Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 20, 27 November 1909 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICIOIOXD PALLADIUM AXD SUN-TELEGRA3I, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1909.

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telearam . Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 1 days each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. ItlCHMOND. INDIANA. Rudolph G. l.eeda Editor Charlea M. Mowa...Muaclas Editor Carl Bernhardt .Aaaorlate Editor XV. R. Pouadatoae Xm Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TEHMS. In Richmond 5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year, in advance J5.00 Six monthK, In advance 2.60 One month. In advance .45 RURAL ROUTES. One year, in advance $2.50 Six months, in advance 1.50 One month, In advance 25 Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be ffiven for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received.

Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter. Association of (Naw York City) asearWUtatae Oaly the la it Vtk 4 TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson) The Lucrative End of the Enterprise "So you don't want to be the manager of my new hotel!" "No," answered the head waiter. "I'd rather go on accepting gratituities In my present menial position." "But you won't have any dignity or authority." "True. But the chances are that I will eventually have a mortgage on the place." Autumn Uncertainty. When the snowflakes In circles so dizzy Come whirling, the old doubt is felt, Must we with a shovel get busy Or can we just wait till they melt? A Test. "Well," said Mr. Cumrox, "your party was a great success." "How can you tell?" asked his wife. "Whenever a crowd comes along that makes me feel like a stranger in my own house I know it's a brilliant occasion." A Welcome Exception. "Why do you consider that man so desirable as a dinner guest?" "He's one of the few people of our acquaintance who don't insist on having light meat when a fowl is carved." More Evidence. "So you regard that explorer's loss of temper as evidence in his favor?" said one scientist. "Yes," replied the other. "It indicates that he has spent so much time In arctic localities that he is tired of keeping cool." In Readiness. Turkey in de barnyard, Possum in de tree, Rabbit in de cornfield, An dey all looks good to me! Partridge In brown sage, Oyster in de bay; Needn't wait no longer! Bring along Thanksgivln' day! Dat gratitude jes' ha'nts me. With a persistence strange! It lingers in de pantry An' round' de kitchen range. We's been hopeful thoo de hardship An patient with delay; We's here to be rewarded! Bring along Thanksgivin' day! Items Gathered in From Far and Near Indifference to Manners. Prom the Century Magazine. There can be no manners without a standard of tacit agreement in society concerning them, and this standard amounts to a dead letter unless it is enforced and insisted upon to a greater degree than is now done. The treatment from private and public servants and from children to which gentlemen and ladies submit without protest Indicates that as an active principle of society manners have lost force. The fact seems to be that a good many Americans who have good manners act as though they were heartily ashamed of It, and hope that their children will not find it out. By the indifference to the impoliteness of servants, employers make life more difficult for themselves and for society just as mothers do who fail to exact prompt and implicit obedience from their children. Recently in a certain club a call boy, sent to find a member, rushed into the sniakin room with a repeated and strident summons of "Jones!" whereupon a gentleman drew him aside and softly prompted him with "Mr. Jones, if you please." " This action was a service not only to the boy, but to every member of the club. But how many "house committees" consider these or a score of such delinquencies worth discipline? And where is the multitude of servants to learn their trade if no one exacts of them respect? Profanity in Public Places. From the Omaha Bee. The stage has become so bold in its modern tendencies that the profanity, bordering on blasphemy. In this piece Is not to be marveled at, considering the tendencies of the times. Profanifv on the stage is a reflection of pro-

kaVHIMflBMW

WHO IS THE PARTY? Mr. Cannon, Speaker and Dictator of the House of Representatives, is out with a violent attack on all those who oppose him. No one is particularly surprised and he has advanced no new arguments. His principal argument, or in fact his whole attitude, is the old one about "majorities." Therefore, he concludes that as the Insurgents did not vote with their "party," they are little better than lepers and outcasts. Analysis will show that Mr. Cannon's ideas on "party" do not take into any account the people, (the voters, whom the representatives in Congress are supposed to represent,) but in his conception the "party" is composed of those representatives bearing his collar in the House of Representatives. Mr. Cannon knows he has control of the House of Representatives and can force through, or block legislation as he wills therefore his conception of the party is himself personified. Any man who votes against him is, of course, thereby excluded from the rights, privileges and perquisites of the party as contained in him Cannon.

