Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 45, 2 January 1913 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGKAM. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2. 1913.
PAGE SEVERN
MILTON, IND. MILTON, Ind., Jan. 2. Mr. and Mrs. 'Martin Frazee were at Richmond Tuesday. Walter Higham entertained at bis country home south of Milton, at a watch party. The party, was in honor of the young people who were home from college for the holidays. Those I present were James Murphy, Harry 1 Caldwell, Glen El well, John Rusk Manlove, Ralph Moore, and the Misses' !Lora Beeson, Helen Coyne, Blanche Coyne, Luella Lantz, Mary Jones, Ixrene Warren. The evening was delightfnlly spent in games. Refreshments were served. Mrs. S. E. Reed, southeast of town, entertained on Sunday in honor of her husband's thirtieth birthday. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kirlin and son, Howard, Mr. and Mrs. John Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Court Troxell and son Edgar, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Troxell, Kenneth and Ethel Troxell, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Doddridge, Miss Ruby Plesinger, Homer Callaway, Mrs. Jennie Plesinger and daughters, Gladys, Mildred and Virgil, Mr. Lafe Reed and Geo. Bruttain. A turkey dinner was served and a pleasant time enjoyed. Mrs. Mary Walker and Mrs. Ven Beeson went to Hartsville Wednesday to be the guests of the Rev. and Mrs. C. II. Pinnick, a few days. Dr. Sweney was at Richmond Wednesday to attend the County Medical society. Mrs. W. H. Heist and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Brown and son were at Richmond Wednesday as the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Gentle and family. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Young, Christmas day, a daughter. Mr. and
Mrs. Young were formerly residents of Miltan, and now live near New Paris, Ohio. Mrs. George Munley was at Richmond Wednesday to visit her mother, Mrs. Border. Miss Alpha Templeton, who has been the guest of Miss Ruth McCormick, returned to her home at Hartford City, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Crook entertained at New Year's dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Burroughs, of Jacksonburg. Jos. Clevenger left Wednesday for Tampa and other points in Florida. He was accompanied by Samuel Morris of East G.ermantown. Miss Lillian DuGranrut, who spent a few days at Easte Germantown, with Miss Helen Shafer, has returned to her home. Miss Shafer returned with her and will spend a few days here. Mr. and Mrs. Benton Wagner entertained at dinner New Year's the following guests: Messrs and Masdames James Shank, of near Richmond; Henry Fricker, Isaiah Fricker and family, of Dublin; Will Brown, of Williamsburg; Ora Wagner, of East Germantown; Will Wissler, Clyde Leverton and daughter, Lenton Wissler and family, Chas. Wilson and family, east of town; Carl Williams, of west of town; Mrs. J. M. McMahan, of Miltpn, and Mrs. Alfred Wagner and daughter, Miss Martha, of Kansas, fir whom the dinner was Tnlionor. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Doddridge entertained at -turkey dinner New Yeai-'s day. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Doddridge and son, Delmar, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Dailey and family, of east of town, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dailey and family, of Cambridge City. Mrs. Doddridge has unique place cards in. which the initials of each person's name formed a sentence. Mrs. L. E. Ward and daughters had as their guests, Wednesday, Mrs. Lewis Harmier and daughter, Miss Marie, of west of town. Mrs. Alice Gresh entertained at New Year's dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Hurst and sons, of near Connersville; Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Jones and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Jones, and the Rev. and Mrs. F. C. McCormfck. Miss Ola Burney was the guest of Mrs. Anda Higgs, Wednesday. Santford Little and his brother John, were at Anderson Wednesday to attend the funeral of their late brother, David Little. Mr. and Mrs. Lute Lantz, Jr., entertained Mr. and Mrs. Jay Dewey, of Richmond at New Year's dinner. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Thos. B. Lantz and son. