Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 325, 6 January 1908 — Page 8
FAGE EIGIIT.
THE R1CII3IOXD PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGHAJ1, MONDAY, JANUARY G, 1!MS. saes Sale Continues Three Days Only Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday Remarkable Price Concessions in all Ladies' Wearables, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday em939 Masses9 and FadSe9 StyflnsQii WeauraMes QnMr
M.(BninisiFBsaM
Sadie
Wmm
G
Again surpassing all previous efforts, tomorrow, Tuesday, we will inauguarate a sale of Ladies, Misses and Children's Wearables, the announcement of which will suffice to send a thrill of expectation throughout the city, as all are aware of the character of garments we carry.
You will realize that such offerings are the result of our, determined policy not to carry garments from one season to another. Regardless of style, kind or price, all Ladies' Suits go at ABSOLUTELY HALF PRICE. NOT ONE RESERVED! THINK WHAT THIS MEANS! $10.00 Suits $5.00; $15.00 Suits $7.50; $20.00 Suits $10.00; $25.00 Suits $12.50 ; $35.00 Suits $17.50
ALL LADIES' STYLISH PLAIN COLORED COATS AT HALF PRICE including the season's newest Tan, Brown, Red and Green shadings; also ail Evening Party Coats and Capes. Savings are just half. ALL FANCY VELOUR COATS, short and medium lengths, sold for $25.00 to $35.00, now go at half, $12.50 to $17.50. LADIES' FANCY ASTRAKAN JACKETS, newest colorings, worth to $25.00, go at half price. LADIES' BLACK, LOOSE AND TIGHT FITTING COATS all go at one-third off Regular Price. ONE LOT LADIES' BLACK KERSEY COATS full length, braid trimmed, full, loose fitting, regular $8.50 values, while they last $4.95. ONE LOT LADIES' NOVELTY COATS, tight and loose fitting effects, regular $8.00 and $10.00 values, while they last, $1.98.
ONE LOT LADIES' NOVELTY COATS, Loose Fitting effects, $10.00 to $20.00 values, while they last, $4.48. ONE LOT LADIES' BLACK KERSEY COATS, full length, elegantly trimmed, regular $12.50 values, while they last, $7.50. ALL MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S COATS at a big saving, including some of the prettiest styles of the season in Plain and Fancy Cloths, Bear Skin, Astrakan, Etc., $3.00 Coats, $2.00; $5.00 coats go at $3.50; $7.50 coats, $5.00; $10.00 coats go at $7.00. ALL LADIES' WAISTS REDUCED Silk Waists, Lace Evening Waists, also our new Spring line of Fine Lingerie Waists. FINE TAILORED DRESS SKIRTS all go at One-fourth Off. Perfectly made skirts, Skirts that hang correctly, Skirts that give entire satisfaction; 'tis our kind of Skirts.
ALL FUR NECK PIECES, MUFFS AND JACKETS all Reduced. Nothing reserved in our Fur Section. All go at OneThird off. Fine Fox, Mink, Squirrel, Persian Lamb, Krimmer, Im't Ermine, White Fox, Brook Mink, Marten and Coney Boas, Scarfs, and Cravats and various styles in neckpieces, including Muffs to match, worth $2.50 up to $45.00. Reduced to $1.69 to $30.00. ALL FUR COATS INCLUDED 1 Brook Mink Coat, worth $85.00, now $56.67 1 Sable Squirrel, worth $85.00, now 56.67 1 Sable Coney Coat, worth $30.00, now 20.00 1 Russian Pony Coat, worth $75.00, now 50.00 1 Sable Squirrel, worth $110.00, now 73.34
SEE THE WINOOWS 2 SEE THE WINDOWS! It's worth the trip even if you only come and look. Sale Continues Three Days TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY.
LEE
LOVER BLITHE II
SECOND
CHILDHOOD
SHIP WAS AFIRE.
Senator H. G. Davis Will Scon Wed Pretty Young Woman of Washington.
RUMOR CANNOT BE KILLED.
MISS A6HFORD WAS A CHARMING SOCIETY EDITRESS ON A WASHINGTON PAPER THE OLD MAN IS MUCH IN LOVE.
Washington, Jan. 6. The commanding officer of the Arcthusa, now at Para, Brazil, has reported to the navy
department that a tire broke out in the engineers' store room yesterday. Slight damage was done, which will delay the departure of the vessel for
three days. The Arethusia is a hospi
tal ship accompanying boat destroyer flotilla.
tho torpedo
Ycra neadn't suiter -with VcV b-a3ch8. Indijriou, ecnst(r:it:on cr aay ck.ict troubles aris- ..? rora 6 dUcrfltrod storaaoh. Dr. Caldwell's v.'go Pep? in w:H core you and kw? you well. :y at keep" -n---' v' - arotma. In parts of Switzerland stone throwing contests are held, handsome prizes being given to those who throw a fair sized rock farthest.
