Casket Co., Cambridge City. ' 12-3t WANTED Rooms for light housekeeping Phone 1758. 12-3t WANTED Place to board in the country by family of four, where surroundings, are clean and pleasant; must be within several miles of Richmond. References exchanged. Address "Outing" care Palladium. ' ' 12-tf WANTED Sewing by experienced party by day or week; would go in country. Call or address 422 N. 14th street. 12-2t WANTED Place by elderly lady to do general housework in family of two or three with good wages. Address "Housekeeper," care Palladium. .. H-2t WANTED Roomers. 231 S. 12th. 10-4t WANTED To buy watches, rings and
Market Reports NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS. ty Correil v.d Thompson, Growers, Eaton, Ohl4'
" New York, July 12. Open High Low Close L-eVN. .. .V.. - . ..141 142 141 142 Oreat Northern .. ..149 149 148 149 Amalgamated Copper . . v. .. .... ,.N .. Sm 81 81 81 American 3 melting . . ............ . . .. 95 95Vi 95 95 Northern Pacific- . 4.. .. ..150 151 150 151 17. 8. Stel .. .4.. .. .. 69 19 68 69 U S. StStlptd.. ............. .4.. .. ..125 126 125 125 Pennsylvania V .. c. .138 138 138 138 St. Paul .. .. .. . ., .. .. ..154 154 154 154 B. A O. V - VV .. .. .. 118 119 118 119 New York Central .. .. . .. .132 132 132 132 Reading ., . ., .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .155 157 155 157 Canadian Pacific .. .v .. .. . .184 184 184 184 Union Pacific .. ..19) 194 193 194 Atchison - ..., ., .. .. .. .. . . ..116 116 116 116 Southern Pacific, j r - ..134 134 133 133
' Ch)caao. CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS, (3y Oorrsll sod Thompso. Broken, . SstoS Q.) Chicago, July 12.
; WMat , Open High Low Close July .,119 120 119 119 Sept' . . Ill 111 109 110 Deo. '.. 103 '109 ; 107 108 " ''" . Corn 'Open Hign Low Close July ...-72 72 71 72 Sept ... 67 67 66 66 Dec. 57 57 56 56 Oats. ' Open High Low CIos July .. 50 50 49 49 Sept ..: 43 43 42 43 Dec. ... -43 43 43 43
Indianapolis Market. REPRESENTATIVE SALES. No. V . At. Dk. Price 17.00 7.00 7.25 7.35 7-60 7.70 7.75 7.75 13 96 .. 13;............,.... 131 .. io 126 .; : 2$ r , 1 40 . 52 .A....;..'....... 153' SO 62 . . , . : ; . . , , . . . 167 80 86: X;. ......... 148 160 49 ;.v. . m. ; . . 58 . .... . ..... 160 " 160 t 86. ......... .v..... . 167 120 7 .... 176 200 82 167 T;.. 186 120 78 ................. 171 80 88 196 " 400 61 ................. 185 160 66 'it ....... 211 200 151 213 320 69 20s 200 6 "ii.li.. 248 440 7.80 ' 7.85 7.85 17.90 7.90 7.95 7.95 8.00 8.00 8.05 8.10 8.10 8.20 8.25 66 . ....... 240 40 59 V.U. ...... 1 235 Indianapolis livestock. - HOGS. .. '4 ' , . ..... . .... . " 1 Best heavies $S.00$8.i5 Good to choice veals ...... 4.00 7.75 Best pigs 6.50 7.00 , BEST STEERS. " Good to choice steers ...V 6.35 6.85 .Choice to--fancy yearlings 5.50 6.00 STOCK CATTLE. Good to hvy feeding steers 4.750 5.00 Fair to food feeders..... 4.50 4.75 Werlor to choice stockers 3.00 4.50
Central. QUIGLEY DRUG STORE, 4th and Main. ' Wast Richmond. JOHN FOSLER, Richmond Ave. and West 1st., GEO. H. SHOFER, 3rd and W. Main. Fairview. J. J. MULLIGAN, 1093 Sheridan St.
