Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 76, 23 January 1910 — Page 8
THE RICH3IOXD PALLADIU3I AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1910. 53 Mn(B Pays Price Only, Not Quality Is Lowered The Saving is Sure, the Quality Is Guaranteed Have you been in yet? If you haven't, you'd better hurry. At the rate people have been coming, the good things won't last long. Each satisfied buyer, who has left our stores in the past eight days is making it a point to tell his friends about this opportunity to save money. The prices we are making and the quality of our goods is such that each customer becomes a walking, talking advertisement. So it will be to your interest to look the list of shoes and prices over and decide just what you want. And when you've decided, don't say: "I'll go in and get it some time next week," but say, "I'm going to be safe and get it tomorrow." Then you won't be disappointed.
PAGE EIGHT
P
Wound's
Foster $5 Shoes, now $3.95 Foster $6 Suedes, only a few $4.75 $5.00 Black Suedes, Mi'.o buttons $3.95 $5 Colored Suede Boots, now $2.50 All $3.50 and $4 Tan Shoes now $1.98 $3.50 Tramp Last Shoes, now $3.10 All regular lines of $4 Shoes $3.25 A good many $4 and $5 Shoes in odd lots, including several Foster Shoes, are selling now for $2.50 $3 Shoes are now $2.65 Some $2.50 Shoes are now $1.98 Warm Lined Shoes Grover's Soft Soled $2.50- Shoes are now $1.98 Iiunn & Sweet, Old Tyme Comfort Shoes, $2.50 grade now 24 $2 Grade, now '. $1.74 All others similarly reduced.
(CMirei's
FDttwor
Boys9 Shoes High Top Shoes, the kind that keep the warmth" in and the cold and dampness out, were $2.50 and $2.75, now are gg $3.50 Dress Shoes are now 95 $3 Shoes are now JJ g5 $2.50 Shoes are now J 20 $2 Shoes are now $1.13 Shoes are now gg Misses' Shoes $3.00 Dress Shoe;?, now J2 5 -30 Shoes 3193 $2 Shoes, now $1.65 $1.75 Shoes, now gg All Baby Shoes reduced in about, the same degree.
lei's
Hanan $6 Shoes, now gg Choice of any Mens $5 Shoos gg Feltman's Tramp Last, $i grade g The Jim Dumps Last. $1 Shoe jg g M. & K. Tau Shoes. $5.00 grade $2.50 Heavy Wines and Winter Tans, $4 grade, now are gg gg Men's Wine Shoes gj gg Work Shoes $2.50 Shoes now ""$2.20 $2 Shoes now gj gQ $4 Menzics Shoes gg gQ $3.50 Barker Work Shoes gg The origiual 72 pairs of Ball Band Boots went so fast that we had to order a new shipment. These will be in tomorrow and will go as before at gg g
You'll notice that standard goods, those which will be worth just as much the coming season as now, are all reduced. That's the way we feel a sale ought to be conducted. Don't you?
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STRICT DIVORCE LAWS HOT HEEDED
Mrs. Trimble-Woolsey of Kentucky Says Women Don't Favor the Move.
IN POLITICAL SERFDOM
WOMEN ARE HELD IN THIS COUNTRY, SHE STATES IN AN ADDRESS TO BIG MEETING HELD IN WASHINGTON.
