Richmond Palladium (Daily), 12 October 1904 — Page 8

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RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 12, 1904.

D ' D O

Some Very Pretty SILKS.

20 pieces Fancv Silks jus; received. Good value at half a dollar. On s lie at 48c 10 pieces 27 inch Fancy Silks worth $1.00. On sile at 75c. '27 inch Changeable Taffeta Silks so very desirable. On eale at UOc. Guaranteed Black Taffeta worth $1.00. On sale at 75c. 36 inch Black Peau DeSoie Silk, regular $1 50 value. On sale at $1.25. STYLISH GARMENTS IN OUR CLOAK DEPARTMENT. Our garments are exclusive. There are hardly two alike. They were bought for those who do not care to have their cloaks and suits djuplioated. Doa't fail to visit our Cloak Department.

Fall Clothing

NEW

For Men and Boys

He 4c t

LOEHR & KLUTE .725 MAIN STREET

The Best Place To Buy

IS

C3A1TMEIRI, (SCRIPS. ... PHONES 49. Brancli Yard, 39 6. 611iPfioiie 516. "

Executes All Manner of Trusts.

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V Acts as EXECUTOR, ADMINISTRATOR, GUARDIAN, TRUSTEE, Xt RECEIVER, Etc. Wills kept In our Safety Vault Free of Charge t Consultation on Estate ? Matters Invited

4

Silver 6:

A POP

mm b

The new season's silks are very attractive and the prices we quote makes silk-selling easy.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX -X-X- X X X X X X X XX The handsome new browns are in highest favor, and we have them in a multitude of vari -ties, covering practically all the new .styles that have been brought out, and which fashion says are right $10 TO $20 Cbi'dren's clothing of every description. A complete and varied stock, , comprising many fabrics and several exclusive novelties. . S3 TO $6 AT

Has the purchasing power of a gold certificate simply because Uncle Sammy stands back ol it - . . - OUR BIG SUIT BARGAINS Are great values, and we stand back of them with our guarantee as to fit, wear and permanency of color - , . V Suits from $6.48 up. We can please you. Call and see. Webrley & Thomas, Furnishers 418 N. 8th and 203 Ft. Wayne ave.

LOCAL BREVITIES.

Dr. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. Take the Dayton & Western cars x the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now spen. tf Moore the real estate man, over 8 North Seventh street has several houses for rent. Go and see him today. E. A. Dickinson, north seventh street, returned from Chili, Ind., where he has been with a fishing partjv He reports a good time. On Wednesday evening the ladies of the Fifth Street M. E. ehurch will have a measuring Social with program and refreshments. ll-2t. Typewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines Tyrell, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. Bernard Knollenberg reported to the police yesterday afternoon that some one had stolen his wheel while it was standing in front of the Garfield School building. If troubled with a weak digestion try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will do you good. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co., W. H. Sudhoff, fifth and Main streets. ENGAGEMENT IN PROGRESS (Continued From First Page.) ing him a slight superiority in numbers. .The Russian advance had a marked effect on the London stock exchange yesterday. Russian imperial 4s gained one-quarter of 1 per cent., to 9212, Avhile Japanese old 5s went down 1 per cent., at 854, and the new 5s at 83, and 4s are one-half of 1 per cent, lower on reported Russian victories. St. Petersburg, October 12. A battle upon which the fate of this year's campaign in Manchuria depends seems only a few days ahead. Advices from the front are meager. All that is positively known officially is that General Kuropatkin has about-faced his army and is marching against the enemy. According to unofficial reports Field Marshal Ovama, at the first sign of General . Kuropatkin -m taking the offensive, began drawing in his line and concentrating upon fortified positions north of Liao Yang. Aceord ig to the latest reports from Mukden, dated at 6 o'clock last evening, the Japanese outposts are being driven in all along the line. All surmises as to where General Kuropatkin intends is strike are mere guesswork. It is not clear whether General Kuroptakin contemplates a blow on the left, or right of the Japanese army, but the fact that stress is laid upon the capture of Bentsiaputze, which opens the road and fords .to liensfihu, twenty miles east of Liao Yang, where General Kuroki crossed and that Cossacks are ah-eady reported in the neighborhood of the stream, might foreshadow an exact reversal of the battle of Liao Yang this time the Russian commander flanking and turning Liao Yang with his left, as Field Marshal Oyama did with his right. Building Permits. Building permits have been "issued to William Eloff, for a frame house at South Ninth and H streets, to cost $500, and to W. H. Braughman, for a frame house on Northwest Third street, to cost $1,000. The Maker of a Will often wishes to secure the advantage of the special knowledge of his wife, attorney or friend pertaining to the settlement of his affairs. This need not deter him from appointing Dickinson Trust Co. as EXECUTOR, for it will act in connection with such friend, consuling him in all matters pertaining to the estate, at the same time relieving him of the responsibility and details of management. Your own attorney will be retainedWe will be glad to eonsult on this and other matters free of charge Safety Deposit Vaults.

