Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 9, 17 November 1911 — Page 6
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA31, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1911.
PAGE SIX
WANTED "MAKINGS" Vni TTCI? IV T ATT . (
"Give me a lot of cigarette papers, hie- cause I'm goin' to jail fer 'leven days," commanded William Higgins, a stalwart youth of twenty-two, as he staggered into a cigar store last evening and stood side by side with Ladd the prosecutor. It was evident to the latter that Higgins was unmistakably under the influence of strong drink. A short time afterward Higgins strolled east on Main street and rubbed shoulders with Patrolman Yingling. With a "Come with me," the patrolman escorted Higgins to the city jail. He pleaded guilty to the charge of drunk and the mayor gave him $1 and costs.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
North Carolina has 125,000 cotton mill operatives. The cotton industry of England employs many more women than men. In 1898 the total number of railroad employes in this country was 874,558. Last year the total was 1,-451,000.
The Milwaukee Merchants and Man-1
All EARLY OPENING FOR MS SEASON Local Merchants Establish a New Precedent for the Holiday Trading. Shoppers who have firmly resolved to make their Christmas purchases early In order to avoid the rush and also lighten the work of the shop girls, should begin to do their part as the merchants are in readiness to do theirs, although Christmas is about six weeks off. In every line Christmas Stocks have been laid in and the merchant Is now preparing his holiday displays. It is neither too early to shop now nor too early to display holiday goods, the merchants say. This year local
dealers have advanced the season bout two weeks. The early preparations to accommodate the purchasers la a record for Richmond. Even last year, with the campaign to shop early many dealers did not open the season until December 1. Such an early Beason was an unheard of thing until last year, but the merchants found their action pleased the public Immensely and greatly lightened the burden of the employes In the various stores. The sales for the season 1910, were larger than in previous years under the old system. The merchants Baw the benefits deprived and this year they are going to fbe even more progressive. At a meeting of the merchants Section of the Commercial Club which will be held Boon details for the Ichristmas shopping will be considered, tkiarly shopping alone will not be dei bated. It Ib likely that attention will i be given to the night closing proposition. Some of the merchants have expressed themselves as being in favor E' a concerted stand by the business en not Jo open their places of busiss after six p. m., at least not tinfill the last week of the holiday season, and of course excepting Satuday nights. There is objection made to the scheme to eliminate night shopping. Some merchants argue there is fm. certain class who can not And it convenient to do their shopping during the customary hours, and some arrangement must be made to accommodate this class, they say. Another thing to be considered is ithe law prohibiting the employment of juveniles. Extra clerks must be
taken on during tne noiiuay season. , nian in Pittsburg, to
The law now prohibits the employ-1 caused by resignation
ment of children and also declares j The Woman's National Trade union that women clerks must be given op- j league has established a "strike couuportunity to rest when they may hap-1 cn a unincorporated with a tund oi pen to have a little leisure time. In-1 $io,000 to be used for bailing purposes diana does not have the same statute ' wherever women are on strike and as some other states which prohibit ! their pickets are arrested, the employment of women at any oc- pcr skilled men, tiucli as.carpencupatlon for more than ten hours perju-rs, iaajii3, plumbers, painters, pai4y. j urmakoa, printers, etc., the prcduini iuant tante of wages in England axi.i
halt to
LATE MARKET HEWS
Furnished by A. W. Thomson Co, Hittle Block. Phone 2709. Correspondents, Logan and Bryan.
EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK East Buffalo, Nov. 17. Cattle Receipts 450 head; prime $7.257.65; butchers $3.00 6.75. Hogs Receipts 10,200; yorkers $6.50 6.65; heavies $6.756.80; pigs, $6. Sheep Receipts 10,000; prime $3.65. Calves Receipts 500; choice $6.00 7.50. Lambs $5.40 5.50.
PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK Pittsburg, Nov. 17. Cattle Receipts none; steers $7.50 Sheep Receipts 4000; top $3.65. Hogs Receipts 4000; heavies $6.65; pigs, $6.10; yorkers $6.40. Calves Receipts 200; top $9.00. LambB $5.30.
INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK
$4.85(3: $4.60
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK
Chicago, Nov. 17. Hogs Receipts 12000; light $5,700
6.45; heavies $5.90(fi 6.55; pigs $3.75
(a 5.35. Cattle Receipts 1500; $4.655.10. Sheep Receipts 1500; prime $3.70 4.40.
Choice $5.50 8.50. $5.70(Jt5.80.
MEN AND BOYS' DAY OBSERVED ON SUNDAY
NexttSunday will be observed as men ana boy's day at St Paul's Lutheran Sunday school on South Seventh street. A special program has been arranged for the occasion, with Charles Meigs of Indianapolis, and Dr. N. C. Cox of this city as the principal speakers. Nearly a thousand invitations
SIR WM. WHITE GETS
JOHNFRITZ MEDAL (National News Association) New York, Nov. 17 Sir William White came to New York today to receive the John Fritz medal, which the united societies of American Engineers presents annually to the person, Irrespective of nationality, who has during he year benefited humanity to the greatest extent through he application of science.
SJr William White is one of theipected that 500 men and boys alone) most celebrated engineers and naval will be in attendance. This special j architects of the world. After com-; day has been observed by the school ! pleting his studies at the Royal School for the past several years and has I
or Naval Architecture he Joined the been instrumental in recruiting many constructive department of the British I new members to the school's enrolladmiralty in 1867. As director of na-' ment. St. Paul's school has earned for val constuction, which office he held j itself the reputation of being the leadfrom 1885 to 1902. he practically re- ' ing Sunday school of the city and is constructed the British navy. With noted for its wide-awake methods of the exception of the late Lord Kelvin, : doing things. The public is cordially Sir William is the only. Briton who invited and the hour is 8:45 for the
FAMOUS NOVELIST SHOT ON A HUNT
entered the novelist's eye, forehead and knee. He was taken to a hospital where the surgeons say the outlook Is grave. The hunter who did the shoot ing attempted to commit suicide when he learned that the novelist was his
and other literary t victim- Despite the fact that Sien-
VIENNA, Nov. 17. Carelessness of j a fellow hunter may cost the life of j Henry Sienkiewics, famous as author j
of "Quo Vadis"
works. Sienkiewics was hunting with j kiewicz is now in his sixty-fifth year a party near Lemburg, when the ac- he is still an inveterate hunter and cident occurred. A hunter aimed in J sportsman, and during the last year the direction of a pheasant and Sien- j has spent most of his leisure time in
have been sent out to members of the kiewicz happend to be standing in s the forests and on the lakes of Pot school and their friends and it is exr ranse. but hidden by shrubbery. Shot i and.
has received the John Fritz medal.
SHIVELErS REPLY
opening instead of 9:00 a. m. the usual time.
Indianapolis, Nov. 17. Cattle Receipts 700; steers Hogs Receipts 10,000; top
r An
ufacturers' association is to establish j sheep Receipts 10,000; prime $3.00 u permanent free employment bureau. ! cajves $9.00. The Labor Temple association, cap-; t amfos 25 00
itanzeu at xou.uuu, nas Deen rormea to build a home for organized labor in Chicago. The American Brotherhood of Cement Workers, at its recent annual session in Chicago, decided to meet biennially for expediency and economy. The label section of the San Francisco Labor Council will co-operate with the International Boot and Shoe Worekers union in giving a big union
label show in one of the local thea- i Calvestera. Lambs
Kansas City's board of public we-1-1
I farre had $125,000 to spend during its ! f-.. . t t -T"I I I trrcTOfl."
first year, lylO. and this year has over v-""-""t" ' l v - iv $200,000. It has a free legal aid bureau, lodging house bureau and em- C , , v' 17ployment bureau. Cattle-Receipts 27; top 16 7o. One-third of the silk in the country j HoRs-R.reipts ,40(; top $..0. la i., .h. iun,, rupi ir Sheep Receipts 600; top fo.,0.
