Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 223, 28 July 1913 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELE GRAM, 'MONDAY, JULY 2S, 1913

All the Latest Sport News

TROPHY COP TO 0, S, Poor Old England Bows to America Again. (National News Association) WIMBLEDON, England, July 28. The Davis trophy, the most sought for cup in the tennis world will come back to America. The United States team, after beating the Australians in the preliminary games in New York last June and working their way up to the challenge grounds by defeating the German and ,Canadian teams in England, today won !the trophy for the United States by 'defeating the English defenders, j Maurice McLaughlin, the young Californian brought victory to his country by defeating C. P. Dixon in three straight sets in the single match today. The scores were 8-G, 6-2, 6-3. Although his service was faulty at the beginning today McLaughlin soon got into his stride and the American proved himself the master of the Englishman at all stages. BROOKLYN TAKES BOTH FROM CINCY CINCINNATI, O., JuJy 28. Brooklyn took both games of a double-header from the locals here yesterday, the first by a score of 7 to 4 and the second 8 to 1. In the first game Cincinnati used three pitchers, Herbert, a youngster, doing good work for the final three innings. Brooklyn, on the other hand, used two, Curtis, who relieved Ragon, holding Cincinnati safe. Heavy hitting by both teams marked the game. In the second contest Rucker had Cincinnati at his mercy at all times, while Benton for Cincinnati was hit hard and often. Groh was ordered off the field by Umpire O'Day following an argument. Cutshaw obtained two singles, a double and a home run out of five times at bat in this game. Brooklyn's fielding was sensational. Scores: FIRST GAME Brooklyn 0 0 1 0 0 6 0 0 0 7 Cincinnati 02100001 04 Runs Moran, Cutshaw 2, Wheat, Fisher, Miller, Kirkpatrick, Hoblitzel, Groh 2, Kling. Two-base hits Fisher, Stengel, Groh. Three-base hit Kling. Home run Cutshaw. Hits Off Ragou, 9 in 5 innings; off Curtis, 4 in 4 innings; off Ames, 9 in 5 2-3 innings; off Brown, 4 in 1-3 inning; off Herbert, 1 in 3 innings. Stolen bases Cutshaw, Meyer 2, Groh, Fisher, Tinker, Moran, Double plays Wheat to Miller to Cutshaw; Fisher to Daubert, 2. Left on bases Brooklyn, 8; Cincinnati, 9. Bases on balls Off Ragon, 3: off Ames, 1. Hit by pitcher By Curtis, Bates. Struck out By Ragon, 3; by Ames, 2; by Herbert, 1; Passed ball Miller. Time 1:52. Umpires O'Day and Emslie. SECOND GAME Brooklyn 10 5 00010 18 Cincinnati 10000000 01 Runs Moran, Cutshaw 3, Meyer, Wheat, Daubert, Smith, Bates. Threebase hits Miller, Meyer, Smith. Home run Cutshaw. Sacrifice fly Daubert. Stolen bases Cutshaw, Meyer. Double plays Smith to Cutshaw to Daubert; Hoblitzell to Egan. Left on bases Brooklyn, 6; Concinnati, 1. Bases on balls Off Rucker, 1. Struck out By Rucker, 4; by Benton. 2. Time 1:37. Umpires O'Day and Emslie. BASEBALL NUTS If Evers and Bresnahan and down-in-the-mouth over pennant prospects, how is Artie Phelan? Murphy couldn't say, but Agnew. BOUT IS ARRANGED. LOST ANGELES, July 28. A twentyround bout has been arranged between Johnn Dundee of New York and Jack White of Chicago, light weights, for August 12. WATSON VS. BURNS. OAKLAND, Cal., July 28. Red Watson and Frankie Burns have been matched to box ten rounds at the Wheelmen's club here on August 12. They are light weights. Burns recently stopped Watson in the ninth round of a twenty-round bout. BUILDING A RAILROAD. What It Means When the Contractors Begin Operations. With the right of way established, great army of men enter into the Beld. The company does not build its Own road. It is turned over to contractors and Is usually let in sections of rroin 200 to 300 miles. The contractor must lire up to certain specifications, just as though he were building a house, and he furnishes everything men. teams, machinery, food and nsaterial. Few people realize what this means. A contractor must be very near to a king. For instance, there is the Hazelton ection in the mountains. It Is less than :X)0 miles in length. Before a ingle shovel or pick was engaged in the building of this section the contractors had to equip themselves with a fleet of steamboats at a cost of $200,KX. They had to build scores of camps at from $2,000 to $4,000 a camp. Each of these centers had to be stocked with provisions, supplies and materials almost before a builder was brought in. Before these contractors moved a shovelful of earth or fired a ingle blast they had spent over $6,OO.OOOl Each contractor's camp is like a mall city, with its stores, hospital, scores of sleeping shacks, kitchens, dining rooms, warehouses and barns. Jameg OUTerjCqrwood. In Leslie's.