bicycles. JVM. Lacey, Pawn Broker, Cor. 8th and Main. 9-7t WANTED To rent a farm of 75 or 100 acres; address "Country," care Palladium. 9-7t WANTED Ladies to learn hairdreasiug, manicuring, facial massage, chiropody or - electrolysis. Few weeks completes. Wonderful demand for graduates. Good field for resident work; diplomas granted. Instruments given. Investigate. Moler College, Cincinnati, O. , 25-tf WANTED Stock to pasture; call phone 1215. 24-tf WANTED To store your stove for the summer. 1030 Main. , Phone . 1778. 17-tf FRESH "SUPPLY of 'Bicycles and Baby cab tires and sundries, soft filing and edge tools ground and repaired. Brown-Darnell Co., 1022 Main. Phone 1936. 10-3t WANTED If you , want money in place of your city property or farm, go right to Porterfleld'a Real Estate office. Kelley Block 8th and Main. 14-tf Common to fair heifers .. 2.50 3.25 . BUTCHER CATTLE. Good to choice heifers... 5.00 ; 6.00 Good to fancy cows ...... 3.85 5.00 VEAL CALVES. Fair to heavy calves ...... 3.00(g) 6.75 250 pounds lKi. $7.75 $8.15 SHEEP AND LAMBS. Best yearlings .... .. 5.75 6.25 Good to choice sheep. . .. 4.00 4.50 Good to choice lambs .... 6.75 7.50 Richmond Grain Market. (Richmond Hollar Mills) Wheat, per bu. ... . .. .. .. . $1.35 Corn, per bu. -. .... . . .... 75c Rye, per bu. .. .. ... .. .. .. . 80c Bran, per ton $27.00 Middlings, per ton .$30.00 Clover seed, per bu., $4.50 Richmond Seed Market. (Range Co.) Timothy, per bu., ........ $2.70$? 83 Clover Seed ... 4.50 4.69 Richmond. "- CATTLE. (Paid by Richmond Abattoir. Best hogj. average 200 to 250 nounds ........... $6.75 a S7.15 Good to heavy packers 7.00 7.50 Common and rough Steers, corn" fed ... Heifers .... .Vi. Fat cows . . . . . . . Bulls ............. C&lvcs . Lambs ..J. 6 75 7.00 5.00 5.50 3JSO 4.50 3.50 4.23 3 25 tP 3.75 6.00 7.00 6.60 PRICES FOR POULTRT. (Paid by Bee Hire Grocery.) Young chickens, dressed, per lb. ,.18c Old chickens, per lb. ......"......18c COUNTRY PRODUCE. . . (Pslfi by Bee Hive.) Creamery butter, per lb., .;.26c Country butter, per lb lS30e Eggs .... .;.,......20e Richmond Hay Market ' (Omar O.'WhelsJX.) Timothy hay. (loose) ...... . . .$14.00 Clover hay, loose . . . . . . . .$12.50 Mixed hay ...................$13.00 Oats, per bu ....... ....... .50 to 52c Cora .... .... ...75c WTmELnttXA? Better use Gold Medal Floor.
