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

Richmond daily palxadium. Thursday; june rigo.

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JUNE OFFERINGS EXTRAORDINARY OPPORTUNITIES Friday and Saturday Two Record Breaking Bargain Days. Get your summer needs now; you can't afford to miss this unprecedented BARGAIN GIVING. Wonderful Reduced Prices throughout entire store. Just a few of the many sacrifices for Thursday and Friday:

41c

lCc Fancy Lawns, per yd Fine White Dimities, per yd

Yard Wide Tercale. per yd 2 yards wide Unbleached Table Linen, worth 65c, per yd Fine Wide Embroideries, up to 12 inches wide, per yd . . .

4tc 6c 35c 10c 25c 6c ,23 .20

Ladies' black and colored Voile Skirts, beautifully trimmed, Co QQ worth J. 60, special,....; 'ft i3U Fine quality India Linen, per yard, 4C

&Cc LadieV Girdle Corsets Ladies' line ribbed Vests, taped neck and sleeves, worth i2Jc special, 72c box Cuticle Soap, guaranteed as good as Cutlcura or money refunded, per box r . . . - , . Ladles' crush leather Belts, all colors, &:c kind,

BOTH PHONES

LEE B. NUSBAUM

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ILOCAL ITEMSl W. Rossiter, carpet layer, phone 1381. Optical goods at Haner's. Will Keller is in the city today. Oneida Dill is visiting in Piqua, 0. Mrs. W. S. Hiser's shorthand school. Harrj' Carroll left for Peru this morning. J. L. Rupe spent yesterday in Logansport. Blanche Kerr of Greensfork was

here today. Karl Kepler spent yesterday in

Greensfork. "Walter Painter went to Rushville this morning. Will Turner of Kokoino is in the city on business.

THE JAPANESE IN KOREA

How Marquis Ito Won Concessions For His Country. SYMPATHY OP NATIVES DIVIDED.

OOOOOOOOOOOxOOOOOOOOOOO

'Tis well to remember that the Only way to;get AHEAD In the world is to save a part cf your income regularly. A deposit v. ith the DICKINSON TRUST CO. Will earn you 3 per cent, interest. Compounded semi-annually, May I and Nov. 1. Ready cash has saved many a man. A aaving account is always Ready. SAFETY DEPOSIT BUILDING.

Coffee! Coffee! Coffee!

People who have used Hood's

Brand of Coffees know that they are Al and superior to other Coffees which are 25 per cent, higher. Now we are going to offer you the best of all that we have for Saturday, only we will give you a better price than afterwards. Our Mocha and Santos Coffee which we will sell you for 25c is the regular 30c goods, and with each two pounds we will give you one Haviland China Chocolate Cup and Saucer. With two pounds we will give you one China Tea Cup and Saucer; with 3 pounds we will give you one China Coffee Cup and Saucer; with two pounds one Haviland China Pie Plate; with two pounds one 5-in. Plate; with 3 pounds one G-in. Plate or one 7-in. Plate. We have the balance of the different pieces compos-

i .c.-ii tt :i ,i ru: tv,

mg n xuii sei ui. nauu vniiia. vtu and intend to continue selling this

col'fee

is it has been the biggest sel

ler of any at our other stores, especially with the way that we give the Haviland China away. See our window as we have it displayed ready for you to look at, then of course, you will come and buy. Do not fail to see the Big Bargains in Laces and Embroidery at only 5c a yard. Dressing Sacques from 48c up. The prices on our other goods remain the same and we want all of our customers to take advantage of the extreme Bargains that we are giving them in this Coffee. Come and see us and we will save you the dimes and pennies. Yours for more business,

Ella Callahan left for a visit in Cincinnati this morning. George Grottendiek of Cincinnati is spending a few days here. Miss Huff and Miss Lindemuth left for New York last evening.

C. E. Shively returned last night from a trip to Indianapolis. Dr. Park, the only one price dentist in Richmond, 8 N. 10th st. tf Malcolm Bobbins returned this morning from a visit in Hagerstown. Miss Florence Lacey who has been

visiting at Muncie has returned home. Misses Taber and Ball of Ealrham went to Lewisville, Ind., today to visit. How'ard Burgess returned last evening from Purdue to spend the vacation. R. M. Ferriday and W. B. Wood spent yesterday in Logansport on business. Everett Macy, of Lewisville, Ind.,

a former Earlham student, was here yesterday. Rev. Father Roell returned last

night from a few days' business trip to Cincinnati. Mr. Thomas Kenney of Marion is visiting his brother, John Kenny and family of Fairview. Lawrence Smelser went to Anderson last evening. He will work near there during the summer. Mrs. Harry Hill, of north Thirteenth street, returned last evening from a visit in Newcastle.