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Huddleston entertained Messrs. and Mesdames Jos. Weighle and Albert Weed, of Cambridge City, at dinner New Year's day. Mrs. Carl Passmore, enroute from Urbana, Ohio, to her home in Connersville, visited Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Beeson and Mrs. Mary Passmore Wednesday. She had been to see her father. Will Dye, of Urbana, who is ill. He formerly lived near Milton and is well known here. HAGERSTOWN, IND. HAGERSTOWN, Ind., Jan. 2. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Backenstoe entertained at a New Year's dinner Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Kidwell and Mr. and Mrs. Exum Copeland and daughters Marjorie and Helen. Miss Leona Halderntan of Cincinnati is the guest of relatives here. Mrs. John W. Thornburg is seriously ill with pneumonia. t Miss Edna Cain visited at New Castle Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Woodward were at Newcastle Tuesday afternoon. Clyde Petro is visaing at the home of his aunt, Mrs. Scena Mull near Centerville. Mrs. Isaac Brumback is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs. Melvina Powell at Newcastle. Mrs. Jo'an Hahn and children Forrest and Pearl have returned from Dayton, O., where they visited with Mrs, Halm's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Newcomb onlertained Tuesday at dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Will Van Vactor of Plymouth. Ind , Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Alec Kirby. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whitesell, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Quickie, Mrs. Ella Whitesell, Miss Katie Kirby and Robert Kirby. Mrs. Chas. Abel returned to Alexandria Tuesday after a visit with her pons EarTand C. W. Abel and family. Mrs. D. Ot Lumpkins has been sick at her home north of town. Mrs. Ella Fox and Mr. John Fox of Grensfork were guests Wednesday of
we ain't Got no HOrAt. I AIN'T GOT- A CENT AND IT'S TM? fAlDOLG OF VJINYFR.
I AIN'T EVENGOV OVRXOAT AND IF OMG I'D HOCK IT TO co-xt x.TG.-x't 39i2 Mr. and Mrs. Harley Benbow and family. Mr. Ed. Petro and Mrs. Celia Purdy were married Tuesday at Richmond. The bride, and groom have many friends. The Two O'clock club was entertained this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Chester Life. The hours were delightfully spf-nt with erabroidry work. followed by luncheon. Mrs. Fred Shu-1 mard, Mrs. Ed. Newman and Mrs. ! Dorwin Durbin, have become members j of the club. Mrs. Syril Hiatt will be the next hostess in two weeks. Miss Esther Porter entertained at a card party, New Year's afternoon. Miss Nellie Brant entertained several friends Tuesday evening at a "watch" party. Mrs. Raymond Knapp has rturned from Michigantown where she visited with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fleetemyer and son spent the holidays with his parents at Lafayette. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Fouts spent New Year's day with Mrs. Alice Fouts. Good Shooting. The story below of certain Virginia mountaineers whose patriotism was only equaled by their marksmanship, is one told by C. R. Bolton in the American Historical Review. In 1775 500 recruits were needed, but many more came forward, and the commanding officer decided on a shooting match to determine their proficiency. A board one foot square, bearing a chalk outline of a nose, was nailed to a tree at a distance of 130 yards. Those who came nearest the mark with a single bullet were to be enlisted. The first forty or fifty men who shot cut the nose entirely out of the board. Might Be Saved. A Kansas butcher was driving a cow to his slaughter house when a stranger stopped him and said: "What are you going to do with that cow?" "I'm going to kill her," said the butcher. The stranger looked the cow over carefully. "Oh, I don't believe I'd do that. If you feed her up awhile I think she'll live." Kansas Magazine. A Hit. "I made a great hit at the banquet Inst night Came off with a good deal of distinction, in fact." "1 didn't know you ever spoke at banquets." "I don't. I was the only one there who absolutely declined." Chicago Record-IIeraJd. Modern Eccentricity. "What an eccentric person yeung Duckworth is." "I've never noticed it He seems to me to be rather a sensible sort of chap." "But he wants to name his baby daughter Sarah." Chicago Record-Herald. Pathetic Proof. "My Jim is dead, my Jim is dead!" wailed an old colored mammy, holding up a letter. "Here is a letter from I him right from the dead letter office! Woman's Home Companion. Life, like a dome of many colored glnss. stains the white radiane of eternity. Shelley. Palladium Want Ads Pay.
