Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 321, 2 January 1908 — Page 8
PAGK EIGHT,
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THTTRSDAY, J A NTT A It Y 2, 190S. SHAH'S SEVERAL WIDOWS WOULD HAVE PERSIAN PARLIAMENT SETTLE UPON THEM ANNUAL INCOMl. KNOiLLENBERG'S STORE yowr Banks Won't ! WE WILL! During these times of financial panic LOAN YOU ANY AMOUNT OT MONEY ON VERY EASY wum Iin..!. jWn ,'v ,' . arai. y m wj First Bargain Opportunity in the New Year f .WW, jx- .-, ."If Ladies' Cloaks and Suits At Prices- That Should Interest. l -.
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Read the List of ..EUR COATS... 2 Plain Electric Seal Coats, size 46, at $22.50 1 Plain Electric Seal Coat, size 42, at 25.00 1 Plain Near Seal Coat, size 40, at 20.00 1 Plain Near Seal Coat, size 40, at 30.00 1 Plain Near Seal Box Coat, size 38, at 45.00 1 Near Seal Japanese Mink Trimmed Collar, Cuffs and Revere, size 38, at.. 40.00 1 Near Seal Beaver Trimmed Collar, Cuffs and Revere, size 38, at 35.00 1 Near Seal Beaver Tri Timed Collar, Cuffs and Revere, size 36, at 40.00 1 Sable Coney Eton Coat, size 34, at 12.50 1 Astrachan Coat, size 38 20.00 2 Sable Coney Box Coats, sizes 36 and 40, at 25.00 1 Broadtail Coat, size 36, at 35.00 1 Russian Mink Box Coat, size 38, at 45.00 The reduction on the above Coats is from 25 to 40 per cent less than regular prices a strong saving to the buyer. Ladies' Tailor-Made Suits 6 Colored Suits, former price from $14.00 to $25.00 to close at $ 9.48 20 Black and Colored Suits, former price from $17J50 to $30, to close at.. 11.48 5 Black and Colored Suits, former price from $30.00 to $40.00, to close at.. 15.48 Ladies' and Misses' Long Coats 1 Lot Long Colored Coats in different sizes and quaJities, former price from $7.00 to $12.00, at only 4.98 1 Lot Long Colored Coats, former price, $15.00 and $'6.00 at only 7.98 1 Lot Long Colored Coats, former price $12.00 to $2CJX), at only 9.98 All the above named goods are wonderful Bargains. Interested persons should not faH to see them promptly.
Geo. H. Knollenbers: Co.
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Three of the widows of the lata -P Shah of Persia. All the Shah's wid- , cms are complaining to the Persian Mf parliament that they are not granted i a sufficient income. The Shah provid- ' $W , Mb ! ed that each should have $1,000 a year, f Considering that $1 In Persia will buy? tJ as much as $40 in this country, it ' p' would seem that the Shah died pretty g&sP well off for one having so many wives. Parliament thinks so, but the widows 'M&i Si are determined to secure an increase ' g? HI to their incomes. I " fjSJ&W
and without red tape or delay. You will find there is NO COMPARISON between our rates and those of the ordinary loan company. Indiana Loan Co. Automatic Phone 1341 Third Floor, 40-41 Colonial BIdg. Richmond. Ind.
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ON VERGE OF A
BREAKDOWN POWEBS
TREMBLES IN CELL
were given precautionary instructions. The Jurors sent word to Judge Morris at 7 o'clock that they would receive the case this morning. Powers is laboring under great mental strain and shows it. He nervously worked his fingers and licked his lips as if they were feverish when waiting to hear whether the Jury would retire
last night, or this morning. Officers who saw him later in his cell, said that he was trembling as if on the verge
of a breakdown.
The Bee Hive Grocery Co. Automatic Phones 1198-1199 Bell 190 Fancy large new Olives, imported from Spain by us. 30c a Quart Old Fashioned Buckwheat Old Hickory Syrup Gold Bond MAPLE SYRUP Backmeyer Kraut Home-made Apple Butter Fresh Vegetables of all kinds Fancy Fruits and Nuts
Richmond Trust Company
We lione that 190S will bo the happiest and most lunosperous vcar you have ever passed through. A regiilarly-adlrd-to savings account would prove of great help in bringing about such a result. We Invite 6u to nujmber yourself among our depositors during this new year. A resolution to save is ones which you will find a pleasure to keeiw
MOITO WILL BE LEFT 0FFJ5 PIECES Coinage Will Begin Next Week At Mint.
