Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 141, 15 June 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Friday, June 1 5, 1 908.

Page 5.

Don't

Use Cheap ""IERRIES for canning purIU po3es consider quality above quantity Kuth's ' berries satisfy everyone as regards quality phone us and we will deliver your order by Im mediate delivery. Tondatoes Our ordeof Texas torWatoes finer

ones cannt be foundln the city Is In use ta phonff and get some. For high clss vettables try the

following: 8pring onions 2 for 5c. Cucumbers .. .. .. .. 2 for 15c. Radishes, crisp .. .. 2 for 5c. Lettuce, tender per lb TC'2c Cherries .. . 2 qts for 15c Asparagus.. .2 bunches 15c Gooseberries . .... fc'qt 15c 0. A. Harnteier Phone llll. l030Moin S- A. LOITT 9 S. 6th St. CABINET MAKER Fine Cabinet rk and Repairing. CLIFFORD 6. KE88LER 1018 MAIM STREE TINNER General Job wJrk & Repairing. I W. P. O'l :ary ....The Fruit lercharft.... 1020 MAI I A full line of it. Vegetables. Candies. Ci(ral TobsVco and X Groceries. FRlvt DULIVE&Y. i Dsj lnf tba past Hght fnonth we have gtn . oflloUtod at all thf woddlngs ol the moat prDlnent Brides of .Richmond You know thorn. Apt thm abont oar work. If you want. t Mo musical program of yourweaaiog nrjsuo ana complete, Call up TcjNo. IS0G Jet-rang Concert Quytet

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..WALL PA0ER.. fine Line GraduatlnraPresents. TKADINaVrAMtS Moormann's BoJk Store B20 MaxSTSt.'

THE RICHMOND fi jBt. - m is. nu a 9 nuriji gin r . lj 4 fe For Home Ck good service. l ofed food m d e eater to ve,S Li best trade only. Business Merv'sn Hunch our specialty. Sewing Machines... REPAIRS and :: i 4 SUPPLIES. R. MkL4cey I 718 MM I Horn Phon 1243 L RICHMOND TEA COFFEE AND GROCERY CO. 715 MAIN jSTREET DEALERS Ifl THE HIGH,JMM unnUt uUUU) AT THE Lowest cash prices. CALL AND BE CONVINCED.

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Social and Personal Mention MR. AND MRS. LEANDER J. WOODARD WILL ENTERTAIN FOR THEIR SON, ISAAC, AND HIS WIFE PARTY OF RICHMOND TEACHERS LEAVE FOR EUROPE WHERE THEY WILL SPEND THE SUMMER TETRAUQ QUARTET CONCERT AT STARR PIANO ROOMS TONIGHT.