LEAGUE STANDING

NATIONAL LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. New York 62 27 .697 Philadelphia 51 34 .600 Chicago 47 44 .516 Pittsburg 45 44 .506 Brooklyn 42 43 .494 Boston 38 50 .432 St. Louis 26 55 .396 Cincinnati 35 59 .372

Yesterday's Results. Brooklyn, 7-8; Cincinnati, 4-1. Chicago, 6; Boston, 5. New York, 2; St. Louis, 1. Called in seventh. '4 V Games Today. Philadelphia at Pittsburg. Boston at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. New York at St. Louis. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 65 28 .699 Cleveland 56 38 .596 Washington 54 39 .581 Chicago 51 47 .520 Boston 44 46 .489 Detroit 40 58 .408 St. Louis 38 61 .384 New York 29 61 .223

Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled. Games Today. St. Louis at Washington. Detroit at Philadelphia. Cleveland at New York., Chicago at Boston. CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Grand Rapids 65 31 .677 Fort Wayne 50 45 .526 Springfield 47 48 .495 Terre Haute 45 50 .474 Dayton 44 53 .454 Evansville 35 59 .372 Yesterday's Results. Evansville, 12-1; Dayton, 1-0. Fort Wayne, 9; Terre Haute, 4. Grand Rapids, 9; Springfield, 7. Games Today. Fort Wayne at Springfield. Terre Haute at Evansville. Grand Rapids at Dayton. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Pet. Milwaukee 63 40 .612 Louisville 55 45 .550 Minneapolis 54 46 .540 Columbus 54 47 .535 Kansas City 49 53 .480 Toledo 45 55 .450 St. Paul 44 54 .449 Indianapolis 37 60 .381 Yesterday's Results. Indianapolis, 2-4; Columbus, 1-2. Last game eight innings. Kansas City, 8; Milwaukee, 2. Toledo. 3-3; Louisville, 1-5. St. Paul, 3-Minneapolis, 2. Games Today. Louisville at Indianapolis. Toledo at Columbus. ; Kansas City at Milwaukee. Minneapolis at St. Paul. FEDfKAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Indianapolis 45 32 .584 Cleveland 42 33 .560 Kansas City 37 36 .507 Chicago 36 38 .486 St. Louis 35 38 .4S6 Pittsburg 30 47 .390 Yesterday's Results. Cleveland, 11; Indianapolis, 1. Chicago, 12; Kansas City, 5. Pittsburg-St. Louis, wet grounds. Games Today. No games scheduled. 1 HOT LINERS I OFF THE BAT Ty Cobb and Joe Jackson are running neck and neck for the slugging honors in the American league. The Georgia Peach has closed up the gap on the shoeless one and from now on it will be a battle to the finish. It looks as if Rube Marquard is going to try and beat his record of 19 straight games made last season. The $11,000 star annexed his ninth straight yesterday and is pitching in better form than he was a year ago. In a sea of mud the Giants and St. Louisans battled for 7 innings with the Giants on the long side of the score. Then the deluge came and the game was called. The second part of the double-header also had to be called off. The Dodgers are trying hard to get back in the first division. They shoved the Reds back twice yesterday and a victory today with a defeat for the Pirates will put the teams on even terms at the foot of the leading four. Bert Gardner of the Roanoke club established a Virginia league record when he pitched two shutout games against Newport News. He is the first pitcher in the league to start and finish two full games. The Cotton State league pennant race has been won by Jackson. The deciding of a number of protested games against Pensacola did not beat that team out of the pennant as the club had the bunting cinched. Catcher Agnew of the St. Ixuis Americans, is rapidly improving from the effects of being hit by a pitched ball during one of the Washington games. He will be out of the game, however, for several weeks. Hess' wildness and opportune hitting by the Cubs gave them a close victory over the Browns. Zimmerman returned to the game for the first time since his ankle was injured and displayed his oldtime speed and hitting.

