Richmond Palladium (Daily), 23 October 1904 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER - 23, 1904.
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Big Bargain Event Continues with utmost fervor READ FOR SATURDAY SELLING :
$1.50 black mercerized Petticoats . 08c 25c fine embroidered Turnover Collar 5c 10c Dress Sateens, dark patterns Oc $1.25 black mercerized Petticoats 75c Fancy striped Flannelette Petticoats 25c Good quality Canton Flannel ........ 2c 10c fleeced Wrapper goods, per yard .... i)4c Splendid Cotton Blankets, a pair tHc
Good size hand knotted Silkoline Comforts . . . 8!: 75c Fancy Silks, while they last, yard JMc Ladies' heavy Union Suits, ribbed and fleeced . . . 50c Misses' heavy Union Suits, worth 60c, to go at . . . 25c 50c Men's Underwear only :19c 27x00 fine Moquette Rugs, worth $2.50, only . .1.75 Extra Special Moire and all Silk Ribbons, all widths, special ... 5c yard
TO I' US FOR SATURDAY SELLING
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LOCAL BREVITIES. MAKES COMPLAINT
Style
Quality
The subject talked most, any hour of the dayt every season of the year, is WEATHER
Stormy weather is uppermost In our thought today, and the means of protection against it Our Grave nette C oats are for this purpose, long and loose easily slipped on j J & jfi We have them in all lengths, including: the extra fiftv-two inch j .
They come in brown and light shades RAIN GOATS S16.00 TO $25.00
t The Only Way To Get Ahead in the world is to save a part of yon r income regularly. A deposit with
3 as C x n n s on ir an s ft 5 . Will earn you 3 per cehUinterest Compounded semi annually May 1 and November 1. Ready cash has saved many a man. A savings account is always ready. Safety Deposit Building
oiful Anticipations
Are now being indulged in by the "Young Folks" with the near approach of Hallowe'en. The heads of families are not so light hearted, for fall and winter brings additional expenses, and care must be exercised to make "both ends meet." We cordially invite careful buyers to our store, assuring them that we will assist in "bringing the ends together.' ' 1 ONR STORE WAS CROWDED SATURDAY. In Our Dry Goods Department we have a wealth of bargains for this week in all lines of seasonable goods. Ladies' and Children's Coats, Cloaks,. Capes, Furs, Toques, Tam-O-Shan-ters, Automobile Caps, Etc., Blankets, Comforts, Underwear, Flannels, Flannellettes and everything seasonable at lowest prices in th city. GROCERY ITEMS: Apples, winter keepers, in crates, all the good varieties, hand picked and sound, per busheel, 65c Oysters received daily, solid measure, per quart, 35c. Cider Vinegar, pure, uowatered, per gallon, 20c. Prepared Mustard and Good Catsup, per quart, 10c. S. & H. Trading Stamps with all Purchases. .Free delivery. Store open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings.
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411-415 MAIN ST. Both Phones
Phaeton for sale cheap, 2021 X. F. street. 23-2t A good Sunday dinner at Home dining room. 22-2 1, Bert Moorman, of Newcastle, is visiting relatives here. Miss Helen Timberlake is visiting relatives at Greensfork. Miss Iva Wimmer is visiting her parents at Hagerstown. Arch Street has returned from a ten days' stay at West Baden. Dr. and Mrs. X. S. Cox will return from their vacation today. Dr. Park for high class dentistry, 8 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant. Miss Myra Baker is spending a few day with relatives in Kokomo. Mrs. Charles Cain, who has been visiting in Hagerstown, has rehired home. Take the Dayton & Western cars to the New Cedar Springs Hotel, now jpen. tf Miss Maud McPherson, is here from Logan sport for a visit with friends. Moore the real estate man, over 8 North Seventh street has several houses for rent. Go and see him today. Do't let your Grocer give you something "just as good," insist on having Faultless Creams baked every da 3'. Faultless Cream Crackers are fresh from the oven every day. That can be said of no other cracker sold in Richmo.id. Miss Jessie Wiedman is spending
a few days with her parents in Hagerstown. Miss Nora Holmes, who lias boon spending a week here visiting : friends has returned to her home in Givencastle. Richmond people eat cream and Butter Crackers. Wehn yon buy Faultless or Richmond Butter, you get the best crackers made anywhere. This week we want to tell you about Faultless Creams. John Trindle has returned after an extensive trip through Califorinia and the far "West. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Mills will leave tomorrow to spend several days at St. Louis. Try one of the best dinners you have ever ate at the Home dining room, 23 north ninth. Have you noticed how crisp the new Faultless Cream Crackers is? After lots of expense, we are producing the finest Cream Cracker ever sold in Richmond. Insist on having Faultless Creams. Mrs. Perrv Freeman left Yester
day for Indianapolis and St. Louis to visit friends. Mr. find Mrs. Charles Backenstace
have returned to Hagerstown, after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Will Clendeneu of this city. Bookkeeping, Stenographing and tire Common School studies will be taught at the Business College Night School, which opens Monday, Oct.