AN X HSO AN'O - ere . SHOES IN JAPAN. A Man Will Wear Out From Eight to Ten Pairs a Year. The shops and booths of Japan aro of unfailing interest. Here the greengro cer and fruit seller has arranged his wares till it seems as though one look-1 ed upon a great bouquet. There the flower shop blazes in brilliance and the j lantern maker squats at his multi- j colored task- At the next entrance we j nerhas see a man severing chicken ; meat from the bone, and he performs j the operation as skillfully as the surgeon with his dissecting knife. Beef and chicken are commonly sold in this fashion. Two or three paces farther on one is confronted with a typical Japanese shoe store. All the footwear of the lit tle brown man -is here on view. The! c-otn fwoodpn olotrsl and straw s.indala i are indeed a fanciful exhibition. They line the benches, the floors, the shelves. They hang from above and seemingly are everywhere, allowing the seller just about enough room to squat on his mat. The newcomer is at once startled at the immense quantity of this simple footwear and the many places where it is sold, but he soon finds a solution to his query when he hears that a Japanese man annually makes away with from eight to ten pairs. Christian Herald. SIZE OF WHALES. Length of the Biggest Ones and thi Height They Can Spout. A government official who has made a special study of whales states that the average length of a full grown sulphur bottom whale is just under ! eighty feet This estimate disregards I the exaggerated reports sometimes ! spread by sailors m and Is based on j actual measurements of many indi- j vidual specimens. There seem to be credible accounts of whales reaching a length of from eighty-five to ninety-! five feet but the authority quoted has never seen any of that size. Whales appear to grow with great rapidity, the length of yearlings being estimated at fromthirty to thirty-five feet How high can whales spout? Photographs taken by the scientist referred to give a means of measuring with some accuracy the height to which the water is thrown. This appears to be much less than it has often been sup posed to be. It Is claimed that even the great sulphur bottom whale on the averago spouts to a height of only fourteen feet, although occasionally the heisrht may be as much as twenty feet Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. A Just Beast. In the days when the late archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Frederick Temple, was master of Rugby he sentenced to expulsion a boy who was innocent of the offense charged against him. but who could not clear himself without exposing the real offender. The lad made up his mind to bear the punishment and wrote to his father saying that he was sure his family would rather have him expelled than know him to be a sneak. The father promptly sent the letter to Dr. Temple, calling attention to a postscript in which the boy said he wished the doctor to understand the matter and add ed. "Temnle is a beast but be is a Just beast" Itls on record that Ternpie did understand, and the boy was! not exrvellpd. Dr. Tenmle. trmm old man that he w.s, was always proud (
'S (VOTHHN' EITHER-A.Nd '
VARIED HIS VIEWS.
A Broad Minded Candidate and a Patient Constituent. Farmer Gordon was engaged for a fortnight to drive a political candidate about the county In his buggy. They traveled by day, each town being a stage, and the politician spoke every evening. The man was honest and well meaning, but careful local partisans had tried the temper of each community in advance and reported to him with suggestions. So. it happened that from his extreme anxiety to please his expressed conviction on the issue varied considerably from time to time. "Well. Mr. Gordon," said the candidate one day at the beginning of the second week, "how do you stand on the election? How are you going tc voter The farmer was silent, thinking. "I really don't know." he said. "I can tell better, maybe, at the close of our engagement." "Can't make up your mind yet You've heard all of my speeches." "Yes, and I like you personally, ana I'm hoping to get to vote for yon. Don't worry at least, not yet." "Not yet! Why do you say that?" nsked