Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 204, 6 September 1908 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, SUNDAY, SEPTE3IBER 6, 1908.
PAGE THREE.
KPT MftWV If you need money, call or write to us. We will loan you money In any amount from $5 up, on household goods,- pianos, organs, teams, fixtures, etc., without removal. You can have from one to twelve months' time In which to pay It back, in small weekly or monthly payments, as you prefer, $1.20 is the weekly payment on a fifty-dollar loan for fifty weeks; other amounts at the some proportion. If you need money, fill out the following blank, cut it out and mail it to us. Our agent will call on you at once. We guarantee the most courteous treatment, and lowest rates obtainable. Loans made in city and all surrounding towns and country.
SERVICE RULES
HELD UNFAIR
Shippers Hold Them Worse Than Those It Was Intended to Relieve.
Your name ..... Address street and number Town Kind of security Amount Wanted....
You need not leave your home to flL lan All communications are held strlcTTy confidential.
RICHMOND LOAN GO.
ROOM 8, COLONIAL BUILDING. ESTABLISHED 1895.
HOME PHONfc 1545. RICHMOND, IND.
We will have on sale next Wednesday morning 25 BUSHELS FANCY
Pliias
Place your orders early Bcc Hive Grocery Co.
Special Prices In Hey wood Go-Carts
CHICAGO
WIL
L
CENSOR
SALOMES
COMPLAINT IS FILED.
Those Low Down on Scale
Will Find Dances Are Classified as Immoral. STANDARD IS ESTABLISHED
AT
DUNHAM'S i . .. Furniture Store 627-629 Main St.
Henry W. Deuker
FANCY GROCER
High Grade Coffees and Teas - v Cor. 6 th St. and Ft. Wayne ave Phone 1204 Established 1874
PURE CIDER VINEGAR. WHOLE SPICES. HORSE RADISH ROOT. LITTLE RED PEPPERS. ATLAS FRUIT JARS. HADLEY BROS.
SEE OUR SPRING LINE of aw I GO-CARTS at HASSENBUSCH'S
Moore & Ogborn
Insurance, Bonds and Loans, Real Es
tate and Rentals. t Both phones. Bell 53R. Hom T589, Room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
POLICE SERGEANT AND ASSISTANTS VISIT EACH PLACE AND INSPECT DANCES, PASSING JUDGMENT ON THEM. Chicago, Sept 5. All of the fiftyseven varieties of Salomes threaten to invade Chicago, but those low
down on the scale will find that their dances already have been classified by
the police as undesirable performan ces.
It is planned by the guardians of
public morals, who already have arranged a strict censorship for the bur
lesque theaters, that a line should be
drawn between sensuousness and sen
suality.
The general form of the edict that
is to go forth will be that the Salomes of the second rate amusement places
must be held up to the standard main
tained by the artists of the high class
houses and not allowed to sink below the level of decency, but Sergeant Charles E. O'Donnell, head of Chief Shippy's theater bureau, has declared all objectionable features must be eliminated from each dance or it will be forbidden the boards. Censors Watch Each Salome. In order to accomplish this end he
proposes that he and nis assistants
shall watch each of these fad followers in her early performances and that
any little step, grimace, or gesture
aimed to carry any suggestivenesa other than that of the story of Salome with a corresponding degree of purity, shall be noted.
At the close of the performance the manager of the theater, as well as the dancer, will be notified to eliminate the criticised actions. A few of the widely various brands that as a whole have had their genesis in New York already have appeared on the local boards following predictions of severe shocks to sensitive natures.
MANY EXCEPTIONS TAKEN AND
SHIPPERS CLAIM THERE ARE TOO FEW PROVISIONS FOR REFUND OF CHARGE FOR SHIPPING
The new car service rules adopted by the Chicago demurrage bureau, which went into effect on Aug. 1, are, according to the shippers, "more unfair and less reasonable than the former rules." The shippers of Chicago, through the traffic committee of tht Illinois Manufacturers association, have filed a complaint asking for the restoration of th old rules. The principal cause for protest is in the reduction of the number of conditions
under which car servict charges may be refunded. Rule- No. 12, dealing with the subject of claims, formerly contained five provisions for refund, of which all but one have been eliminated and which the shippers ask to
have restored. The first provision declares that a claim for refund might be made "in case of overcharge or error in the assessment of charges;" the second for "failure on the part of the
railroad to properly handle freight when such failure is responsible for the charges;" the third, in case of "unavoidable failure or breakdown in the machinery used for loading and unloading of cars;" fourth, ".when
the freight cannot be disposed of at the point held for sufficient to realize both freight and car service charges." The only provision for a refund now
included in the rules are In cast of extreme cold weather, rain, enow or
strikes (formerly the fifth provision), and in case of errors of omissions on
the part . of the railroad." Railroad
officials 6tate the first and second pro
visions are sufficitntly covered by the new item "errors or omissions" and
that the other two items were omit ted in accordance with a recent ml
lng of the interstate commerce commission. No date has been set for the proposed conference with the bureau
as to a revision of the rules.
