Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 155, 19 July 1908 — Page 3

PAGE THREE. Ktofl WM We Say Bui WMIl We P That Makes This tthe Greatest off AM (mn-AmnnsiIl CfleauniILJp allies

THE RICHMOND PALlaADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1908.

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and it brings with it the greatest money saving values ever known to the Richmond community.

Think of it! Men's and hoys' suits at 40 per cent off; straw hats at half price; neckwear, underwear, etc., at from 10 to 25 per cent. off. Everything must and will go. : KH&T D H (UJ Kffl

BOYS' KNEE PANT SUITS Boys' knee pant suits, including sailor blouses, straight and knickerbocker pants, made up of the latest fabrics and the latest styles, at half price.

Boys' Shirts Sizes 12 to 14 years, nobby patterns for 35c Boys' Knee Pants $1.50 grade 1 $1.15 75c grade 59c 50c grade 39c

$7.00 $6.00 $5.00

.$3.50 .$3.00 .$2.50

$4.00 $2.00 $3.50 ...$1.75

Boys' knee pant suits, blouse, straight, made in latest styles and best fabrics.

$1.50 suits for $1.15 $1.00 suits for... 79c

75c suits for 59c 50c suits for 39c

The Store of Good Wearables For Men and Boys Watch Our Windows For Specials.

MosemMoom. liiftta & C

824 Main Street

Here Are the Savings On Clothing No reason why you cannot become well dressed at these remarkable low prices :

$28.00 $25.00 $22.00 $20.00 $18.00 $15.00 $12.50 $10.00

Hart, Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothcraft Suits Clothcraft Suits Clothcraft Suits

Suits $21.50 Suits $19.75 Suits $17.75 Suits $15.75 Suits $13.75 $11.25 $ 9.75 $ 7.25

Two Piece Suits $20 Hart, Schaffner & Marx 2-pc Suits $13.50 $18 Hart, Schaffner & Marx 2-pc Suits $12.50 $15 Hart, Schaffner & Marx 2-pc Suits $ 9.75 $12 Hart, Schaffner & Marx 2-pc Suits $ 7.25 $10 Clothcraft 2-piece Suits $ 6.75 $ 8 Clothcraft 2-piece Suits $ 5.25

Men's Furnishings Men's Soft or Stiff Hats, all This Season's Styles, Including all the Latest Shapes

53.00 hats for $2.25

$2.00 hats for ..

.$1.25

$2.50 hats for 41.75 $1.50 hats for sfl.00-

NIGHT SHIRTS. Sizes 14 to 19. Muslins and cambrics. $1.00 grades 79c 75c grades 63c 50c grades 39c DRESS SHIRTS. Cluett coat shirts. $1.50 shirts at $1.15 $1.00 Mountain and Silver brands at 79c WHITE AND FANCY VESTS. $4.00 grades, extra.. $2.75 $3.50 grades, extra.. $2.25 $3.00 grades, extra.. $2.00 $2.50 grades, extra.. $1.75 $2.00 grades, extra. .$1.35 $1.50 gradec, extra.. $1.15

UNDERWEAR UNION SUITS $3.00 knit fabric... $2.29i $2.50 knit fabric... $1.78 $2.00 knit fabric... $1.39 $1.50 knit fabric $1.17 $1.00 knit fabric S9c TWO PIECE SUITS. $1.00 a garment 89c 50c a garment 39c WORKING SHIRTS. The shirts are union made, all Elzes from 14 to 18. Blues, blacks fancy at 39o ANCHOR BRAND SHIRTS. Anchor brand 50c shirts, sizes 14 to 19. 50c shirts at 42c 3 for $1.25

SEVEN DAYS

WITHOUT

FOOD

Chester 0'connell Suffers All Agonies, Locked in a Box Car.

THE STORY OF HIS TRIP.

FOUGHT MADLY FOR SOMETHING TO QUENCH HIS THIRST AND TO APPEASE HIS HUNGER, BUT WAS UNSUCCESSFUL.

New York, July 18. The medical taff of the Lincoln hospital, at One Hundred and Forty-first street, the Bronx, has a patient of whom it is proud. He is Chester A. O'Connell, of Bath Beach. He is twenty-five years old and is ill with typhoid fever in a virulent form. The doctors agree that he will not die because he came to

tnem after a seven day ride in a freight car with neither food nor wa

ter. Compared to that experience,

they say his typhoid is merely an epi

sode. O'Connell is a machinist with an Iron constitution and a roving disposition. Last winter work being slack In his native Brooklyn, he betook himself south for the season. He traveled by easy stages, principally on the trucks of freight cars, and about the first of the year brought up at Jaskonvllle, Fla., where he found steady employment, and a climate that appealed to him. On May lO he decided to leave there eo went to a freight yard and inquired about train schedules. He learned that a train to his liking would leave In three hours. In the meantime with a night ride on the "bumpers" ahead of him he decided to 6leep. He looked around and found a refrigerator car full of potatoes with an Inviting open door. He entered it, found it cool and comfortable and so stretched himself on the floor and slept. The car had a refrigerator installed at one end, and, except for a gangway partitioned oft by heavy wire screening, was otherwise full of potatoes. When O'Connell awoke he found himself locked in. the car pitch dark end the train moving. Concluding that the train might make a run of a few hours, perhaps a day, he lay down and slept some more. When he awakened the train was still moving and he was hungry. O'Connell began to lose track of time liom that on. There was not a ray