the puzzled candidate, "Well, you've had several points ol view, and I'm just waiting and thinking maybe before the end of the week you'll get round to mine too." Youth't Companion. A Striking Monument. Nowhere in the world can be found a more striking monument than that erected ou the shores of Lake IssyKul, in central Asia, in honor of the Russian General Prjevalski. a famous explorer of that region. The tomb Is hollowed out in the summit of a jutting cliff ou the eastern margin of the lake, and the monument consists of an enormous rough hewn block of gray granite, twenty-five feet high, over which is thrown a chart of centra! Asia. PETITION OF BANKRUPT FOR HIS DISCHARGE. In the matter of Edward F. Cutter, Bankrupt. No. 3479, in Bankruptcy. District of Indiana, ss: j On this 27th day of December, A. D. j 1912 on reading the petition ofthe ""-upi ior ins mscnarge, it. is oraerea dv tne court, tnat a hearing be had upon the same on the 11th day of February A. D. 1913, before said court, at Indianapolis, in said district, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and that notice thereof be published twice in the Palladium and Sun-Telegram, a newspaper printed in said district, and that all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be granted. And it is further ordered by the Court, that the clerk shall send by mail to all known creditors copies of said petition and this order, addressed to them at their places of residence as stated. WITNESS, the Honorable ALBERT B. ANDERSON, Judge of said Court, and the seal thereof at Indianapolis, in eaiu ui&LinL tin me iiiu uay oi nwi(,mh n ,Q, NOBLE C. BUTLER, (Seal of The Court) Clerk. , 31-6t
PALLADIUM Want Ads
Talk to the Tcvn T h rough The' Palladium 1c a word 7 days for the price of 5 Telephone Number 2566 WANT AD LOST Mall will be kept for 30 Cays only. All mail not called for within that time will be cast out Typewriter 2 L. R 1 WANTED WANTED All persons who desire to learn telegraphy to apply at the Richmond Business college. A class will be organized Monday night, January 13 if enough persons make application for it. This is your opportunity if you want to become a telegraph operator, but it will require prompt action on your part. For particulars. Phone or address Richmond Business College. 2-3t WANTED Sewing by the day. Ad dress "Sewing," care Palladium. 2-2t WANTED An experienced blacksmith. Inquire. Richmond Safety Gate Co. 2-2t WANTED A happy new year for all. Scott Hershey, Ph. D., will lead Evangelistic meetings at First Presbyterian church beginning Sunday, January 5. Bring your folks. 2-7t WANTED Boy to take ticket over 16 years of age. Inquire Murrette Theater. 2-lt WANTED Middle aged white woman to wash dishes. Inquire at City Restaurant. 2-2t WANTED Position on farm by an experienced maft Call or write 612 South E street. 3-2t WANTED To rent modern 7 or 8 room house, new or in good condl tion, east of 7th street and south of Main. Address "R." care of Pal ladium. 1-St WANTED Washing by a lady of experience. Work done right or money refunded. Will call and deliver free. Address "Experienced," care of Pal Iadium. - l-2t WANTED Washing. 1117 Butler St. l-2t FURNITURE and pianos carefully moved. Headquarters Shurley's livery. Phone 1536 or 2649. 30-7t WANTED Washings and ironings to do at home. Address Washwoman, care Palladium. 31-2t WANTED Some one to do housework or take care of invalid. I. H. Hoi lings worth, National Road West Phone 5126G. 31-2t Trimmers and painters wanted. A few good trim and paint shop work men, general upholBterers, backhangers, cushion makers, mold men, painters, stripers, etc. Reasonably constant employment and good wages to capable men. (Trouble.) Address Box 85, Detroit, Mich. 20-7t WANTED Child's beds. Phone 4431 27-7t WANTED One copy of October 20, 2 of December 8, December 1, November 24. Palladium. 24-tf WANTED Work on farm by man and" wife. Experienced, care Palladium. Address "Farm," 28-tf WANTED Intelligent men and women to write photoplays. $25 to $100 per plot. Literary experience unnecessary. Particulars free. Drop postal to Box 154 F. McKeesport, Pa. 17-2wks RAILWAY MAIL CLERK examination soon. Candidates coached free Franklin Institute, Dept 94 W, Rochester, N. Y. nov 8 to jap. 7 WANTED Your pictures to frame, grinding of all kinds, Baby cabs retired. Wo repair everything. Brown and Darnell. Phone 1936. 