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SPORTING NOTES (National News Association) SAN FRANCISCO, July 28. San Francisco will be the western terminus of the Lincoln coast-to-coast highway. This is one of the results of the tour of the Indiana automobile men who reached Oakland yesterday, and who will come to San Francisco today. Carl G. Fisher, the man who conceived the idea of the Lincoln highway, vice president of the Lincoln Highway association, and whose word will carry more weight in the decision of the committee, said on this point today: "The terminus of the Lincoln coast-to-ooast highway, to be selected by a committee chosen by subsccrobers to the highway fund, will undoubtedly be San Francisco. "The natural terminus of all routes leading toward the setting sun is the Golden Gate. This doesn't mean, however, that Los Angeles will be left out of the calculation entirely. It is planned at present to make the town of Big Pine in the Sierras the portal to California." LOS ANGELES, July 28. All is set for Tuesday night's twenty-round boxing contest here between Leach Cross and Matty Baldwin, each of the lads eagerly awaiting the bill. The training grind is over. Cross announces that he will weigh 135 pounds when he boxes Baldwin. With over two thousand spectators on hand to cheer him through, his final workout at the Doyle camp in the afternoon, Cross boxed six rounds. The New Yorker skipped through eighteen minutes of exhibition work and appeared to be perfectly satisfied with his condition. Baldwin also entertained a big gathering of admirers at his camp. His work consisted of the regular ring routine of nine rounds of boxing as a round-up. LOS ANGELES, July 28. Eager to nail down Ad Wolgast to his offer a $2,500 side bet for a return match Willie Ritchie today is making a desperate effort to get the former titleholder to meet him today and sign articles. On Saturday Wolgast Tosted with James J. Jeffr ies $1,000, part of a $2,500 side bet in a twenty-round title contest wiht Ritchie. Wolgast specified that half is to go that he will win from the title-holder in twenty rounds, the other half that he knocks out, stops or forces' Ritchie to quit inside of the limit. Ritchie lost no time in accepting the offer when he learned that there was seriousness to Ad's movements, and he asked Jeffries to affect a meeting between he and Wolgast for this afternoon in the hope that articles might be signed. Ritchie leaves here for San Francisco Wednesday afternoon, and he would like to close the match before starting. Should the pair come together they will clast either September 1 or 9. PARIS, July 28. Jack Johnson, the colored pugilist, was given an ovation the other night when he attended as a spectator of a series of boxing bouts, and was compelled to enter the ring and make a speech. The black champion has purchased another automobile and after complet ing a 12-night engagement at the Folios Bergeres, where he will meet a French heavyweight each night, is to leave for a tour through France, Belgium and Russia. After his tour he intends to return to Paris and train for fights. His manager, Leon See, says Johnson is not worrying over the forfeiture of his bail in the United States, as the negro never expects to return to America. SAN FRANCISCO, July 28. Sam Langford and Joe Jeannette have been matched to box twenty rounds in Los Angeles on September 29. Langford, accompanied by his wife and baby, his manager, Joe Woodman, and Jack Read, the Australian light weight, will leave here today for the East. Langford wants to visit his relatives whom he has not seen for several years, before going into training for his bout with Jeannette. LOS ANGELES, July 28. Leach Cross and Matty Baldwin have prac tically finished their work, but will stage extensive boxing programs to morrow afternoon for the benefit of the hundreds of spectators, who are expected to visit the Vernon and Venice quarters. Cross and Baldwin meet next Wednesday night in a scheduled twenty-round bout before the Pacific A. C. at Vernon. Among the ring celebrities who will be present upon this occasion are Light-weights cham pion Willie Ritchie; the former title holder. Ad Walgast; Johnny Dundee, Jack White, Jess Willard and "Bud" Anderson. NEW YORK. July 2S. Ed Sweeney, the big catcher of the Yanks, who has been out of the ?ame for some time on account of an injured finger, won $50 Saturday by hitting the '-Bull" ! sign in right field with a fairly batted j ball. This is the Irst time the feat has been accomplished since the new Brush stadium was built. The Quest of Health. "I suppose you take excellent care of your health ?' "No," replied Farmer CorntosseL "I tried every kind of medicine I could get hold of for awhile. Then I gave up and forgot about my health, and I've felt better ever since." Washington Star. Generous. "Man, how you do look! Why, yoa have a full beard." "Yes; I have raised it for a birthday present for my wife." Ulk. One thorn of experience is worth a whole wilderness of warning. Lowell.

