Richmond Palladium (Daily), 13 October 1904 — Page 8
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The Place to Buy Winter Necessities Extreme precaution and pains were taken in the selection of our Fall and Winter needs. Nothing but the BEST VALUES OBTAINABLE grace' our store & & J & & J Good Value Giving Is Our Constant Aim Special values in Cotton and Wool Blankets, Comforts, Fancy Blankets for Robes, Ladies', Misses' and Children's Golf Gloves, Sweaters, Tarn O'Shanters, Toques, Silk and Wool Knit Shawls. Best values all the time Best assortments for selection
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S He g lie I X He LOEHR 725 The est IPO Mm m IS
PHONES 49 Branch Yard, 39 S. 6tliPlione 516.
ERCOATS
And we have a nice lot. THE CHOICEST PICKING ON THE MARKET They are not of the "picked-too-s jon" variety, neither are they "leftI over" from last s.-asou's picking. OUR OVERCOATS as well as SUITS, Trousers, Hats, Caps, etc., are all fresh stock, of guaranteed quality.', We are confident that we can give you the best value for your money of any store in the ciiy . . Seeing is believing r Come and see. Wchrley & talis, The Furnishers, 1S5Sffir
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Executes All Manner of Trusts.
Acts as EXECUTOR, GUARDIAN.
RECEIVER, Etc.
Wills kept In our Safety Consultation Matters -
Mlffi S XXXXXXXXX XX XXX XXXXXXX t . The handsome new hrowns are ia 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 S10 TO $20 Children's clothing of every description. A complete and varied stock, comprising many fabrics and several exclusive novelties. $3 TO 86 He & MAIN STREET
KLUTE
Place To Buy
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ADMINISTRATOR, TRUSTEE. Vault Free of Charge on Estate Invited
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, THUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13,
LOCAL BREVITIES. Worth Clark has returned to Chicago. Mrs. Dr. Bulla and son have gone to Wilmington, O. Mr. A. R. Beyerle, of Milton, was in the city yesterday. Mr. H. J. Day of Hagerstown was a local visitor yesterday. Mrs. Maria L.Sehlater will inspect the W .R. C. on the 20th. Ladies- of the G. A. R. will give a bean supper November 5. "br. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. Mrs. R. J. Strickland is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. M. Westcott. Take the Dayton & Western cars .0 the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now ipen. tf Moore the real estate man, over 8 North Seventh street has several houses for rent. Go and see him to day. Business Men's quick 25c lunch, from 10:30 to 2, Union Station Res taurant. P. Merkle & Son, Prop. 13-7t. Mr. II. Bloom was looking after the interests of the American Loan company yesterday. He is located in Indianapolis The new piano for the I O. O. F. hall has been purchased of A. O. Left wich of Richmond and is a very handsome one. ' ,; Typewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines' Tyrell, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. 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. David Bispliam received an ovation this afternoon at his first recital here since his retirement from Metropolitan opera, and the concert tour of the popular Philadelphia singer seems assured. Mr. Bispham was in'excellent voice this afternoon, his large aujience at Mendelssohn hall being evidently as much delighted as when Mr. Bispham sang in the glitter and panoply of the operatic stage. After the recital Mr. Bispham held a reception, and was warmly congratulated by scores of his .admirers; 'Am I glad to quit bpeera?" said Mr. Bispham smilinglyy repeating a j ques tion. ""Well, this reception by the music lovers of New York looks 'as if I have no fault to find with my change does it not?" Mr. Bispham will be heard this season in concert and oratoiios in all of the leading cities of the country. Philadelphia Ledger. EMPLOY WHITES Negro Seamboat Roustabout at New Orleans "Canned." (By Associated Prss.) New Orleans, October 12. The steamboat men today began to experiment in employing white menin the place of negro roustabouts. Sixty white men were brought from northern cities nd they went to work today. Negroes gathered in crowds but made no effrt to disturb the new comers. The habit of the negroes to strike and demand an increase in wages whenever a steamer was ready to leave led to this plan. SECURING LEASES 1 Cambridge Oil Company Has Secured 