Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 60, 7 January 1910 — Page 10
PAGE TEX,
THE RICHMOND PALIADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1910,
JEMMEST IF T1E1 ML OMK AID OT OJEAMRC
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Hundreds, yes, many hundreds, benefited by our past clearances, will gladly welcome this extraordinary sale announcement We Say Greatest ! Assortments 2 Savings 2 Every garment in our cloak room affected, presenting some most remarkable purchasing opportunities; in fact, values offered will be so great, seemingly so out of proportion with sales prices prevailing elsewhere that we deem it wise to again Assure the Buying Public oi the Unquestioned Excellence, Style and Quality ot Our Fall and Winter 1909-1910 Garments READ 2 SEE OHJIR WINDOWS 2
Ladies9 Elegant Tailored Suits Lot 1 Ladies' Suits worth $12.50 to $20.00 $4.95 Lot 2 Ladies' Suits worth $20.00 and $22.50 -.89.95 Lot 3 Ladies' Suits worth $25.00 and $27.50.. $13.75 Lot 4 Ladies' Suits worth $30.00 to $50.00 ..$17.45 Mind you, this season's suits. Ladies' Stylish One-Piece Wool Dresses Beautifully made and Elegantly Trimmed. Dresses worth $15.00 to $20.00, clearance $( 0.00 Dresses worth $20.00 to $30.00, clearance $15.00 My, what a snap for a stylish, one-piece wool dress now so popular. Furs ! Furs ! Furs ! Every piece of Fur in our store from the finest of real mink to the cheapest coney neck-pieces and muffs for Ladies, Misses and children, all go at half price. Think of it, saving just half.
Those Stylish and Popular Long Capes We've only a few of them left; these go $12.50 Capes only $8.34 . $15.00 Capes only $10.00 $18.00 Capes only $12.00 An elegant opportunity for one of those pretty capes. Ladies' Black, Stylish, Seasonable Coats Ladies' Black Coats, $8.50 and $10 values go at ..$6.75 Ladies' Black Coats, $12.50 and $15 values go at S9.95 Ladies' Black Coats, $17.50 to $20 values go at SI 3.75 Black Coats worth $25 to $40.00, all reduced. The season's most popular and stylish garments. Ladies9 Colored Coats Fashionable dark fancies including those much desired grey striped novelties. All $10.00 Novelty Coats go at $5.00 All $15.00 Novelty Coats go at $7.50 All $25.00 Novelty Coats go at SI 2.50 All $40.00 Novelty Coats go at $20.00 Savings just half on all Novelty Cloth Coats.
50 All Wool Dress Skirts, novelty materials, splendid styles, not one worth less than $5, choice for clearance $2.75 Don't miss this opportunity for an everyday skirt. Messaline and Taffeta Sillc Waists One lot colored Silk Waists, worth $5.00 and $6.50, while they last $3,75 Other waists equally interesting. Children's Coats Sizes 10. 12, 14 years, novelty and plain cloths, worth $5.00 to $12.00, clearance $2.00 They must go! They will go! If savings are a criterion. Children's Coats Sizes 2, 4, 6 years, Bearskins. Caraculs and Cloths worth $2.00 to $6.50 all go at ONE-HALF PRICE. Saving just half on any child's coat up to 6 years. Silk Petticoats Splendid Taffeta Petticoats, good styles, black and colored Taffeta SilksPetticoats worth $7.50, clearance sale $4.05 Petticoats worth $5.20, clearance sale S3. 50 Values unusual. Prices less than wholesale.
EVERY GARMENT IN OUR CLOAK ROOM GREATLY REDUCED. OUR IRONCLAD POLICY OF NOT CARRYING GARMENTS FROM ONE SEASON TO ANTOHER, IS THE CAUSE OF THIS EXTRAORDINARY CLEARANCE OF LADIES' FINE WEARABLES. SALE BEGINS MONDAY, CONTINUES ONE WEEK.
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SIBAILJIMI
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TUFT JUMPED III
EASTERN PROBLEM
Japan Must Abandon Her Machinations Against This Country.
JAPAN OPENLY FLOUTED
18 TOLD THAT UNITED STATES, GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE AND nPRM&KIV -ADC? TU tr detai
GUARDIANS OF CHINA.