It is just this view point on which almost all the utterances of Mr. Cannon depend, covering many columns of newspaper space, which has created the attack on him, It is not hard to trace the influence of this sort of reasoning in Mr. Taft's Winona speech. It is the 'majority" and the "party," which ar trotted out to do service as arguments, when everybody knows that the source of that "majority" was not the people, but the machine that Cannon and the interests back of him has built up in the House of Representatives with a corresponding situation in the Senate, under rules which have given Aldrich the power. The people were promised certain things in the platform of the Republican party. The people did not get those things as promised. The Insurgents did not vote for the Payne-Cannon-AIdiieh tariff biU because it did not fulfill the promises made in the platform. Even tlis President admitted that it was not a "complete compliance with the promises made," if strictly interpreted. This being so, who kept it from being a complete compliance? It most certainly was not the Insurgents. It must have been those who belonged to the "party" the machine of Mr. Cannon and Mr. Aldrich. And the machine was due mostly to the rules which the Insurgents objected to. They fought with those rules did Cannon and Aldrich.

Having, therefore, set forth the iniquity of the words "party" and "majority" as interpreted by Mr. Cannon we believe that Mr. Cannon's statement that the Republicans who refused to vote for the tariff are outcasts and ought to be fought as enemies of the party, resolves itself into one alternative. Either the party is the people, and the duty of the representatives is to 'vote in accordance with the wishes of their constituents and the promises made to them: Or, the party is a political machine in congress, the representatives to be subservient to Cannon and to disregard their constituents and the promises of the Republican convention, made to the voters. We still maintain that the Insurgents have represented the people, have kept their promises made to their constituents, and that the Republican party is composed of the rank and file the common every-day citizen, no matter if its wishes are denied and trodden upon by a political business machine in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, whose rulers are Aldrich and Cannon.

Who is the Republican Party? Or the men in the ranks? fanity in public. A generation or two ago people were repelled every time they picked up one of the early English novels or plays, because of the coarse language, but in the present ' generation there is too commonly heard on every street, in the cars and public corridors a constant stream of language much coarser and much more profane than exists in any of the classic early English literature, which under the old order was not admitted to the fireside circle. The indecencies of speech heard in public places, in all cities, throughout the country, particularly from youthful lips, is one of the most flagrant evils of the age, and it Is a pity that the stage, which roes not have to pander to such tastes, should lend itself to the propagation of so disgusting a habit. Spoils and Public Service. From the Chicago Record-Herald. Under the spoils system men have become incapacitated for honest work after they have once tasted the spoils Given the emoluments of office, they have devoted themselves to the business of the party machine and neglected their official duties. When they were thrown out owing to a victory of the opposing party they attached themselves to some boss and waited for the next change of fortune that should offer them another chance at an official salary. Meantime they did nothing to prepare themselves for the special work, of any office. Keeping their wagon hitched to the boss, they applied for the largest salaries they could possibly hope to get when their crowd succeeded again, and accepted whatever was allowed them. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Bread and Pipe Baker. The lecturer at the cooking school sometimes enlivened her remarks with an anecdote. "The eighteenth century baker," she said, "was a pipe cleaner as well, just as the barber a little earlier was a surgeon. Everybody in those days smoked clay pipes, provided the same as cups or spoons by the coffee houses.. Well, each morning a waiter carried his master's stock of pipes, some hundred perhaps, to the nearest bakery. The baker would boil them, then dip them in liquid lime, then bake them dry. They came out of the oven as sweet and white as new. Philadelphia Bulletin. Degrees of Hunger. "I'm simply starving!" cried the short story writer at the Hungry club- ,! wish they'd begin dinner." "I never saw you when you weren't starring," said the poet "I'm never as hungry as you are, though," the short story writer declared, "because I write prose." New York Press. I Good Imagination. Teddy, after having a drink of plain soda water, was asked how he liked it ! "Not very well." he replied. "It tastes too much as though my foot had irons asleep in my mouth." Success Magazine, n Italian Custom. A white handkerchief on a pole at the window of a private house In Italy Indicates rooms for rent

Cannon, Aldrich and their machine?