JUST BEFORE

BREAKFAST A FEW ITEMS THAT ARE EAS ILY DIGESTED. ARE PREPARED ESPECIALLY For People Who Eat Hurriedly and Chew Their Food on tie Way to Their Work. When a woman does not want a thing she can say "No" without the least bit of previous practice. Graduates from a cooking school are surprised to discover how much they can learn by a post-graduate course in their mother's kitchen. Misery loves company, but not by any means with the passionate regard of a theatrical manager. Single men are beginning to wonder if the girls really know it is leap year. 4C- ' The continued sprightliness of a gas meter is surprising, considering the amount of work that it does. J - -XA fiisherman's union would hardly be a success, for no one would want to be the walking delegatev . - A campaign spellbinder talks so impressively that at first one is half inclined to think that he almost believes what he says. .V. -V. it. fc Green goods are only disposed of to suckers who are ripe. - -K -XTo see the greatest grandeur one must first climb the mountain side. f The older a man gets, the steeper he finds the ladder,. to. the .hoymow, ,Th baker,,;never gets round-shouldered carrying the holes in his doughnuts. ;, , , . . -. --.I..: ' ' ' ' . iA man is mighty smart, but he can not make a, noise like, a woman when escaping from a mouse. , . The heart of many a man is in his poeketbook. That is why, frequently it is so hard to touch the heart. Some men wear earbobs so they can't hear the bums ask them for a dime. At a recent wedding a bystander remarked: "She don't look good to me. If she had her debts paid she couldn't wear such nice clothes. She owes everybody in town. I'll never get married if I have to do so on bor rowed jewelry She's wearing her sister's rings, The telephone girl was passing a cornfield and got shocked. She thought she had a corn-er on the whole business. -V- VA Beeause a man goes to church is no sign he's a Christian. Not any more than it's the sign that a man's a good reader when he's only looking at the pictures in a book. : -XPolicemeen are hard to beat. fSIf the members of the metropolitan polic force in Richmond didn't have to report by telephone every hour, what would they do? Who said they would go to sleep somewhere? .M. .V. M. - What's the difference between a winter and a summer street car in Richmond? Only two guesses. Two colored men, both as blank as ink, were arguing today as to the relative merits of the earning capacity of each. One remarked that his work would stand the test. "So will mine," responded the other. '"Why, what do you do," enquired Xo. 1. "I didn't know you worked." "Oh, yes," responded No. 2, "I eat free lunch in a saloon." LOU DILLON Queen of Trotters Shows Remarkable Mile in Workout.. Memphis, Tenn., October 12. Lou Dillon, C. K. G. Billing's queen of the trotting turf, broke the record here yesterday for a mile with a run-

Richmond Shoe Co. Eighth and Main. Clias. II. Feltman Geo. W. D cuter

Krippendorf's hand turn and Goodyear welt Shoes combine more style, comfort and wearing qua ity lhan any other shoe at the Aft price wOiUU

Krippendorf's f 3 50 Shoes are easily worth selling them at..

We have the best, most stylish and complete line of $2.00 shoes in the ff city. In patent leather, boy; calf or vici you'll find no better at . . v(UU

