Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 26, 5 December 1911 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AKT SUIT-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1911
LIFE SENTENCE FOR JIM M'llAMARA AND 15 YEARS FOR JOHN
judge Bordwell on Monday Morning Sentences the Two Self Confessed Dynamiters After the Pleas. (Continued from Pace Ono.) would bring them back I would gladly give it. In fact. In pleading guilty to murder in the first degree, I have placed my life in the hands of the state." (Signed) James B. McNamara." The McNamara brothers had a fair ly good night. Both men were uj at 7:30 o'clock. Court Room Cleared. Jamea B., the younger brother, who faced a possible death sentence, wakened at daybreak and did not sleep afterwards. They spent a half hour before breakfast taking light exercise in the big cage In which they are kept. They ate a hearty breakfast. At 9:45 District Attorney Fredericks appeared In Judge McCorralck's room. He had come from a conference with Judge Bordwell. Shortly afterwards the bailiff, at the orders of the sheriff, cleared the court room. Prominent attorneys, who had been angered when told they could have no place inside the rail, protested vigorously. It was of no avail, however, as the bailiff carried out orders to the letter. Outside the room the crowd in the corridors crushed against those who were ejected and there was a scramble at the 'door. TEMPERANCE STILL A VERYJJVE WIRE IfT. Nicholson Says Winning Party Will Advocate County Option. "The temperance convention at Indianapolis Is not for the sole purpose as has been published, of forcing the Indiana Republican party to place a county local option plank in its platform next year," said Timothy Nicholson of this city, one of the most active temperance workers in the state, before leaving for Indianapolis Tuesday morning with the other members of the Richmond and Wayne county delegation. "The party that places a county lo cal option plank in its platform next year will sweep the state," Mr. Nicholson continued. "Temperance people, Irrespective of party, will vote for the puny wnose piauorm contains sucn a plank." "How will the temperance people vote if neither party places such a plank In its platform?" Mr. Nicholson was asked. "That remains to be seen," he replied. The large "omni-partisan temperance rally" opened this noon in Indianapo- , Us, when representatives from all , parts of the state gathered In Tomlineon hall to listen to an elaborate program of speeches by the leading pro- ' hlbltlon workers of Indiana. Wayne county's delegation left thla city at ten o'clock this morning. The following Richmond men were in the party: Herbert S. Weed, Timothy Nicholson, Richard Sedgwick, Robert I. Wilson, Dr. J. M. Thurston, and 'Revs. J. F. Radcliffe, Truman Ken- ' worthy, Murray S. Kenworthy, Conrad Huber, and T. . Kenworthy. Amateur Might Oe as Wsll. Tell the truth, now. Tou are a professional beggar, are yon not?" said the keen faced Individual who had been approached. "I used to think I was," replied the weary wayfarer, "bat since 13 cents Is all I have to show for a day's work I am forced to the conclusion that I am merely sn amateur." Stray Stories. CITY ADVERTISEMENT. Department of Public Works. Office of the Board. Richmond. Ind., December 5, 1911. To Whom It May Concern: Notice Is hereby given by the Board of Public Works of the City of Richmond, Indiana, that on the 4th day of December, 1911, they unanimously adopted Improvement Resolution No. 289, 1911 For the Improvement of Southwest 4th Street, by grading and graveling the roadway and constructing cement curb, gutter and sidewalk on both Ides of said street, from National Road to Southwest "E" Street. Improvement Resolution No. 290, 1911 For the improvement of East Main 8treet. by constructing cement sidewalk 9 feet in width on the south side ot street from South 12th to South Z2nd Street and on north side from North 21st to 22nd Street. .. The Board of Public Works of said etty has fixed Monday, January 8th, 1912, as a date upon which remonstrances may be filed or presented by persons Interested in. or affected by. . amid proposed Improvements or either ct them as above described, and on Std day, at 9 o'clock a. . m . . said Board will meet at Its office for the pmrpoM of hearing and considering any nmomttimaeea which may have teem filed or presented, and for the Xarpo of talrlag final action thereon, ch action c&aS be final and ooncla- ? , H. M. Hammond Fred R. Charles - -. .J'.: ;W. ',W.; Zimmerman. ; Board of Publle Works.