FARMERS TOO BUSY TO BRINGJN HOGS Number Sold to Stolle Plant Last Week Was Below the Average. The number of hogs bought at the Stolle packing house during the past week was somewhat be4ow the average, owing to the fact that farmers are to busy to bring in live stock at this time. The number of cattle and calves was an average. Stock bought during the weak was a follows: Hog6. From Dan Kitchell 12 From J. W. Haustetter 21 From Harmon Kuhlman 12 From Dan Shendler 29 From Ben Kuhlman 45 Cattle. From Nick Smelser 7 From O. N. Long 4 From J .11. Kelley 5 Calves. From J. H. Kelley 5 From Herman Osterman 1 From J. H. Shempler 1 From O. N. Long 2 From A. D. Austin 2

IMITATION PEARLS. They Are Made With Essence d'Orient, a Fish Scale Product. As the real pearl comes from the oyster, so to a larye extent is the manufacture of artificial pearis dependent on a certain species of fish. The complete processes of manufacture are, of course, trade secrets, but it is interesting to know that it is from the brilliant scales of the nblet, or blay, that essence d'orient is produced, as with this essence imitation pearls are made. The blay is a small fish with a green back and a white belly, and the essence is obtained exclusively from its white scales, which are covered with a pigment of metallic appearance. They i are first treated with ammonia and then with fish glue, a powder being first obtained and then a paste which can be easily spread on glass. In the early stapes of pearl manufacture, about 1656. this essence d'orient was applied to little balls of plaster, but the temperature and the damp heat of the human body modified the adhe sive qualities of the pearly matter and j caused cnanges or color, in ltssu a Parisian named Jacquin invented a method of covering small glass balls with this essence, thereby producing the first practical artificial pearl. .In the north and east of France and in Germany blay fishing is actively pursued. About 4,0X) are required to produce a pound of scales, which in turn gives a quarter of a pound of essence. New York Tress. WINDOW GLASS DECAYS. It Gets So Brittle In Time That It May Be Cut With Shears. It is generally supposed that glass is practically Immortal. But it has been demonstrated that glass exposed to the elements will decay and in time become so rotten that it is worthless. Window glass exposed to the heat nnd cold and varying winds will, after a number of years, become so brittle that it can be cut with a pair of shears. It Is said that light and darkness have different effects on glass, and this alternation alone will cause it to become fragile and in time worthless. It is almost impossible to remove old windows from a building without breaking many of the panes of glass. New glass can be handled with much more carelessness. There is a certain elasticity to new glass that leaves glass which has faced the weather for a number of years. Street fakers who travel throughout the country selling scissors will obtain a lot of old window glass and show the crowds how wonderfully their ! shears will cut by clipping off strips ( of the glass just as a person would ! cut paper, when in fact the feat is i due to the fact that the glass is actu ally rotten. Harper's Weekly. Many Names of the Thames. The Thames has been the cause of much controversy. Its name has been variousfr stated as Tameses, Tamese, Tamises (at the juncture of the Isisl and Tame, near Dorchester), Tamisa.j Tamesa, Thamisia, Thamesls and finally Isis (where it flows between the Ox-1 fordshire and the Buckinghamshire shores. Thus at Oxford it is still often called the Isis until it receives the shallow river Tame just below Dorchester, from which point it is called Thames. Historians trace this error to an early attempted division of the Latin word Tamesls into two word. Tame esisr or Tame isis, suggested perhaps by the existence of the Tame in Buckinzhamshire. The Saxons called it the Thames, ancient maps and documents designating it Thamesis Fluvius. From "In Thamesland." A Pioneer Tourist. Thomas Pennant was the great pioneer of the tribe of tourists. He discovered Scotland. Ireland and the Isle of Man, taking with him a tame Welsh artist of genius to illustrate his travels. "I have had the hardihood," he wrote in 1771, "to venture on a journey to the remotest part of north Britain." So alluring was the account of hi6 exploration that the country has ever since been inundated with southern visitors. Of Ireland he was able to make only an imperfect report, because of the "conviviality" of the people, and of the Isle of Man his impressions have perished. Pennant corresponded with Linnaeus and met Voltaire, whom he found to be a "master of English oaths." London Standard. Harvard Then a College of Children. In 1S5, when elected president of Harvard, the Rev. Increase Mather refused to resign the pastorate of the North church in Boston for the sake of "forty or fifty children." Therefore he used to ride back and forth from Boston to Cambridge, charging to the college the cost of shoeing and baiting his horse and mending his saddle. Many of these students were but twelve or thirtoea years od.

