Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 343, 18 October 1910 — Page 10

iAGE TEX.

THE RICII3IOND PALL.ADIU3I AND SUX TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 19lO.

ORYAII WILL FACE A HOSTILE CROWD No Cordial Welcome Waits the

Peerless One at Capital

on Wednesday. MEETS "SHOW ME" PEOPLE IN HIS CAMPAIGN THROUGH RURAL INDIANA WHERE PROSPERITY J S EVIDENT ON EVERY HAND IS CAUTIOUS. r Palladium Special! Indianapolis, Oct 18. Met during the first few dayi of bis campaigning In Indiana with conditions which gave the laugh to hla arguments and with uapicioua attitude upon the part of that section of democracy which is supposed to stand by him, William Jennings Hryan comes Wednesday into the heart of his enemies' country when he enters Indianapolis. It was expected he would get the warm hand and a good old-fashioned welcome in the smaller towns where he made hit campaign debut He "has thus far drawn fairly large crowds but of a pestiferously InquUltlvo character. When on Wednesday evening he mounts the same atand In front of the English opera house which Col. Roosevelt graced with, hia presence, Bryan will confront the city democracy, the materialistic, organization type which has generally ostracised him. He will confront the democracy of big business and the Interests which has no use for the ethereal, the theorizing far-western democracy. Farmer Cam In Autos. W. J. Bryan has been traveling through a land of milk and honey. Last week h found nothing but prosperity along the route. He found bursting barna and well-fed stock. At

nuriingion n aaaressea a iour county meeting Saturday and a hundred farmers were there In automobiles, some of them big touring cars. His arguments on how to aid the poor farmer were taken as an unconscious touch of humor and many a farmer smiled to hear them. Whether Bryan will yet make good hla latest Intention to defy Taggart and mention county option, remains to b heard la tb rest of his speeches. However hla heart failed him when he struck Indiana Friday and his attitude since has been on of extreme servility to the democratic boas. He has carefully avoided all reference to bribery, jackpotlam and local option. When he spoke at Auburn Friday his main option speech in Nebraska wai circulated In the audience and was read, whll the oratory flowed. Hundred of women wore white badges with the words "We are for temperance" on them. And In that aame speech Bryan made a strong appeal for the election of Cyrus Cline, Stephen Fleming's man, and a wet man, as a candidate for congress In the twelfth district At Lebanon on Saturday he spoke to a crowded opera house. In Boone county the democratic candidates for

the legislature are pledged to aupport

county option. Several times his

speech led up to the point where It

was the most natural thing In the

world for him to take up county op

tion, and again to the point where It appeared Inevitable that he could

mention the Kern bribery char

aes. yet he spoke not of them. The

memory of one night In the Denlson hotel when a gray-haired man tucked a thumb In hla buttonhole and pulled

him Into a corner for a three minute

whlaper was apparently sufficient to Iron out of the convultlons of his brain

very wrinkle which auggested option

or. bribery. Ha Net Btn Popular.

. Th attitude of the Nebraskan In atn

tacking the sincerity of Col. RooBevelt and Senator Beveridge In their oppo

sition to corruption in politics has not

been a particularly popular argument

not only because of the people a un

shaken confidence In these two men,

but also because of the ludicrous light

In which the argument appeared with Bryan stooping low to kiss the sandals

of boss Taggart Bryan was chal

lenged at Lebanon by a young man In

the audience who reminded him of

8nator Beverldge'a unswerving opposition to the methods of the steel trust the tobacco trust and the cotton

combine.

At the beginning of the campaign

when Stokes Jackson, chairman of the

democratic state committee, fell into

the trap laid by the publicity depart'

ment of the republican state commit

tee, and was induced to invite Bryan

into the atate la the hone of stopping

the talk of democratic Inconsistency,

democrats generally commented upon the fact in every preceding campaign

In which he has taken part in Indiana

Bryan has been the prize vote loser.