Powerful Claasea In Favor of Japan, Tonic links and Southern Ulee

Growers Are Opposed Korean Em-

peror fcald to lie Entirely Subservient to Japanewe Deuinnilx. Indili'erenee of Korean to Outcome of tlie War. A staff correspondent of the New York Tost at Seoul, Korea, recently sent to his paper the following article on Japanese influence in Korea: How it feels to be the bone of contention Las been the subject of diligent inquiry. Altogether it appears that the Korean people do not care which side wins or whether the established government of their country is overthrown. This Is because of popular dissatisfaction with the dynasty which has held sway for 511 years. Corrup

tion that makes American boss moth

er respectable.,..- The main brake , on progress is the custom of living upon a more prosperous relative. It is calle! "sorning." No odium irttaches to wlint we would call sponging. When a uinn feels overburdened with his own or his wife's kindred and has himself political influence lie says to the govern ment: "Here are some relations of mine who cannot make a living. They must have political cilice." And the office is granted. The word for work in Korean m ins "unfortunate;" to do nothing is to be genteel. Yet to gain a living is not difficult. Scratch the soil and enough to live on springs up. Wealth anyway is discouraged, if relatives do not swarm about to subsist upon what a man has earned the government steps in to relieve him of his accumulations. Thus one man (this happened to n friend of the editor of the Korean lieview) who was known to have come

into possession of $2,000 w..s one day waited upon by an officer of the empire. "I congratulate you." said he. "Why?" inquired the man. "The emperor lias conferred upon you the Order of Something or Other, and I am here to give you the insignia and to collect the $2,000 which it is customary to pay."

Mr-

The Great Spread

for Daily Zread.

w

X 1

CORN SYRUP

At grocers, lfte, 25c, 60c tin.

CORN PRODUCTS CO..

new York and Chicago.

PEOPLES EXCHANGE

ods seem like a code. of political mor- 1 V"" l" ,uamt: als has thrived in Korea and grown ?esics' 1 nt.cre ?r tbe decora

during authentic; history, which means .

i ti, c. There can scarcely bo

WANTED A big second hand leather satchel. L. J, Smith, 13S south sixth street.

WANTED Small family washings and gents' washings also at 320 S. 8th street, upstairs. WANTED Good girl for housework at home of Chas. Stetson, 2 miles northeast of Greensfork. A good home and good wages. Address R. R. 1. . r!

Both Thones. Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday nights. The MODEL BEPARTM8NT STO 411-415 MAIN ST. Both Phones

IB

tD J

IANOS FOR SALE IANOS FOR RENT IANOS MOVED IANOS TUNED

BOTH PHONES 346

STARR PIANO CO. 93.

Main St.

ELECT BOARDING

Home like Menu. Rates Reasonable

Mesda'es Smith & Conlei

30 N. Eleventh St.

Miss Edna Overman will return to her home in Knightstown today after a visit with friends in this city. Mrs. II. IT. Swift of south twelfth street went to Rpringboro, 0., this morning to visit relatives for a few

days. The best farm in this vicinityt; $40 per acre buys it. Before buying a farm apply to Moore, over 6 N.

Seventh street. 2-tf Opal Husson and Florence Smith, who attended Tndor hall, at Indianapolis, returned home this morning for the summer. Attend the big reduction sale of all millinerv at Mrs. C. A. Brehm's, 41

north eighth street. Choice of 25 street hats at $1.00 each. Miss Edith Woodward returned to Knightstown this morning after a

short visit with friends here. She

formerly attended Earlham.

Edward Beatty, who attends Cul-

ver, ana wno has Deen at 01. liouis

with the Culver cadets, returned home last evening to spend the summer.

Typewriters, all makes, rented,

sold. Rentals, $3 to $5 per month. Repairs and ribbons for all machines.

Tyrell, W. U. Tel, office. 'Phone 2G. Mr and Mrs. A. S. White and daughter, Miss Edna White, returned last night to Knightstown after attending the Earlham commencement exercises. Clark's Concert Orchestra will give an entertainment under the auspices ofjtthe Royal Neighbors, Friday June 10th at S p. m. Woodman Hall. Admission 15 cents. Ed Forkner, formerly of this city, who has been in Anderson and other cities for some time, arrived last night for a stay here. His main object is to see the art exhibit.

any preference for Japanese suprema- ,

cy over Russian, for this is the fifth time that Japan has entered the country to its damage. Traditions 400 years old tell what ravages she has committed in Korea, and she is still referred to as "that accursed nation." Yet such men of consequence as I have gained touch with declare that the sympathy of powerful classes is with

Japan. It is not credible, even if the j

emperor has expressed cordial sentiments to the Marquis Ito. He is capable of expressing the same sentiments to Russia's prime minister, for he is an arrant coward, a man who weeps from mere apprehension, who looks like the residue of a decadent line (as he nearly is, for his son, the crown prince, can never have an heir), and it is not long ago that he escaped from his palace In a woman's palanquin to the Russian legation to save himself from Japanese plottings. The class which favors Japan is that of the olnceholders. They have made a guess as to the outcome of the war.