WOMEN
RESENT
Some Women Like Handsome Men and Others Prefer the Brutes. Although Denying It, Women Are Not Averse to the Cave Idea.
BY E8THER GRIFFIN WHITE. Do women like handsome men? "Wasn't, he grand? I could dream about him all night," one woman was heard to say to another the other aft-1 ernoon coming out of the theater. j They were talking about Henry! Woodruff. . Henry Woodruff may have served as a subject for antl-matutinal slum- j bers fifteen or twenty years ago butj hardly now. Although perhaps, too, i there may be an illusion that 1b not j visible through opera-glasses. As said otherwhere, however, this i former matinee idol has even row a sort of saccharine quality that is : mildly attractive. Like the candy in j a confection-shop window. You glance . in and It looks awfully good. You start toward the door to buy some and then conclude you don't want it. Further down you see some more just like it. Chocolate creams have the same j general resemblance in Richmond, New York, Paris or Timbuctoo. The analogy holds good as to men. Get 'em out of the spot light and they all look more or less alike. And there's always plenty of them. Not according to the census in New England to be sure, but on every other street corner. You hear girls and women saying "there are no men." Then you go down town and run an Indian gauntlet. They're everywhere except maybe where the girls and women want them. Is it possible that its quality and not quantity that makes 'em seem so scarce at parties and other frigid de lights? Generally speaking, men this! side the age limit who go to parties are a driveling set. No really sane person ever goes to a party unless they are corralled, lassoed, can't get out of it or think maybe this time they may enjoy it, or have to go to placate somebody or because their wives make them or because there's some person they particularly want to see under torture. Or perhaps they are assured, on the side, there will be a little pot after Cousin James and his wife go home. This, of course, does not include all parties. Men's parties, for one, where it la said great and relaxing enjoyment obtains. Women won't admit it but they know perfectly well that men never really enjoy themselves except with each other. Women only have one kind of attraction for men. The attraction of sex. When men want to have a really good time they look up some other man animal and go off hunting or to the .club or the saloon round the corner or the bowling alleyi or out of town or to the office where other males drop in and sit sociably with elevated, heels, comfortably smoking and indulging in the profane conversation peculiar to the lords of creation. Take jnan in the aggregate and he is far from refined. But for that matter neither are women. What men say when they get together no one really knows but other men, and they never tell unless put through the third degree by their wives.
WM foettlteF ffoir sum GWT Allan a Good Reliaable WATCH?
Our assortment of Watches of all kinds was never larger or more varied, and prices never as low from a 75c nickel watch for the boy to the $150.00 solid gold, t" wceled Howard, we can supply you. A FEW OF OUR 8PECIAL8 Open face Men's or Boys' Nickel Watch ....75c Open face 7-jewel American Nickel Watch $225 Open face 7-jewel American 10 Yr. cases $4.50 Open face 7-jewel American. 20 Tr. cases 9&50 Lady's O. F. Solid Nickel and Silver cases $6.00 Lady's O. F. 20 Yr. Gold Filled cases ..$6.00 Lady's O. F. and Htg., 7-jewel, 20 Yr. cases $7.50 Lady's Htg. 7 Jewel 14K Solid Gold Cases $12.75 up All Standard American Makes and Fully Guaranteed. TnVATPTT TTIL'II.1
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THE PRETTY MAN
Women, however, are guilty of inexpressible coarsenesses. The nicest women alive will get together sometimes and tell the most frightful stories about other people and their best friends and will laugh howlingly in the telling. Refinement is a mere veneer. To return do women really care for handsome men? Barring school girls, of course, who will at times make an idol out of a wax figure mannikin or actors like Henry Woodruff was. The majority of women the man hunters don't. That is if he's handsome it's just an incident. Maybe they'd prefer him with a certain degree of pulchritude. (Pulchritude, by the way, is in the dictionary and means several things it doesn't sound like.) But what they really do care about is man, (in Italics,) no matter what his facial configuration or anatomical structure. Some of 'em rather like the brutes the big square-jawed ones with silent eyes and grim mouths who ride up, grab them and bear them kicking and screaming all put on to the brutes' respective caves. The trouble is the man sometimes makes a mistake in the seizure. As some person said in a novel not long ago the ideal social state will have been reached when the right man gets the right woman Into his particular cave. And even then the ideal social state will not continue. Because nothing can continue. There will never be an ideal social state. It's because life is, as said here before, fluid. It ebbs and