Richmond Palladium (Daily), 2 December 1901 — Page 8
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM MONDAY DECEMHER S. 1901.
I OUR CONSTANT AIM IS TO SELL THK BEST SOOOS I I ... IN THE MARKET ... I
How the World Moves Only a few years ago everybody bought coffee green and roasted it at home. Now how many persons will you meet who have never seen coffee in the green state? Coffee roasting and coffee blending has got to be quite an art. We will not tell you our coffees are "the best." Everybody lays claim to that distinction, and everybody cannot be right. All we ask is a trial, and if your purchase proves satisfactory, we feel sure that vour relations will be lasting ; if not, all the argument in the world would not prevail. GIVE US A TRIAL.
john f. McCarthy
u
MAIN ANB S. fOtb.
BEE HIVE GROCERY
HOES
1B3
CT'RTI BROTI! K Rs'
Canned Vegetables
EABLY JUNE PEAS MARROWFAT PEAS STRING LESS 15EAXS LIMA UEANS BAKED 15EAXS SUCCOTASH
BLUE LABEL CATSUP j
15 cents 2for25c
o 4 I 1
The superior quality of these goods is well known. When you want the best, try them.
TF TOC GET IT AT THE BEK HIVE. IT'S (jOOD.
W. E. HASTINGS
When Hunting for Bargains in COAL and SEWER PIPE The Pointer Iwill have The correct scent And the trail will Lead to
e'epho-e Mather Bros. Go.
Central Livery Stable. TJXDEB NEW MANAGEMENT. COACH SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY.
Prices on Coaches for Weddings and Parties made on application. Prices on Coaches for Funerals, J3.00 to any city cemetery. Price on Pall-bearer Coach, $4.00 to any city cemetery. We solicit a share of your patronage.
uuin riiuiica j
uli) asi
Gaar & Shurley, 12 and 14 N. 8th St.
AS OVEKTIKNKD
Caaes Cremation or Five In Our Family. Altoona. Pa, Dec. 2. Mrs. Mary C. Burk and her four children. Adam, aged 16 year. Mary, 13. Joanna. 11. and Joseph Vi -t-.r, 8. all burned to death at their home at George Station, near here, Sunday. Carl W. Burk, the husband, w-ts seriously burned about the back. Mrs. Burk and all the children except Adam retired at the usual hour Saturday night. Mr. Burk. -who was in Altoona, did not get home until late. The lamp was burning In the kitcnvn for him. Before he T.ent upstair he turned It low. A lunch was left on the kitchen table for Adam, who is a stage hand at the AliooLa opera house. It is not known what time Adm tame home. Mrs. Burk was awakened by a dense smoke in her room. Sne awoke her husband, who found the kitchen ablaze. Burks clothing was ignittd, but he rolled in the snow to extinguish the Games, lie then summoned the assistance of neighbors, but when ' they arrived there was no hope of saving the house or rescuing the inmates. Burk was sent away to a hospital, crazed with grief. The house was soon consumed and the bodies, charred and blackened, were recovered. One corpse could cot be distinguished irom the other. The general opinion is that Adam forgot to extinguish the light from the lamp when he retired, and that the lamp was in seme way upset, possibly by the family dog.
V1L,1 WKsr TACTICS
Bold Hold Ip In a Peaceful Ohio Town. Alliance. O., Dec. 2. Three desperadoes gave a display of wild west tactics here Sunday. They entered two houses, held up the inmates, held up seven persona on the street, and finally stole a horse and buggy with which they made their escape. The home of Mrs. Margaret Teeters was the first entered, where she and her son Carl were robbed of their Jewelry and $20. While one of the three men guarded the Teeters hom, two others entered the home of ex-Senator Silas J. Williams next door, but got nothing. They next tried to enter a saloon, but were met at the door by Lawrence Cavanaugb, who, though covered by several revolvers, shouted for help. Some young men who ran to Cavanaugh's assistance were covered by the revolvers of the highwaymen and made to give up what valuables they possessed. The trio then jumped into a carriage stolon from a livery and got away. The police immediately started on their trail, but found no trace of them.
l'ersrusoii Convicted. Jacksonville, Ills., Dee. 2. The jury in the case of William Webb Ferguson, charged with the murder of Dr. J. L. Barnes of Monticello by poisoning the doctor in Central hospital for the insane here last May. returned a verdict of guilty Sunday morning. Ferguson"s punishment will be 20 years in the penitentiary.