BY LEVI T. PENNINGTON. It Is not strange that the "conserv

ation movement" should have reached this body; and this question is as much more Important than the conservation movement of Roosevelt and

Plnchot as spiritual things are more

Important than coal and forests and water power. The religious life of any community is its most valuable

asset even though commercial clubs

and improvement societies may not recognise the fact And the conservation of this religious life is a matter of vast moment to any community.

How may the religious life of the

community be conserved? Well In the

first place, as any other possession is

conserved, by avoiding waste by see

ing to it that the religious life is not dissipated.

How the church of God In the world

has failed here, time out of .mind! What volumes of religious life have been wasted in interdenominational

rivalry! The Methodist proselytes

from the Quaker, . and the Quaker makes reprisal on the Congregationalist, and he in turn reaches over ti the Presbyterian or the . Baptist or the Lutheran, and enriches himself at their expense. ' And none seem to realize that we are all. if worthy the name of Christians, but workers in the vineyard of the Lord, and that If

we could tear from Its place one of His planta and make It grow in the

part of the vineyard that we are tending, there would be no real gain to the Master of the vineyard, whereas the tearing up and transplanting of the vine cannot fall of doing it, and therefore the vineyard, real harm. If

Blackheads, blotches and pimples

are caused by the improper action of the bowels. Holllster's Rocky Moun

tain Tea regulates the bowels, makes your complexion clear and beautiful, gives you that healthy look. 35 cents.

Tea or Tablets. Conkey Drug Co.

Wanted Three carpenters at once

at rear 14 8. 8th St Ferrla 4 Ferris

Wanted 25 men. Apply at

Elliott 6 Reid Fence Factory,

West Richmond, tomorrow

mArnlnn lS-2t

iiivi limy. Jeffries-Johnson champion shb contest pictures, Tues

day evening, Oct. ICth, eight o'clock at Coliseum. Tickets

w sale at Simmons' Cigar

of our life will be revealed or our dls- ever, should be made my a vote of

F F . i -Tr rfc or our

flOXV TO OnSiV 1 lit? MX I O US loyalty will be exposed, as we do or the whole people and this is a point

Life of The City of Richmond

ing campaign lor ue nuvancemcni oi

great store of religious life that ought to be conserved and developed into power of which the church today is not in possession. Religious life may be conserved, then, as any other thing is conserved, by stopping its waste and preventing the dissipation of it. But in another way, a different way. spiritual life must be conserved and developed into power of which the church of today la not like a material store. If I could preserve my store-of water as I cross the desert, I put it into a water-tight air-tight receptacle, that I may not lose by leakage or evaporation; but. you cannot thus preserve life. . If I would preserve the heat of. the mixture, I put it into a Thermos bottle, that it may not lose that heat by conduction or radiation. But the religious life, is not like the heat of the coffee in the Thermos bottle, but like the fire that Bunyan saw at the House of the Interpreter, fed with oil by the Christ within the wall, so that the devil could not put it out try as he would." - It is life, not material, thai we are ceeking to conserve. Jesus came that we might' have life, and that we might have it abundantly. And how does abundant life come to pass? Where do you find it? Intellectual life .in abundance is found where men think

and study, and use their mental pow

ers. And intellectual idleness is the greatest dissipater of intellectual life and power. Where do you find the abundant physical life? Why, where athletes congregate. You see it on the football field as ' Rome saw it at the gladiatorial combats and Greece at

the religious life of this or any other I the Olympian games. It 13 where

community Is to be conserved, the leaders of the church of God, under whatever name, must put aside all thought of one denomination profiting at the expense of another, and all must labor for the common cause. Interdenominational rivalry is a terrible dissipater of religious life.

Worldliness is another great cause

of the loss of spiritual life. When a body Is charged with electricity it is necessary if It is to retain that charge, that is should be Insulated. And if we are to hold our spiritual life

we must be spiritually insulated Trom the kingdom of evil. The teachings

of the entire word are that we are not

to be of the world, even though for long time we are to be in the world.

We are to come out from among the

world and be separte, for God desires a peculiar people, a people from His own possession, because like Himself.