flows. It runs in currents. Sometimes it 's deep and smooth on the surface. Soiuetim3s it ripples on the face and is stagnant beneath. Sometimes it is wild and wave-lashed. Life is a wonderful thing. Very beautiful and very sad always sad, and melancholy beyond belief. Social unrest, social unhappiness, the thousand and one rents in the so cial fabric are a result of the non recognition of the fact that you can't nail down any condition to a state of permanency. And if it was anchored the very ones who planted the an chor most ardently will be the very ones to strain on its chain the most impatiently. Things change. People change. This is trite but too many trite statements of fact are passed over because they are trite in the saying. You are apt to not notice how true they are and what a part of your life they may happen to be. If the right man were to get the right woman into his cave she wouldn't want to stay there and he would, now and then, want to tie her up to the table-leg while he went off on pleasure hunts of his own which had nothing to do with the woman in the cave. "After nineteen hundred years," says a certain philisopher, "man is but an imperfectly monogamous animal." To return again to the handsome man affair. Women, after a fashion, don't care for them. A "pretty" man 12 N. SI
is an anomaly in nature. He is entering the exclusive field of feminint operation. He is poaching on her preserves. He is encroaching on her privileges. For, first, last and all the time, women know they are on parade. Never believe a man when he tells you he prefers true worth. He says it with one eye on the pretty girl passing the window or on the especial physical charm of the woman he happens to be saying it to.
Women recognize this know it..It's the first thing they learn. They play to it all their lives. "Looks," in ordinary parlance, are a woman's long suit, or short suit. When physical charms fade, her power begins to wane. To preserve these charms and, in a way, they are a part of every woman's makeup is her obsession, if she's canny. Sometimes she isn't canny. She forgets the decorative role she is cast for in the farce of life. When she "comes to" she runs to the beauty doctors. Frequently too late. And propped up beauty is a melancholy, not to say a terrifying spectacle. It is just here that she resents the pretty man. She sees he is taking a part that wasn't intended him by the I great god of things. For men don't ! need to be handsome. They only need to be men. Certain fascinating men of history have been monsters of ugliness. A handsome man, too, is apt to be so much more egotistic than his average fellow Who is always the supreme and utter egotist as said somewhere an evening or two ago that he takes on a sort of abnormal attribute. He is always posing. And the better he looks in the spotlight, the more complacent does he become. He wants adulation and generally gets it. Because there are always a lot of women to burn incense and prostrate themselves. But, in the large, women prefer to be adulated to. That is, on a score of externals. And that is all men care for in women before marriage. Afterward it really makes little difference. As was well said the other day its attraction and propinquity that capture a man. Cooking and sewing may hold him but they don't get him. Looks before taking domestic science after. All men pose to be those gods which they firmly believe themselves to be but know they're not. They're on the job, so to speak, and among themselves keep up a sort of free-masonry of fraud. They know it isn't necessary for them to be handsome and so don't try. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss.: Estate of Anna D. Cain, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the VTavne Circuit Court, Administrator of the estate of Anna D. Cain, deceased, late of Wayne County, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Harry Burns, Administrator. John L. Rupe, Attorney. 5-12-19. An Inference. Browne Yes, sir; on next Thursday I will own my own home. Towne Servant's day out, eh? "You'll Do Better
This Week Will Be Notable FOR THE BRILLIANT DISPLAY OF OUR CHRISTMAS FURNITURE There's an indescribable touch of distinction about Druitts' Furniture that is difficult to define, either by word or illustration. There is to be said, however, the pieces reflect the brightest ideas of world famous designers. All of the pieces are newly arrived. They are of that character which distinguishes one home from another and the prices are no higher(than you pay for the ordinary kind. Undoubtedly the most important feature in gift giving is the pleasing of the recipient. In accomplishment thereof, the best to be had is none too good.
Come
We Will Always Be Pleased to Show You Through.
Come in, go through the tors, take your time to making your selection. Our modem way of showing furniture Is so simplified that you can almost wait on yourself.
See the Beautiful Line of Karpen Bros. Upholstered Furniture we are showing. Leather Upholstered Chair and Rockers. Priced $15.00, $18.00, $20.00, $25.00, $30.00, $40.00, $50X0 up.
