Richmond Palladium (Daily), 24 October 1904 — Page 8

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RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, MONDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 24, 1904.

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Big Bargain Event Continues with utmost fervor READ FOR SATURDA Y SELLING:

$1.50 black mercerized Petticoats . . . . . .98c 25c fine embroidered Turnover Collar . . . . . 5c 10c Dress Sateens, dark patterns 6J4 c $ 1.25 black mercerized Petticoats ...... 75c Fancy striped Flannelette Petticoats . . . . . . . 25c Good quality Canton Flannel 2c 10c fleeced Wrapper goods, per yatd ... - J2C Splendid Cotton Blankets, a pair ISc

Good size hand knotted Silkoliae Comforts . . . Hz 75c Fancy Silks, while they last, yard IlOc Ladies' heavy Union Suits, ribbed and fleeced . . - 50c Misses heavy Union Suits, worth 50c, to go at . . . 25c 60c Men's Underwear only IIOc 27x00 fine Moquette Rugs, worth $2.50, only . . $ 1.75 Extra Special Moire and all Silk Ribbons, all widths, special . ,. . 5c yard

T OU ItS TOR SATURDAY SELLINCg

Oy? Vf5T J?

...

Style

Quality

The subject talked most, any hour of the day, every season- of the year, is

WE

Stormy weather is uppermost in our thought today, and the means of protection against it Our - JG r4a venette- Goatsare for this purpose, long and loose easily slipped on & & & We have them in all lengths, including the extra fifty-two inch & & & - They come in brown and light shades RAIN COATS SI 6.00 TO S25.00

LOCAL BREVITIES. 'NEFARIOUS SCHEME Richmond ; Shoe Co.

The Only Way To Get Ahead in the world is to save a part of yonr income regularly. A deposit with SBfiasCxi si sauim Traastt Will earn you 3 per cent.finterest Compounded semi annually May 1 and November 1. Ready cash has saved many a man. A savings account is always ready. Safety Deposit Building

WE ARE GRATEFUL For the many inquiries as to the progress being made in the treatment of d "bad spell," ami are glad to say, ' ' We 're doin ' pret ty middlin ' well considerin" "We are grateful for the genuine patronage extended to our store during our enforced absence. When a man gets in a grateful mood his heart warms to everybody and everything. Bv fortunte buying we have a stock of exceptional merit and the prices Ave shall name from now until the holidays will bring you to the store, if -you have not been a patron and the same attractive prices Avill hold you as t constant .patron after a trial order. We would much prefer to see a large amount of stock at a very low profit than a -wagon -load now and then at a prohibitive price. Kindly come and see. If you are "with us" keep on coming DOUBLE STAMPS ALL OVER 1 HE STORE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. BOTH PHONES. ..MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE BOTH PHONES 415 Main. Street. ; i ... , s . ... .

Phaeton for .sale cheapp202i N.F.

street. ,,; ;23-2t : Mr. Dan Conner spent Sunday r in Dayton. : - Emmons Tailoring CompanjT , ate fine suits at $15 and $18. Dr. . Park for high class dentistry, 3 N. Tenth street. Lady assistant Take the Dayton & Western cars to the New Cedar Springs Hotel, .now pen. tf Mr. and Mrs. Don Lamar, of Peru, visited "relatives and -friends in this city yesterday. Mooi-e the real estate man, over S North Seventh street has several houses for rent. Go and see him today. Chicken supper at the First Presbyterian church next uesday eveningSupper at 5:30. 24-2t. Do't Jet your Grocer give you something "just as good," insist on having Faultless Creams baked every day. ? Mr. Frank Elder returned to New York City Saturday evening after a visit of several davs among local friends. Chicken supper 25 e at the First Presbyterian church Tuesdaj-, October 25. 24-2t. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Campbell and daughter Marie returned Saturday night from Indianapolis. Faultless Cream Crackers are fresh from the oven every day. That can be said of no other cracker sold in Richmond. Richmond people eat cream and Butter Crackers. Wchn you buy Faultless or Richmond Butter you get tlie best crackers made anywhere.

! 'pi.: . i- - -

i ins x e:iv w e wm, iv i-trii uu iiunui Faultless Creams. Have you noticed ljow crisp the new Faultless Cream Crackers is? After lots of expense, we are produc

ing the finest Cream Cracker ever sold in Richmond. Insist on having Faultless Creams. ;., r Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moorman, of Logansport, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Moorman and familv. , ! Bookkeeping, Stenographing? and the Common School studies . will be taught at the Business College 2$ight Sch.Qxilr wicb -opens Monday Oct. 24hV;-' ; " .': 19-lwk? Typewriters, all makes, ren ted, sold. Rentals $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines Tyrell, W. U. Tel. office. Phone 26. Ir. Oliver Mitchell, of Cleveland, Ohio, a former resident of this city, spent yesterday with his brother, Reece R. Mitchell and returned to his home last night. Mr. Mitchell is assistant superintendent for the Metropolitan Insurance company at Cleveland and is prospering. When you buy Faultless .Creams, you are not buying a cracker that

ihas been shipped a hundred miles in

a dirty box car, and perhaps been on hands two or three weeks. They art fresh from the oven and all that sweet taste and crispness that are important in a good cracker is there.

