Richmond Palladium (Daily), 6 June 1904 — Page 4

THE RICHMOND

PALLADIUM

i'1 H 1 1 U MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY EXCEPT SUNDAY. ss if ;y , .)AT 922 M AN STREET. J T -; ; 'U 30-1

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KNTEHKD AT KICUMOND FOSTOKBIOE AS BKCQNP-CLASB MATTKB Dally deltvered.by carrier to any par ot the city for six aeuts a weefc. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: DAILY Outside !ft'. six months. In advance '. Outside crqr, one month, kn advance o Uutalde city, oaie year, In advance 0 w WEEKLY By mall oae year, 81.00 In advance. 1T7 VOT T T7 A TT at any time 8t yur Paper from your carrier, you will conlr X VJU t AIL fer a faor by at once notifying the office by tlephor

James R. Hart. Editor. S M. Rutherford, Business Manager John S. FltzglDbons. City Editor.

TIE TEW

r

TEACH TROTH

grand

LD6E

OF THE DRUIDS OF INDIANA HOLDS ITS AN- ' NUAL MEETING HERE TOMORROW-WEDNESDAY BANVUET TO NIG AT Will Start the Ceremonies Program Richmond Lodge to Give i Carnival.

The annual meeting of the Grand Lodge of Druids of Indiana will be hold in this city tomorrow and Wednesday and the meeting will be one of the best in a long while. The ai rangemencs preparatory to the meeting have all been arranged and everythins; is in readiness for the cornfort and enjoyment of the vi -si tors, of whom there will be a large number. The business sessions open in the I. O. O. F. hall tomorrow morning. Tonight the chief social function of t h 3 meeting a grand ball and banquet for the Druids and their laflies will be held in the Odd Fellows hall. The la lies of the Indianopils circle, the auxiliary of the order, will o? among the visitors and the ball will be an oc ;asion of great enjoyment to the delegations that will attend. During the business sessions, which will occupy the greater part of the two days of the meeting, reports wiJl be heard from all the grand officers. It wil' be shown that the lodge has grown greatly in the past few years and J;as attained a place in tho high ranks of secret orders in the point of rembership. 1 Apropos of the above, announcement of the grand meeting it ought to be stated that the Richmond order of Druids will give a carnival this summer. The Mundy Carnival Co. Avill furnish the amusement., the company havii g l)oon secured when it was playing at Dayton. It is a very large one, finer probably than the Ferari liros. Co., and the Richmond people will yet this year have a chance to ?oo another excellent carnival. Tt u. hope the weather will be finer lhan it was during the week of the Rod Men's Carnival.

EARLHAM

BACCALAUREATE

Everybody's liable to itching piles. Rich and foor, old and younqr terrible the torture they suffer. Only one sure cure; Dean's Ointment. Absolutely safe; can't fail.

Is it a burn? Use Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. A cut? Use Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. At your drusrsrists.

(Continued From First Page.) present predicament, what does the future hold in store? There is no answer forthcoming to any of these questions. And, as they do not comprehend the past, the present, the future of His life, no more had we better say much less ? do' they comprehend the past, the present, the future of .heir own lives, for they h ul pinned their faith to Him. The sun has set, and it would seem the stars must go down, too. Here are two of God's men two of humanity's me-i tilled with moral earnestness, in the midst of a surprising crisis, with holden eyes. This is a picture of experiencenot an experience of Cleopas and of Luke alone, but a picture of

human experience a picture of universal humanity. It is a picture of the experience of college men and women, it may be, on a commencement day. With all our language and mathematics and science and philosophy Ave still see through a plass darkly; Villi our lit tie language an 1 mntlieruatics and science ar.d philosophy we s'nnd with uncovered heads wj are brought ry this suudden arresting today of the current of college iife, face to fuce with the meaning and the mystery of our own lives.

"But, while I bring you i message today of the holden eves and Ihe burning heart, I am chiefly concerned with the burning heart. If you speak of the mind of man you maj be misunderstood you may misunderstand yourself for the world is made up of many cien tnd of many minds; but you may speak of the heart of humanity without this ambiguity. Men have hearts, hidden away, it r ry be, in deep and dark recesses but the hearts are there, and, what is even more to the point, He speaks to men's hearts a id sends a thrill through their being. "We are learning to judge of trees by their ft nits, and so we ar. learning to juudge of men and of institutions." At the college last nisht the president of Butler college, Rev. Garrison, addressed a joint meeting of the Christian Associations. A large audience was j' resent. Buy Ideal or Mother's Bread and be satisfied. Buy others and you will have to wish vou hadn't.

THEY HAVE THEIR LESSONS YET FOR THE PEOPLE OF 1 THE OCCIDENT IS THE .. THOUGHT OF - , REV. STEPHEN S NYRICK He Develops This Rather New Idea in A Lecture at the Fifth Street Methodist Episcopal Church Last Night.