MR
WH
TMORE
S.
IS THE DEAD WOMAN
FIRST CHINESE WOMAN EVcR FORMALLY PRESENTED TO A PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
"Washington, D. C, Jan. 6. The report that former Senator Henry Gassnway Davis of West Virginia is to marry Miss Maude .Ashford has been revived in the last few days by the
fctatement ot her intimate friends that
the engagement is indeed true and that the marriage will take place in
the near future. In fact, it is said the
wedding of the former senator and
Miss Ashford will take place the coming week; Senator Davis plans, it is understood, to take his bride to Palm Beach for a honeymoon, and it is further said he will settle upon her, at the time of their marriage, the sum of $1,000,000, in consideration for which she will waive all her dower rights. This probably is in consideration for the feelings of hia family. Marriage to be Quiet. One of the senator's daughters, Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins, wife of the senator from West Virginia, still denies the engagement of her father to Miss Ashford. in consequence of which some of her friends think the senator Is keeping his family in ignorance of his intended plans, and that the wedding will therefore be extremely quiet. Bride-Elect Once Reporter. Miss Ashford, whose name has been linked so persistently with that of the last democratic candidate for the vicepresidency, was for a time society reporter on one of the local papers. She is, of course, much younger than the former senator, who was born at Baltimore as far back as 1823 and is now in his eighty-fifth year. As a youthful old man he has distanced even Speaker Cannon, and. while bis bride to be is more than two score years bis junior, no one seems Inclined to criticise the marriage, except, possibly, some of his own immediate family.
J2ALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
CXj5sg: j 4 jg., f , ft. , . C$ 'T S ats ft t -3S3 2a ! v .
Her Identity Is Established Beyond All Doubt and Her Husband Is in Cell.
BODY TO BE BURIED.
ANONYMOUS LETTER MAY GIVE SOME LIGHT UPON THE MURDERCHANCE REMARKS LEADS TO AN ARREST IN THE CASE.
GIRLS OFFER BONUS TO THE YOUNG MEN
Will Pay Them 50 Cents an Hour to Dance.
MURDERED MAN'S SUIT CASE F
Harrison, N. J., January C Theodore Whitmore, the New York motor-
man in his cell "to await the action of the coroner," is the central figure in the Passaic river swamp murder mystery. The identity established beyond dispute, the body of murdered Lena w'hitmore is to be accorded private burial by relatives. It will be sent to Schenectady, the home of her youth. Whitmore today expressed a desire to rescue the body from the morgue. Whitmore. who gave away to occasional bursts of weeping Saturday, had himself well in hand today. The anonymous letter received by the police some days ago, in which the writer said that he had accompanied the woman to the flats and there stunned her with blows on the head, may prove important evidence. The
writer denied that he had killed the woman, but suggested that she had probably drowned herself because of her chagrin when she regained consciousness and found her clothing had been stripped from her. It now ap
pears, according to tne police, that the
handwriting in this letter bears a striking resemblance to the writing in the letters received by Mrs. Whitmore's sister, which purported to have come from Mrs. Whitmore. but must have been written after her death. All of the letters will be examined and compared by experts. The inquest has been set for next Thursday evening. A chance remark led to the arrest today of Caleb Evans, a time clerk employed by te Third Avenue elevated. The remark quoted Whitmore as having said that he would steal home some morning and surprise his wife.
Walla Walla, Wash., Jan. C Be cause they could not get young men to attend their dances in sufficient numbers to take care of the young ladies, even when they reversed the usual method and charged the girls instead of the boys at the door, members of the Modern Brotherhood of America have announced that they will pay 5o cents an hour for twenty-five young men to attend the dance they will give next week. About IL'.j applications have already been received, which the brotherhood
take as an indication that the financial stringency rather than high moral3. is the cause of the lack of attendance during the last few months.
BURIED IN CEMENT.
The
Re-
Was About Two Miles Scene of Tragedy.
From
Want First Floors Only; -From house to house a young couple passed, looking at flats. "It's funny they can't find anythinc in this whole block that suits them." said an interested observer of their proRir-iss. What is the oatter?" "There are plenty of vacant flats." said an agent, "but they wouldn't unit
i those people. They are not on the first floor. That couple is just from the j country. Like all other people who ! never have lived in an apartment, they are afraid of fire and on that account can't be persuaded to go aboT the ground floor. A year from now they will cheerfully climb to the fourth or maybe the fifth story, but until they get broken in nothing but the first i floor will do." New York Press.