The ladies' auxiliary of the South

Eighth street Friends church will meet in the church parlors on Tuesday afternoon. The best flour, carefully blended, the best lard monev can buv, mixed and baksd by the best bakers money can hirf, make Faultless Cream Crackers, the ideal Cream Cracker. If you are no using them, try a pound and be eonyinnced of their goodlier.

.(Continued From First Page.) agree to vote for all said Democratic candidates at said election. , - The Republican State comm'tee is informed that this same form of receipt is being used in other counties. Negroes' Story in Affidavit. ! Walter Mitchell, Edward Kemp and Nathan Edwards make joint affidavit before William Dakin, justice of the peace, as follows: i "We, Walter Mitchell, Edward Kemp and Nathan Edwards, do, each and sepai-ately, swear, upon oath, that we were invited to the residence

Eighth and Main.

Clias. H. Felt man Geo. W. Deuker

Cails for a Neat well fitting shoe You should have no other. We're foot-fitters. We call attention to a few "of our nea ones.

of William Black, in the east side Krippeodorf's hand turn and Gcodyear wtlt Shoes combine more style, comfort

.... . S3.00 $3.50

Wthave a ipltrdid Ladies' Slice at

or linnesoia avenue, in the city ot Alexandria. Madison comity, Indiana, on the night of the 19th day of October, 1904, at about 8 o'clock p. mv and when we arrived at said residence wo were invited into the house ;i t i-itnducted through a roni of said I " -'. which was dark, and after pas-i.iu ('trough said room we entered into a in;n which was lighted up and found tisercin the following named persons, towit: James II. Edwards, mayor of the city of Alex

andria; James S. Wales, treasurer of

said city; William Black,

Hart man and t"vo more men whom Ses.' I told him I would not do it,

we did not know. We were first ap-'s .s 1 would not sign mv name to anv

and wearing qua ity than any other shoe at the

price Krippendorf's f3.50 Shoes are easily worth $5.00, but we're Selling them at

We hae the best, most stylish and complete lire of J 2.00 shoes in the OQ flrt city. In patent leather, box calf or vici you'll find no better at . . viUU

$1.50

buying your votes for it he Democrat ticket, but we do not care to have you vole, but to stay away from the

polls." 4 'I said to him, 'Do vou - i

Killian have to sign anything,' and he says,

people's com . . . - . iii t .... J., 1-..JL -. . I All ads. under the above head will

o harged for at rate onehalf eeat a word. 8uoh Itern a Lost, Fourd, Help Wanted, etc, Inserted free.

proached by James H. Edwards, and

he says to us: 'What is your name,' Mid 'where d you live,' and we told him and lu then looked in a book and said to each of us: 'Vou are a voter.' and savs to each of ns: 'You

paper, as I would not lose my vote lor three dollars nor thirty-three dollars, as I am going to vote for Teddy. Mr. Edwards then says to me, 'vou come to mv otliee in the niorn-

WANTFD -41,144 people to attend the painters dance October 27, at

Maccabee hall.

sign this paper and Edward Kemp tjlVr ;,nd 1 will give you a recommenignel it and Walter Mitchel and , datiou so as you can get a job in a Nathan rdwards says to Mr. Edwards J'ullman car as porter, and asked me 'We can not write,' and James S. lo ay nothing about this meeting." Wales signed our names to the pa-J Johnson swears that he saw colper, and James ,11. Edwards then ored men going out of the Black handed each of us 2 and says to uslOUse wjtn nionev in their hands, and

j'You fellows are suppost-d to stay ,e swears no person was asked exh'way from the polls, on flection day L ept colored voters, "and they had a rnd give us no trouble.' We then ,llm at the door to let us in, one at

FOR RENT Nice house at 31 Railroad street. 23-2

?33.00 San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Tacom and Seattle, $31.50 Boise City, $30.50 Spokane andd Walla Walla, $30.00 Ogden, Salt Lake City and Butte.

From Chicago via the Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line every day until October 15th inclusive. orrespondingly low rates from all points. Daily and personally conducted excursions from Chicago and PullDan Tourist Sleeping cars, only $7.00 'or double berth, (accommodating rwo people), through to the Pacific Joast without change of cars. Choice of routes. Excellent train service. Dining cars, (meals a la carte.) For full information apply to A. H. Waggentr, Trav. Agt. 22 Fifth ' AveChicago, Ills.

i walked. We each further swear up

on oath" that no person read anything to us that was on the paper, and did not-ask' either of us to rend the paper and did not explain anything to either of us, and we did not know anything about what was on the paper which they asked us to sign. We separately swear that we each entered the house one at a time, as they did not allow more than one of us in the house at the same time. The man that asked us to said house told each of us at the time he invited us that we could go over and get a little money as it would not in any way interfere with our rfght to vote." Says He Refused to Sign. Garfield Brown made affidavit that he entered the room at William Black's house and was approached by Mayor Edwards, and James Wales asked him to sign, which he refused, whereupon, he" swears, they said he could not havo any money and they were through with him. lie also says he saw "quite a number of the colored boys outside, and they says to me, 'have my money and signed the paper.' " Johnnie Johnson made affidavit, substantially the same as the rest, but he charges that James II. Edwards said to him: "We have the

monev t uistriDute out among vou ,

TOR SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents bnndred and some thrown in.

