Richmond Palladium (Daily), 9 January 1904 — Page 8

a

"Onr constant aim ia to sell the i Hi IU3 y II ii

i

0000000(74

W . N 5

8 AITHR

COAI

$7-50 PER TON This coal is stored in covered bins and carefully screened before leaving the yard. Prompt delivery by expert drivers.

o o o o o BRANCH YARD 39 South Sixth St Phone 516. MATHER

OOOOOOOLaLl000

Railroad Restaurant -I5!

Top Notch v A new kind ofbutter seotrh . mar? in a tip nr3 a Vtt.r 1 i

A new kind of-butter scotch, butter scotch 'than von cvr

nutritious as well as delicious; better because it's Pure, wholesome. Try the following recipe and test its real goodness. One cu p of JCaro Corn Syrup, one cup of granulated ugar, one-half cup of fresh butter. Boil until a small quantity dropped in cold water becomes hard and snappy. Do not stir while boiling. Add batter Just before candy is done.

CORN SYRUP

Is decidedly

preferable to any er witn all the

v xne consum

measure has

accumulated since its last use. Kai

Syrup is

protected by airtight, friction-top tins, which

x preserve

its purity, insure

its goodness, ioc, 25c and 50c, at g CORN PRODUCTS CO.,

New York and

THE MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Is more than ready to sell you goods cheaper than any other store in the city. Ou business is keeping up at the same rate as it did before the holidays, and the prlc". we are giving the people is the only thing that is doing it. . Listen to m while w tell you what you can purchase duiing Friday and Saturday only. Our Combination Basket Contains

23 lbs Granulated Sugar for ..... .3 lbs Butchers' Lard 1 lb Hood's Special Blend Coffee . . - 1 can our own Sugar Cured Corn . . 1 3-lb can Hood's Tomatoes . . 1 package Pancake Flour 2 lbs hand ricked Navy B ;ans . . . 1 lb fancy Mixed Tei . . . . . . Total . . . ...... . . .' . 25 tradtn? stamps will be given with each b sket. tra stamps with the Combination basket. Hood's Monarch Blend Coffee still Roes at ?0c. The finest Potatoes in Richmond, 75c per bushel.

Do not fail to vitit our. Dry Goods Department. We are seLing our Coat fcr a lower price than can be purchased from any wholesale house in the United States. Any cne wishing- a coat can come to our etc re and g-t it at their own price. We always unload our winter Jackets and Coats so as to be able to buy new cncs. come and see us and the coat is yours. x

Yours Jlor more business.

TlieJIUEPR?

Both Phones Home 1079 ; Central

"Y'IK- 33. IIPZESZEOIE

fin Crava ttd Bridjt Work. XSS CCLCSI4L.

.0

best goods on the market." " iiii-iiii ACITB.. C3 o o O BROS. CO. IfkM 25 North rcet made in actl other syrups, which dirt and dust the its cleanline Chicago. $1 00 ,2H .18 .OS .08 .08 .10 .45 . . $2.25 This gives you three exmm Union. Black 241. Dentist