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PALLADIUM
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FOR SALE. FOR SALE City property and farms, merchandise stocks and fire Insurance. Porterfield, Kelly Block, 8th and Main. 6-tf FOR SALE Roof and bridge paint. Guaranteed five years. Retail at wholesale prices. Clendenin & Co.. 257 Ft Wayne Ave. Phone 3425. 1 Apr. 2 fri&mon FOR SALE Sideboard, folding bed; 815 S. A St. 12-2t FOR 8ALE Two good top wagons, have been used, but in good condition. Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 727 Main St. FOR SALE OR TRADE Lots in Earlham Heights. Bargain. Will Reller. Phone 2455. 9-7t FOR SALE 200,000 cigarettes, 50 . brands, 5c to $1.50 pkgs. Feltman's Cigar Store, 609 Main. Wholesale and retail. 9-1 mo $1 00 A11 makca Sewing Machines repaired, any. distance. Young, 240 Ft. Wayne Ave. 7-7t FOR SALE Sickness compels me to sell my Merchant Delivery business. A good paying job to hustler. J. P. Howes, 23 N. 21st. ll-2t FOR SALE Show case, folding bed and buffet at a bargain. W. F. Brown, 1030 Main St. 11-tf FOR SALE Big bargain in velvet brussels and ingrain rugs. Prices $1.10 up. Antique Furniture Co., 519 Main. 8-tf $10 00 SmSer Domestic Sewing machines, good as new. Young, 240 Fort Wayne Avenue. x FOR SALE Good oak show cases and counters, 1031 Main. 6-7t FOR SALE 2 head horses, 3 grade Kentucky, 1 milk cow with calf, 1214 Sheridan. 6-7t FOR SALE Jeweler's big clock; can be seen at the Theatorium, 620' Main, Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. E. F. Hirst. ' 2-14t FOR SALE Real estate, Fire InsurIndianapolis Grain. fP Indianapolis, July 12. Wheat $1.25 Corn 76 Oats 52c EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, July 12. Cattle Receipts 500; tops $6.75. Veals Receipts 400; tops $9. Hogs Receipts 2.500; tops $8.45. Sheep and lambs Receipts 340; sheep $5.25; top lambs $8.75. TOLEDO GRAIN. i' Toledo, July 12. Wheat $1.40 Corn... ... ... ..... 7oc Oats .....55c Rye .Sic CINCINNATI GRAIN. - i Cincinnati, July 12. Wheat ............. ..." ....$1.30 Cora 71c Oats.. .. t.. .. ..,54c Rye 89c CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK. Cincinnati, July 12. Hogs Receipts 3,000;-top $7.75. Cattle Receipts 2004 : ten to tweinty lower. Sheep and lambs Receipts 2,800; top sheep S4.25; lambs, $8.75. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK, Pittsburg, July 12. CattleReceipts 150; tops 56.85. Veals Receipts 900; tops $9.00. Hogs Receipts 20 loads; tops $8.45. Sheep and lambs Receipts light, top sheep, $5.35; lambs $8.50. Swiss Glaciers. As the Matterborn Is the grandest object to be seen In Switzerland, so also are the glaciers above Zermatt the most magnificent. In the Oberland and at Chamonix the glaciers, are frozen rivers and cataracts. From the Gorner Grat the glaciers are Test seas of Ice, with ledges of rocky , beach, over which the froxen breakers are beating. The Aletsch and the Rhone glaciers are grand frozen torrents of immense volume, and the ice fields of the Mont Blanc range are of vast extent, bat It is from the Gorner " Grat, where the spectator is surrounded by frozen seas, out, of which the snow peaks rise, like Islands, that the imagination is overpowered br rMndrtii etaeial effects. :. .., --I , .. , Her Capacity. ' "If teeth do Just as well without nerves," she said to the dentist, "and stay just ns white end don't break any quicker, why are the nerves put there In the first placeT, "rve often wondered myself," said don't know unless it is so you can suffesthe pain of losing .them. You'd be too'baDpy, you know, unless you underwent Spittle suffering now ana then." "A littler she shrieked. Ton t. member that tooth of mine last winter and bow I came within an ace of dying- with the palnT "I remember," said he. but yo have a great capacity for suffering. seen other people lose four and
-w York Pws
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WANT AD "lth batl1 for cents, at the Grand. feb22-tf LETTER USY" MISCELLANEOUS. Tne followins are replies to Palla- FOR EXCHANGE Poultry farm near dium Want Ads. received at this of- Richmond for city property. "Exfice. Advertisers will confer a creat change." care Palladium. 9-7t favor by calllns for mail in answer -" - to their ads. Mail at this office up to I (QT 12 noon today as follows: - uuo 1 A. B. ...u... 1 Exchange ... i LOST-Broach. amethyst set: Main AT i n it i street, valued as a gift. Reward. Baby 7.7.7.7. 1 Country 7.7. 1 Return 15126 East Main St. ll-2t Mail will be kept for 30 days only. T-Two fishing poles, cane and All mail not called for within that Bte,e V. t P??! ' between lkorn time wlij be cast out. fnd addo?km bridge" Rewar ' rev turned to S27 N. H street. 