Tiger hunters of the north are antiRussian. They have attacked outposts. Tong Haks of the middle prefectures are anti-Japanese and within a few days destroyed a Japanese scouting force. Rice growers in the south are frankly opposed to the island people, for, besides legends, there is daily evidence of their innate brutality. 10 very English person on the ship we voyaged by remarked upon the "beastly way"

the Japanese treated the Koreans at the ports we stopped at. Indiana or Delaware would not offer a negro such

general indignity and rough usage.

You may infer what the emperor's own secret human feeling is toward

the Japanese by recalling the incidents

of Oct. 7, 1805. That was the night

that forty-five Japanese in Seoul, with the tacit approval of the Japanese min

ister, Miura as afterward proved at

the trial planned and carried out the

assassination of the empress. According to General Dye, an American who was the emperor's military adviser and

was present in the palace, the Japa

nose rushed the guard, some of them

assuming Korean uniforms, pulled the

"palace women" by the hair to compel

them to indicate the whereabouts of her majesty, threw some off the ve

randa roof, cut and kicked others, mur

dered two, slashed the crown princess

with a sword and threw her downstairs

The empress was dressing when they

found her. The minister of the house

hold stood at the door with hands out

spread to keep the Japanese back, and

his two upraised hands were chopped

off. lhe empress ran. Out on the ve

randa she Was overtaken and stabbed

cue asiieu u tne crown prince was

safe, "and a Jap jumped on her breast'

and ran a sword through her. Then

her body, alive or dead, no one knows

was taken to the deer park, sprinkled

with kerosene and burned so that noth

iu reiiiumeu ior interment out one bone of one finger. This woman was the emperor's wife. She ruled him, no doubt, but he cared

for her. lie refused to sign the edict which the Japanese caused to be prepared reducing her to the "lowest or-

"what! Reject a distinction confer

red by the emperor?" exclaimed the messenger. "It was leze majesty. The offending citizen was brought before a court, the magistrate was paid $200 to render judgment of $2,000, and the man had

WANTED Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Private family. Address X care Palladium office.

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

to empty his house of goods and yield I . 1 un his bank deposit and go penniless i OK SALE Good Palladium route

into the country to live off the soil. There is a wooded hill on the em

peror's farm which it costs a head to (.

cut a tree from. The crime is capital I

owing to the tradition that when trees !

are all cut there the Korean nation will

disappear. The time is approaching.

It is declared by persons daily in con

tact with the cabinet and the empei'or

that one of the things Marquis Ito came to request waR that Korea should

grant to Japan the mining, forests and

fisheries concessions. Ito lets it be un

derstood that his mission was success

ful. He threatened, one hears, that unless Japan's desires were met there would be troops in Korea to enforce them, and the wabble kneed emperor

gave in. lie has subscribed also to the Tusan railway, and the crown princess, who was slashed with a Japanese sword, has contributed to the

Japanese Red Cross society. These are

politics so high and so interesting that

I hesitate to write them till I am surer of my facts. Against what would be

the supposedly human prejudice against the traditionally hated nation there is to be weighed the overpowering physical presence of its people and armed forces. Hundreds of new Im

migrants recently arrived at Chemulpo, and if the rate keeps up till midsum

mer Korea's gentle 8.000,000 inhabitants will be outnumbered as well as overawed by their aggressive historical enemies. Immense works are being pushed under the energetic, strong, peasant bands from Japan. Hills are being lowered into the valleys to form new rich rice fields, and the railway to Thyongyong is being graded and laid by coui:iess men with remarkable vigor, even soldiers taking picks and spike hammers, the wish being to have a road from Tusan up the peninsula clear to New-

chwang and the Yulu open at once and j

to Teking a little later. Japan is prevailing over Korea through sheer self assertion (although that is a quality which Japan as yet

has no word to express), and Korea is 0 pitifully nonresistant. As one of the j

observers in Korea puts it, "To take over this whole government and country would be merely like stealing candy from a blind child."

in central part of town. Call at Palladium office.

'oil oiir. Old pajjeia io .iif at the Palladium office, 15 "r".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. FOUND A lady's pocket book. Call

Home 'phone 910 E. LOST White fan, between Westcott Hotel and Ninth and north D sts Return to this office.

STORAGE Ground and Main. Vm

noor, ijixteentl Snr.itb

MABKET

Quotations From 0. G. Murray's ExchangeClosing Prices Chicago Market.

Wheat.

July SG 5-S

80 7-8 Corn, 4S 7-S

Sept.