How the religious life of the church

has been dissipated by worldliness 1 The dance, the card table, the theater, the billiard room, the Sunday spin in the auto at the expense of the church

service, the use of tobacco, carelessness in speech, these things and others of like character break down the moral and spiritual insulation of the church, and the electrical charge of spiritual power- Is dissipated. And not only do these things break the spiritual insulation but eventually

they cut the wire that connects with

the great power house, and the moral and spiritual life are gone. Sometimes the church, Samson-like, does not recognize this loss of power, but says, "I will arise and shake myself, as at other times, only to find that the Lord has departed.

This great leak of worldliness must

be stopped. If the spiritual life and power of the church is to be conserv-

the physical powers are exercised to the full that you find the fullness of physical life and power. The natural law holds in the spiritual world. If we are to conserve spiritual power we must use it to develop it. Spiritual lethargy and Inaction will paralyze

and atrophy spiritual power as surely as the Indian faker's arm is atrophied by inaction.

If then we are to conserve the religious life of the city, we'must have an abundance of religious activity. Family worship must be kept up, class meetings and prayer meetings must

not be neglected. Christian Endeavor societies, Epworth leagues. Baptist Young People's unions, Luther leagues

Brotherhoods, etc., must be maintain'

ed and made really religious. And

above all those definite spiritual activities must " be . maintained which minister directly to the needy. Charities, home and foreign missions, actand evangelism, etc., will fail if the religious life is not maintained, and convers'-y the religious life will fail if these are not maintained.' One thing more. It is life that we are to conserve. I have no dou" . that some day I shall die. If therefore I am to preserve my life, I must propagate it. Unless I leave offspring the line will die and life will fail, so far as I am concerned. Still more emphatically is it true that if we would conserve the religious life, we must propagate ' it. . Evangelism is the heart of Christianity. That church which is not evangelistic in spirit will die, and will deserve to die. That church which in the spirit of the Master, seeks to advance the kingdom not the individual denomination primarily, but the kingdom will live, and will deserve to live. The religious life of Richmond is

the spiritual life of the community.

METER REM WAS FRUITFUL TOPIC FOR OISCUSSIOII (Continued From Page One.)

now contending in their demand on the legislature for municipal suffrage in order that they may have a hand in the. control of the schools.

Elevated Rivers. . The most elevated river in the world is the Desaguadcro. in Bolivia., It is of a considerable" depth. audits whole length, from the village Desaguadero, at the south extremity of TIticaca, to the north end of the lake Aullagas, is about ISO miles. The average elevation of the valley or tableland of Desa-

mlght be disposed of profitably and ! adero above the level of the sea U

used for other purposes. He thinks it

would be well for the school board to

sit up and take a little more notice of

what the city council and the patrons

of the school really want.

After a more or less general discuEsion in which it was developed that the council feels that it get 3 scant courtesy at the hands of the school board, it was decided the council should put itself formally on rec ord in reference to the objectionable rule by passing a resolution at a subsequent meeting and sending a copy of the same to the school board. The council elects the members of the school board and after this is done, the municipal fathers have nothing more to do with it, although they hold it would be nothing more than fair if more attention were given council's suggestions and more information were furnished for the benefit of the public as to the conduct of school affairs. It was . asserted that there is too little publicity connected with the affairs of the school management. Members of council strongly intimated that if the council is to elect the members of the school board, which is in compliance with the state law, a naw plan may be followed in the future in order to bring the relationship to the city government a little closer and that is to elect from the membership of council. The choice of a school board, it is contended, how-

about 13.000 feet The river whose

source lies highest is the Indus, which rises on the north of the Kailas Parbat mountain. In Tibet, 22.000 feet above sea level. -

When Wagner Fled. - Richard Wagner, the composer, was an ardent republican in 1S49. In the archive of Dresden there to a document setting forth a case of high treav' son against the musician. He was accused of having written to a friend a letter proposing to turn Saxony Into a republic. "But whom shall we make president?" he asked.. "I see nobody competent for the office except our present sovereign. Frederick Augustus 11." : Frederick Augustus does not seem to have appreciated the humor of the suggestion that he should doff the crown and content himself with the dignity of a republican president. For this flash of dnconsclous fun Wagner had to bolt to Switzerland.