12-3t ance. Agent for Fox Typewriter. LOST Locket and chain on Main beR. L. More, 23 N. 9th St. Phone tween 5th and 9th street; reward; 1316. 2-lmo return to 246 S. 3rd street. 12-lt FOR SALE OR TRADE An ideal su- LOST A medicine case; return to 23 burban home suitable for retiring N. 6th. 12-lt farmer or busluess man. Phone - CARD OF THANKS. FOR SALE Mill wood. C. W. Kramer nJJ m & Co. - - 29-tf CARD OF THANKS The family of Miss Mary A. Elliott wish to exC(0 RPWT press in this public way their grat- . . . ' itude to all who in any way helped FOR RENT 7 room house. 115 South them ln the death cf tneir dear one10th street. Apply to HIrshburg's We especially thank Mr. and Mrs. studio. 12-lt Issen for their kindness, in whose home Miss Elliott died. Sister. FOR RENT House on North E street; Nieces and Nephews. it electric lights and gas. Inquire 815 South A street. Phone 1741. 12-2t BUSINESS CLASSIFIED FOR RENT Five room flat, modern; 36 S. 11th St. Call at 46 South 11th street. 12-tf LAUNDRY. FOR RENT Furnished room; bath, Dirty clothes made clean; if you don't 30 N. 12th 9-7t believe it, try us. Richmond Steam FOR RENT-Y. M. C. A. furnished La"dry. Phone 1251. feb23-tf rooms, cool, light, clean, shower baths, $1.25 per week and up. CLEANING AND PRESSING. FOR RENT Farm of 75 to 100 acres. FRED JONES at Friedgen's, 918 Address "Country" care Palladium. Main. Orders called for and deliv- . 8-7t ered; lowest prices; work guaranFOR RENT Good house. Moore & teed- Phone 2068. jun24-lmo Ogborn. 7-tf ' FOR RENT 12 room house 200 Rich- ART GOODS, mond Ave. Riley Hiatt. Spring Home -Baking. Fancy Work and Grove- til Stamping. Haners Art Store, 8
WIND AND WAVES. A Gale's Action Upon Water, Desert Sand and Prairie Snow. There are wind waves In the water, sand and snow. The great sea waves are produced at that part of a cyclone where the direction of the wind coincldes with the direction of advance of the depression. Along this line of advance the wares In their progress are accompanied by a strong wind blowing across their ridges as long as the atmospheric depression Is maintained. 8o the waves are developed until they become steep. The average height In feet Is about half the velocity of the wind in miles. . A wind of fifty-two miles an hour gives waves of an average height of twenty-six feet, although individual waves will attain a height of-forty feet. The prevailing wind in all longitudes is westerlyt so wherever a westerly wind springs up it finds a long westerly swell, the effect of a previous wind still running, and the principal effect of ,the newly born wind Is to Increase the steepness of the already running long swell so as to form majestic storm waves, which sometimes attain a jength of 1,200 feet from crest to crest. The longest swells due to wind are almost invisible during storms, for they are masked by the shorter and steeper waves, but they emerge into view after or beyond the storm. , , i'Tfae action of the wind to drift dry sand in a procession of waves is seen in the deserts. As the sand waves cannot travel by gravitation, their movements are entirely controlled by the wind, and they are therefore much simpler and more regular ln form and movement than ocean waves. In their greatest heights of several hundred feet the former become more complex owing to the partial consolidation of the lower layers of sand by pressure, but they still have the characteristic ware features. In the Winnipeg prairies of Canada freshly fallen snow is drifted by wind In a procession of regular waves, progressing with a visible and ghostlike motion. They are similar to desert sand waves, but less than half as steep, the wave length being fifty times as great as the 'height. The flatness of the wind formed snow waves affords a valuable indication of the great distance to which hills shelter from the wind. Chicago .Tribune. TOO GOOD TO BE WELL A London Hospital Doctor's Hurry Patient From the Outside. The accident bell at the door of the hospital clangs,' and the next moment an ' agitated parent Is seen running down the passage with a child racked under the arm. Its bare legs streaming behind It In the wind of Its mother's rspldlty. What's the matter, missis? Has she swallowed some poison T" No, sir; it ain't that." she pants, "but Tm that scared I don't know 'ardly which way to turn." "Well., but what's happened? Has she hurt herself?" 246, sir, and er father es that upset e couldn't do nothink, else I ain't used to running like"that, and 'e'd 'are brought er up. but.'e says as 'ow 'e daren't touch er. and I've run an the way. and me 'eart" 7 "Come, now, missis, Just tell me quietly what s the matter with the cbfld." : - . .Tbe JsOlesta. prettj. jmij. tUfiS.tf
1 cent per word. 7 days for the price of 5 days. We charge advertisements sent in by phone and collected for after its insertion.