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. ' Copy, is fit, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye IS WOMAN INFERIOR? When woman demands her right to suffrage one reply of her opponents is this: "Woman is inherently weaker in body and intellect than man." Let us call the roll of history. When Israel was at its lowest ebb a woman Deborah restored the nation. She not only led the armies, but wrote the battle hymns. From her throne in Egypt Cleopatra ruled not only her own country, but ruled the world's rulers Caesar and Mark Antony. The "golden age" of Greece was the age of Pericles. But a woman ruled Pericles and Athens and answered Socrates according to his logic Aspasia. Babylon, long since fallen, once was great. Who organized Babylon and ruled it and led its armies? Who but Semiramis, a woman? Who shook Rome when the great Hannibal, son of Ilamilcar, was unable? Zenobia, a woman. And who of all its sovereigns can Russia compare to Peter the Great? Only one the great Catherine. i In the annals of England what reign j can be compared to that of Elizabeth? Only one the Victorian era. j Can Austria in all its troubled history point with pride to a greater reign than that of strong Maria Theresa? China in its age long records never had an abler executive than the late Empress Tsi An. And of all the peerless leaders of men on the battlefield where is one above the Orleans maid of seventeen Joan of Arc? When tyranny oppressed the people of South America the amazons alone were able to free them. Margaret of Anjou leveled thrones. And time would fail us to tell of those early American heroines who fought the savages side by side with their husbands, and of Moll Pitcher at Monmouth, of Hanna Winthrop at Lexington and of the heroic spies and nurses of Federal and Confederate, to say nothing of the brainy women who have led reforms and who distinguish our day. Whether or not it would be best to grant suffrage to woman may be a mooted question. But As to her right to suffrage every sense of justice coincides, and as to her ability to use it all history proclaims. Kept Dodging There was a chicken to be killed for Sunday dinner at the Cranes. Mr. Crane did not like to wring its neck; likewise he shrank from using an ax. T have it," he finally decided. "Ill shoot it." So, armed with his trusty gun, he took the chicken to the woodshed. Little Itobert, anxious to be In at the death, followed. By and by Robert's mother, hearing- no sound, stepped to the back porch and called, "Kobert, hasn't your father killed that chicken yet?" "No, Robert called back. "It won't set In the way." Everybody's.

The Sunday Church Services

World's Temperance Sunday The Anti-Saloon League will have 9 men in the city to fill as many pulpits both morning and evening. The appointments are as follows: In the morning. United Presbyterian Church, Rev. W. C. Helt. Grace M. E. Church, Rev. R. H. Moore. First Baptist Church, Rev. E. A. Miles. First Eng. Lutheran, Rev. Geo. E. Hicks. First Presbyterian, Rev. N. C. Shirey East Main St. Friends Hon. R. C. Minton. First M. E. Church, Rev. E. M. Barney. South Eighth St. Friends, Rev. S. P. Mc Naught, Earlham College, Rev. E. S. Shumaker. In the Evening St. Paul's Lutheran, Rev. N. C. Shirey. United Brethren, Rev. Geo. E. Hicks. Second English Lutheran, Rev. S. P. McXaught. Third M. E., Hon. R. C. Minton. Whitewater Friends, Rev. E. S. Shu-' maker. First Christian, Rev. E. M. Barney. African M. E.. Rev. R. H. Moore. Universalist, Rev. E. A. Miles. Two mass meetings will be held in the afternoon one at the Y. M. C. A. for men, to be addressed by Rev. E. M. Barney and Hon. R. C. Minton. The meeting for women at the First Presbyterian church to be addressed by Revs. E. S. Shumaker and W. C. Helt. Those meetings will be held at 3:00 p. m. First Baptist Church H. Robert Smith, pastor. Preaching at 10:40 a. m. and at 7::0 p. m. Sunday school at 9:15. B. Y. P. U. at 6: CO p. m. All are invited to attend these services. First Presbyterian North 10th and A streets. Thomas J. Graham, pastor. Sabbath School and Bible classes, 9:15 a. ra. Mr. R. B. Nicholson, Supt. 10:30 a. m. Church services with an address by Rev. X. C. Shirey of Ft. Wayne. 7:30 p. m., Evening Sermon. Prayer Hour and Conference Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Come and worship Our Father in Heaven! First Church of Christ Scientist Masonic Temple. Sunday services at 10:45 a. m. Subject, "Ancient and Modern Necromancy or Mesmerism." Wednesday evening experience meeting 7:43 p. m. Public invited. Reading room No. 10 North 10th street; open to the public daily except Sunday, 9:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon; 1:30 p. m. to 5:00 p. m. Fifth Street M. E. Church J. Cook Graham, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Morning worship 10:30 a. m. Sermon by pastor, subject "Lying, Gossiping, Covetousness The Penalty." Epworth League. 6:30 p. m.; leader. Hugh Foss. Evening service at 7:30. You are welcome. St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran C. Huber, pastor. Sunday school at 9. German preaching at 10:30. Young People's meeting at 6:30. Evening services at 7. Rev. N. C. Shirey will address the meeting. South Eighth Street Friends Levi

Joe Cannon Strikes at Enemies Speaker, Thoroughly Maddened by the Attacks Made on Him, Hands Out a Few Knocks at Banquet Last Night.