2200 Acres at Hagerstown. Harerstown, Ind., October 12. the "Friday" well of the Cambridsre City Oil Company was baled out yesterday and a large quantity of oil aqj, dn "jqSnojq sbav jajiuv IJps ptn? exact capacity of the well will not be known until the pump, which has been ordered, is put in operation. The company in the past few day" have been busy securinsr leases on land in the vicinity of thf "Friday" well and they now control 2200 acres of land. No new wells -will be sunk until the capcity of the "Friday" well is known. Entertainment at Boston. The Girls of the Y. W. C. T. IT. of Richmond will hold an oratorical con est ar the Christian church. Boston. Satnrdav evening. October 15. at 7:30. The girls wil compete for a silver medal. A fine rrorram of music and recitations will be rendered. Come and bring your friends. Admis
KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS MEET IN ST. LOUIS AND ELECT NATIONAL DIRECTORY REGULAR QUARTERLY SESSION Columbus Day Celebrated by Knights of Columbus Election of Directors. St. Louis, October 13 The National board of directors of the Knights of Columbus met yesterday afternoon at the Jefferson hotel for the regular qurterly session. Supreme Knight E. L. Ilearn, of Boston, occupied the chair. Insurance affairs of the order were taken up and the board voted to invest $100,000 of the order's mortuary fund in mortgages and bonds. This amount is a surplus vfhleh has accumulated in the treasury during the last few months. The meeting was the first one ever held by the board outside of its headquarters at New Haven, Conn. The following officers were present : Daniel Col well, New Haven, nation" al secretary; Rev. P. J. McGivney, Middletown, Conn., national chaplain; James G. McConnell, Fitchburg, Mass., national advocate; Dr. William T. McManus, New York, medical, examiner; P. L. McArdle, Chicago, deputy supreme knight; P. J. Brady, Cleveland, national treasurer; James E. Smith, C. A. Weber and Francis J. Thorne, Brooklyn; James A. Burns, East Orange, N. J.; Joseph C. Pelletier, Boston; T). J. Callahan, Norfolk, Va.; P. J. MeNulty, Pittsburg; William J. McCullough, Davenport, la.; George F. Monaghan. Detroit; James A. Flaherty, Phila delphia; M. J. Cummings, Provi dence, R. I.; and William S. McNary, Boston, directors. The board gave a dinner last night at the Jefferson hotel, at which 'Archbishop Gleunon was the guest of honor. ! Bishop Hennessey, of Wichita, and other members of the ,. hierarchy in the St. Louis province were present. ...-v.-.,v i.v,:.; i, -v-'- V The Rights "of jColnmbus .day ex ercises at the World's Fair opened at 0 o'clock yesterday, morning in the Temple of Fraternity. OTHER PEOPLE And Things Chinaman Supposed to Have Three Souls. In Morocco they build and make, and they do things beautifully and well, according to one who has been there. But they seldom finish, says The Chicago Daily News. "In a house dainty with fountains and arabesques and colored tiles," he says, "you will still find a corner uncompleted, a pillar which lacks the delicate fluting of the other pillars, an embrasure for a clock half ornamented with gold fiiligree and half left plain. And, if they seldom finish, they never by any chance repair. "The mansion is built and decorated within; artists fit the tiles togethe in a mosaic of cool colors and carve and gild and paint the little pieces of cedar wood and glue them into the light and pointed arches; the rich curtains are hung and the master enters into possession. There follows the procession of the generations. The tiles crack, the wood work of the arches splits and falls and the walls break and crumble. The householder sits indifferent and the whole house corrodes. So, in the narrow streets, holes gap and the water wears a channel where it will and the mud lies thick and slippery on the rounded stones; the streets run steeply up and down the hills, wind abruptly around corners and dive into tunnels. Every Chinaman' is supposed to jxssess three souls. One goes into the ground at burial, one into the "ancestral tablet" and one into the realm of spirits. It is partly in order to provide the last with those things which are requisite to its well-being that ancestor worship "is kept upf departed ancestors often taking revenge on the living for any negligence on their part in the performance of the customary rites for the dead by bringing some calamity upon the household. These " rites of the dead" are per
1904.