1-tf WANTED Money to loan on Gilt Edge Real Estate. Clear you 6 per cent. Sanford E. Henning, 205 North 8th street 19-tf FOR RENT FOR RENT325 S. 6th. -4 room modern flat. Call 2-3t FOR RENT Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 315 North A. 2-lt FOR RENT 3 large rooms up stairs. $8.00. Phone 2477. 10-tu-thur-sat-tf FOR RENT Furnished and bath. 1322 Main. rooms. Heat l-14t FOR RENTSouth 6th. -Modern 5 room flat. 301 31-2t FOR RENT Furnished room for gentleman. Light, heat and bath. 25 S. 7th St. Call after 6 p. m. 31-7t FOR RENT A room with or without board. 300 North 18th street. 30-7t FOR RENT o-room house, 79 John street. Phone 1345 30-tf FOR RENT S room Telephone 3105. modern nouse. 27-7t FORWENT 5 room house, 21s N. 2nd street 28-7t FOR RENT Sarah J. Clark property, 776 National Avenue, opposite Earlham -College, good house, 7 rooms, all in excellent repair. Inquire Dickinson Trust Co. - 6-tf
LETTER
FOR RENT Continued. FOR RENT Furnished rooms with steam heat, bath. Windsor hotel. 27-14t FORHrENT Furnished flat for light housekeeping. 105 North 4th street. 26 tf
FOR KENT House 8 rooms and lar$e barn. 131 S. 4th. Call O. D. Bullerdick. 309 S. B. 7-tf FOR -K EN T 3 "Targe rooms upstairs JSOO at Zl South 4th street. Phone 2477. 21 ti FOIiRE NT FurnUhed' room Uta htat and bath. C4 S. 12th street. 22 tf FOR R EN T 7 rooinT brick house ( u r Dace, bath and electric lights. 13S South 13th. lmuire 200 South 13th sireet. 12-tf FOR SALE PUBLIC SALE--:i miles north of Greeni'fork. Thursday, January V at 10 o'clock: head of horses, t! head of cattle, 45 head of hogs, general line of farm implements, manure spreader. De Iival Cream Separator, Sugar making outfit complete. Hay and straw in mow. Geo. Chamberlain. 2-4-7 FOR SALE Household goods, prac goods tically new. Must sell at once. Wayne Ave. 70 Ft 2-4! cook FOR SALE One gas range. stove, wood heating stove, coal heating stove. 41 S. 12th. Phone 2791. 2-lt TYPEWRITERS For sale or rent ; rib bons for any machine 60c. Schwenke Second National Bank Bldg., Phone 2709. 13-eod-tf FOR SALE Two black Manarche Spring Cockrels. $1.00 each. One Rhode Island Red Cockrel, $1.00. Twenty-five white Leghorn Cockrels. $.60 choice. All full blooded stock. Call or address Charles M. Shepherd. Vt mile south of Richmond on South 13th, Route 1. l-2t FOR SALE Jacket and fnr cape. 226 North 8th street. l-3t FOR SALE Stores, 249 S. 4th. 31-7t FOR SAL3 2Vi horse power gasoline engine. 297 Lincoln. Phone 3291. 31-tf FOR SALE Restaurant furniture. See Mrs. Runge, 314 North A, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. 31-7t FOR SALE Registered Jersey bull calf. J. H. 3Ialone, phone 5138-H. 30-3t . FOR SALE Good new stock of grooeries, in a good location. Doing 1,000 month business at 20 per cent profit. . Will Invoice around $1,200. Phone, 2768. 16-tf BUSINESS CLASSIFIED A. M. ROBERTS REAL ESTATECITY PROPERTIES AND TARJA3 Liberty Ave., R. R. 1. Phone 417L Office at Keys Harness Store, 616 Main street. Phone 2663. lfr-tf SEE MOORE OQBORN tor all kinds of Insurance, Bonds and Loans, Real Estate and Rentals. Room 16. I. O. O. F. Bldg. feb20-tt A. O. DERING, Auctioneer, Centerville, Ind. Phone or wrifp aug-eod-tf FOR SALE REAL ES TATE FOR SALE, REAL ESTATE Something good 8 room brick house, modern, near Math and 14th, $4,200. Is Cottages In Fairvlew, $1,050 to $1,250. Double. 11. inside. A colt, 7 months old color seal brown; Grand Sire sold for sixty-two thousand dollars. Would trade for a driver. PORTERFIELD, Kelly Bl'k. jan 1-2-3 RICHMOND PROPERTY a specialty at Porterfield's, Kelly Blk., 8th & Main. t! FOR SALE. 200 acres best low bottom farm In Wayne county. Fine improvements all around. $100 per acre. One mile, from railroad station. Ideal home. 40 acres all black, no waste, fine improvements, $100 per acre. 80 acre farm good location, all black, no waste, $100 per acre. 6 room house central location for $2.000. Wanted an 80 or 100 acre good farm, well located. 8 room house. 