Washington, D. C, Jan. 22. That the women of the United States do not want greater restriction of divorce is the declaration of Mrs. TrimbleWoolsey of Kentucky. She is a de-
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scendant of Robert Trimble, who, when a justice of the United States supreme court in 1802, joined with his brother. Judge John Trimble of the Kentucky court of appeals in drafting the first law framed in this country to give women the right to own property. Mrs. Trimble-Woolsey was the principal speaker at a meeting of representative American women held here to protest against the effort being made through the congress of governors, to devise means to secure the adoption of a uniform divorce law in all the states. She Cites Injustice. After calling attention to the injustice of man-made laws and customs toward women in other countries, she discussed the conditions now existing in the United States, saying in part: "Its women who are held in absolute political serfdom, with no more voice in the laws under which they live than the negro had prior to the abolition of slavery. An emperor represents his whole people as much as men who vote represent women who have no vote at all." "The laws give the husband the sole ownership of the property which the wife help him to accumulate and at death the wife can leave no part of it even to her own children the father has the sole right to say if the children may be hired out to work, where they may go to school, what they may do in life, and at his death he may appoint a guardian for the children, who also has these rights." Rights of a Husband. "The father and not the mother is the next of kin to the child, and if the child has been killed or injured the
father alone may sue and collect damages, and the father alone inherits property of wealth of which the child may die possessed the husband alone has the right to choose the country or home however injurious it may be to the happiness or interests of the wife. "In the state of New York (with its populations about equal to some dozen of the western and southern states) the husband may commit any wrong or sin against the wife but without the wife can prove infidelity against him she cannot obtain a divorce, and this is the same in the District of Columbia. In South Carolina. "In South Carolina the husband may commit every crime in the category against the wife, but the wife, under no circumstances can obtain a divorce. "Such is the outline the general legal, civic and political status of about 99 per cent of the women under the flag of this government. "Men exploit every government for their own exclusive benefit and plan all legislation solely in the interest and comfort of their own sex. There Is no woman who is not a victim, one way or another of nJale made institutions; and every woman, whatever her station or wealth, is nailed to the cross by masculine laws. This is why I pro-
I test against men alone making laws
Pall of Pantome Has Descended Mummers and Maskers Hold Full Sway Over All Sections of England and Play Houses Are Filled Nightly.
(American News Service) London, Jan. 22. The pall of pantimimes has descended upon England from Land's End to John-o'-Greats the full limbed "principal boy, "the masculine old lady, technically known as the "Dame," and the red-nosed comedian, who is Baron, King, or Magician, according to the inspiration of story, hold unquestioned sway and draw hundreds of thousands to the playhouse nightly. It is surprising how conservative the British playgoers are except in the merest details, there has not been a single new idea in the pantomime for years past. There are the same meaningless ballets, the same anachronistic jumble of scenery and costume, and the same topical tresspassing on the author's text. The production of an English pantomime is a curious thing. The oracle against whether there is no appeal, is the costume designer. , He is the autocrat of tho theater, and his word is as unalterable as the law of the Medes and Persians. Long before a line of the "book" is written he is called in to consult with the manager and it is he, with an eye to lofty sartorial flights, who suggests the subject
All ORIGINAL THIEF
of the big scenes. Then the author and scene painter are calltd in. The first has to distort
his plot so as to .ive prominence to !
the customer's ideas: the second is told ! to paint his scene in a subdued key, so j that the dresses will be all the more brilliant by contrast, and the triumph i will be purely satorial. This is always the signal for disturbances. The au-; thor mildly refuses to sacrifice the plot ; for "Signor Pantorelli's glorification, j and the artist declaies he will pa-ntj the scenery as he likes or not at all. ! Pantorelli threatens to wash his hands of the whole business, and the manager ; deluges the troubled waters wit Is co-! pious li nations of oil. j The same petty jealousies rmoulder in the breasts of the artists, each en-i deavoring to get ahead of the other in 1
some way that will bring him or her into unusual prominence and snae stars even go so far as to insist that they, and they only, shall be the mouthpiece for all topical allusions and for all catchy songs. And the end of all the strife is the same old glitter, the same old bowing company of "ecstatically happy" artists, and tho same old howling success.