is state-d that there are 18.0J0 girls
and several hundred men and boys em 1 1 t . ...in 1 . . .1 . .. i.ii .
luoyeu in ine iiinis ut-uie'eu nsvtss- 1
barre and Scranton. j INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Peter J. McArdle, general president j of the International Amalgamated as- j Indianapolis, Nov. 17. sociation o flron, Steel and Tin work-; whent 97V4 ers, has been elected a city council- i Corn 72'i
fill a vacancy Oats 431: .... t"
JO J 1
Clover seed ; $10.C1 i
Editor of The Palladium: The views expressed by me in reference to the City Light plant as reported by The Palladium were merely my personal views and were not in
tended for publication. Furthermore, ( they were not expressed by me as attorney for the Richmond City Water J Works, or as in any wise representing ; the views of any officer or director ;
of the Water Works. I wish
would please publish this in justice to myself and the Water Works company, whose name was evidently mistakenly used by the writer of your article. R. K. SHIVELEY.
PATRIOTISM TOPIC AT NOON MEETING
Automatic valves which sound a whistle when an automobile motor becomes overheated are a New Yorker's invention.
To purify politics by co-operating in all movements for the elevation of the morals of the country, was advocated this noon at the Friday observance of the international week of prayer. James E. Perry led the meeting today at the local Y. M. C. A. which was on the subject of partiotism, with Europe
you as the foreign topic. Prof. Elbert Rus
sell, of Earlham College, will lead the meeting this evening following his weekly lecture on Bible study. An effort is being made by the Y. M. C. A. officials to make the meeting tomorrow noon the be"st of the entire week. Sunday school superintendents are asked to bring as many of the men in their churches as possible, and the event promises to attract a large number of religious workers.
LamDs ?.00. Calves $8.75.
I
r
Established 61 Years
TOLEDO Gtf AIN
i
FOR THIRD TIME MARRIED SAME MAN TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Nov. 17. Cards has been received announcing the marriage of Miss Ramona Knapp, formerly of this city, and whose parents moved to Buffalo, where Mr. Knapp is eastern auditor and manager of a Chicago packing house, but the announcement does not tell how Miss Ramona was married three times in one week to Andrew Shea. He is the so and a rich Springfield (Mass.) man. The parents of neither know of the marriage until after two of the ceremones had been performed. The couple was first married by a
justice of the peace. Then the bride, j
who Is an Episcopalian, wished a ceremony in her church, and the next day at Springfield they were married by the rector of an Episcopal church. The bride entered the Catholic faith, her husband being a communicant of that faith and they were married again two days later.
Toledo, Nov 17. Wheat 97VaC ; Corn 66c Clo;er seed $12.43 Oats 50c Alsike $10.8i
Shopping
Has Begun There Is an Advantage in Buying Christmas Gifts Now. Now you can choose the gifts at your leisure and have the advantage of selecting while the stocks are X thMr best. Our displays in every department are complete. Many of the more distinctive nr.velties. which cannot be duplicated, are always sold at the season's beginning. AN ENTIRE NEWSPAPER COULD BE PRINTED WITH SUGGESTIONS, but the most satisfactory way is to come to the store: bring your lists in bk-nk. A few moments here will.suggest the kind of eifts that ycu want and everyone will be glad to receive. WE HAVE THE GOODS
! Mrs. Caroline M. Severance, ago ninety-one, bus completed fifty-eight years of fighting for woman's enfranchlsevrrnt by renolerir;g as a voter at Los Angeles.