four.'IcCTs' todufrfBgiy-at he farhied parent There seems to be little the matter with her. "It's all very well yer a-sittln' there and a-tellln of me to be quiet," cries the mother. "If yer 'ad children of yer own yer -wouldn't lite ter see 'em die afore yer eyes. Oh. dear; oh, dear, and there ain't only two more and the babyr The doctor ln despair examines the little girl, but falls to discover anything wrong. "Now, look here," says he firmly, "I can't find anything the matter with your child, so you'll have to go away unless you tell me why you brought her up to the hospital." "Well, doctor, we was all a-havin' our tea a minute ago as it might be, and 'er father was eatin a nice bit of tripe as was over from dinner when Susy, this one I 'ave with me, says as 'ow she loved God and was gcin' to 'eavlng when he doled. What!", In tones of horror. -"Ain't yer going to give er no medicine?" Cornhlll Magazine. Hi'Lucky Coin. In one of bis Hibbert lectures Max Muller said to the students: "Many of you, I suspect, carry a halfpenny with a hole ln It for luck. I am not ashamed to own that I have done so myself for many years." The case was cited by him in his lecture as an illustration of "survivals" from primeval fetichism, but on his own account Max Muller confessed that when sometimes be had left home without this halfpenny talisman he felt "very uncomfortable" until his safe return. Wemtn the Waitress. "A woman,"" ' remarked the wise widow, 'Is always waiting for a husband." "How do you figure that out?" queried the interested spinster. "If she isn't married," answered the w. w "she is waiting to get one. and if she is she's waiting for him to come home." Chicago News. His Finish. "Did you ever complete your education?" "No; my wife did." Houston Post. Cruelly Prank. He How ts It you are always out When I call? She Just lock. Life. : A PROMINENT NEW CASILEM All DEAD Local Friends of Herbert Heller Are Surprised. Local friends were surprised to learn of the death of Herbert Heller at New Castle. He was one of New Castle's best known and most progressive citizens. He had a large number of friends In Richmond. Death followed an operation performed last January. He made a brave struggle for life, but physicians realized from the first it was against tremendous odds and must in the end be lost. The deceased was one of the owners of the famous greenhouses. The funeral was held this morning and was attended by a large concourse of friends.
RATE!