Kansas City, Mo., Nov. '21. "When Senators Cummins, La Follette, Bristow and their so-called 'progressive' following join hands with Mr. Bryan in making war upon the republican members of congress who passed the tariff bill and upon the president who signed it, in that contest I know of but one way to beat them, and that is to fight them just as we fight Mr. Bryan and his following." Such was the declaration of Speaker Cannon, who delivered the principal address before the Knife and Fork club here last night. Mr. Cannon said Senator Cummins alone had read himself out of the Republican party. He defended the rules of the house, saying they will remain substantially ?s they have been and will be. so long as there is a congress. Here are a few of the statements made by the speaker In the course of his address: "The senators and representatives who call themselves 'insurgents voted to increase or maintain the duties on the industries and products of their own sections." "Senator La Follette did not vote on the duties on lead and zinc because, hn said, he had a pecuniary interest in th? outcome. 'Senators LaFollette and Bristow voted with the Rf-publicans on sehdulcs which protected the products of their constituents and with the democrats on others." "The tailors of Tooley street are ever with us, and when they can not be 'we. the people," they take it out in resolving and declaiming." "The famous went down with colors flying, but not to don sackcloth or sulk in their tents." "With whom did Senator Cummins co-operate? Let the record of the votes decide." "Neither Bryan, Cummins. La Follette, Bristow or their followers claim that It can be changed during the coming four years, but they all agree In one thing, namely, that they will agitate and they are agitating for additional tariff legislation, and. as the car of prosperity drawn by 90..Oi people moves on. they are seeking to hinder its progress by criticism and denunciation, and this, too. within three months of its enactment.' "Singularly, the critics who insisted that the tariff should be further lowered are the same critics who are dissatisfied because we have not gone faster and farther and appropriated more money. We can not eat our cake and have it." "There is only one thin; that can

T. Pennington, pastor. Bible school at 9 o'clock. John H. Johnson, superintendent. A representative of the Anti-saloon league will speak at the 10:30 service. Christian Endeavor meeting at 6:30. Prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. A cordial invitation to all to attend all these services. East Main St. Friends Truman Kenworthy, pastor. Bible school at 9:10. Arthur M. Charles. Supt. Meeting for worship, 10:30. Mr. R. C. Minton. legislative superintendent of the Antl Saloon League will attend the meeting. Endeavor Society. 6:30. A cordial invitation is extended. Universalist Church in Masonic Temple, Sunday, Nov. 2Hh. Rev. Martha Jones will preach at 7:30 p. m. Sunday School at 2:30 p. m. Everyone invited. Grace M. E. Church W. M. Nelson, pastor. Sunday School at 9:00 a. m. Services at 10:30 a. in.; pulpit will be occupied by Mr. Moon, representative of the Anti-Saloon League. Class meeting at 11:45. Epworth league at 6:30. Preaching by the pastor at 7:30. subject. "First Things." You are cordially invited. St. Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at S ar.d 9 o'clock and High Mass and sermons at 10:30; Vespers and benediction every Sunday at 3 p. m. Rev. J. F. Mattingly, rector. Rev. Thomas A. Hoffman, assistant. tf St. Andrew's Catholic Fifth and South C streets. Mass at 7:30; High Mass at 9:45; Vespers, sermonette and benediction at 3 o'clock. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector; Rev. H. J. Gadlage, assistant. tf West Richmond Friends. Services held at Earlham college. Bible school at 9 a. m Prof. E. P. Trueblood superintendent; meeting for worship at 10:30; temperance sermon by E. F. Shumaker, president of Anti-Saloon league; mid-week meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. All interested are cordially invited to every service. First Methodist. Sunday school at 9 o'clock; 10:30, sermon by Rev. E. M. Harney, Indianapolis; 7:30 Thanksgiving cantata by choir. Reid Memorial Corner Eleventh and North A streets. Rev. S. R. Lyons pastor. Pleaching 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. ni.: Sabbath school, 9:15 a. m.; Christian Union, 6:45 p. m. First Christian Corner Tenth and South A streets. Samuel W. Traum, pastor. Bible school. 9:05 a. m.. Prof. Judge Boggs. superintendent; Chris