Can Huerta Hold His Position?

- - .vicivrv ft

President Vietoriano Huerta. whose administration as head of the more or less tottering government in Mexico is believed to be drawing rapidly near to a disastrous ending. The man who. betrayed the slain president, Francesco Madero, is beset on all sides with revolutionists, who are continually plotting to bring about his downfall.

LATE MARKET NEWS NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Correll and Thompson, I. O. O. F. Bids. Phono 1446. Am. Can 33 Ami. Copper 71 Am. Smelters . 64 U. S. Steel . . .. ... ... .. 59 Atchison .. . . .. . . 99 St. Paul . . (J"! ..106 Gt. No. Pfd 126 Lehigh Valley 150 N. Y. Central 98 Ti No. Pacific 110 Pennsylvania .. ..' .. ..114 Reading 162 So. Pacific 93 Union Pacific 150 33 70 64 59 99 106 126 151 99 110 114 162 93 150 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT. Open Close July ... ..84 85 Sept. ..86 86 RDec. ..89 89 CORN. July .., 62 62 Sept 62 63 Dec 59 60 OATS. July .. .... .:; .". 39 39 Sept. .. .,' 40 40 Dec 42 42 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, July 28. Hog receipts 47,000; market 5 to 10c lower; mixed and butchers $8.60 to $9.40; good heavy 58.80 to $9.40; rough heavy $8.45 to $8.80; light $9.10 to $9.50; pigs $8.05 to $9.20; bulk $8.85 to $9.25. Cattle Receipts 18,000; market strong to 10c higher; beeves $7.35 to $9.20; cows and heifers $3.25 to $8.40; stockers and feeders $6.25 to $7.90; Texans $6.75 to $8.15; calves $9.25 to $11.00. Sheep Receipts 26,000; market steady; native and western $3.25 to $5.40; lambs $5.50 to $8.25. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, July 28. CattleSupply 4,200; market 6teady; choice beeves $8.50 to $9.00; tidy butchers $7 to $8; veal calves $11.50 down. Sheep and lambs Supply 11,000; market higher; prime sheep $6.60; lambs $7 down. Hogs Receipts 5,000 head; market active; prime heavies $9.40 to $10; pigs $9.20 to $10. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK INDIANAPOLIS, July 28 HogsReceipts 2,000; market 5 cents higher; tops $9.55; bulk of sales $9.45 to $9.55. Cattle Receipts 650; choice steers $8 to $8.70; other grades $6 to $7.90. Sheep and lambs Receipts 250; market steady; prime sheep $4.25; lambs $7.25 down. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, July 28. Wheat, cash No. 2 red 86; corn, cash No. 3 white 68; oats, cash No. 2 white 41. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, July 28. Wheat cash 88; corn 66; oats 42;- cloverseed $8.35. RICHMOND MARKET PRODUCE (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper.

phone 2577.) Old hens, per lb 15c Old hens -(dfe saedj per lb.... 15 to 18c Young chjcknj3er lb 18 to 20c Towff chickens Cdr eased) per lb. .2c