FISH MARKET. Muth's for fresh fish and turtles; 16 South 5th street. Phone 1535. 26-tf DENTIST. DR. C. S. WILSON. Hittle Block. Special attention given to plate work. Phone 1532. 24-lmo BAKERY. SIX LARGE LOAVES of bread for 25 cents at Arnold's bakery, 29 N. 8th St. 'Phone 2474. Jun27-lmo AUTO LIVERY. Touring cars and runabouts for hire by hour or trip, especially low rates. Molino Sales Co., Phone 2384. 1-tf MOTOR CYCLES. New and second band. Waking & Co. 406 Main St Phone 2006. 22-tf UPHOLSTERING. Awnings and Upholstering J. H. Russel. 16 S. 7th St. Phone 1793. marll-tf FOOT DOCTOR. A. sure cure for Cores. Prof. H. H Rolling. 20 B. Sth. febl2-tf MEAT MARKET. Fresh Meats, Hams Bacon and Young Fries. Long Bros., Phone 2299. 7-tf FUNERAL DIRECTORS. WILSON. POHLMEYER & DOWN ING, 15 North Tenth. Phone 1335. Automobiles used for long distance calls. Private ambulance. 7-tf FINANCIAL. Money loaned; low rates; favorable terms. Thompson, 710 Main. 9-7t PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. BIFE ENTERED A NOTJUILTY PLEA Was Remanded to Jail Without Bond. Eaton, O., July 12. The preliminary hearing of the case of Harry Rife, charged with the murder of Mrs. Griswold last Thursday, was held Sa'urday. Rife pleaded not guilty to the charge of first degree murder and was remanded to jail without bond, pending the investigation of the grand jury. The grand Jury will report on July 10. POLE CATCHES FIRE. Crossed wires ignited -a telephone pole at Tenth and North E streets last night The department was called. The only damage was to the pole and wiring. FOR PRETTY FINGERS. Consolation Fcr Women With Homoty Finger Tips. Now that the gloveless time of yesr Is pressing bard upon the season that renders covering for the hands imperative the maiden who has been neglecting her dainty digits Is ln despair. Injudicious ways of trimming nails are partly responsible for bsdly shaped finger tips, writes a manicurist of experience. Nails serve as a brsce for the flesh, and if the prop ts unwisely cut away the skin will sag. Thus the effect of cutting the nails too far at the corners is easily understood, for the flesh that should be upheld has nothing to cling to, and a broad, flat tip Is developed. It Is absolutely Impossible to make a wide nail almond shape, and. this being the esse, the sooner heroic measures are dropped la effort to make the change the better. It Is this unwise attempt to make narrow a surface which is wide that is the beginning of the trouble. An inexperienced person imagines that by cutting away the nail at the side its aspect will be altered. This is true, but only for the worse, a fact to be remembered each time a file or pair of scissors Is used. Consolation for a woman with home ly finger tips lies ln the fact that much Improvement Is gained merely In shap ing the tops, letting the sides alone. If narrowness is achieved it will be by making them oval en the edge. A pointed top merely makes tb rest of the nail look broader by contrast. whereas one slightly rounded does not call attention to the wide surface. It is always a mistake to clip the sails with scissors unless the final finish is given with a file. Even then scissors should not be used, for their effect Is to thicken the nail and take away the transparency. Once the use of the file Is learned it works quickly, and better lines are made- with It. Yet. excellent as It Is. there Is one disadvantage that with It one can go lower la the edges, pulling down the corners more than ts likely to happen with the scissors. If any rule can be given about when to stop filing at the side It Is as soon as there Is the least sensation, although) It may net be a poattrre pain. Bat the instant lrre flesh makes itself rrtdest any pvsktug
CHARMS OFUGLY MEH Case of John WKkes, the Famou: London Alderman.