Last evening Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Woodard at their beautifv-1 country home In Spring Grove entertained about two hundred guests, many from out of the city, la honor of their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Woodard of Sablna, O. The home and the large lawn looked like a picture of fairyland. Stretched about the lawn were hundreds of incandescent electric lights and the house was illuminated in the same manner. The large veranda which surrounds the house was banked in with plants of various kinds. About ten o'clock refreshments were served to the big company. Some were served on the veranda and others In the diningroom. In the center of the diningroom was placed an immense bouquet of roses and ferns. Hidden in this large floral piece were several electric lights. The entire lower floor of the house was decorated with roses, carnations, plants and ferns, giving an indlscribaWy beautiful effect. Among the out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Evans, of Indianapolis, Dr. Gray of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Of Knightstown, Mrs. Pray and Miss Pray of Knightstown, and Miss Elliott of Knightstown. The bride was beautifully gowned and assisted Mrs. Woodard in receiving the guests. Mrs. Isaac Woodard is well known in Richmond, having formerly attended Earlham College. Miss Harriet Thompson.Miss Augusta Merring, Miss Lena Stahl, and Miss Bertha Hawkins left yesterday for New York. They will sail Saturday on the American line steamer, St. Paul, to spend the summer abroad. They will go to Paris first, after a short stay in that city, Miss Mering and Miss Stahl will leave for a tour of the continent and Miss .Thompson and Miss Hawkins will go to England. They will sail for America the first of September. This evening there will be a Music Recital by the Tetrauq Concert Quartet at the Keramic Art exhibit in the parlors of the Starr Piano C.o's room" on Main street. The program will J as follows : "O.rture to Norma" Belleni Mandolins-Mandola-Harp. Meditation Mendelsohn "For All Eternity" Mascheroni Harp- Violin-Piano. "Serenade'-Celebre" Shubert Violins-Viola-Harp. Part Second. A Spanish Fantasy . .' Almagio Mandolin Trlson Song from II Trovotor.... Verdi Saxaphone-Violin-Harp "Op. 7" Lennard Violin-Piano. I Fantasia of Italian Airs. . . .Bellenghi j Mandolins-Mandola-Piano. ! Miss Mary Pienning and Miss Carrie j WeiBt entertained a large partv of friends at their home, 201 South Ninth 6treet, on Wednesday evening Progressive euchre was the feature of tho evening. The house was beautifully decorated with roses, pond 111liea and fern3. The guests were: Misses Lillie Losler, Pearl Hollern, T.tUie Connell, Rosamond Herold, Anna Kramer, Kate Todd. Lizzie Welke, T?ornadetta Piening, Ellenora Pfennig, Mrs. Werner, Mrs. Phennis, Mrs. Josephine Phenls, Messrs. Jim Lawler, John Madden, Gus Scherer. Uuben Yost. Otto Zeyen, Charles Tayor, Teace Deln, Andrew Witte, Euveno Herold, Joe Werner, Frank Phe:i!3, Henry Phenls, Charles Lahman, Carl Weist and Carl Pienning. After t.ho Fames a two course luncheon was served. Prizes were awarded to Miss- ' Flora Dickman and Lillie Connell and Messrs. Ruben Yost and Frank 1 Phenls. i j Mrs. Bary Whitridge gave a delightful luncheon yesterday noon for MrB. Louise Van Uxum Chappell, of , California. The table was artistically decorated in roses and garden flowers and a four course luncheon was served. The guests included Mrs. Fred Chilton of Woonsocket, R. I., Mrs. A. W. Hempleman, Mrs. D. L. Mather, ' Mrs. Mary Mather, Mrs. Mary Grant, Mrs. Lucy Howard and Miss Bertha i Whitridge. ! j The members of the Ladies Whist Club of Cambridge City, gave a dinner, followed by a card party and dance last night at Jackson Park, in l honor of their husbands. 4 A pleasant party was given last night for Messrs. C. M. Wilson and 1 11. M. Hammond at the home of the ; latter, 206 South 8th street. The af1 fair was planned by Mesdames HamI mond and Wilson, it being the birth1 day of their husbands. The evening i was spent with cards and in a social ! way. Many presents were received. The guests were: I. A. Gormon and family, J. U. Gormon and wife, R. C. ; Wilson and family, E. M. Wilson and wife, James Wilson, Mrs. Lou Taggart and two sons, Mrs. John Brown and - daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Parry Ryan and son. -Mrs. John Gormon and Miss Louie Gormon of Centerville. The Protection Mite Club, a social organization composed of members of the Knights and Ladies of Honor, met last evening at the home of Mrs. Maggie Brown, on North 9th Btreet. There were fifty members present and the evening was delightfully spent with games and songs. A luncheon was served, late In the evening. Mrs. D. A. Kennepohl and daughter, Miss Gefina, and granddaughter, Mis3 ! Elizabeth, have returned from CallforI nla. where they spent the winter.

PERSONAL MENTION. Mrs. Amos J. Walker of New York who has been the guest of Mrs. Howard Dill, went to Indianapolis yesterday. Robert Dwyer has returned to Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sudhoff have returned from their wedding trip. Mrs. Louis Strcmme and Mrs. Homer McCoy have gone to Toronto, Canada for a few weeks' visit. Ray Newman has returned from New Castle. Miss Maude Johnson has gone to Cincinnati for a few days' visit. Miss Clara Newman will leave tomorrow evening for a visit with relatives in Chicago. Miss Susan McCormick of St. Louis, is here to attend the Art exhibit. Mrs. Brown Blaire and son, were in the city yesterday, enroute to Los Angeles California. Col. W. J. Robey and daughter, Miss Grace, returned this morning from Indianapolis, where they .attended the annual dinner given by the Sons of the Colonial Wars. Carl Bernhart returned yesterday yesterday from Johns Hopkins University, where he has been attending school the past year. Miss Mabel Berber is home from DePauw University, where she has been attending school. Miss Sophia Pepper of Connersville, was visiting In the city yesterday. . . Miss Lydia Myrick has returned from DePauw. Miss Edna Moore, who has been teaching in Indianapolis, . will return home the last of this week. Merle Genn went to Indianapolis yesterday. Miss Dorothy Dille is visiting In Indianapolis. Miss Anna Fihfrock,' who has been attending New York University, will return home the last of this week. Mrs. Howard McWright of Cincinnati, is the guest of friends in tho city. Pres. and Mrs. Kelly of Eurlham, and Mrs. A. J. Ballard, returned yesterday from Fountain City, where they attended the wedding of Miss Olive Harrison and Prof.,W. B. Kelley. Miss Ella Lemon left yesterday to attend the commencement exercises at Wlmington College, Wilmington, O. While there she will be the guest of her sister, Mrs. Frank Lamar. Mrs. Jesse Harvey and Mlsa H:irrlet Eitle of Indianapolis, and Miss Estelle Symons of Mihnepolis, will arrive noxt week to be the guests of Miss Bertha Hill of South Thirteenth street. Paul Binford, a former Eavlham student, who Is now connected with the American Biscuit Comp:nv j. Chicago, returns today to his old homo at Greenfield, Ind., where he will spend a short vacation. Mr. Binford has been in the city attending the graduating exercises at his alma mater.