with the hope of delivering them from hades or of improving their condition there.' TlVey last for 'periods that vary according to the age and weatlth of the deceased for children and young people from seven days to a month, for a middle aged man of ordinary means, from a month lb forty-nine days. 4 Korean is a difficult language to learn. Trifling errors are likely to lead a foreigner into great embarrassment. It was only the smallest mistake that led an impassioned preacher to warn his congregation that unless they repented they would be relegated to "a cellar" the Korean words for cellar and the nether world being almost identical. In like manner the story of Lazarus, who fell sick, was told to, a Sunday school class with an unauthor ized ending. The native form of expression is "entering a sickness," and by a trifling confusion the teacher was made to declare that Lazaruh entered a bottie. DISCOVERY DAY (Continued From First Page.) Reading Little Charlie and I . . Mr. John Zwissler Solo "King of the Dungeon" George L. McKone Quartette "Brown October Ale." Meditation n the harp Prof. Kemp Remarks Wm. H. Kelley Orchestral selections. After the above excellent selec Hons were rendered, dancing was indulged in to the sweet strains of the orchestra. On the second floor sever al tables were arranged for card playing, for which prizes were given. The following parties were suc cessful : The gentlemen's prize was won by Mr. John Zwissler, a handsome pair of gold cuff buttons and the ladies' prize, an elegant lunch cloth, by Mrs A. 15. Crump. During the progress of the evening refreshments were served. The affair was one of the nicest ever given by the Knights of Columbus and will ever be remembered as the first celebration of Discovery Dav. WILES ELDER ,f. ( mm dots Praised for High Class Football Playing. Football writers on the New York papers were very much surprised last Saturday at the Columbia-Williams games to see Wiles Elder run on to the field with the team from Williams. They were still more .surprised to see that be lined up with the men in the preliminary practice and their hearts nearly stopped beating when they saw Elder start into the game and give the white stocking players from Columbia a few examples of his gilt edge work at end. The New York Sunday papers say that Elder was the smallest, lightest and youngest of any of the men who have played or are likely to play on the Columbia field. Elder made a distinct hit with all of the papers on account of the high class football which he played There is no doubt but what Elder is the youngest player in any of the big Eastern colleges and from all reports he has his position on the Williams team cinched for this year. RUSSIANS CHECKED Japanese Have - Stopped Enemies Turning Movement. (By Associated Press.) Tokio, October 12. The Japanese have cut off the retreat of a Russian brigade of infantry and two thousand cavalry which were trying to strike Kurokis flank. The Japanese possi bly will capture , the whole force of the Russian's 'attack. The attack on Sieh Chuang was evidently made to cut off the Japanese communication with the Yalu River. Tokio, October 12-The results, of the battle .yesterday and today are not decisive. .It is believed the Japanese have checked the Russian turning movement. 200 BUSHELS FANCY WINTER PEARS (60c BUSHEL) AT EGGE-MEYERS.
Now is Your Time. For sale cheap enough. Going, two good new cottages ready for oecupancy next Monday morning. Call on 13-2 1 Thompson's Agency.
PEOPLE'S COLIU
All ads. under the above head will be charged for at rate off one-half eent a word. Sueh Heme as Lost, Found Help Wanted etc.. Inserted free. WANTED Bright Business Woman (home work) to distribute sample magazines and to compile an official census of magazines subscribed for. Steady employment. Salary at start $15.00 per week. Experience unnecessary, but good references required. Address Sprague Wholesale Co., Magazine Dept., 270 Wabash Ave., Chicago. 5-d-St. FOR SALE Quartered Oak Book case and shelves combined; also Quartered Oak Stand, No. 1115 north D street. 12-3t. FOR SALE Violin music stand, in struction book. 1029 North II street. Phone, Bell 253 R. 12-2 FOR RENT Neatly furnished room, gas heat and light at No. 12 Sout'j Tenth street, private entrance. Cheap. 12-5 FOR SALE Hardy Bred rat terrier, male pup, Centerville, Ind. Lock box 21. 13-2 LOST From carriage while standing at the curb, in front of city building on .the afternoon of October 10th, ten dollars in paper money, or on fifth and Main, or Fourth street, at court house. If found please leave at Palladium office and get suitable reward. FOR RENT Two five room flats complete with bath and steam heat. Apply to A. W. Reed, South Seveth street. 13-5t. DINNER AND SUPPER WILL BE SERVED AT THE PYTHIAN TEMPLE, OCTOBER 14. PRICE 15 CENTS. 12-3 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 as EXECUTOR, for it will act in connection with such friend, eonsuling 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 retained. We will be glad to consult on this and other matters free of charge. Safety Deposit Vaults. STOVES TO BURN WOOD STOVES TO BURN COAL STOVES TO BURN ANY OLD THING This is the stove for all whi are looking for scracthing new and practical. The Incandescent ST. CLAIR HOT BLAST Double Fire out. Pot. No linisgs to. wear Ask .to see them. BREAD TOASTERS 30s X. A.
Dicliihson Trust Co, : : .v '.M .
KIRKMAN .., 1' . 710 ilain SU
I Phone 785.
sion 10c
formed for all over ten years of age,
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