Alcohol Baths. Alcohol baths are thrice beneficial whn th hand 1m substituted for the

I Bponge vf old Time' usage.

Catarrh Cannot Be Cured vlth LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they annot rach the seat or the disease Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and In order to -ure It von must take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and muoou . surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a nuack medicine. It was prescribed bv

lone 6t the best physicians In this eoun- ! try for years and Is a regular prerlp-

lion. n is composed 01 me Desc tonus known, combined with the best blood purifiers acting- directly on the rr ucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients what produces such wonderful results l:i curing Catarrh. Send tor testimonials CHENEY & CO.. Props.. Toledo. O. Sold by Drurfrlsts. price ?5c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.

Your Family's Hcalii

is so important that the wholesomeness of your foods is of the greatest consequence. Biscuits, muffins, cakes

and so on are made lighter, more wholesome, more digestible by Rumford Baking Powder

than by any other. The results Surely Secured by

this best of powders are just the

results you want with no chance of

trouble. Regard for health economy, too should lead you .to choose now and always

V

POST CARD COUPON

Clip this Coupon and bring It to

one of the Quigley Drug Stores with 1Q cents and receive one set of 25 colored view Post Cards of

Richmond. By mail 3 cents extra for postage. :

Wear our Toric Lenses they give comfort to your eyes. Miss C. r.l. Gwoitzor OPTOMETRIST PHONE 1099. 927 MAIN ST.

LrvC

D3)

BAKING POWDER

Sunday Evening DINNER AT THE WESTCOH It's Different It's Good Music 6 to 8 P. M.

ed. And we who are ministers must i not at flood tide, if I read the' signs

stand to the truth, and far on the safe side, if we are to be true "conservationists." Worldliness does' not

come upon the church at once. Like

Israel of old, we begin to desire to be like the nations round about. In

speech, in dress, in business attitude.

in amusements, in one thing after another we become, contrary to the

word, "conformed to this world," till

if God Himself knows that we are

not of the world, certainly the world does not recognize it. Worldliness on the part of the church must be prevented It we are not to lose our religious life.

Again, wrong emphasis is a great

dissipataer or religious life. The ap

proval of men, good as it is, is often

exalted, till it becomes a god, and the

religious life dies as loyalty to Jesus Christ is replaced by desire for the

approval of men. The club replaces

the church; the secret order, with Us alms that are good In part, takes the place of the church, the best organization in the world; the moral life is emphasised above the religious, which being greater Includes the moral; money Is made the thing to be desired, and the dollar is placed so close to the eye that it shuts out the light of the sun and all the stars. Wrong emphasis, and the spiritual life is wasted. . Another great source of waste in religious life is the . failure in our work with the children. The child Is naturally religious and the Man of Galilee understood the child heart when He said, "Of such is the kingdom of heaven." The church of God, however, in spite of . the Quaker "birthright membership" and. the infant baptism of other dnominations, has failed to conserve the religious life of the young, to such an extent that even among ministers those can be found who thnk that it is inevitable that the young man shall sow his "wild oats." God never intends it so. Among the children of our churches and church communities there is a

aright. We are none too rich in spiritual life and power. If we would conserve our present power, we must add to it. Our loyalty to the Master

ESTABLISHED fQ YfARS Moral Obligation A very noticeable factor in the growth of our business is the friendly compliments of our patrons. "I sent ycu a customer for a watch," "We buy everything here," "I wastold to come here; this ring was bought here sixty years ago." . Popular belief in the motive and method of this store has in a great measure shaped itself. That'a why every transaction is based upon the feeMng that the whole of the future may depend upon the deed of the moment. 0. L DICKINSON DIAMONDS MOUNTED. WATCH REPAIRING

Gel Measured Now For that New Tailor-Made Soil al Woolley's, 918 Main

B3

Beauty Parlor . Shampooing, Hair Dressing, Facial Massage. : Everything sanitary. ROOM 1, MURRAY THEATER BUILDING. PHONE 1728.