Washington, Jan. 2. Frank A. Leech, director of the mint, explained
to the President some of the changes that were necessary in the coinage of the new $20 gold pieces of the St. Gaudens designs. The first 8.000 that were struck off were so highly embossed that they would not stack, and for ' this reason were objectionable to the business world. The coinage was Etopped and changes made in the design. The raised figures on the coins were reduced and the rate was put in
plain figures instead of the roman numerals. The first coins struck off are now commanding premiums of anywhere from $o to $10 each. So that the demand for them may be supplied some more are being struck off. Director Leach has issued orders that the coinage of the $2.,"0 and $," pieces shall begin next week at the Philadelphia mint. These will bo reproductions of the $20 design now being turned off. All these coins of the St. Gaudens type, approved by the president, are without the motto, "In God We Trust."
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County. iss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of K. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay th auin of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS lor each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of llall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of December. A. D. 1SS6. (Seal.) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. 6end for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. Sold by all Drugrslsts. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pllla for constipation.
This is the season when your blood needs purifying; if the blood is pure and healthy, you'll be well. The most reliable blood remedy is Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Nothing can do more good. 35c, Tea or Tablets. A. G. Luken & Co.
A Healthy Clay Eater. "The old clay eating negro of the south is seldom found now," said a Montgomery man. "1 remember my old black mammy ns she would hunt
for rich brown clay and eat many pieces of It She said it helped her stomach and kept her from illness. She would eat the clay every day and would wind up by eating a large piece . of charcoal Just before going to bed. I She was never sick a minute in her whole life. She lived to be ninety-two years old and died from an injury re- : ceived in a runaway. She told me many times that good clay would keep the system In fine shape and that char
coal was most healthy. It acted like a charm in ber ease." Nashville Tennesseean. The marksman's eye is gray.
Hotel Life. For ourselves, we can imagine no worse punishment for persons who value privacy and Intimacy and homeliness and the peculiar arrangement or even disarrangement of their own belongings than to be condemned to pass the term of their natural lives in a great hotel. The marble halls, which once seemed grand, would become a nightmare of grandiosity. The loneliness of a man among the unceasing multitude of strangers would become intolerable. The graces of the cookery, as they once seemed, would become familiar tricks and a hollow imposture. Life would become a circus without tinsel, a Etage without limelight, gingerbread without gilt We have known an old man who had lived for manj' years In the same hotel, and he had all the fads and crotchets and selfishness of the worst old fogy in a club. Indeed, he had many more, and worse, for a clubman is restrained by the opinion If not by the protests of his fellows, but an old resident in a hotel can hardly be moved from Insisting on more than his rights by the combined criticism of all the strangers whose opinion is nothing to him. Lon doa Spectator.
It Does The Business.
Mr. E. E. Chamberlain, of Clinton. Maine, says of Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
"It does the business; I have used it for piles and it cured them. Used it for chapped hands and it cured taem. Applied it to an old sore and it healed it without leaving a scar behind." 25c. at A. G. Luken & Co.. drug store.
Arguments Were Closed in the
Famous Case Wednesday And Jury Retired Today to Pass Final Judgment.
MUCH SPECULATION AS TO THE VERDICT.
Nervously the Accused Man, Thrice Convicted, Awaits The Verdict of His Inquisitors.
Swans have been known to live 300 years.
Georgetown, Ky., Jan. 2. New Year's Day will live long in the memories of the throng who heard the closing arguments in the fourth trial of Caleb Powers, charged with and thrice convicted of complicity in the assassination of William Goebel in the state-
house grounds at Frankfort just 30 day less than eight years ago. At the close of the arguments, just a few minutes before 6 o'clock, Judge Morris said: "I will not submit this case to the
! jurors until they have had their sup- ; pers and I know whether or not the i majority wishes to consider the case ! tonight or rest until the morning be
fore retiring to their jury room." So Judge Morris sent the jurors to their hotel, telling them to notify him of their decision. The jurymen were carefully admonished against talking to any one and the deputies in charge
Ladies, don't forget the Embroidery Sale at cleaning-up prices Friday and Saturday at Knollenberg's Store. THAWSWCIL
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READY FOR FAMOUS
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sel, "but Wo are prepared for that step. We are all ready for Miss Simonton if she wishes to 'got even wilh Thaw,' I believe she is reported to have said. "It would not be right for me to say in what way we are ready, for if the prosecution is trying to surpriso us we cannot announce our plans in advance. For that reason I must fctill refuse to state whether our plans for the new trial provides for the appearance of Mrs. Thaw as a witness. "She is ready to appear, if needed, but we have mapped out a new line of defense, and I will not commit myself one way or the other on the question of Mrs. Thaw being asked to retell her story. I have seen definite
statements made in the newspapers to
the effect that she will testify aud that
he will not go upon the stand,, but I crii say positively that no person knows that fact as yet excepting myself, and I have not told any one. "There will be several other new features to the case, but If I should mention any of them, even those of minor Importance, they might serve as at clew to our general course as now C"re.tletely, and. I lielieve, satisfactorily mapped out."