jj " c Niv Ht Schaffner St Mar WW
TOO SCARED TO CRY
Woman Watched Burglars at
Work on Vault and Could Not Talk.
DESERVING OF A MEDAL.
Easton, Mo., Sept. 5. Mrs. A. Marvhall of this city watched four burglars working on the vault of the Bank of Easton for two hours. She was too frightened to cry out or otherwise give the alarm. The men escaped with about $100 belonging to the postoffice. The money was between the outer and inner doors of the vault and the robbers were frightened by daylight before securing the bank's funds. The vault was wrecked and a large hole blown in the floor. The men drove away in a carriage toward St. Joseph. They are believed to be the same men who robbed the bank at Rushville, Mo., last Wednesday, for whom a reward of $5,000 has been offered.
FREIGHT CARS T0BE NEEDED Actual Famine Expected by Middle of October.
Saginaw,' Mich., Sept. 5. According to statements made at Pere Marquette headquarters in this city there will not be an idle freight car in Michigan within 6 days. In fact, it was predicted that there will be a car famine by the middle of October. Over 500 of the Pere Marquette's 2.500 Idle cars in this district have in the last ten days been absorbed in the handling of early crops. The Pere Marquette is turning out repaired cars at the rate of fifty a day in order to meet the prospective rush.
TAFT EXCEPTION IN ANOTHER WAY Not as Easily Controlled as Dirigible. , "Heard the latest aoout Taft?" Inquired a campaign manager. "No, what is it?" the reporter asked. "It is copy for all of you, whether
your papers are republican, democratic
or prohibitionist. A true and harm
less story that will neither make nor
unmake votes. "Mr. Taft," said the campaign man
ager, after pausing to laugh, "was out
taking a brisk constitutional one day,
and in sharply negotiating a corner he ran square into a peddler, upsetting the man's tray of shoestrings and col
lar buttons.
"The peddler, as he stooped to pick
up his wares, grumbled to himself:
" 'And they want to say these here
dirigible ballons is perfected!"
Selecting the School Is Easy If You Consider Only the Best. When you spend your money for a course in bookkeeping, shorthand, typewriting and correlated subjects you do so with a view of qualifying yourself to meet the demands of the business public. Whenever you attend the INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE, you have not only the support of the school which you attend but of eight other schools which are also interested in your success. This, together with the EMPLOYMENT DEPARTMENT to which you have a life time right, WITHOUT COST TO YOU and which is maintained at Indianapolis entirely separate from any school, should be sufficient reasons why you should attend our school. There are also many other reasons. Students are now enrolling and entering daily. It will pay you to investidate our school before making arrangements elsewhere. We are glad to explain our courses to you whether you enroll with us or not. If not convenient to call, phone 2040 and one of us will call to see you. Night School opens Sept. 7th. Address all communication to L. B. Campbell, Mgr. of the RICHMOND BUSINESS COLLEGE
YOU notice how dressy, stylish, distinguished in clothes, some men always look. Do you know how they do it? We'll tell you. They buy here Hart, Schaffner & Marx clothes; that means all-wool, perfect tailoring, and correct style to begin with. They buy, in addition to a fancy weave suit, a black thibet or cheviot, or a blue serge ; and occasionally change off for a week, get the suit they're not wearing pressed, give it a little rest in the closet, and then put it on fresh and new looking. You can do that; and you ought to; it's clothes-economy. We'll see that you're dressed right all the time if you say so This store is the home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes $15.00 to $25.00
School Opens Sept 1 4 Boys' ScDiooD Soots Have you seen our Boys' School Suits? From all sides we have been complimented on the superiority of our little men's clothing and the littleness of price. This combination suit we are talking about is a wonder, as Is also the blouse two trouser suit. "Boy Proof." No such boy clothing anywhere else In Richmond. Be sure your boy starts to school wearing the right kind of clothing. Prices all the way from - $3.00 to $7.00 r
Every suit carries the Rosenbloom-Buntln label a sufficient guarantee of good wear, perfect fit, honest and reliable manufacture, and the best value for the price that can be bought. We save you money on your boys clothing bills. i Rosenbloom, Buntin & Co., S24 Main st.