of light in the car, all the food there was, raw potatoes, was on the other side of a stout wire partition that he could not break down. Water, there was none. O'Connell's recollection of his long and horrible ride before he finally be--held daylight again i3 a blur relieved by worries of tortures. Sometimes the train stopped, and the imprisoned man could tell that he was in a city or in country. Often he was tortured by tho sound of brakemen running over the top of his car, by the voices of passengers on platforms, and worst of all, by the splash of water gushing from water tanks. Sometimes, for hours, there would be nothing but roar of the train lumbering with caterpillar slowness it seemed to O'Connell, over endless leagues of track. Generally though in a kind of stupor, he was dimly conscious of being alive and of wondering why he continued to live. O'Connell had a knife and with it occasionally he was able to obtain minute pieces of potato through the wire mesh. These he sucked to their last globule of moisture, and then swallowed in little bites. When he was not spearing potatoes he was lying in half delirium on the floor. The car in which O'Connell was locked got to Jersey City on July 17 in the morning. O'Connell did not know where he was, nor cared. He was aroused by the beat of waves and the sensation of sailing and knew that his car had been put aboard a boat. Long afterwards in the dark men entered his car with lanterns. The men were freight handlers at East Hudson river freight yard. One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street and the East river. They were astonished at apparition on the floor of the car. A creature, seemingly human, that babbled In flighty sentences and whose hands and feet were a mass of bruises and open wounds which he had come by they learned later from beating and kicking at the walls of his car prison. O'Connell says that he is not going

to die that he is going to live to get to Bath Beach, and that then he will stay thare.

V

CHICAGO WILL PA! FINAL TRIBUTE

Memorial to Be Held in Great Coliseum in Memory of Cleveland.

IROQUOIS CLUB IN CHARGE.

POLITICIANS AND PERSONAL FRIENDS OF THE FORMER PRESIDENT WILL SPEAK TO THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE.

Chicago, 111., July 18. Chicago's final tribute to the memory of Grover Cleveland will take the form of a big memorial to be held in the Auditorium Sunday. Personal frineds and political associates of the former president will make the leading addresses and thousands of citizens of Chicago will unite with them to do honor to the "Sage of Princeton." The meeting will be held under the auspices of the Iroquois club, the democratic club of the city. From the day that news of Grover Cleveland's death reached Chicago, associations, clubs and public bodies here have vied with each other In bearing witness to the admiration and affection with which the former president was regarded by democrats

OFFICERS EXCLUDED. Those Above Rank of Captain Kept Out of National Shoot. Washington, July 18. In an order Issued at the War Department officers above the rank of captain and civilians are excluded from shooting in the national team, individual, and the pistol matches to be held at Camp Perry, Ohio, this summer. The order la in accordance with the act of Congress approved May 15, 1908.

"Are your five daughters all married off, Mr. Brown?" "No, five sons-in-law have married

on." FUegeade Blatter.

Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accoringly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objectionable substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug

and republicans alike. The board of trade was one of the first bodies to take official action and summed up the feeling of the city and of the entire country in the following striking resolution: "On June 24 the mortal life of Grover Cleveland was ended. The record of his career as president of the United States for two full terms and in other capacities, both public and private, is one of lofty patriotism, of unsurpassed courage, of unswerving fidelity to great and immutable principles, of profound statesmanship, of unhesitating loyalty to his convictions, regardless of personal considerations of political affiliations. In the great crisis which made illustrious his presidency he kept unawed and solely in view the maintenance of law and order and tho glory of the republic No sophistry ever pierced his armor of righteousness. He was great in his simplicity and simple in his greatness. His name is written in living and ineffaceable characters among the names of our great presidents. The life and character of Grover Cleveland are among the imperishable treasures of the nation." The board of trade of Chicago has always been foremost in voicing the unspoken sentiments of its members and of the city in times of national calamity, and In such cases as Johnstown flood, the Galveston flood and the San Francisco

earthquake it contributed large sums of money for the relief of the sufferers. Among other organizations which passed memorial resolutions were the Iroquois club. Union league club, Hamilton club, Illinois Athletic club and the board of commissioners of Cook county.

PENNSYLVANIA TRYS BIG AUTO DRAYS

Shown That Package Freight Can Be Handled Faster.

MPORTANT RULING OF WAR DEPARTMENT

Affects Admittance of Cadets To West Point Academy.

Philadelphia, July 18. Auto drays are being tested by the Pennsylvania, and if the results are satisfactory, they will bo adopted for Pittsburg and Baltimore to expedite the transfer of freight. One experiment has 6hown a saving of from six to twele hours in tho handling of package freight between stations eight miles apart. The truck used has. a capacity of five tons, and averaged seven and a half trips a day, carving two " and two-tenths tons each time. The method saves much switching and congestion.