Stephen S. Myriek, who has but lately returned from a three years stay in tne Orient, addressed an appreciative audience at the fifth street M. E. church Sunday night on the topic: 1 ' Thoughts Gleaned From Oriental Sanctuaries." It was the effort of the, speaker to convey to his hearers a notion riot only of the curious things connected with these sanctuaries but also to point out that vital element, the central helpful thought of good which was impressed uponiliim by the forms of worship which he saw. At Tokio in the Shinto temple the dominant thing was the perfectly polished mirror teaching the carefulness requisite to maintain perfection. The horse and its imae of bronze which first catches the eye in the Buddhist temples of Japan gave the idea of the vitality and the constructive quality of religion. Mr. Myrick's idea of what may be learned from Oriental Sanctuaries, of the gotal which may come to one from their contemplation is rather a novel

) view to those who have been taught

to think of them as pagan temp!o3 and of no ethical interest. But where there is persistent life, there is a truth behind it and this inay lie in the central thought of good so well taken hold of by the speaker. Mr. Myriek has many interesting curios from the east with which tr illustrate his talks on life in the far east. He adds the local color of being able to use certain eastern dialects and twists his tongue about the words like a native. Mr. Myriek has abundant material at hand for many such instructive talks and it is to be hoped that he may see fit to develop it.

A limited 'amount of Petro-Pine Co. stock for sale. Stock guaranteed. Apply soon. Petro-Pine Co., 2-it 45 N. 8tli St.

Every loaf of the original Mother's Bread has a blue star label on it.

SALARIES OF TEACHERS. (Indianapolis Journal.) Chicago will need 200 new teachers in the public schools next September,

and the school board doesn't see

where they are to come from. The superintendent would like at least

half of this number to be men, saying that it would be a distinct ad

vantage to the schools to have more

men in the service between the fifth and eighth grades, as well as in the

high schools; but he does not see how they are to be secured when, after years of training and preparation, they are asked to begin on a salary of $550 a year. In some cities, he says, it is the custom to pay men nearly 50 per cent, more than women, and thinks it would solve the problem if Chicago would do the same, but "there would be an insurrection of women" in such event, he says the board of education now placing men and women on an equality in the matter of salary.

OASTOTIIA

Bears the yi The Kind You Have Always Bought

Signature

of

I The EAIIEOil SffiElf

Saturday was the greatest day in the history of this store greatest in peint

of crowds, ki sales and in bargains. For a store, noted as being always busy even -fjf

tjji. when others are idle, the above statement speaks volumes, Only those who were fjj. here Saturday and it seemed that nearly all of Richmond was here can appreciate Jf the difficulty we had in properly serving every customer. We egret very mudi f that all were not waited upon as they should have been, but it was unavoidable,

fjj. even with our extra help. To these persons, as well as all others, we say, please

come again.

0 0

TIK3E GnEOT

SOHMlCHOini

0

CONTINUES FOR THIRTY DAYS.

I But the BEST GOES FIRST S

Come To-night or To-morrow,

COME ANY TIME

And get your share of the matchless bargains offered in every department.

-

E. E, BROWN. 0

The Railroad Store Co.

B. D. GAME.

Incorporated.

PEOPLES E

WANTED A big second hand leather satchel. L. J, Smith, 138 south sixth street. WANTED Small family washings and gents' washings also at 320 S. 8th street, upstairs. . FOR RENT Furnished room at 31 south 13th street. 3-3t.

FOR SALE Cheap, a good Palladium route. Call at this office.

FOR SALE Good Palladium route in central part of town. Call at Palladium office.

TOR SALE Old papers for sale ai the Palladium office, 15 cents t hundred and some thrown in. LOST Saturday afternoon lady's black chamois chain pocket book, containing $5.00 and change; also door key and celluloid note book, between Railroad Store and Main street, on eighth street, party is known who was seen to pick it up by two young ladies and gentlemen If returned immediately to Mrs. W. Q. Simcoke, 32 Ft. Wayne avenue, liberal reward will be given. STORAGE Ground floor, sixteenth and , Main. Vern Smith,

COR. EIGHTH AND MAIN Cbas. II. Feltman. Geo. W. Deuker. Exclulve agents ol (tbe TRY A PAIR.

L VxlL..,- rr- 00

GUESS on pennies In window. The person guessing nearest number In the window will get a PAIR OF SHOES FREE.

The Palladium For JOB WORK

Bath Towels, 10c, 15c, 20c, 25c, 37 l-2c, 50c, 59c. See the 22 x 39 in. at 20c.

B&ST&M

Pony Hose. Once a Customer, Always a Customer 25c a pair. Boys' and Girls'.

The only Dry Goods House in the city where you always get the LOWEST and ONLY price without the asking. A Child buys as Cheaply as does the most Expert Shopper.

Hot Weather Coodsl 15 c yard. 86 pes. Choice new Wash Goods, including Voiles, Etamines, Dimities, Lawns and Batistes. See this special assortment, second floor. White Goods, every kind and quality known to the Weaver's art.

Hot Weather Coodsl Knit Underwear

Forest Mills Underwear is making new and fast friends every day. Made for Infants, Boys, Girls, Men and Women. The quality high, prices low. All can afford to wear t his splendid and most satisfactory underwear.

Hot Weather Goods! White Linens.

For Waists and full Suits. These are kept in our Linen department, Big values and a large Assortment. 36 in., FK)c and 60c; 45 in.. 75c; S0 in., $1 and $1.25. 45 in. shrunk Cotton, soft finish, 20c. A splendid substitute for Liuen.

Hot Weather Goods? Ribbons. 25 pes plain Taffeta Ribbon, 6 in. wide Pink, Blue, White and Black, 19c as long as they last. FANS. Beautiful line for graduating purposes. Splendid assortment from 25c to $ JO each.

Hot Weather Coisets, Batistes and Nets, 23c to $1.50 American Lady's and R. & S.