(ill I r w

3 f

u

1 1

' come to I I syrup Corn

ss, guar- y rocers. jr

mm

SCENIC - RICHMOND ITSPRESERVATION

MISS ROBINSON'S ABLE PAPER AT LAST MEETING OF TOURISTS' CLUB. ONCE FAMOUS TREES The Vital Question is How to Stop Their Mutilation Loss of Glen's Pine Groye. At the last meeting of the Tourist Club, Miss Robinson in speaking of Scenic America, and its preservation, spoke of the government protection of Yosemite, Yellow Stone, Sequoia Woods and other places, but brought us back to the place where we belong, Richmond on the Whitewater, and loyalty to its trees rocks and streams, made every tourist exrress his or-her dreams of its future scenic beauty, and its immediate preservation. The first vital question was how to stop the mutilation and destruction of the once famous trees, that made the town known. The eloquent defense of them occasionally by E. G.W. should give her an Arbor day in her honor. It is too late to scold about the loss of the . pine grove at Glen Miller; those former fragrant, healthgiving twilight paths are gone, in their stead some stripped telegraph poles, with a tuft of green at the top waving with mute appeal the place an unsightly dumping ground, and those scarlet rocks, that were shrines years ago, where are they? And the two " monarch Tulip Trees that might have been banded with iron and saved just as the Boston people knew how to take care of the Washington Elm, and all other trees they want to save; never topped to die in a few years, but every limb allowed to grow as intended, after its own kind and way. Now, the compensation that this generation can give future Richmond would be to bujr Fleecy Dale, and add to Glen Miller, all the land, forest grown, to the east, anil north of the railroad to the Xew Paris pike, with our Whitewater flowing through it, its irregular banks remaining, with only drives or pathways through it. One of the Tourists gave an experi ence recently of a stranger on the cars asking the way to Glen Miller said he was from California, had heard about that park, Glen Miller, had stopped off to see it. No place can show a happier thought than Honeysuckle bank there, or the roses and Tillies on the banks of the pond, or that canna bed this past summer. So, let mayor, council, park commissioners, citizens, before it is too late add this strip of land, and let their names go down to future Richmond as lovers of nature, who . thought of posterity, "and not of the wrangles of nothing worth while, that consumes 1 life time without motive or meaning Dr. Stevenson's communication shows the spirit of a public benefactor; making us see the beauty in the fut ure of the banks of this river west of town, and its possibilities. Stop at once all defacing buildings and mistakes in bridge building, control the current of the river, plant, trees, shrubs along its bed, over its banks, make as fair a sunken garden as Edinburgh holds called pleasure gr-.unds or Princess street gardens; .restore the old drive round the clift", a-id weep for the1 .. picturesque old pillared bridge. th-!t meant so much nistoriCii'iy (another regret like two old vv:) at the Glen.) The . telephone and electric light companies have helped in the distruetion of the ei! trees. One religious neighborhood became absolmeJv proline in 'iyn . to defend j eir trees. Th. expense of planting on one's own ground, caring for. and il.e-erowth o? y -ars to be s.twed off , ocordiNg to orders, from a company vl.'hont a ' soul. There are !w naiion l organiza j to preserve, make soniWy. and ' beautify towns, villages and mh 0f America, The Amen an League of Civic' Improvement, and The American Park and Oufdt or Association. Mr. Cliiflon ( Woodruff, president of the Inter aoeii ion and . ser'-rtary of the National Municipal League" states: "The American League, for Civic Improvement seeks to correlate and ail all the forces making for a clean and beautiful America. Some of ihese are humble and concern the care of the small plot, the small streerv?l henarrow path, 'even the lnu-k yard. Some are broader, aim at the regeneration of whole communities, provis

ion for breathing places and places of great sjjenic beauty, removal of the unsightly and the unsanitary. Whether large or small, whether affecting the few or the many, the impulse back of this work is wholesome and is making for a realization of high ideals, but it needs encouragement, sympathy and above all direction; this is the' function of the American League for Civic Improvement, organized on democratic lines, it seeks to interest the many and trail the few." The road commissioners in the rural districts near Chicago have takei steps to prosecute all persons who post flaring bills of any kind on bridges, culverts of the public highways; already considerable improvement in the roads of northern "Minois is noticeable. We wrant them re moved from the rocks west of town. There was a bill offered in the Vermont legislature by one of it.- members at the session of 1598-1801 to the effect that all persons forming such communities as Lenox, Mass., Tuxedo Park, Long Island, Birkle' neighborhood, California, taxes should 1 e remitted on such property for life or for a very long term of 3'ears. There is an astonishing history of what is being done with very l.'tlhc monv in various parts of the country, for village beauty -r preservation of what they have, for instance, at Tlonest'ale, Pa., the town is crossed by a liver, banks in shamefully iiegIce.fed condition; the;, built a retaining wall on each side, the council aidr ing by forbidding to.ii dumping of ashes or rubbish. Tiny made a path (five foot) on the no .-'I. side of tho liver which was already sh-ided by a double row of maples; vines were planted along the walls and spate gained filled in and flowers planted, d long row of hydrangias reflected in the water on the south bank. A fountain was placed in the river about twenty feet from a bridge. There was also a frog pond and dumpingground. This was graded, paths made, trees and shrubs planted with a large flower bed in the center of the park. There is another park or square in tht center of the town, with a largo fountain in the center; this is surrounded by a circle one foot wide, of tulips in the spring, followed by flowering plants all summer. Cans pointed green are placed along the streets.