tian Endeavor 6:30 p. m., Edna M. Smith, president; preaching services conducted by the pastor 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. The pastor is in Ohio visiting over Thanksgiving, but will return in time for services on Sunday. First English Lutheran Corner of; Eleventh and South A streets. E. G. j Howard, pastor. Morning worship at j 10:30 a. m. Address by a renresenta- i tive of the Indiana Anti-Saloon league. esper service at 5 p. m. Sermon by the pastor, "The Source of the Christian's Life." Sunday school at 9:15 a. ni.. Jjee B. Nusbaum superintendent. A cordial invitation is extended to strangers and to those who have no other church home in the city. Come and worship with us. halt this confident move forward to give the country another era of pros-j perity, such as we had from l!i7 to) U7. and that is agitation for the mere purpose of agitation, without any well conceived, healthy purpose in view." "President Taft is the recognized leader of the republican party and the great majority of republicans are his followers. With whom did Senator Cummins co-operate? Let the record of the votes on this legislation from beginning to end decide." "Had Mr. Clark's resolution been adopted the House of Representatives would still be in session considering the innumerable amendments the democrats would have offered to the hundreds of paragraphs in the tariff bill, and the United States senate would still be waiting for the bill to be sent over for its consideration." "We have had these rules since the beginning of the government and substantially without change for the past twenty years, until a few months ago two changes were made at the suggestion of the so-called 'insurgents,' who then voted against the adoption of the modifications." "If the democrats should again secure control of the house. Mr. Clark should realize his ambition and be elected speaker, he will, as certain a he maintains manhood worthy such responsibility, return to the position he occupied and again become an ardent defender of the rules." Her Complexion. We once knew a woman who quarreled with her complexion. At one time she touched it up so much that it became touchy. At another time it was beyond the pale. Occasionally it broke out and became very flery. But. however much she quarreled with it, she was always ready to make it up. A Merger. Regular Customer There used to be two or three little bald spots on the crown of my head, away back. Are they there yet? Barber No. sir; it ain't so bad as all that. Where those spots used to be, sir. there's only one now. Chicago Tribune. A Hard One. "When." he demanded. "wCJ yon pay this bill?" Smiling, we waved him toward our confrere. Ton most ask," we said, "the possle editor." Exchange.

Stock and 4

Bonds American Telephone

and Telegraph Company

Aside from owning and directly operating all the long distance and toll lines, the great work (and substantially the entire espeasa) of tha a mat ican Telephone & Telegraph Company is the administration o( tha affairs common to all its subsidiary companies. These comprise all the) operating Bell Telephone Companies in the United States and Canada, including also the Western Electric Co, These it controls by a majority stock interest. At one expense with one effort, it solves a problemperfects a system tests, and adopts or rejects aa ioveotioa or innovation; and the result serves for all its companies. Thereby it economizes tine, effort, labor and eipease, and preserves harmonious uniformity of construction, equipment and operation throughout the united Bell System. The Astonishing Growth Due to This Centralized Administration is best shown by comparing figures from the annual report of Jaanay v 1st, ly09with L0O. just prior to the acquirement of the business and property of the various Bell Telephone Companies.

Jin. I ga J9l S.0J 10 2.:t GAIN 2.617

Darin the past 27 years, dividends have never been less than 7j (for 1906-7-8-9 they have been 8 ft). Since the American Telephone A Telegraph Company acquired the Bell Companies, it has never earned less than three times its fixed charges. Both tha Stock and 4 Convertible Bonds are listed on the Stock Exchanges of Chicago, Mew York. Boston, Philadelphia and London, affording a broad and convenient market. The Company's policy of issuing new stock to stockholders at par so valuable in the past promises even greater future value. We recommend these securities for investment and solicit purchasing orders. Small orders given equal attention with larger. Write for complete descriftire circular. Correspondence invited. Russell, Brewster & Company Dealers in Investment Securities.