THE MAKING OF STREETS NEW PLAnJ FOR RICHMOND Suggested that the Tar Covered Macadam Might Prove More Effective Than Process in Vogue in Richmond at Present Time. Richmond's' macadam streets, especially newly finished North Eleventh street, are a revelation to many municipal officers in Indiana, and the only possible fault that can be found is that they are not long-lived; the wear begins to show in a comparatively short time. The latest and the most economical substitute for permanent paving has been! successfully tried at Montclair, N. J., and Richmond's Board of Works and the city street Commissioners may at some time be inducted to duplicate the work. The street at Montclair, which had a grade of 5 to 7 per cent., and which was in fair condition, was swept clean and the tar was spread over the surface thickly by means of sprinkling pots with holes about one-tenth of an inch in diameter. On this was spread stone dust, sifted through a screen with half-inch meshes, and the road was well rolled down with a ten-ton steam roller. The second coat of tar was then put on and covered with stone sifted through a sand screen; the surface was again rolled, putting on more of the smaller stone, until the whole road was smooth and compact, with no tar coming to the top. The result of this treatment has been most satisfactory. After nearly two years' wear the street is still, in good order, the surface has not been broken up and it has been free from dust all the itme. HIGH DEGREE CONFERRED The Presiding Elder of the Richmond District Honored by De Pauw University, The Rev. Thomas M. Guild of this city, newly elected presiding elder of the Richmond district, Methodist church, was highly honored by De Pauw University at the annual commencement exercisas Wednesday. The degree of D. D. was conferred upon Dr. Guild and also upon Dr. L. F. Dimmitt, of Greencastle, presiding, elder of the Bloomington district. Palladium Want Ads Pay.

VALUE OF MUSIC IN THE SCHOOLS

Superintendent Jordan Addresses the Township Trustees on Subject. IMPORTANCE OF SUBJECT HE SAYS THAT IT IS NOT THE PURPOSE TO MAKE MUSICIANS, BUT RATHER APPRECI ATi" LISTENERS. In a well prepared paper before the meeting of the Township Trustees yesterday. County Superintendent Jordan called attention of the trustees to the benefits to be derived from the teaching of music in the schools, and he appealed to them to be careful, when employing teachers, to see that they are able to instruct in music as well as in the other branches. Supt. Jordan's talk, in part, was as follows: "Upon the questions ' of proper education of the youth of the land depends the question of whether or not the people are ever to come to a settlement in the great matters which are coming up each day to perplex the government. " The . differences of capital and labor can never be settled until both sides are. properly educated, and an educated . public would do away with greed andgraft. "Along with the other lines of training, music is a valuable adjunct to the common and high school courses. It developes the reason, trains the memory, awakens the imagination and molds the character, all of which go to perfect the education of the youth. It has been rightly said that 'Music hath power to sooth the savage breast.' It is good for creating a sweet temperament among children and entertains them in connection with their studies. All Nations Have Airs. "All nations have their songs and national airs, which are filled with feeling. Church hymns would be the same if they were spoken instead of sung. The songs of a nation affect it fully as much as the laws, it has been said. To show the effect of singing, I will tell a story of the tyo great armies, the Federal and the Confederates, that were encamped on opposite sides of the river near Fredericksburg. The Unionists sang 'Yankee Doodle,' and the 'Rebs sang 'Dixie.' Finally, both ended by singing in unison, 'Home, Sweet Home.' " , "The study of music trains the ear, eyes, the voice and the hands, besides all the mental forces. It is not the purpose of the school training to turn out musicians, but rather people who will be appreciatinve listeners, and thereby open to the boys and girls a world of aesthetic culture which they would not otherwise have known. "The pupils all take interest in music and- love to sing. The public schools should follow after and take the place of the old time ' 'singing school,' which trained so many for choir work in the churches. ADDRESS BY DR. DAVIS INTERESTING TO LEAGUE Richmond's City Health Officer Talks on Sanitation and the Broad S??ect it has on the Populace of Every Community. Dr. T. Henry Davis, Richmond City health officer has returned rom Marion where he attended the sessions of the Municipal league. As stated in a dispatch from Marion published in the Palladium yesterday, Dr. Davis made an address on "Sanitation" which was of particular interest "Criminals and lunatics are manufactured articles as much as an eccentric on a machine," declared Dr. Davis in speaking of the moral phase of sanitation. "Man is a creature of his environment. Many a degenerate is the possessor of a starved brain due in part to improper feeding in infancy, and continued exposure to unsanitary environment during youth. Broadly speaking, vice is another name for disease. The lack of sanitation in preceding centuries in responsibly for a large proportion of th3 degeneracy of the race. "The demand of the twentieth century is for more hospitals for criminals and less penitentiaries, more public sanitation and less penance. Public sanitation permeates the entire social structure and in time the stamp of physical and moral improvement will appear. The doctor then spoke of public san itation from an economic phase. Disease, he declared, isan element that causes a paralysis of industry and to the extent it prevails it may be counted a direct loss to the community. He referred to the deaths from typhoid fever in Indiana, and said that sanitation would have reduced the death rate sixtey per cent. To enumerate the cost to the state of preventable deaths that public sanitation would have averted, the sum total would stagger belief. ...wFred Besslernan of this city hii received a book of pictures of thi San Francisco ruins which were iken shortly afi?r the earthquake by his son. Fred L." Besslernan of Los 'Angeles, Cal., who visited the striiken city ia an automobile. These pictures are now exhibited at the art exhl'oit. Why wait for your friend s friend to come and look at your house week after next? You can sell it with a To Let ad in The Palladium;