2nd square S. 12th street. So cheap it will make you feel queer. Five good business houses on Main. Modern brick; hot water plant, cellar with laundry, hard wood finish, 8 rooms. Rents for $25.00. All fine one and half squares Penn. Depot Ideal for roomers or boarders, $4,200. Modern house, good location, new, $1,650 on payments. 10 room brick house, furnace, electric light, both kinds waters, sewage, center t walks, 135x550, 2 acres. Ideal place in cify, you can almost steal it if bought at once. Wanted A 40 or 50 acre farm. Wanted A $3,000 house north of Main. We have several good business propositions for sale and trade. List your property with us for quick sale. A. BROOKS & C. E. SELL Room IS Kelly Block. Telephone 1203 7-tf TODAY 320 acres in the Garden Spot of Rush County, Indiana. The seeker of first class grain lands will be pleased to buy this farm. SEELNG will convince you that this is a bargain at $120 per acre. ARE YOU A BUYER FOR SOMETHING EXTRA GOOD IS THE FARM LINE? SEE THE J. E. M. AGENCY Over 6 North Seventh Street Richmond, Indiana 28-tf
FOR SALE REAL ESTATE Continued. FUNK & MILLER. SECOND NAT L BANK BLPG. PHONE 2766 SECOND FLOOR
THE NEW YEAR HAS COME lu a way the most of us have been' SUCCESSFUL durins the old year that has parsed away. Some of us more so than other?. Unfortunately some of the best things that pass our way are unnoticed until too late. Be WATCHFUL for our advertisements for NINETEEN HUNDRED and THIRTEEN. For among them there will 1 surely be some rare BARGAINS. To our old friends and clients of the !oi.l YEAR. To our NEW friends of the NEW YEAR; To the HUNDREDS; OF PEOPLE who read our advertise-j nients daily WE WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY' and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR. FOR SALE New six room house,' electric lights and bath. Both kinds of water. For terms and price see A. W. Gregg, Hoosier Store. 28 sat-wed-thurs-sat FO R S A LE SO "acres" good soil! 1 mile from depot. mile from school of months. 200 fruit trees., 2 houses, barn. silo, out buildinga. Easy terms $25 per acre. See l. D. Ramsey. $206 Phone 1940. North 13th or call 2 7t SANFORD E. HENNING 205 N. 8th Street . has 100 acres fine buildings level -land, new fences woodland $99 per . acre near Richmond. , Eight room brick. South 13th St, for sale at a bargain. 2-2t . LOST LOST Pocketbook containing $6.3S. Return to 226 S. 11th St Reward. 31-3t FOUND FOUND White kid glove. Call 407 & 11th. 2-21 9453 A Useful, Comfortable, and Simple Work Apron Ladies Apron, with or without sleeve, and in round or square neck outline. Gingham, Jean. Alpaca or Linen may be used for this modeL It, is cut in simple lines, in loose sack shape. It may be made with or without sleeves and collar, as illustrated. The mattern 1s cut in 3 sizes: Small. Medium and Large. It requires 4 yards of 36 inch material for the medium size. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10c in silver or stamps. Name Size Address The Sympathetic Watch. The sympathetic watch Is all very well, writes a correspondent, butthert are many who find that their watches ' can never be relied upon to behave regularly. Generally the wearer 1 found to be of a very nervous disposition, and It certainly looks as If this communicated itself to the watch. One Inherited by the writer, which had kept good time for years, immediately developed erratic tendencies when worn by him and has never got out of them. Only once for a brief space did a watch go regularly with him. It was a Swiss one. which had varied when worn In England, but kept accurate time on a Swiss holiday. And tie question was whether It was the wearer's temporarily braced nerve or the effect of its native air on the watch that did the trick. London Chronicle. The Happy Family Clreeb ?ther aod mother, sitteri and brother.. mmv rt to know one another' intimate affair, and -.4 little bowel and liver diatorbaacea aooa b 3iae boosehoid commeit 1 1 ia weU to remetn- k r that in coaatipattoo and indigestion, and 1 3r trowoi of the stomach. liver and bowels rroick core can be had by the nse ot Ur. CaldeU's 6 jrrop I-epiin. Take it tonifbt aad von , feel perfectly weD in the meraiBg. Prtoa wnlTMeesrtaaadSiatdracgistt.