HE WEDDED A K0TED BEAUTI And He Was 8o Homely Tnat HI. Looks Frightened the Children In thStreets Bailly. With a Face Like i Horse, Wen a Famous French Beauty There was perhaps as much trutl as boasting la the statement of Johi W!!kea, the famous Ixudon aidermai and champion ef British electors Tgly as I am. If I can have but i quarter of an hour's start I will ge the better of any man. hewever goes looking, ln the graces of any woman. Of Wilkes abnormal ugUcess then was never a question, for Is It not re corded that the "very children in th street ran a may affrighted at the sighof him?" And yet his powers of fascl nation were so great that 'ladies ot beauty and fashion vied with eacl other for bis notice, while men o: handsome exterior and aU court lj graces looked enviously on." There were. It is said, few beau tie of the day whose band Wilkes mtghi not hare confidently hoped to win, aa when he Ted Mary Mead to the sltai he mad? a wife of one of the rlfhesi and most lovely women of her t!me " 'Beauty and the Beast' they call us. Wilkes once said to bis friend Patter "and I cannot honestly find fault wltl the description. Jean Paul Marat, whooe name wll always be associated ' with the ev history of the French revolution, wa notoriously the ugliest man of bis dsj In Paris. When this reputation reach ed his ears Marat is said to have re marked. "Rut why limit my supreme cy to Paris?" And Indeed the reetrle tlon was much too modest. And yet In his earlier years, whet he was the most popular of court doctors, his very ugliness seemed to exercise such a fascination over aristocratic ladies that they rrowded his consulting rooms in order to catch a glimpse of and to exchange words with bin under the flimsiest pretexts of Imsglnary ailments. The studied Indlffer ence with which he treated alike tbeit charms and their flattery only made them the more Insistent until he de clarrd to a friend that ho would bare to fly from Paris to escape the persecution of his fair admirers. Bailly, msyor of Psris at the time o the reign of terror, la said to have a horse. His appears nor was, ln fact, , so abnormal, so monstrous, thit children shrieked and women fainted at the very sight of him. and yet his wife wss one of the most lovely women to -the whole of France so lovely that as a girl she was known as "the beautiful angel." . That there Is a powerful fascination for some women la extreme ugliness Is proved by Innumerable oases ln which wumro nuv em.v pmi , uij wotvkw with physical charms have fallen madly la love with men of almost repulsive appes ranee. A London paper records a remark, able case of this kind la 1S17, when Lady Mary X. married Mr. Mudford. a London attorney. Lady Mary . was a girl of peerless charms, tho most beautiful of all the court ladles and tbe favorite toast of the world of aristocrats. She might for her birth r.nd fortune were almost equal to ber beauty have choeen her husband from among dukes, end even more than one royal prince sought ber hand In vain. - To the ronsernst:on of society, she married Mr. Mudford. not only s pettifogging attorney," but a man of almost unnatural ugliness cf face and with a deformed hand and foot. Singular, too. as It msy appear, ber married life was one of unclouded happiness, and to her dyirg day, nearty forty years later, she never seemed to hars a moment's regret for her choice of a husband. Still more remarkable was the story told of a most beautiful heiress with an attachment for one of the freaks of a traveling show, and she persisted In marrying him ln spite of all the efforts of her friends and relations. This singular object of her affections masqueraded under the tlt'e of "the man monkey, or the ugliest man ln the world," and be had an excellent claim to the title. Exchange. An Awkward Text. A butcher of a certain village, betng a devout Christian, whenever be sent a burtness note invariably accompanied It with a text. A certain lady, wishing him to km some of ber plga, sent him a letter to notify him of tbe fact, to which bo sent tbe following reply: "Dear Madam I will call on Friday to kin your hogs without fan. Tours, Mr. B. N. B. Be ye also ready London Graphic. He Had Noticed. Father (who Is always trying e teach his son now to act while at the table) Well. John, you sea, when I have finished eating I always leave the table. John Tea, sir. and that Is about all you do leave. London MaQ. Sure! ; De man dat don't do nuCLn but look out for No. V said Uncle Ebon. "Is putty sure sooner or later to attract attention to hlsse'f as about e smsllest figger la de "rithmettc" Washington Star. . The nobleness of life depends on fJ consistency, clearness f purpoee. ejCSat nd ceaseless eoergy-Suskln. The A certain married saaa to the boys that bis wits for him slipped out. to a cigar the other evening? after sapper and fanes' to notice that his wife bad ber party sgwn on. When be softly tiptoed Into the house at 2 a. m. he was slightly surprised to see a dewy eyed lady trf down the stairway, tarn ber back to ttfm i1 (MrfMI. XT-
"There are two bosks I Just couldat teach. Wont yoa sarfasfen them so I can go to bedTV " IVxtanately be cotH a&l g1-Cr