at intervals for the reception of rubbish and papers. " This is all done by an organization of women nobl3r aided by the town council. Let us have a civic awakening in Richmond; Jet us get out of the monotony of villages laid out by cows.- We do not now need stockades of fences, nor live dose together "like tribes. We are now old enough to have tree embowered towns like New or Old England. Quaint well-kept villages of song and story to allure travellers ; foreigners comment very unpleasantly upon th5 lack of beauty and cheerfulness in and about our villages and towns. The Engelmann Botanic Club of St. Louis has a member who writes of trees., "The indiscriminate cutting away of the branches by telegraph, telephone and electric light companies is a great source of injury; in making new sidewalks or jutters the roots are cut away without regard to the influence this will have on the tree. Barbarous pruning has destroyed many a beautiful tree; not only is a tree cruelly injured by eutting off large branches, but when in addition, this is done so as to leave nagged stumps, from which decay starts, then an incalculable injury is inflicted; decay in trees is caused by fungi which gets in through wounds made by horses or pruning" he says, "nevercut a tree when once set. trimmed a little to ma ke the trunk, the beauty of a tree lies in the grace of iis extended limbs or tops. Chop off the tail of your dog, if you must, and shear his ears, if yon will, but never cut a tree. , J. M. Yaryan. Sec. Tourist Club. E. P. Trueblood, President. Perhaps You Wonder. if the tormenting cold that made last winter one long misery will be as bad this year. Certainly not, if you take Allen's Lung Balsam when tickling and rawness in the throat announce the presence of the old enemy. Do not expect the cold to wear itself out. Take the right remedy in time. Allen's Lung Balsam is free from opium. 1 The following persons, Rev. Gentry says, have been cured: Miss L. !?. Delavan, 113i north I street, Richmond. Ind. ' Mr. Fred Waking, 431 south tenth street, Richmond, Ind. (asthma.) Jennie Tate. 32S south eleventh street, Richmond, Ind. (rupture.) Mrs. Geo, A. Davis, New Castle, Mrs. Alinda J. Davis, Mrs. Amanda Milton, Mrs. JTannie Gaskins.

TOPI GS mLTCr-i U RCH ES

1 First Presbyterian. Rev. I. M. Hughes, pastor. Sunday-school at 9:15 a. m. The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be observed-in connection with the morning service at 10:30. "Lessons From the Chicago Fire" will be the subject of the evening service discourse at 7:30. Endeavor society meeting at 6:30 p. m. Second Presbyterian. Rev. Shirey, pastor. ' Sunday-school at 9il5 a. m. Communion service and reception of new members at 10:30 a. m. The pastor will have stereopticon views at the evening service at 7 o'clock. C. E. at G:30 p. m. United Presbyterian. Rev. S. R. Lyons, D. D., pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. and 7 :30 p. m. Morning subject, "The Paths of Jesus," a sermon to children. Sabbath-school at 9:15 a. m. Christian Union at 6 :45 p. m. St. Mary's. Rev. J. F. Mattingly, rector. Holy sacrifice of the mass at 6, 8, 9 and 10:30 a. m. Sunday-school at 2 :30 p. m. Vespers and benediction of the Blessed Sacrament at 3 p. m. St. Andrew's. Rev. Frank A. Roell, rector. Holy sacrifice of the mass at 7 :30 a. m. and 9:45 a. m. Sermon by. the reetor. Sunday-school at 2:30 p. m. Vespers and benediction of the Blessed Sacrament at 3 p.m. St. Paul's EpiscopaL Rev. H. H. Hadley, rector. Holy communion at 7:30 a. m. Sunday-school at 9:15 a. m. Morning prayer and sermon at 10:30. Evening prayer and service at 7:30. Special music. First English Lutheran. Rev. Elmer G. Howard, pastor. Sunday-school at 9 a. ra. Morning worship, with communion, at 10:30. Y. P. S. C. at 6:45 p. m. Evening service at 7:30. ' Second English Lutheran. Rev. H. Allen Leader, pastor. Divine worship in the morning at 10:30.. Sunday-school at 9 a. m. Luther League at 6 :30 p. m. St. Paul's Lutheran. Rev. Conrad Huber, pastor. Sunday-school at 9 a. m. German services at 10:30 a. m. ' Subject, "The Transformed .Life." Young People's meeting at 6:30 p. m. English services at 7 p. m. Subject, "The Holy Spirit God's Free Gift." First Church of Christ, Scientist. Services at 10:30 a. m. Wednesday evening experience meeting at 7:30, Pythian Temple. All are welcome. United Brethren. Chas. Broughman, pastor. Sunday-school at 2 p. m. and preaching at 3 p. m. Services in the Rhoda Temple. Come and worship with us. Sunday evening the congregation will begin a series of meetings to continue indefinitely. A Reliable Sporting Annual. One of the most complete and reliable books of the year is the "Police Gazette Sporting Annual" for 1904, Avhich is a veritable mine of information, so -far as sporting matters are concerned. It contains, within a small space, all the important boxing records, as well as records of the athletic world, and as a pocket encyclopedia, is invaluable. It is illustrated with fine halftone portraits of the champions of the ring, tha turf and .the field, while the cover is a particularly handsome one, printed in four colors. The price is only ten cents. INDIANA FAIR COMMISSIONERS Newton W. Gilbert, Fort Wayne, president. H. W. Marshall, Lafayette, vice president. J. W. Cockrum, Oakland City, secretary. W. W. Wicks, Bloomingt on. W. Stevens, Salem. W. II. O 'Brian, Lawrenceburg. Crawfol-d Fairbanks, Terre Haute. D. W. Kinsey, New Castle. . N. A. Gladding, Indianapolis. Frank C. Ball, Muncie. C. C' Shirley, Kokomo. Fremont Good wine, Williamsport. Joseph B. Grass, Huntiugton. Stephen B. Fleming, Fort Wayne. M. W. Mix, Mishawaka. .