He (Jkii'. Keuiain. Manila, Dec. 2. Mr. Paterson, the Englishman acting as secretary to Sixto I.opez. Aguinaldo's agent, who refused to take the oath of allegiance to the United States when he landed at Manila, is awaiting deportation from the islands as a result of this refusal.
Bnller's Friends Turn Ont. London. Dec 2. It is estimated that at least 50,00' people were present at the demonstration in favor of General Buller :n Hyde Park Sunday. This makes it the biggest th'ng of Its kind which I.a - -furred for many year.
ISOLATION OF ACTORS.
Condition Which Make the Profession a World by Itaelf. This condition, which from some Important points of view is fortunate, from others unfortunate and from nearly all Inevitable. Is unique Indeed. Here we have the only large class of workers which keeps the world st arm's length. Clergymen, physicians, lawyers, architects, merchants, trades men and laborers of all sorts, by tha very terms of their toil are brought into constant personal contact with parishioners, patients, clients or customers. Even painters and sculptors must needs be in touch with their patrons. But that thin, impassable row of blazing lamps which rims the front of the stage accomplishes what the great wall of China was built to accomplish. Behind them is the sole "profession." In front of them the barbarous laity. If the player desired to brak down
rne parrtnoa. Bc' wck.IJ starvtHyable to do so. From the more Important social eath erlngs which take place tn tti- --; m both Mi-tress and actor are necessarily absent. The actor may vote if lie tun acquire a residence and contrive lo le In his own city on election !:,i but it is impossible that he should tsk? any active part in polities or participate In preliminary meetings, caucus es and rallies which are held at night, and as to attendance at church, the player encounters, in the first place, the difficulty. Inseparable from ti!s wandering life, of tuakisijr a conned len with a parish and. Is';de5. In ret-n years, is almost constantly required to travel on Sunday, passing from a S;it urday eveuing's performance In nn town to a Monday uiorniuj's rehearsal In another. Atlantic Monthly.
BEAVER TAIL SOUP.
A Michigan Lumber Camp Delicacy That A Biased a Mar? lander. "Although I am a Marylander and an Eastern Shore one at that." said an epicure from that state, "and consequently know what good things to eat are. I want to tell you that I'll have to take off my hat to the lumber camp cook of the upper Michigan peninsula as the discoverer, fabricator and dispenser of a dish that knocks the Eastern Shore cuisine silly. And that -rare lumber camp dish is beaver tail soup. "I was with Colonel Park of Colum bus, O.. deer hunting In the Rainy like region of Michigan one fall. We lived at a lumber camp boarding shanty. "There were signs of beaver at the upper end of the lake, and a trapper succeeded in trapping one of the wily dam builders. "When the beaver was brought Into camp, the camp cook went nearly wild, and so did the lumbermen wheu they heard the news, all because they had
been trying to trap a beaver for weeKS. not for it fur. but for its tail, as they were pining, they said, for beaver tail soup. "The cook took that broad appendage of the beaver, mailed like an armadillo, took from it the underlying bone and meat, and from it made such a soup as never came from any other stock at the beck of the most expert and scientific chef that ever put a kettle on. "We could do the same thing and perhaps better on the Eastern Shore, but we lack one thing. We haven't got the beavers to yield us their tails." New York Sun.
Winter is tlou Here
i and at such a time it often happens that rca ly cash is badly needed.
In such cases come to us at once. You can borrow money from us on your furniture, piano, team, ' fdx'urcs or Other personal property of value without removal. You can get any amount from $10 to JUX. You can get it on short notice. You can have from three to twelve months' time. You can pay it back weekly, monthly, quarterly, or as you may desire. You will have the use of both the money and the property. You will be trented courteously. You will receive honorable, satisfactory dealings. Your business will le strictly confidential. If you owe a balance to any furniture store we will advance you the money to pay them off. You can also j,et some additional money for other purposes, if yoo ish. Your payments iil lie so small that you will not feel them. You can also make loans on diamonds, watches and other valuables left iu pledge. We also make loans to salaried people who are permanently employed by reliable firms, on their personal note without security. -Civ Do not fail to call on us when in need of money. RICHMOND LOAX CO., ..XXTAULlSIIEl 1M5.