Members: New York Stock Exchange Chicago Stock Exchange A LIItKAKT SIN. The Fabrication of Quotations Is a Censurable Practice. "Plagiarism is hardly so great a crime as the fabrication of quotations a practice which has caused many an earnest student to waste hours In a fruitless endeavor to trace the passage cited. Among the guilty Samuel Warren deserves special mention. On one occasiou he took part in a debate during which Roebuck boasted that he was not a party man. whereupon Warren rose and said that "my learned friend's boast reminds me painfully of the words of Cicero, 'lie who belongs to no party is presumably too Til for any.' " At the conclusion of the debate Roebuck came over to compliment his adversary on having made a successful hit. adding. "1 am fairly well up in Cicero, but 1 have oo Idea where I can find the passage you quoted." "Neither have 1." said Warren. "Good night" That literary sin. the fabrication of quotations, leaves its legacy of trouble behind it long after It has been committed. Only the other day to a weekly journal's correspondence column came the venerable question as to where in the Scriptures Is to be fouud a reference to "oil on the troubled waters," a quotation countless preachers and writers have used for centuries, but neither Cruden's "Concordance of the Bible" refers to it nor has Notes and Queries or Its industrious correspondents ever been able to throw a light upon its origin. London Chronicle. ' Instructed the Queen. Queen Victoria of England was once pulled up short by an old Scotchwoman. Her majesty bad started out one afternoon to sit on a hillside and watch some of her relatives fishing In the river below her. when she found that she had no thimble in ber pocket, so could not work, as she had intended, at the sewing she was carrying. Consumption

( MM

mm. wrrni caktcs and well. Cough, distress In my chest, and the Indigestion are gone. My appetite is good: I sleep welL This is all due to Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, vhich I regard as an unfailing cure of consumption if taken In time. Mrs. Nettie Carter. Elkton. Ky. Thousands, both men and women, like Mrs. Carter, praise Duffy's Pure Matt Whiskey for restoring them to health. 0u's IPuire alti UGnfloCioy

cures diseases of the throat and lungs ditions of the body, brain and nerves. It builds new tissue, invigorates body, brain and nerve, quickens the circulation and aids in driving out all disease germs. It is prescribed by doctors and is recognized as a family meaicine everywhere. CAUTION Waa yoa ask year tfrsntot. aYaceeef scs Se sara yaa ar aaalrrtar Daffy's Para riatt wauaay a sara yaa gT taa gsaaiae. w w aaiy assaiately para saatfteiaal asalt whlskay, mm U sold ia scaled tmttlas aafy: aavar la to Ik. Price I J09. Lea far ts traee-aaarB taw Old Cliialrt." aa taw latsal. aaa lalra saw ttM saal avr tha car la aabrokaa. Writ

3

Mit mt BTW tut I 8.0 7 tlOOtlSlS.121.707 1.0:6.777 U0C) SM.96 7.C61.M1 fU.aiS.6 137 Adams Street Chicago, Turning out or ber way to str. ym ond's shop, she bought the smallest thimble there, which was. however, many size too big for ber. There was an old Scotch dame at the counter Impatiently walling to make ber own purchases. Not recognising the queen, she broke into the conversation with a "Boots, bat it's a rare fuss an' faddle you're makln. Blow lntae It weel an' It'll stick." That phrase, the latter part of the sentence, amused her majesty immensely and became quit a proverb In the royal family. Mind Ovar Matter. "Much may be done." said the acute observer, "by an authoritative voiceNow, if a man says to a dog. "Come berer with a note of absolute authority la bis voice the dog comes Immediately." "Yes." said the traveler. Tve notkv, ed It And it Is especially marked la oriental peoples. Why. when 1 was In KhaUsandjbaro 1 heard a man ssy. with that authoritative note In bis tone, 0 king, live forever.' and Immediately the king lived forever." Carolyn Wells In Success Magazine. Disinterested Affection. "I'm afraid. Edward, you're marrying me only because I've Inherited from my uncle 100.000 crowns. "Why. Blanche, how can yon think that of me? Your ancle Is nothing to me. I would marry yon no matter from whom you Inherited the money. Der Floh. Successful. "I started out oo the theory that the world had an opening for me, and I went to find it." "Did you find It?" "Oh. yes: I'm In a bole. Baltimore American. Early Australian Squatters. Equatters in Australia used to be able) to take up crown lands at a yearly rent of a penny an acre. Con io teci Mr. Nettie Carter of Okton.Krafter ber physician bad told her that she bad censBmp tion took Duffy's Pare Jlalt Whiskey and has been com pletely restored to health. Appetite U food, she sleeps well and enjoys life without pain or ache. "I had acute Indigestion for two years, which kept growing worse. I employed several physicians without any berefit. 1 came near starving, as I could eat very little. For several months I suffered frequent attacks of vomiting, which made me very weak. Finally my physician told me that I had consumption. This filled me vttlr terror; "In an advertisement In the Nashvine 'Banner' I read that Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey was recommended for Tuberculosis or Consumption. I began to take it In dessertspoonful doses four or five times a day. and a tablespoonful at bedtime. 1 am now strong and a0 run down and weakened i