Eggs, per dozen 16c Country butter, per lb 20 to 25c

GRAIN MARKET (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019). Wheat, per bu 80c Oats, per bu 30c New oats, per bu 30c Corn, per bu 60c Rye, per bu 40c Bran, per ton $24.00 Middlings, per ton $26.00 LIVE STOCK (Corrected daily by Anton Stolle, phone 1316). Choice veal calves, per lb.... 9 to 10c HOGS. Primes (average 200 lbs) per 100 lbs $9.10 Heavy mixed, per 100 lbs. $7.50 to $7.55 Rough, per 100 lbs $.00 to $7.00 CATTLE. Choice steers, per lb 7c Butcher steers, per lb 7c Cows, per lb 2c to 6c Bulls, per lb 5c to 6c WAGON MARKET (Corrected daily by Omer Whelan. phone 1679). Corn, per bu 60c Oats, per bu 35c Timothy hay, per ton, old $15.00 Timothy hay, new, per ton $11.00 Clover hay, new $8.00 Rye straw '. $6.00 Oats or wheat straw $5.00 Bran $24.00 M idlings $26.00 New oats 32c Spelling by Ear. The young French stenographer, whose progress in English had not kept pace with her proficiency in shorthand, was puzzling over some notes she bad taken of a recitation at a public entertainment. As she transcribed tbem the recitation began like this: 1a fanthl wurlaf swidbeu. Out p&nju oul pelone. "That's easy," said the expert to whom she submitted the notes. "It is part of a poem that begins: "Laugh and the world Uufrhs with you. Weep and you weep alone." Chicago Tribune. The Very Worst. Schoolmistress Now, tell me the truth. Johnny Jones. You know what will happen if you tell a lie, don't you? Johnny Jones Yes. ma'am; I'll go to a bad place. Schoolmistress Yes, and that isn't the worst of it. You'll also be expelled from school. Palladium Want Ads Pav.

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IILHL. LulHIL II1LII HULO CONVENTION! More Than 1,000 Delegates 1,200 Mile Trip Is Planned. (National News Association) . WINNIPEG. Man. July 2S With more than 1,000 delegates in attendance. the sixth annual convention of the National Association Real Eetat Exchanges opened here today. The convention was railed to order in the hall of the Industrial Bureau. This la the first time that the association has held a convent ion outside the United States. Elaborate arrangements haTe been made by the Winnipeg Board for the entertainment of the visitor. One of the feature will be a trip westward in special cars of more than 1.2P0 miles, coverirp a period of three days. The trip ill include visits to the cities of Saskatoon. Moose Jaw. Retina and Brandon, returning to Winnipeg by August 3. The association includes seventy real estate exchanges in all of the principal cities of the United States and six exchanges in Canada. The organization was launched in Chicago in 190S and the first convention was held in Detroit in June 1S09. The 1910 convention was held In Minneapolis, the 1911 convention in Denver and the 1912 convention in Louisville. ALLAH'S HUNDREDTH NAME. Only the Camel Knows It; He no the Sneer on It Face. The 090 widows of the mosque of Sultan Selim remind one of the ninetynine names of Allah. These ninetynine names, the Arab say. are writte In the palms of the bands of all true believers. The explanation la interesting, and even an unbeliever can teat it. The Arabic numeral 8 Is written like n inverted V of the English alphabet. By holding up your left hand, with the thumb and fingers beat sligltly inward the lines of the palms will be seen to take the form of a rough Al. which makes the Arabic figures 81. Placinc the right band under the left In the same way makes the flfuras IS (1M). The total is 00. There ought really to be 100, but the hundredth is lost to every creature but one. Why does the camel wear snch a supercilious expression? The heavy pendulous under Up and the snarling curl of the upper give an expression of sneering contempt which can hardly be equaled In the brute creation. No wonder. The camel alone knows the hundredth name of Allan, and be won't tell It Manchester Guardian. Consider tho Dew. The question is often asked. Does the dew rise or fall? Dewfall is as admissible an expression as sunrise or sunset. In both cases the expression la at variance with scientific fact. Meteorologically, the formation of dew is not accompanied by motion In the vertical plane, hence there can be no question of rise or fall. Under certain conditions of wind, cloud and temperature variants dew Is produced. Warm air charged with moisture comes In contact with a cooler surface. When la this contact the beat is subtracted from the air and the saturation point for that temperature la reached, the moisture, which la the air baa existed as water vapor. Is condensed upon the cooler surface at the point of contact. The dewdrop, also good English, although false physics, has no existence in the air, but comes Into being upon the surface bedewed. It does net fall nor does it drop. Harper's. Like a Hen's Toe. The back to the soilers know all about farming before they tackle It. But their hired men. having been born on the farm, are often silly about the real science of agriculture, nave you beard about what Innny Toung'a factotum told him about the new bone? No? Then listen. "That boss you bought baa came," announced the servitor. "Ah," cried Danny; "I'm glad of that! Is he rightr "Fine." ' TIow are bis teeth? We must always look at a horse's teeth. An bit teeth all right?" "Bose. his teeth are as perfect and sound as a newborn babe's." "Fine! I have a bargain, by hen!" ' fl.i. and rlfn IiaaIap Umbrellas and Parasols Repaired and Covered. . . M WM. II. DUNING, 43 N. 8th St.

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