24 th. 19-lwk.
Typewriters, all makes, rented, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machinesTyrell, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. When you buy Faultless Creams, you are not buying a cracker that has been shipped a hundred miles in a dirty box car, and perhaps been on hands two or three weeks. They are fresh from the oven and all that sweet taste and crispness that are important in a good cracker is there. The best flour, carefully blended, the best lard money can buy, mixed and bak?d by the best bakers money can hire, make Faultless Cream Crackers, the ideal Cream Cracker. If you are no using them, try a pound and be convinnced of their goodness. The Misses Ruby Hunt and Rae Chandlee will go to Jamestown, O., this week to attend the wedding of Miss Jessie Baker, a former Earlham student. i Mrs. Edward Wilmington and Mrs. Harry Dickhut, of Indianapolis, will be the guests of Mrs. Ira Swisher this week. The stockholders of the Centerville Co-operative Telephone company will have their annual meeting for the election of a board of directors to serve one year, in the company's room in the K. of P. building in Centerville on Saturday, October 29 at 2p.m. '
Benonah Parshall Appears Before the Commissioners, Yesterday. Benonah Parshall, whose farm is located on Peeler's hill, was before the county commissioners yesterday with a complaint against the way in which the grade has been cut down,' and he has also asked damages to the extent of $926.70. Parshall 's home is east of the road-
way and at the top of the hill. He
claims that the cut has inconvenienced him to a large extent. The eut has been made so deep that a load of hay passing on the road can not be seen from the house, and according to the present arrangement the passageway which formerly gave him access to the road has been blocked. The case was compromised for $500.
NO POSTERS Commissioners Will Not Permit Bill Posting in Court House. The county commissioners announced yesterday that in the future they will not permit any advertisements, political or commercial, to bo placed m the walls or pillars in the court building. All such matter will be restricted to the regular bulletin boards at the east entrance to the building. Any one who hereafter places an anomicement or advertisement any place about the building except ( n these boards will be prosecuted for trespass. All, the advertising matter now up will have to be removed.
Steik-Bloch
Smart
Clothe
Style to be Style Must Be Hew
Would you rather pay double for clothes that are modeled after a dusty fashion plate, or wear the vital, vigorous styles that are to be seen on Fifth Avenue
this very minute? That is what the clothes question comes to in the end. Our STEDM-BLOCH Smart Clothes enable men of taste to gratify their desire for fashionable dress at a reasonable cost. STEIN-BLOCH Smart Clothes are Whole- This label marks the ttntshed clothes:
sale tailored to fit any size stout, thin, tall or short. Their material is of the best, and their workmanship tne finest unlimited resources can procure.
Sold exclusively by Fte Model eiolliino Bo., 7Cq-71i Main St.
J eowtiD ism 3
DISCONTINUED
Passenger Service Between North -' Judscn and Griffith no Longer.
, -Passenger service on the ('.. C. & L,. has been discontinued' let ween North Judson. ,and Griffith: ami -.North
Judson is nowthe northern, terminus of the passenger trains. It-is said that a lack of patronage north of North Judson is responsible for the change. - : . Until passenger service into Chicago is arranged, the tracks of the C, C. & L. between North Judson and Griffith will be used only for freight trains, which are now running into Chicago. It is now understood that through trains between Cincinnati and Chicago over the C, C. & L. will be operated until next summer. By that time it is believed that the physical condition of the road will be so improved that through trains can be operated without trouble.
TRIP PLANNED
Prof. Fiske Will Probably Run an Excursion to Mammoth Cave. Professor Fiske, of the high school is planning to run another excursion.
i this time to the Mammoth Cave, in i . ' ' Kentucky, his trip will be taken
some time the first part of November provided the required number of people con be induced to signify the.r intention of going. Last year a number of high school studnts and other local people took one of Professor Fiske 's "personally conducted" ex-
do not know of any road maps or other detailed data for the state of Wisconsin for instance, that equal tho-e published by our passenger department, showing the haunts of summer tourists and fishermen. They arc on' file in public libraries as part of their reference records. Oilier portions of the western country have been similarly taken up by our people and maps of a most complete char acter made for them; in fact, the western lines are fully alive to the value of a good map in the hands of the traveler. The map publishing terns is today reduced to scientific principles and handled in a. most systematic manner. The North-"Westem Line prints thousands of maps, running all the way from large wall
enrsion trins to the Wvandotfe Cave
in Southern Indiana, which was sneh - maPs of the world, down to the small
1 ' a
quarter
) a. .success that Professor Fiske has
been encouraged to make another attempt in the excursion line.