Iniilut to Gilbert T. Dunham -
LATE MARKET NEWS
Furnished by A. W. Thomson Co, Hittle Block. Phone 2709. Correspondents, Logan and Bryan. NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS "NEW YORK, Dec. 5. Open High Copper 62 62 Am Smeltg .. 72V U S Steel . . . 63 63 U S Steel pfd 109 H 109 Pennsylvania 1224 St Paul 110 110 B & O 102 Low Close 61 62 72 62 109 63 109 122 110 101 106 149 239 127 174 39 110 N Y Central Reading . . . 106 150 150 240 127 174 174 39 39 749 Can Pac . . Gt Northn Un Pac .. Mo Pac . . 173 38 117 106 156 177 111 11 90 Northn Pac. 118 118 Atchison ... 106 106 L & N 157 157 117 106 157 177 111 11 90 L Valley ... 177 177 So Pac 111 111 Am Can 11 11 Am Can pfd. 91 91 CHICAGO GRAIN
CHICAGO, Dec. 5. WheatDec 94 94 93 93 May 99 99 98 98 July 94 94 93 93 CornDec 62 62 61 61 May 63 63 62 62 July 63 63 62 62 OatsDec 47 47 46 46 May ' 49 49 58 49 July 46 46 45 45
LIVERPOOL, Dec. 5. Wheat unchanged to d higher; corn unchanged: EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK East Buffalo, Dec. 5. Cattle Receipts 225; prime $7.50 8.00; butchers $3.007.50. Sheep Receipts 11,000; prime $4.00. Calves Receipts 200; choice $5.75 9.00. Lambs $6.006.25. Hogs Receipts 10,200; heavies $6.50 5.75; packers $6.30. WANTED YOUR MACHINE AND REPAIR WORK BALLINGER & GIBBS MACHINISTS REAR 220 LINCOLN STREET Phone 3040 or 3158 SHEET MUSIC All the Latest Hits. Ten Cents and Up. Best Strings on the Market. BOWLING ALLEY 22 North 9th Street. at Droit. Brothers" Often wB&m 627-S29 Main Street
SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS ANY SELECTION YOU MAKE DELIVERED
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Dec. 5. Hogs Receipts 3,400; heavies $5.85 6.40; light $3.656.20.' Cattle Receipts 7,500; steers $4.75 $9.30. Sheep 25,000 head; prime $3.75. Calves Choice $6.25 6.80. Lambs $5.85.
RAOQIXIEA'
Xmas Gifts GIFTS D
The gift articles we offer in the electrical line are different from the usual run of gifts they are serviceable and at the same time appropriate.
Laiinnips
If you have ever seen a more beautiful line than the one we are carrying it will be a surprise to us we do know there Is nothing to equal It in Richmond. See our window.. Price $6.50 to $16.50.
Chafing Dish f he delight of a chafing dish Is only known to a woman who has used one. It'e one of the most con
venient articles around the househow much more Is one that is electrical This Is a combination a stove to do lighter form of cooking and the chaffing dish. Each sell for $.500.
Coffee Percolator Thl Percolator Is another ef our electrical conveniences to the home as you see it I pet style and of highly polished nickel with ebonite handle very simple to operate. Price $8X0. "
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Telephone and we will
representative demonstration OlO Main Ot.
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PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK Pittsburg. Dec 5. Cattle Receipts light; steers $7,600 7.80; butchers $6.006.40. Sheep Receipts light; prime $3.85. Hogs Receipts 20 cars; pigs $5,500 5.70; yorkers $5.85(16.30; heavies $6.356.45. Calves $8.00 8.50. Lambs $6.25.
Electrical Electric Iron If your mother or wife Is using the old faehloned way of Ironing, heating, the Irons by, fire dont you think, ahe would appreciate one of thee Standard Hot Point I rone - .Hundred of women In the city are using. them. They sell for $4.80. Electric Vcccnn tiecner Her I one of the biggest convenience to the home there I a vacuum cleaner by electrtt city it can be used for , all form ef cleaning the curtain, draperies, carpets, ruga, etc. We would be glad to call and give a demonstration In your' horn. Pric $10040. and make in your PLUttBIHG a EL5CTHIC Phono 1200
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