New York, Jan. 7. A Washington dispatch to the American says: "The President has tossed a firebrand Into the politice ot the far East. "The statement is bore out by the virile terms of a statement given out today by Secretary of State, Knox, which means that Japan must abandon her machinations against American interests and Chinese sovereignty in Manchuria. "A strict interpretation of the statement makes it clear that Japan has been notified that she cannot hold
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sovereignty over railway properties in
Manchuria. A Startling Policy. "The statement further flouts Japan openly by calling public attention to a new and startling policy of this Government, namely, that it is the United States, Great Britain, France and Germany which are the guardians of the territorial rights of China. It points out in a way incapable om misunderstanding that it is the money of the four great moneyed powers named which is to control the destinies of China. "The logical conclusion of the necessary corollary of the Taft-Knox state
ment is that the Powers named by the President are to control the destinies of the East and of the world.
Stated in the language of diplo
mats, Japan has been asked to agree to the 'neutralization of the railwavs
of Manchuria.' Russia necessarily has
Been asked to agree to the same pro
position. It is to Russia's interest
to agree because the agreement will guarantee to her absolute safety for her owu railway projects, which are menaced by Japan's accressiveness in
Manchuria.
Is Very Optomistic. "The State Department is optimis
tic as to the outcome of its grave move on the international chessboard.
It Is tme that Secretary Knox says
mat Japan may agree, but he also
very shrewdly says that all he knows
at present about Japan's sympathy
with this movement is contained in
some unofficial sporadic Japanese press reading matter. Secretary's Knox's note is built up
on historical facts. The most remark
able of these is his official confirma
tion of the story that President Taft sent an ultimatum personally to the
cninese Kegent, Prince Chun, when
the latter was secretly violating the
agreement as to loans entered into between former United States Minister Conger and China.
Shaw Sends Sarcastic Answer
When Shirt Waist Strikers Appeal to Him for a "Comeback" to Absurd Ruling of a Police Judge.
New York, Jan. 7. George Bernard Shaw directed one of his satrical shafts today at Justice Olmsted, of the Children's Court for asserting to a prisoner: "Your shirt-waist strike is a strike against God." When Mis Elizabeth Dutcher, one of the college girls leading the strike, learned of this decision of Magistrate Olmstead on Tuesday, she called a conference. "We must have some one to retort to this, and do it cleverly," she exclaimed. "Now who will we get to do it?" "There is no one in this country," said a young Barnard girl.
"Try Bernard Shaw," said Miss Elsie Cole. So They Cabled to George. So Miss Dutcher penned the following cablegram: "Shaw, Adelphi, Indon: Magistrate tells shirt-waist maker here she is on strike against God, whose prime law is, man should earn bread in the sweat of his brow. Please characterize. "Elizabeth Dutcher." Then Miss Dutched received this laconic reply: "Elizabeth Dutcher, Fabian, Women's Trade Union League, New York: Delightfully medieval Ameri
ca always is the Intimate personal confidence of the Almighty. "Bernard Shaw." Now the recipient is puzzled. The efforts of the State Board of Arbitration and of Miss Anne Morgan to end the strike, through a conference between both sides, failed utterly, so completely, in fact, that all three members of the State Board will return to Albany. Miss Morgan was greatly disappointed at thft failure nf the mmif:ntiii-ra
to send any delegates to the confer-!
ence and at the announcement of their determination not to recognize the union. The manufacturers refuse to arbitrate, because they say they will go to the wall rather than sacrifice the principals upon which their association was founded, namely, the insistence upon an open shop.
Good old fashioned cakes are made from Mrs. Austin's Buckwheat flour. Now at your grocers.
Phlladelpha boasts of having two of the oldest living skaters. On the first day that the ice was in condition the oldtimers, William H. Wetherill and his brother Frank, seventy-three and seventy-one years old, respectively, made their annual appearance on Haverford college pond. They cut the figure eight and did other stunts that widened the eyes of onlookiwc voune-
sters.
Nearly 316,000 marriages took Dlace
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2 Automatic ???? MlS 9 AtrtosMlle Pboacs FtMtaea life-lit GKlOGEiC&Y iits-iit
Drocood Chicdono ONLY Gwcct Juicy ONLY 15 c Florida Orancoo 15 Cauliflower, Green Onions, Green Beans, Cucumbers, Brussels . Sprouts, Head Lettuce, Mangoes, New Tomatoes, Parsley, Celecy, New Carrots, Radishes. Pine Apples, Malaga Grapes, Fancy Apples, Tangerines, Ba--nanas. - Apple Butter, Sorghum Molasses, Maple Syrup, Old Fashion Buckwheat. Snow Drift the finest thing yet; better than lard, cheaper than lard; coma in and see it.
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Ann a
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in France last year.