1

A North A Street Friends. Sabbath-school at 9 a. m. Services at 10:30 a. m. Young Friends' Association at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday service at 10 a. m. . Ninth Street Baptist. Rev. H. C. Randolph, pastor. Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and at 7:30 p. m. Sundav-sehool at o B. Y. P. M. at 6 p. m. . . j - ' j wesleyan Church. Rev. C. P. Cook, pastor.-i-reacning at 10:30 a. m. Sabbathschool at 2 p. m. Preaching at 7:30 j i. m. jtjtci.yuouy welcome. ' j M. S, Marble, pastor. ' Sunday-school at 9 a. m. Preachinff nf 1fl-3n i n-i onA 7 -m T ior League at 2:30 p. m. Epworth League devotional service at 6:30 p. m. General prayer meeting at 7:30 p. m. on Thursday. Whitewater Friends' Chnrch. O. M. Frazer, pastor. Bible-school at 9 a. m. Meeting for worship at 10 :30 a. m. C. E. at . 6:30 p. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. " . First Methodist Episcopal T -r T-i i-r . .au.. xj. ietnercur. nastor. Sunday-school at 9:15 a. m. Preaching at 10 :30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. by r. Morning subject, "The the pastor. work of the Comforter." E veninpr subject, "Thomas and Matthew." Epworth League at 6 :30 p. m. East Main Street Friends. Bible school 9 a. m. Meeting for worship at 10:30 a. m. Junior C. E. at 3:30 p. m. Senior C. E. at 6 p. m. Whitewater monthly meeting Fifthday morning at 9:30 a. m. First Baptist. Rev. Addison Parker. Castor. j The pastor will have for his morning subject, "The Divine Infilling." J ror the. evening service, "Why Second Birth?" the Fifth Street M. E. J. P. Chamness, pastor. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a.: m. Subject, "The Characteristics of' a Good Man"; and, at 7:30, subject,. "Another Wa3" Epworth League Devotional at 6:30 p. m. South Eighth- Street Friends. Rev. Elwood O. Ellis, pastor. I Bible-school at 9:15 a. m. Worship; at 10:30 a. m. Junior Endeavor at 2 p. m. C. E. prayer ' meeting at 6 :45 p. m. Evening service at 7 :30. Third M. E. T" TTT TT -w- I ne. w. 11. ieirce, rastor. Sunday-school at 9:30 a. ra. Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Junior League at 2:30 p. m. Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. - Christian AT, J. J. White, pastor. ! Bible-school at 9 a. m. Preaching at 10:30 a. m. Subject, "The Lord's ( Money," and at 7:30 p. m. Subject, 1 "The Best of the Wine at the Last of the Feast. "Rom"- "Pv,i,. j. K vi . -i-nvii . ti nitre L ling at 6:30 p. m. The third meeting of the week of -prayer series will be held tonight at the home of Dr. J. ,A. Walls, south tenth street, at 7:30..' Subject, "The -Warrant and Privi lege of the Power of Prayer." Lead-" ' er, Mrs. Duffie. People's Exchanaa STORAGE Ground floor, sixteenth and Main. Vera Smith. TOR SALE Old papers for sale at the Palladium office, 15 cents a hundred and some thrown in. TOR SALE OR TRADE A good new 8-ineh well boring machine and complete outfit for making water wells. Have made two wells a day with a machine like it. Must quit work on account of a?e. S. Tt. Huddlesfon, Dublin, i 14-tf FOR SALE Family mare, carriage and harness. Cheap. Home 'Phone 532. S-2t ' WANTED A position to do office or clerk work evenings and Saturdays. An Earlham student. Call at Palladium. DEATHS AND FUNERALS. 1 iuoore. James Moore, aged httyseven years, died this morning at thehome of his son, 1430 north G street. Funeral services will be held in the r North A Street Friends' church a I 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, SI