A Woman's Gratitude "For more than a year I .had been a sufferer, completely broken down. I had not slept buf two or three hours 'any night for weeks. I had such awful misery in my head, and oh, I was so irritable. I could not depend upon my judgement, and my memory was

failing. I realized that I was losing my mind, and I thought the grave, or worse, the asyj lum, would be my doom. doctor said my case waseyond the reach of medicnj. I went to a druggist adff told him my condition. Hrecommended Dr. Miles'XNervine; he was pretty sur it would help me, I bojht a bottle. That nighVJXtook a table spoonful, and tell asleep in a few minutes, the first rest I had in weeks, and oh, I will never forget that sweet sleep while I live. I have continued taking it, and sleep like a baby, and gain rapidly." TrfRS. VIOLA BARKER, Orange, Texas. Dp. MIIe' Nervine Is sold by your druggist, who will iurantee that tho first bottle will benefit. If It falls, ha will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind Cedar Springs . . HOTEI m NEAR NED FAClS, OHIO Home of tlx ahoc Water Bath Houj :iub House Pool, Billiards. Bowling Alleys and all out door sports. CHICKEN DINNERS a Specialty, 75 CENTS Maxson & McDannald.Props. Call Up (either ... we taruycTur Want Ads by Phone and Charge Them 0

phorjc)

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Fine Wide Malvern Lawns Polka Dot and Floral Designs, 50 patterns to select from. 3&c Per Yard.

Hope Bleached Muslin Another case just in. Friday and Saturday 7c Per Yard.

Ladies' Linen Finished

, New shipment today, at $1.50 Each.

Torchon Laces at 2 1-2c. Fine wide Torchon Laces for these two days only 2J Cents.

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Friday Spe&MM

Canning Time J

No. 1 best heavy tin cans per dor. 40cts. : 1 puart Mason Jars per dox. 5Ccts. Vacum Jars requires no sealing wax, no rubbers, or noVIre,

can that will keep fruit Indefinitely, used years. Seethem before you put away Spurcial for Friday $1.00 per doz. HERRIES: CHERRIES: By the drawer 75cts. Goosberriee, Goosberries per drawer 19 pounds granulated, 20 pounds

8 bars Lenox soap or 9 bars SwiftaPride 25cts. 6 pounds best lurnp starch withZO stamps 25cts. Mule Team Borax, just whatjCu want for cleaning, one pound package and 12 stamps for lcts. Notver five to each customer. Nice crisp ginger snaps jkT spuare crackers per pound 5cts' IN OUR DRY GQODSyOEPARTMENT. We are receivinanKr goods every day. See our line of Ladies Shirt waists the cheapest and fanciest in the city. Buy now. Fine assortment of Lace Curtains. Prices are right. Store opened Friday night. HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phona 1079; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street.

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Best Violfei

IMPORTED PR

RO Phone 56T New

mm MIS!

Victor and Edison Phonograph Records.

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" Curme's Speci

is the sensation of the year in the Richnrvbd shoe trade.

er sale than any other shoe ever sold WHY?

Because it Is a strictly 13.50 shoe ff7z.50, is guaranteed to oe

BEST shoe made for the moneyV aiw more than fills the guarantee. CURME'S SHOEWtORE, 724 street.

Home Phone 593 I kl Rll.Cfim L 16 8. 7th St. f

am. w m M w Manufacturer andlfraUr In Parlor furniture, Mattresm andVWNINGS, Lounges, Couches, Easy Chairs, Etc.: jf Repair work a specialty.

AND

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JkKi ATOIOMY t

the only

by the Germat for tho last 40 any fruit. 9C AJti pounds extra C sugar $1.00. Strings OM GERMANY. STORE 51in St. It Is having a laq inthe City. th O 7 Skirts

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