Winamac, Ind., Jan. C The suit case of George Widesmith, who was murdered and robbed near Crown Point was found about two miles from the scene. The contents had been removed. It has been discovered that
one of the vestibule doors on the train; ! flDIUM WANT ADS PAY on which Wlldesmith was traveling rALLAUIUIVI VVHPi I HUP TMI. had been opened, and the theory of the """""
detectives is that he was sandbagged and thrown from the train. No clew to the perpetrators of the crome has been found.
AN UNC0NQUERED PEAK.
Story of an Arab Boy Who
nounced Mohammedanism. Accordincr to histonr thpr was born
about the year 1520 an Arab boy witb sharp-r pinnacle end more jag-
? was captured in f ea m outline, m neigut Mounts Mass-
Lizard Head on Mount Wilson Has De
fied the Climbers. : The mountains and peaks of the Pan Juan in northwestern Colorado present a different appearance from any of the northern Rockies. They are grander, more precipitous.
Mrs. Chow, whose picture here appears, is the wife of the acting Crinese minister, wbo was preRented at fhs? Xev-- Tear's reception at the White Hoase. and wbs the firs Chinese woman to be farnxallj- pree-cre d to the FTWn o the Uaited States, -
named Geroninao. He was captured
infancy by the Spanish garritson at Oran, and when about eight years old he escaped from his captors and went
I back to his family, living as a Mohamj inedan until the age of twenty-five. I He then volntarily returned to Oran j and resumed the Christian life which he had adopted previously when in j the hands of the Spanish authorities. J A few years later he went on a coast
ing raid with a party of Spaniards, but the raiders were themselves captured by a Moorish corsair and brought to Algiers. Ilere the attempt was made to convert him to Moham medanism. but be persistently refused
to embrace that faith, so that he was j tried and condemned to die. His hands j
were tied behind his back, and he was cast alive, face downward, into a block of ooncrote then being prepared for the Fort des Vingt Quatre Heures. then building. Careful note was taken
Pclaluma Incubators Standard Of the World. Pilgrim Bros. Cor. 5th and Main.
ive. Elbert and Blanca slightly out
rank those of the San Juan, but no-; where else can be found whole groups of mountains rearing their heads to i and above 14.000 feet. I Mount Wilson 14,250 feet the dom- j Inant peak, is one of the most massive j in the entire Itocky mountain range Just east of this mountain is the re- j markable trachyte obelisk called Lizard head. The vivid imagination of j an early pioneer who had been "seeing : things" Is said to be responsible for j the name. ; The summit Is 14.1 GO feet above tne I sea. From a ponderous base the pin- ; nacle rises 200 feet, with a diameter at the foot of only about sixty feet, grad- j oally tapering to less thaa half that at j
the top. Lizard head has defied all attempts of mountain climbers to reach its summit. The foot of the pinnacle Is easily
The Stttnrtts Of T,lf. Infants sad children are constantly oeedioa' a fixative. It is important to know what to gire tliem. Their stoznacb and bowels are not strong enough for salts, purgative waters or cathartic pUs. powders or tablets. Gire thera a mild. pJeasartt, trentte. laratiVe toa.'c tike Dr. Cal3w! a Syrup Pepsin, which setts at the smU sera ot ?U cents or St at oruz stores. It is tfci pp treat rcjaedjr for tc-o to hare m tbe buse to
of the spot bv Ilaido. a Spanish Bene- accomplished, bat thus far the steep
dictine missionary to Algiers, who prayed the time might come when the Lord would pave the way for his exhumation and Cbriatlan burial. In 1ST3 the French found It necessary to deU' -' the f.'t. and the data left by Haklo v.-:e rV. ;, i to be correct, for the designated M'is of cjnerete on being cut open tlaioaed the bones of GeronImo and th cavity left by his body. The bones were removed Dec 27. 1853. and given Christian bnriaL and the now rest la a massive stone sarcophagus In the cathedral. A plaster cast was made of the cavity and afterward
ghtOsrahe&-CtB Age.
sides of the 200 foot shaft have proved
Insurmountable. No doubt the time will come when the venturesome mountain climber will find a way, but many a failure Is the record of the past. Trains circle thi mountain for miles on the way from Telluride to Rico. New York Post.
Hve too troeble of any kind ao-fate? fnrsr a disordered stomach? Go to yoor droaTi sad get a 50c or fl bottie of Dr. CaJdeTi'. Syrup Pepsin, which is positively g-narasteed tc aire yoa and kaep yea well.
The Bee Hive Grocery Co. Automatic Phones 1198-1199 Bell190
Our Bulk Olives are new 1907 crop, the finest in the city
ONLY
30c
Per QT.
Old Fashioned Buckwheat Old Hickory Syrup. GoM Bond Maple Syrup, Fine Apple Butter. Mince Meat. Backmeyer Kraut. Shelled Walnuts. Shelled Pecans, Shelled Almonds. Table Raisins. Shell-Bark Hickory Xots.