We have a splendid Ladies' Shoe at ning pacemaker in front of her, she encircled the track of the Memphis Trotting Association in 2:01ViTanner drove the pacemaker, and at all times kept his horse by the side of the flying mare. The fractional time for the distance was :30, 1 :00, 1:29, 2:0iy2. Previously to the work done by Lou Dillon the record for the distance under the circumstances was held by Major Delmr, who made the mile at Lexington two seconds slower. Creseeus held the record before that. DR. GOODWIN Takes Stand in Defense of Christian i Science His Personal Experience. Indianapolis, Ind., October 12 The venerable Dr. Thomas A. Goodwin sprang a surprise on the Methodist ministers' meeting yesterday. He was asked to speak in the absence of tlie person who had been chosen, and though it .Avas announced as he arose tht his subject would be "Christian Science," evidently no one was prepdrod for his tTeatment of it. "I believe,' '. he. said, "in the Christ.; 'Not so much because of the records we have for Him in the scriptures as because? of what He stands for yesterday, today and forever. I believe Christ told the truth and that that truth abides that the changes of years have not made any change in the purpose and the power and the iruth of that Saviour. I believe what ever Christ stood for in the first century he stands for in the twentieth century. One of the truths he taught was that those who believed in Him might receive benefits in regard to health. A part of His work was to heal the sick, and He healed them. If it was true, as Paul said, that we should pray for the recovery of the sick it is the same today as it was then. "My faith in Christian Science is largely the resuft of my personal experience. About thirty years ago my wife lay at the point of death. She and I prayed together for her recovery. - She recovered from that moment, and for thirty years has hardly had a day of sickness. 'Nine years ago she had a severe attack of rheumatism. We said we would try Christian Seiice, and a Christian Science healer, a woman, to whom she went, cured her, and for nine years she has not suffered a pain from that rheumatism. " The doctor then told how the same healer had cured him of dyspepsia ahT his wife from the threatened blindness. "The prayer of faith." he said, in conclusion, "will save the sick. It grieves my heart to hear a man speak' f K?htingly of the Chris,. If lie has power to save sinners He has power to save the sick." Garfield Notes. . (Ben Lawrence.) -At the general exercises Monday morning Mr. O. Karns gave a tall: to the school on . the railway postal service of the United States. Having been employed in this branch of government service for. eleven years Mr. Karns is well prepareid to give his hearers facts at first hand. His talk was much appreciated by the school, all of whom hoped be may be induced to return at some later date to con-j tinue the discussion. One point veryi strongly empnasizea oy iur. abjus was the unhesitating and immediate obedience to orders demanded of all employees in the postal service. As he expressed it, "A man is never told twice to do a thing." J The school council met Tuesday evening at the cloe of school. Their duties were explained to them and topics suggested for future discussion but no action was taken' in regard fo gcb.ool matters.

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Calls for a Neat well fit ting shoe You should have no other. We're foot-fitters. We call attention to a fewT cf our neat ones. f5.00, but we're ...... ... ..$3.50 ..... $1 0 PEOPLE'S com All ads. under the abov head will be charged for at rate of one-half eent a word. Such Items as Lost, Found, Help Wanted, etc.. Inserted free. WAITED Bright Business. Woman (home work) to distribute sample magazines and to compile an official census of magazines subscribed for. Steady employment. Salary at etart $15.00 per week. Experience unnecessary, but good references required. Address Sprague Wholesale Co., Magazine Dept., 270 Wabash Ave., Chicago. . 5-d-8t. FOR SALE Quartered Oak case and shelves combined. Book list. FOR SALE Quartered Oak Stand, also large lamp, No. 1115 North D street. ll-3t FOR SALE Singer Sewing Machine nearly new, at a bargain if sold at once. Call at 1112 Main street, or phone 143!). 10-3t. FOR SALE Quartered Oak Bookcase and shelves combined; also Quartered Oak Stand, No. 1115 north D street. 12-3t. FOR BALE Violin music stand,. instruction book. . 1029 North, H street. Phone, Bell 253 R. ' 12-2 FOR RENT Neatly furnished ' room, jras heat and light at No. 12 Soutli Tenth street, -private - entrance. Cheap. ' 12-5 FOR SALE Harlj-. "Bred rat terrier, male pup, Centerville, Ind. Lock box 21. 12-2 Oo to Grace church for your dinner and supper Wednesday, October 12th. Dinner from 11 a. m. to 1 p. m. Supper G to 7:30 p. m.. Meal 25 cents each. ll-2t. STOVES TO BURN WOOD STOVES TO BURN COAL STOVES TO BURN ANY OLD THING This is the stove for all who are looting for something new and practical. The Incandescent ST. CLAIR HOT BLAST Double Fire Pot. Xo linings to wear out. Ask to see them. BREAD TOASTERS 30s ; s -. " S $v- ; L '-r .-' N.A. KIRKMAX . Phone 785. 710 Main SC