July Sept.

.4S

Julv

ID

Tin Crovo n4 Bridge Work. TEX COLONIAL.

Dentist

The orthmester fIataal liif e Ins, Co

$SK2?: J- 0 BARBER, General Agent,

Room A and 7 Kelly Bld

Kicnmona, ma.

THE BEST KNOWN KNOWN AS THE BEST.

NflDNE Such mimm meat

In 10c Packages with List of Valuable Premiums.

FIRST VACATION

nl Hen Years Will he Taken by Geo. W. Cotton.

Mr. Geo. W. Cotton and wifeofthis city will leave in a few days for St. Louis to attend the exposition. Mr. Cotton is breaking the record, for it is the first trip he has taken in ten

years.

INVITATION TO SMITHS. John Cabell Smith AVantu All Other Smiths to Vilt Ilim. The Smith family, not specifically but generally, will assemble in Louisville, Ky., this fall if the plan of John Cabell Smith, a wealthy Kentuckian, is concurred in by the Smiths at large, says a Louisville special dispatch. Smith has issued a general invitation through the press to the Smiths of the country to assemble in Louisville for a three days' reunion, and be will

Oats. 39 5-8 31 1-8

j Pork. (July 12.10

Lard. ;

Sept 6.75B Spare Bibs. Juuly 6.92

defray all the expenses of entertain-

der," which is about the only admira- j ment. He says he is willing to spend

uic utnuii ui 111s iiiai one eusuaiiy ; p.u,'-"-"-' i""J1"-1) -uw . - ...

hears about. lie feared to eat anv- ' drop it unless he receives assurances

thing except what was sent in a locked box from the United States lega

tion, and he bad to flee at last to the proportion of those bearing the name. Russian legation on account of anoth- ) "There is no reason why several er edict which the Japanese caused to ; thousand should not attend," he says.

issue abolishing the topknot of hair which Koreans have worn for 2.000

lllil l IUC OU111U lULUlljf Ol IUC u 1IUVV1 States will be represented by a fair

Announcement. George C. Ball having purchased the Fire Insurance Agency of B. B. Myrick will continue the same at the old stand, Nos. 8 and 10 north seventh street and respectfully solicits a continuance of your patronage. Mr. Ball will also sell Health, Accident and Life Insurance. 9-eod-3t

t

years. He and the people resented the abolition as an attempt to make them look like Japanese. Is it possible that the compliments to Marquis Ito have any lasting signiflcance? The other day a north Korean was shot by Japanese as a Russian spy. In Ito's prefecture people have suffered much from the present Invaders. Pbyongyong, for example, was reduced in the Japan-China war from a population of 00.000 to a population of 15,000. Four-fifths of the houses were destroyed, and for days afterward, it has been authentically related, dead Koreans lay exposed to the sky in festering heaps four or five deep. As now, the Japanese were friends of Korea. One cannot tell whether the memory

rankles.

"and in that event we would fix up a parade and other festivities that would startle the world. I want men, women and children, and I want them to come prepared for a hilarious time. I want nil who can come to notify me so that I may proceed with my plans."

Iter First Railroad Journey. An old lady who had never ridden on a railroad car recently visited a station and was shown into the waiting room, says the Frisco (Tex.) Journal. She took a chair and prepared to enjoy herself. After sitting quietly for half an hour she reached over and. touching a stranger on the arm, remarked, "It rides real easy, don't itt"

Dr. Koch's Inland. A Vienna manufacturer, Leopold Kupelwieser, prompted by the result of Professor Koch's investigations re-

Conclusion about oriental lating to intermittent fever, has placed

feelings are not to be reached ! by at Dr. Koch's disposal the lsianu or means of occidental processes. These ; Brioni, situated west of the peninsula are a people of easy going habit. In of I stria and about sixty miles south no country one has experience of are of Trlest, to enable him to continue there so many gentlemen or la ldlinsr there hla investigations.

NEW COMPANY. The Eaton Electric Light company

has been ibsorbed by the Eaton Supy companr. Negotiations which have

been on for several weeks have just I

been closed. Mr. J. R. Cook is thel

president and manager of the new

company.

$1.00 Sunday Excursion to Indiana

polis via Pennsylvania Lines. On Sunday June 12th, Indianapolis and return $1.00. Special train will leave Richmond at S:35 a. m. C. W. Elmer,

9-3t.

Passenger & Ticket Agent.

Take Notice. Eden lodge of Rebekahs will elect its new officers at the next regular meetinc niirht. June 11.

Pearl Pitman, Sec. J

waw w WELL PROVIDED. The teachers who left for Europe

from this city provided .themselves: with American Express ; Co. s traveJ-l

ers cneques iurnisneu7. me gem

agent of the company nere, Mr. H. Brown.