Wleu is eight dollars and a
nine dollars aad a half a week . As a result of the widespread movement for refenu in dealing with industrial injuries, ten states have this year passed laws providing accident compensation for injured employes, and six states for the first time in America, now require the reporting of several well defined occupational dis
eases and industrial poisoning. j oysters, sny style, fried oyster The percentage of deaths from tu- sandwiches, blue points on half shell, j berculosis among all workers exposed fri oyster Winch Saturday afternoon: to breathing air containing metallic and evening free. CAFE 12, G12 Main j dust is 36.9 per cent.; to mineral dust, , stri?et. thur&fri-tf I
28.6 per cent.; to vegetable fiber dust, 28.8 per cent.; to mixed animal and
D
iMniraaira
JLL-JO
Diamonds - Wa'clies Jewelry WE PROTECT OUR CUSTOMERS BY THE QUALITY OF OUR GOODS
CAFE 12
S33
sag
TEEPLE
Pretty Feell are sometimes Clumsily Shod
Often it happens that a foot is made prettier by selecting the right
shoe. Our ladies shoes are skilfully modeled. They are made in shapes jto fit all types of feet and to make any foot attractive. You may say : "My foot is too broad or too flat to look stylish in any shoe." A number of our lady patrons have once said the same thing, but we have fitted them and pleased them. Let Us Please Yon
Black Satin, 16 Buttons at $5.00 White Nu Buck, 16 Buttons at $5.00 Black Velvet, 16 Buttons, Tip, at $4.00 Patent Kid, 16 Buttons, Tip, at $3.50 Gun Metal, 16 Buttons, Tip, at $3.50 Patent Colt, 16 Buttons, Plain Toe, at $3.50 Black Velvet, 16 Button, Plain Toe $3.00
.. I
TTESESIPILrES 718 MAUN ST.
ARMY AND NAVY Y. M. C. A. IS DEDICATED
other forms of dust, 32.1 per cent; to j street dust, 25.5 per cent, and to or-!
ganic dust or dust coming from the ar-:
tides being manufactured by them, 2 per cent.
DISCIPLE OF OSLER CUTS HIS THROAT
(National News Association) NEWPORT, R. I.. Nov. 17. The beautiful new home of the Army and Navy Young Men's Christian Association, the gift of Mrs. Thomas J. Emery of Newport and Cincinnati, as a memorial to her sons, Sheldon and Albert Emery, was today formally dedicated in the presence of a most distinguished company. The building, which contains a large auditorium, library, gymnasium, bath and other features of an up-to-date club house, was erected at a cost of $250,000 . It occupies a conspicuous site on Washington Square, In the heart of the town of Newport. The dedication exercises were held In the auditorium this morning. William Sloan, chairman of the International committee of the Army and Navy Y. M. C. A., presided. Mrs. Emery delivered a brief address of presentation and Major-General Leonard Wood, representing President Taft, responded. The army and navy's appreciation of the gift was abundantly proved by the presence at the exercises of several thousand sailor and marines from the Atlantic battleship fleet and many soldiers from Fort Adams and the other military posts that guard the entrance to Narragansett Day.
(National Nows Association! CHICAGO, Nov. 17. Nicholas Hummer, said to be a disciple of the Osier theory that a man who has reached three-score and ten years has outlived his usefulnes. was found dead in the bathroom of his home with his throat cut early today. A razor lay beside: him on the floor.
Cured at Home
AT RICHMOND Arlington Hotel, Wednesday, Nov. and Until Neon, 23rd.
22,
There are twenty-six great glaciers in Switzerland.
A SEEDLESS LEMON HAS BEEN PRODUCED SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., Nov. 17 The seedless lemon, to produce which botanical experts have unsuccessfully labored for many years, has been discovered here. The bud wood from which the trees now bearing the seedless lemons ' have been grown came from a sample labeled "citron of commerce.". ,',,.
To lessen the' labors of a window cleaner a Massachusetts man has ln- ' vented a long handled brush with a
All for 10 Cents In order to introduce the Vapocura Inhaler and prove that it will cure Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Asthma, Hay Fever. Colds, etc., by oily Vapor Inhalation, we have arranged with the undersigned Drug Stores to supply all sufferers on the dates named below with a Vapocura Inhaler and 2 bottles of Vapocura Inhaling Fluid for only 10 cents. The Vapocura Inhaler sends
AT CCNNERSVILLE Palace Hotel, Tuesday, Nov.