P'tster the Great consumed baked goo:ie stuffed with apples, and considered it a fine dish.
The doll is the oldest toy.
Chief Counsel Says There Will Be Surprises If the Young Woman Is Called to Stand By Prosecutor Jerome.
WAS FORMER FRIEND OF EVELYN NESBIT THAW.
Hard colds, tprd coughs, severe bronchitis, weak throats. Break lun vs. We m-ish vou would
1iJ& sk your doct r if he knows of anything better for these trou bles than Ayer's Cherry Pecto-
r, .. i. . , ral. We belie re it la the best medicine you Do not trust loo much totour oton hide- , . .. , , . . , monlinmeJUalmattenrLnlZolr 1 Possibly take. But ask your doctor, and doctor frequently. He k"w ie,t. thus be sure tct make no mistake. tZtf 'XiU'
Be S
A New Line of Defense Has' Been Planned by Attorneys For Accused ManInterest
ing Developments Expected.
H '.iMiilfl -r- iff
WHILE ON YOUR TRIP in search of pleasure and recreation don't forget to order the Richmond Export brand of well brewed beer. Might take a few bottles along for a case of emergency, or we could forward a few cases to your Winter address by express or freight as occasion requires. The added cost will bring added satisfaction, because when you're getting Richmond Export beer you know you're getting prime Leer. Minck Brewing Co.
Start the Year Economically IBy Attending
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New York, Jan. 2. "We are all ready for Ida Simonton." said Martin W. Littleton, chief counsel for Harry Kendall Thaw, in speaking today of new features that will appear during the second trial of his client for the murder of Stanford White. "I am not going to give away any of the plans that have been formed for the defense of Mr. Thaw, but I feel free to say that there are likely to be some surprises if I3a Simonton is called a witness for the prosecntion
by the district attorney and who is I known as the "monkey girl." : I "Miss Simonton was sought as a j witness during the first trial, but was reported to be in Africa. Recently she returned to Pittsburg and stated that she would "fix Thaw." . I Miss Simonton was a close friend of j Mrs. Thaw when she was Evelyn Nes- ' bit, and Miss Simonton was called to Europe to bring Mrs. Charles J. Holman, mother of Evelyn Nesbit back to America at the time Evelyn Nesbit : and Thaw were making a trip on the j 'continent. j It was evident today from the raani ner in which Mr. Littleton spoke that the Thaw forces have been digging
deeply into all matters regarding Miss
Simonton In preparation for her appearance as a hostile witness. "I suppose the calling of Miss Simonton by the district attorney will be one of the interesting new features of tie second trial," said, Thaw's ccuik'
Tine Secret's Oilt? That we can sell groceries on a smaller margin of profit than the grocer who gives you credit. How can we do it? you ask! We buy for CASH and ell for CASH, therefore we have no bad debts. Trading stamps with each 10c purchase. Just a few of our many bargains: Tomatoes. 2 lb. cans, solid pack, 2 for 15 Home grown potatoes, per bu 75 (5 bu lots or more, per bu 70 Delicious home made 3pple butter, per lb 12, Lima beans, 3 pounds for 25 Fresh country butter, per lb 25 18 lbs. granulated, 19 lbs. A, 20 C Sugar for 1.00 25lbs. Pride Richmond. Carpenters Fancy or White Lily flour 70 Home grown onions (fancy red) per pk 25 Large sour pickles, per dozen 15 Sweet pickles, per dozen 10 6 lbs. fresh ground N. Y. buckwheat flour and 30 stamps 3C 7 bars Santa Claus so?p for 25 Best square crackers, per lb 01 1 pint bottle May Day tomato catsup 10
Model Department Store, 11 S. 7th St. Colonial BIdg. New Phone 1838. Bell Phone 47R Smith St Goodrich, Props.