The Only Furnace on the market with which you do not have to freeze if the weather gets 40 degrees below zero, is the Pilgrim Heating System.

PMLGRUM FURNACE CO.

529 Main St. Phone 1390

714 to 720 S. 9th Phone 16S5

Brighten Up

i

Leifllli of Wjar That's, where shoe economy begins-and ends. Any time that ycu feel that you would like to do your shoe choosing from among a better than ordinary stock, come here. . Eaisley & Son

WOOLLEY'S

Now is the time to do small painting and decorating around the heme. For the many who do this work for themselves we can recommend "Sapolin" Paints and Varnishes. The Sapolin ' Floor and Furniture Stains are eaay to apply and give fine results.. They are colored varnishes, imitating closely all the popular woods, such as oak walnut, cherry, mahogany, etc In cans from 15 cents to 75 cents. - Other lines are Gold Paints, 15, 25 and 40 cents. Plain Furniture Varnish 10, , 15 . and 25 cents.. Enamels for Beds, Chairs, etc., 15, 25 and 40 cents.

Stove Pipe enamel 15 and 25 cents. Bath Tub Enamel 25 and 40 cents. ADAMS DRUG STOUE 6th and Main, -V "The Remit Store" "

M vailafole To Oust Guct&meu'C S . ' Bg8gBabut which in a little while will be gone. It la not necessary that we say more than that thoso should command your immediate attention . .

Lawn Grass Get our seed and sow now, and you will get good results. Rictond feed Store

11 V 13 N. 9th.

Phone 219ft.

You will be thinking and planning for the holidays. This year we will make a strong- effort to supply things that are out of the ordinary. Electric Irons, Electric , Toasters. Electric Radiators, Percolators, Electric Chafing Dishes, Electric fanning Pads. Electric Stand Lamps, Electric Domes and a complete line of BATH ROOM SPECIALTIES. CRAIGHEAD Plumbing CI Electric Co. 010 K3AIN , " "Abreast with the Times"

What a satisfaction it Is to have clothes mads for you, to fit your shape and personality especially if they embody the true metropolitan cut and style such as we " m. put in our clothes Our prices are moderate, but the value we deliver is rarely equalled short of a much higher figure than we charge. Select your patterns and leave your order today. Open Monday. Wednesday and Saturday evenings.

WooMley's 018 Main Street

i

Ladies' Silk Petticoats, black and colors, you've paid $5.00 for no better ...... I-. ---.--$2.95 Ladies' Black Mercerized Petticoats made extra good and full, while they last, . 49c 50c Mercerized Table Damask, beautiful floral patterns, per yd., 39c 40c Turkey Red Table Damask, per yard ......29c Ladies' Extra Size Bags, genuine seal leather bags, $2.00 values only ............ .....---.$1.00

Special values and sizes Im't Seal Bags . -. -------- -- - ----r 50c 50c American Habutai Silks, pretty Fall colorings in plain colors and , dots, per yard, only .-- 35c

Ladies' 50c two-yard Scarfs, hemstitched, each 39c Rhinestone Hat Pins, first quality stones, regular $1.00 sizes and shapes 50c Ladies' Silk Hose, pure silk spun, regular $1.00 Hose, per pair. . . .50c Children's Hair. Bow Ribbons, all colors, 25c values, per yard . . . .19c Boys' Sweaters, extra values, sizes 26 to 30, plain gray and gray with red trimmings, Special.... 50c Don't miss our Underwear and Hosiery Section 'tis brimful of matchless

values. ; , ; r , j Uan'e 7K f ina noiflinoa rtfoc Chirt e '" '-'-A

If I vl I o I wu 1 1 1 1 vs l llliyiv wi woo wi i ig . in plain white and colored figures, at . -..-50c Unusual values in Fine Sweaters for Ladies, Misses and Children.

Note the above items. Come, Investigate them We promise great savings throughout October, WATCH lUfGl

mm "