21.
clouds of healing, oily Vapor into every part of the nose, throat and chest, healing the membrane and curing the disease. Cures cold in one day cures Catarrh, etc., in a few weeks. For this regular Dollar Inhaler Outfit for only 10 cents call Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Nov. 17, 18, 19, 20. Quigley Drug Stores RICHMOND, IND. Also by Mail. Those who are unable to call at the above drug store can remit 6 two-cent stamps on or before December 1st, and we will mail them postpaid a Vapocura - Inhaler together with two bottles of Vapocura Inhaling fluid. Address:' STANDARD VAPORIZER CO, 108 W. 34th St., New York.
All persons, Male or Female, suffering from loss of Expelling Forces, Prolapsing, Fissures. Fistulas. Catarrh. Inflamation. Ulceration, Constipation. Bleeding. Blind or Itching Piles, are kindly requested to call and see me. No Examination No Operation Medicine placed direct to the diseased parts by yourself. I claim the most complete successful, original and sensible method of curing these terrible afflictions ever offered to the public. By the use of my Positive Painless Pile Cere All the above named rectal diseases can be cured as easily as if it were on the outside. Come in and see mi and learu something worth knowing; it may save you hundreds of dollars and years of suffering. It you can't call, write me. Most kindly yours, S. U. TARNEY 25 Year Rectal Specialist. Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer,
MANY IMPRESSIVE BARGAINS, some of which are limited quantities, others, we've a plenty, nevertheless prudent buyers should be on hand early to get first pick of these.
50c Silk Scarfs, hemstitched, all colors, in plain and fancy colorings, Special 35c .v v 50c Fine Oriental Lace Side Ffills, Special 25c
WHITE GOODS FOR CHRISTMAS FANCY WORK 15c Fancy Plaid and Stripe Sheer White Goods, Special 12'2c Yd. BEACON CRIB BLANKETS Beacon Crib Blankets in pink and blue colorings, Special 39c Baby's Cotton Blankets in pink and blue borders, Special 50c Pr. LADIES' CHRISTMAS HANDKERCHIEFS Remarkable Handkerchief Values 25c Emb. Swiss Handkerchiefs, Spec'l 19c; 3 for 50c All Linen Emb. Corner Handkerchiefs, worth up to 25c; Special 15c; 2 for 25c 10c Fancy Sheer Handkerchiefs, satin plaid and fancy Swiss designs 5c; 6 for 25c COMFORT MATERIALS SPECIAL PRICED Good Dark Outings, Special 5c Yd. Splendid Persian Challies, new styles 5c Yd. FineGoeblin, 10c Silkolines, Special 5c Yd. PARISIAN FLANNELS Fancy Waisting Flannels, npw so popular for women's soft collar waists. 17c Yd.
GOOD COMFORTS AT SPECIAL PRICES Splendid Comforts, Silkoline tops and bottoms, pufe white cotton filled, hand knotted, -Special $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 FURS and the Best of Them will last a life time when chosen with proper care; just such furs as we announce here are all the most popular kinds sad newest shapes. " Black & Brown Coney Furs, $2.50 to $16.50 per set Blue Russian Bear Furs $5.98 to $15.00 per set Isabella Martin Furs $15.00 to $30.00 per set Black Fox Furs $25.00 to $75.00 pertet White Iceland Fox Furs, extra special, , e f at $17.50 and $25.00 peTset Blended Mink Furs $13.50 to $25.00 per set Natural Mink Furs $50.00 to $150.00 per set CHILDREN'S FURS We have them in all the good kinds for children in all the prettiest styles, either light, medium or dark furs, Prices $250 up to $15.00 per set WOMEN'S SHIRT WAISTS SPECIAL Women's Popular Flannel Waists, pretty stripes and plain, grey colorings, soft collars, Special 98c Women's Fine Lingerie Waists, pretty emb'd and lace trimmed, side frill effects, waists worth up to $2.00, Special 98c
HEE IB,
MLJSBAUM CO
The Store That Sells Wooltex
for soap on its back.
AUBURN, IND.