MAPS. Robert Louis Stevenson, one of the most notable English writers known to the present generation was wont to say that nothing interested him more than the perusal of a good map; and without doubt, a map that is well made and accurate catches the eye and arrests the attention of many people as few other things cau do. The men in charge of the railway traffic possess a most positive appreci ation of this fact and a large expenditure of time and skillful thought is mad cr"oiT this feature of railway pub
licity, -;o that such portions of the
est details of sections and
settlement in the west, and from an
-ii i ;
anas i-oinuinuig u series m maps ot the seat of war in the far east to
the most carefully worked out portrayal of Colorado's mountain regions. California's winter resorts, or the summering places that abound along the line throughout the west and northwest." :
Omaha via the Northwestern Lint In addition to its already remarkably complete train ; service between
The North-Western Line has inaugurated elegantly equipped parlor car service through to Omaha without hange, leaving Chicago 10:15 a. m. daily, arriving Omaha 11:40 p. nu
uffet, smoking and library car on -
country as thP mystic and interesting this train also opened to parlor can region of the Blaek Hills in South! flsseners. Other fast trains leave
Miss (.race brennan, ot Fountain Dakota. J Chicago 7:00 p. m., 8:00 p. m., and City, is visit ng friends in the city. Said an official of the Chicago & 11:30 p. m., daily over the only douMr. ( Kelley. of the Tiichmond Northwestern Railway recently, while le track railway between Chicago and Loan company is on the sick list. j talking on this subject: "There is the Missouri River. Information and at., t:. , .i t i i , 'no doubt that the American railway ickets can be secured from your home
Mr. Timothy Iiady, who has been
quite ill for a week, is improving.
map engraver has carried his art well agent or address A. II. Waggener, nigh to the borders of perfection. I iVav. Agt 23 fifth Ave., Chicago, EL
3C
The Talk Of The Town Is J. L. Sievert s Jewelry r MuQimm Sai In almost every household you will hear it mentioned of the wonderful bargains to be had and also how much the goods .re being sold below the cost of manufacture. It is not often that the public can buy high grade goods such as: r A. O. Waterman's solid gold, self filing Fountain Pen for y ..$1.35 worth $3.50 to $4.'0 in any first class jewelry store. Or such goods as Rogers 1S47 Teaspoons at 0 for ...i. GO to 05c worth .$2 to f 2.50 anywhere, according to pattern. You can also buy Best Quality Nickel Alarm Clocks for 25c to 35c worth $2 anywhere for th same kind of clocks, which are guaranteel for three years. You can buy solid silver thimbles, worth 25c to 50c each for............... 5c and 10c You can also buy 20-year Solid Gold Filled Watchis for $0.00 to $11.00 worth two and thr.v times the price elsewhere. In fact, during the ancti n sale $7 and $S Umbrellas go at..... ....$2.75 Three-piece Silver Toilet Sets, vorth $t.50, go at $1.75 and $2.00 Solid Silver Teaspoons, worth $(i ; $7, go at -. ?2.50 and. $2.75 $5 Gold Eyeglasses and Sjectaeles, with glasses suited to the eye for ......... .$1.35 and $1.50 $22 Silver four-piece Tea Sets go at.... ... $6.50 $1G.50 Rogers' Best A-l quality Silver Knives and Forks and Spoons, 24 pieces in a plush case, go at. ! ' $5.00 and $6.50 Finest quality three-pie-e Carving Set, worth $5 goes at $1.50 Remember, any article in the house will be put up and srId at auction to the highest bidder regardless of cost or value. The auction sale is an opportunity unprecedented in the history of Richmond. Every article sold by the auctioneer is guaranteed to be exactly as represented. . As Mr. Sievert is anxious to remodel the store before the fall and holiday trade commences, this sale will continue but a short time longer. Now is the time to buy a few of jour Giristmas presents. Hundreds of beautiful articles offered each day. The afternoon sale is at 2:30; evening sale at 7:30. Ladies are especiallv invited. - ? J. L. SIEVERT, No. 704 Main. St