(American News Service) Indianapolis, Jan. 22. James Haniman, aged twenty years, was sentenced to the workhouse for one year for the stealing of a gold watch from a patient at St. Vincent hospital. Harriman has previously worked this game in Dayton. His system was to get employment in the hospital and rob the patients. He pleaded guilty.
in which women are equally interested with themselves. "So long as the law places no lock on the door leading to marriage, it should place none on the door leading to divorce. Is there a hoy or girl so immature, or any released criminal, or diseased, debauch, or half besotted drunkard who can not get the "sacred knot" tied? Reform marriage laws and there will be fewer divorces. Murdered by Hubbies. "In this country, thousands of wives are annually murdered by husbands there are more than a half million wives who have been abandoned by husbands there are more than a million wives of drunkards and there are more than a million virtuous wives who are each year medically treated for the ills and sufferings which immoralities of their husbands inflict upon them. The laws have trapped these into marriage and should not refuse to release them when they wish to go free. "The women of this land are not crying for either a further regulation or restriction of divorce. At least ninety per cent of all the divorces are sought by women (65 per cent direct and the others through their abandonment by the husbands in order to force divorce. "This country would be justified in further regulation or restricting divorce if it could be shown that such has resulted in the moral elevation of the people of the nations which try same. Makes a Comparison. "Take Spain and Italy where no divorce is allowed, and ' contrast them
with Nevada and South Dakota, where divorce is very free. Few wives in those American states would tolerate such immoralities in their homes as practically every wife endures in the Spanish and Italian home. Europe generally has far more restricted divorce laws than the United States republic, but no sane person believes that there is more immorality in American homes than in those of Europe. "We have one state, South Carolina, which denies all divorce, and it is the only state which has enacted a law fixing how much of hia estate a husband may will to his concubine. This speaks its own story. "It is the desire to lift marriage to an eauality with other contracts, and
to place it on as high a plane as other j human affairs, that leads to divorce. j A uniform law is practically impos- j sible of repeal or betterment, and if !
this divorce law is enacted it will stop all progress in reforming marriage thus striking a serious blow at civilization. As women form one-half of the marriage relation this divorce law should be stopped until the women of the land sanction its passage.
Titles In Plenty. Most members of the house of lords hnv more than nne title. The Duke of
Abercorn holds four Scotch, two Irish j
and two British peerages. The Marquis of Lansdowne has one Scotch. At Irish and two British titles. The Duke of Norfolk holds seven peerages, the Marquis of Breadalbane eight, the Duke of Poland five, the Duke of Devonshire five aud the Duke of Northumberland ai.
Poultry Feed THE GOOD KIND That makes them cackle RICHMOND FEED STORE 11-13 N. 9th Phone 2196
3 PER CENT. ON SAVINGS
TRY JUST ONE BOTTLE OF
COMMONS' PIM BfflLK
We might tell you that we produce and handle our milk, scientifically that we are sure it is pure, because we watch it from the time it is produced until it is delivered but give it a trial and you will say you can ask for nothing better.
Our wagons pass your door Commons Dairy Company
9 S. Sfil SL
Fbese 1188
rorry yDIlr 1 CHICHESTER SPILLS FRITZ KRULL xfev SSS5S23rfe Teacher of the Art of Slag- gASKSSW log. Indianapolis, 17 East n e?HKV. Norta SL Richmond. Starr Ir ff SSiSh Piano Parlors, every Uosday SfrOCTCUaasnBtBEzai -B!Smmmmmm More Ancient Than That. " "We don't see the plays we saw flfn i annua m... . w J Ja Ago." "No. but we bear th PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. " Jokes."-Brkljn Life.
?.to you If You Need Money $ .60 is a weekly payment on a $ 25X0 loan $1-20 is a weekly payment on a $ 50.00 loan $2.40 is a weekly payment on a $100.00 loan Other amounts in the same proportion. We loan on housuehold goods, pianos, teams, etc., without removal RICHMOND LOAN CO. Room 8, Colonial Bldg. Phone 1545. Richmond, Ind.
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LrnmA: -Just learned that Gold Medal Flour la
TRY OUR $4.00 SOFT COAL Coarsslted to Ce dear cf SIxte sd CHs&en. 529 S. FIFTH. PHONE 12S5
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