AIDS THEFARMERS. Government of India Will Encourage Sinking of Wells. London, July 18. The government of India has appropriated over 1,000,000 for use in the United Provinces in the way of loans to farmers to enable them to sink wells and Improve embankments for Irrigation purposes.

RANCHERS DEEP IN THE WESTERN HARVEST

Millions of Bushels Will Be Garnered This Year.

Washington, July 18. An important decision has ben reached by the war department respecting the right of appointment of cadets at large at the military academy and those from tho states credited to senators and representatives. A law was enacted some time ago changing tho beginning of the academic year from June 1 to March 1, and under the statutes those who make nominations for cadets at West Point may designate the appointee one year in advance of the date of admission to the military academy.

x. this coBisr; too. a4 car!BDri 1ft. :a&waU' Sttbp Fepi Is citi.ny ruarmocd to car todtreHoa. consuptttoa. afc beadvcb. oSeaalre-fereatli. malaria aaa U djjeajn

Spokane, Wash., July 18. Ranchers in Washington, Idaho and Oregon are deep in the wheat harvest, and it is estimated the total crop for the three states will aggregate 48,500,000 bushels, with a market value of from $36,375,000 to $38,800,000. The last named figure is for 80 cent grain, which price the leading buyers, and milling men in Spokane say will prevail, In view

of the shortage on the Pacific coast At any rate, they do not believe the market will open under 75 cents. The estimates for 1908 are: Washington, 29,000,000 bushels; Oregon. 12,500,000 bushels; Idaho, 7,000,000 bushels. The banner crop In the history of the three states, harvested in 1907 brought the farmers a little more than $39,000,000. The crop in 1906 was as follows: Washington, 25,075.258 bushels; Oregon, 14,215,597 bushels; Idaho, 8,231,000. bushels. The total acreage in 1908 was as follows: Washington, 1,447,000; Oregon, 725,000; Idaho, 374,000; total, 2.546,000 as against 2,340,000 acres In 1907, as follows: Washington, 1,347,000 acres; Oregon, 651,000 acres; Idaho, 342,000 acres. The barley and oats crops in Washington are expected to be heavier In 1908 than they

were in 1907, when 10.365.000 bushels,

of these grain were barrftted.

PLANS BEING FINISHED. Board of Construction Working on Battleship Florida. Washington, July 18. Plans for the new battleship Florida are being rapidly completed by the board of construction. The Florida will be so constructed as to accommodate either the Curtis turbine, the American type, or reciprocating engine, should they be decided upon.

ARE FOR PROHIBITION. Switzerland Will Lose by Stopping the Manufacture of Absinthe.

Geneva, July 18. -The National referendum on the Question of prohibiting the. manufacture and sale of ab

sinthe in Switzerland has resulted in

a large majority for prohibition. This

will involve considerable loss of reV enue to the government.

SPLICED TWICE, BUT WILLIN' AGIN Ebenezer Marries Blushing Tryphena This Time.

Salem, O., July 18. "Parental objections be durned," said Ebenezer Marl nee when some forty-five yean ago he seized blushing Tryphena Miller by the hook and endeavored to drag her to the village parsonage. But "TTypheenie" just wouldn't turn a deaf ear to her folks' protests and she told "Eh" that he must release her mitt right, then and there. And "Ed" obeyed her despite his emotions, and then he hiked West to ge a chunk of kale, and also to forget that "Trypheenie" ever existed. "Eh" soiled with money, came back! here today and wanted to know where the sweetheart of his youth was living. He had survived two matrimonial voyages and Tryphena had him tied. But "Eb" went over to her house, chirked her up a bit, and at 4 o'clock this afternoon he yanked her over to the village parsonage, where the splicing took place. They're only C5 yeara young.

To cure a stomach trouble, first Digest the Food

Tinat is essential. The pain is caused by undigested food, which irritates the stomach lining. The stomach can certainly never get well while that irritation continues. No need to doctor the stomach. And dieting helps but little. The vital thing is to do the stomach's work. To eat what you want, and digest it. Then the stomach, in a little time, will do its work itself.

There is only one way to digest all food. That is KodoL Pepsin digests albumen only. Starch requires something else; fat something else. Then bowel digestion must be accomplished too. That requires other ingredients. It requires an exact combination to digest every food, and it most be in liquid form. Kodol is that combination. 2a teat tubes, in our laboratories.

we have seen it digest every foof that man eats. It does the same in the stomach, in one-third of the time. One can't cure the stomach by; giving it half-way help. There are many partial digesters perhaps you have tried them. . But, however careful you are with your diet, there it food which they can't digest. The irritation continues. But Kodol, whatever yon eat; digests it at once and completely. Please prove this at our risk. See how instant is the relief. See how; quickly the stomach recovers. You will never again permit yourself to suffer from indigestion. Our Guarantee On the first dollar bottle of Kodol your druggist gives a signed guarantee. If it fails to do all we claim, your druggist returns your money. You take no risk whatever. This $1.00 bottle contains 2 times as much as the 50c bottle. Made bjr E. C DcWltt & Co, Chicago,