Rccm 8, Coloiial Building, 8. E. Cor. Main and 7th Sts. Home Phone 445.
Prsvldinjt For a Wayward Sob. Lord Chesterfield gave advice to dia son in sundry letters, which might or might not lie followed, but in his wili he took good care that "my godson. Philip Stanhope," should have strong Inducement to follow his advice on at least one point. All the bequests ere subject to tiie condition that if Philip should keep race horses or bounds or stay one night at Newmarket, "that In famous seminary of iniquity and i!l manners." during the course of the races there, or shoulii lose on any one day by betting or gaming as much as 500. then in such case he shall forfeit 3.000 to the dean and chapter of Westminster for every such offense. All the Year Uonnd.
Kaon Your Ovro Capacity. If the people about you are carrying
on their business or their benevolence at a pace which draws the life out of; you. resolutely take a slower pace; be called a laggard, make less money, ae- j complish less work than they, but be what you are meant to be and can be.! Yon have your natural limit of power as much as an engine ten horsepower! or twenty or a hundred. You are fit to do certain kinds of work, and you
need a certain kind and amount of fuel and a certain kind of handling. George S. Merriam.
Cbcy Stand fte Strain
Service
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of Active
Battels S'tviply Fastened L.zing Qjtlit-j of uhe'bnt ike
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E9 ?an fficfcl Crew?-; ? n.'if the Stylish Curies of Ltct f-c! . - t t- T-
TA0USER.
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CI ca a I a c Jewels. With the exception of pearls Jewel may be washed with warm water and pure soap. They should then be put in boxwood sawdust to dry. If this Is done, polishing will be unnecessary. As boxwood sawdust is very fine. It will not scratch, and ass it absorbs moisture rapidly it helps to give J-wela a high polish. It can be procured from
any dealer in jeweler's supplies or or-'
dered through a jeweler.
The GLOBE One Price Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters.
WIDUP & THOMPCON.
803 Main St
Those Foolish itoeaflOas! Benevolent Old Lady How old are you. sir? The Youngster Thirty-five. Benevolent Old Lady Bachelor? The Youngster Alas. yes. Benevolent Old 1-ady Ah. too bad. Flow long? New Y'ork Times.
Pnialal All Around. t)nnileigh It was an awful trial for me to m::ke that speech tonight. Mildmay Ion"t mention it. old boy; Just think what the rest of os suf fercd.
elS.
OW PRICES ON. FINE GOODS
Q
Bargain S ale on Carpets and Rugs This Week
Are showing the grandest selections of HOLIDAY LINENS and NOVELTI
Large size Satin Damask Towels, hemstitched or tricged. Landsome patterns, all new, at
50c
3-4 Jajge size Diriner Napkics, bttin damask, not CH aLd dainty ptttems, xcellei.t quality, at ..... OOiOU 72-inch nil linen eatin finish donble .Damask Nap- PI ff kirs to rratih all cLcice jatleiit, -rvcrth $1.25 OliUU
72-in. fine quality satin finish Damask match handsome cattems in dots.
exs and plain centers, worth $1.75, at
Napkins to
open Dora- vi tl
UllattJ
72-inch Cream Damask, in all the new designs, handsome patterns, a great bargain at- . -
48c
SPREAD BARGAINS.
S2.50
?:nlsr $300
Fine satin finished Spreads in choice patterns, jnst received, large size, at
Colored Spreads in ail th? newest colors, bines, lemon and reds, choice patterns
Appliqne and Lace Tidies new for Holiday trade. Pillow Shams, Dresser Scarfs, and Tabic Cove rs in Applique and Lace, just received at special prices.
L. M. JONES & CO., 717 TO 721 MAIN ST., RICHLM.ONB,