a time." ' ; (ieorge Knause is named in one of the affidavits as one of the men in the room at the Black home. Tt is said that even the Federal statute does not prevent vote-buying. A few years ago a colored man. named Miller, who worked with the Democrats in Indianapolis, was arrested on a charge of conspiracy to keep negroes from 4 he polls. He was held by the United Spates commissioner, but Jiffige John II. Baker dismissed the charge, holding that

the statute did not apply to his case, j

LOST Cameo set ring on Main street between Sixth and Ninth streets, Saturday night. Return to Kiclhorn Millinery Store.

$7.00 WOBLD'S FAIR TICKETS.

Omaha via the Northwestern Line In addition to its already remarkably complete train service between Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha, The North-Western Line has inaugur-

ted elegantly equipped parlor car

Now on Sale Sundays, Mondays, Toes days, Wednesdays and Thursdays via Pennsylvania Lines. World 's .Fair 7-day round trip tickets to St. Louis are now sold over Pennsylvania Lines Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursday of every week at $7.00 from Richmond. These tickets are valid in coaches of through trains. Longer limit low. price excursion tickets to World's Fair are sold every day. For particulars consult C. W. Elmer, ticket agent, Pennsylvania lines, Richmond, Ind.

fell

ows.

It

Excursion tickets at unusually low

service through to Omaha without rates good for the season, on sale dai-

hange, leaving Chicago 1 0 :15 a. m. j j to Milwaukee, Madison, Waukesha, daily, ai-riving Omaha 11:40 p. m. jreen Lake, Devils Lake, Gogebic, uffet, smoking and library car on Ashland, Marque'te, Superior, Duthis train also opened to parlor car luth, St. Paul, Minneapolis and many assengers. Other fast trains leave ther cool and delightful lake resorts Chicago 7:00 p. m., 8:00 p. m., and reached by The North-Western Line. 11 :30 p. m., daily over the only dou- Information and tickets can be sele track railway between Chicago and ured from your home agent Booklet the Missouri River. Information and ntitled "The Lakes and Summer Reickets can be secured from your home 'orts of the Northwest" mailed upon agent or address A. H. Waggener, receipt of 4 cents in stamps, W. B.

is supposed that we are ; iVav. Agt 22 Tilth Ave., Chicago, 111. Kniskern, P. T. M. C. & N. W. R'y,

Daily nd personally conducted excursions in Pullman tourist sleeping cars, double berth only $7.00 from Chicago, on fast through trains. Choice of routes. No change of cars. All agents sel tickets via" this line. For full particulars address A. H. Waggener, traveling agent, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, Dl. .

M-i,ln-;lr - J Z3I The Talk Of The Town Is J. L. Sie vert's Jewelry AmgUqm EM In almost every hou ehold you will hear it mentioned of the wonderful bargains to be had and also how much the goods re being sold below the eost of manufacture. It is not often that the public can buy high grade goods such as: A. O. Waterman's solid gold, self filing Fountain Pen for $1.33 worth $3.50 to $4."0 in any first class jewelry store. Or such goods as Rogers' 1S47 Teaspoons at 6 for ........CO to 65c worth $2 to $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 jears. You can buy solid silver thimbles, worth 25c to 50c each for. ..................... -5c and 10c You can also buy 20-year Solid Gold Filled Watches for fO.OO to $11.00 worth two and three times the. price elsewhere. In fact, during the aucti n sale $7 and $8 Umbrellas go at .....$2.75 Thiw-piece Silver Toilet Sets, worth $0.50, go at .......$1.75 and $2.00 Solid .Silver Teaspoons, worth "C ad $7, go at $2-50 and $2.75 $5 Cold Eyeglasses and Spectacles, with glasses suited to the pye for $1.35 and $1.50 $22 Silver four-piece Tea Sets go at .....$6.50 $16.50 Rogers' Best A-l totality Silver Knives and Forks and Spoons, 24 pieces in a plush case, go at ....$5.00 and $6.50 Finest quality three-pie-:-e Carviig Set, worth $5 goes at ....... .$1.50 Remember, any article in the house will be put up and sold at auction to the highest bidder regardless of cost or value. The auction sale is an opportunity unprecedented in the history of Richmond. Every article sold by the auctioneer is guaranteed to be exactly as represented. As Mr. Sievert is anxious to remodel the store before the fall and holiday trade commences, this sale will continue but a short time longer. Now is the time to buy a few of j-our Christmas presents. Hundreds of beautiful articles offered each day. The afternoon sale is at 2:30; evening sale at 7:30.- Ladies are especially invited. f . J. L, SIEVERT, No. 7 Q$ 'Main Si.

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