TOWN RESIDENTS
RECEIVE SHARES
Fortune Disposed of by Two
Brothers to Their Old Friends and Neighbors.
WAS DONE BY AGREEMENT.
WEALTHY FOLKS LOOK AFTER
COLLEGES BUT. FEW DISTRIBUTE MEANS AMONG THOSE CLOSE AT HOME.
Special Prices on Our Display Stand Every Day. Backed Up With Four per cent Cash Coupons. PETER JOHNSON CO. MAIN ST.
INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE
LOANS. RENTS
W. H. Bradburv & Son f
Rooms 1 and 3. Wosteott Bin
Saratoga. N. Y Sept. 5. As the re
suit of an agreement made years ago
between Thomas M. and Alexander Gilchrist, two kindly old bachelor broth
ers, a fortune of more than $1,000,000
has been distributed among the residents of the littletown of Charlton.
Alexander J. Gilchrist has recently followed out the agreement made with, his brother four years ago, and left his fortune, together with one of equal size left him by his brother, tothe
friends and neighbors Instead of some pretentious educational or charitable institution. According to the Tillage gossip, several years ago the two Gilchrists, well along in years, with more monejt accumulated by shrewd real estate investments than they could spend in a dozen lifetimes, fell to talking one evening by the fireside of their unpretentious country home of how they should leave their wealth. With no near relatives, here, was no obvious beneficiary to be decided upon. "I am going to leave all my money to you, Tom," Alexander is reported to have said. "Now, that's funny," replied the other. "I have already bequeathed all of mine to you." "But one of us must die first," reminded Alexander, "and who will the other leave It to?"
"Well," Tom Is said to have replied, "there's plenty of wealthy folks to look after the colleges and such, but I don't know any way that will make me lie more contented in my grave than to give all of the good friends of ours around the village enough to make them sure of bread and butter, and perhaps a little piece of cake now and then." Thomas M. Gilchrist approved of the idea and the compact was drawn np by which the survivor agreed to distribute the combined fortunes around the little village, with a ew bequests to distant cousins and friends of greatest intimacy who had moved away-
REMOVING WEST Household Goods shipped at Reduced Rates to and from Western States. Through cars avoiding transfer. Colored maps tree. Write for particulars. Forwarding Dept., TRANS-CONTINENTAL FREIGHT CO. CDUtl, 211 Itarkn ft. Kf TUX. a fcnanr URnucBa.ni Mutant, ut ucao. a i. a. 81TTU. 1H IMi Strut
ANNUAL NORTHERN
RESORT EXCURSION
MICHIGAN
- G. R. & I. 9, '08 From all stations. Richmond to HoagLaml Inclusive. Tickets good only on excursion train and regular train No. X.
$6 $7
.00
Round trip
.00
Ron nd trip
Traverse Cily, Nortbport, Petoskey, Harbor Springs and Mackinaw City
To
To Mackinac Island
Sept. 20, 08, Is the last day you may return on these tickets NOW is the time-the last of the SUMMERTIME For additional Information call or address any G. R. & I. Ticket Agent, or CL LOCKWO0D, E. C HORTON, General Passenger AgU Traveling Pass. Agt. Grand Rapids, Mich.
Anybody Can Kodak
No first, no dark room for any part of the work. Let us explain how sim
ple It Is and show you the new things from the Kodak City. Kodaks $5 to $105. Brownie Cameras f 1 to St. W. ft. ROSS DRUG CO., 804 Main, Richmond.
Palladium Want Ads-Cent a Vord
- 14
3
kWUD ) HQS
Cuxirsroenna
acts gentlyyet promptly ontke bowels, cleanses the system effectually assists one in overcoming habitual consUpalion permanently. To get its beneficial effectsbuy tU Genuine.
-.i. . . -T
Ranuf act urea hy I he lAUFOKNIJL
pLOSxRXJPCo. SOU) FT LFJUaWCrDRUCCJSTS- 60 fBOmt
G
M.M.M. Relieves sour ttomach. palpitation of the heart Digests whatyoa 1
EXQ) IT ,MW8 Burn Artificial Gas In an Artificial Gas Range. Do it now and watch your gasbilL Sec the fflchmond Liflht Deal & Power Co.
