Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 134, 10 April 1912 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGKAM, WEDNESDAY AFKIL 1U, IDIS.
A BOWLING TOURNEY For Two Men Teams Will Begin This Evening. The two-man team bowling tournament will open at the Y. M. C. A. alleys this evening. Fourteen teams have entered and there promises to ' be considerable rivalry. " The tournament will continue tonight, tomorrow .night and Friday night, five teams bowling tonight, four Thursday evening and five Friday evening. Following is appended a list of teams,the evenings on which they will bowl and the time when they start: Wednesday Evening-R. Nusbaum and B. Knollenberg, 7 o'clock; Charles Miller and Karl H. Meyers, 7 o'clock; Miles Calkins and Otto Erk, 8 o'clock; T. W. Hadley and J. O. Donanhue, 8 o'clock; J. E. Perry and Carl A. Lange, 9 o'clock. Thursday evening R. H. Hardin and J. H. Smith, 7 o'clock; L. Nie'woehner and W. E. Keifoth 7 o'clock; L. M. Feeger and James Brown, 8 o'clock; Bruce Kline and C. O. Miller 8'clock. Friday evening C. Erbs and J. H. Miles 7 o'clock; C. C. Dixon and C. Drill 7 o'clock; Oscar S. Weed and Orville Price 8 o'clock; Dan Thompson and S. W. Wallace, 9 o'clock.
The specials, who secured first place in the River Bottom Bush league, which played in the City alleys, won thirteen out of the eighteen games played. The Specials secured a percentage of 722. The Buckets and Suckers were tied for second place, each having a percentage of 555. The Little Giants lived up to the first part of their name, bringing up the rear at the end of the season, just closed, with a percentage of 166, winning three out of the eighteen games played. Coming To Richmond Associated Doctors, Specialists Will Be at the Westcott Hotel, Wed. and Thurs. Apr. 24-25 One Day Only Hours: 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Remarkable Success of These Talented Physicians in the Treatment of Chronic Diseases. Offer Their Services Free of Charge The Associated Doctors, licensed by the state of Indiana for the treatment of deformities and all nervous and chronic disease of men, women and children, offer to all who call on this trip, consultation, examination, advice free, making no charge whatever, except the cost of medicine. All that is asked in return for these valuable .services is that every person treated 'will state the result obtained to their friends and thus prove to the sick and afflicted In every city and locality, that at last treatments have been discovered that are reasonably sure and certain in their effect. These doctors are considered by many former patients among America's leading stomach and nerve specialists and are experts in the treatjment of chronic diseases and so great and wonderful have been their results that in many cases it is hard jindeed to find the dividing line between skill and miracle. Diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, blood, skin, granulated eyelids, nerves, heart, spleen, kidneys, or bladder, rheumatism, dropsy, sciatica, diabetes, bed-wetting, leg ulcers, weak lungs and those afflicted with longstanding, deep-seated, chronic diseases, that have baffled the skill of .the family physician, should not fail to call. According to their system no more operations for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors, goiter or certain forms of cancer. They were among the first in America to earn the name of the "Bloodless Surgeons," by doing away with the knife, with blood and with all pain in the successful treatment of these dangerous diseases. If you have kidney or bladder troubles bring a two-ounce bottle of your urine for chemical analysis and microscopic examination. Deafness often has been cured in sixty days. No matter what your ailment may be, no matter what others may have told you, no matter what experience you may have had with other physicians, it will be to your advantage to see them at once. Have if forever settled in your mind. If your case is Incurable they will give you such advice as may relieve and stay the disease. Do not put off this duty you owe yourself or friends or relatives who are suffering because of your sickness, as a visit this time costs you nothing. Remember, this free offer is for one day only. Married ladies must come with their husbands and minors with their parents. Ap-10-13-17-20-23
Biggest Little Store in Town for Fine Emblem Goods. Kennedy's, 526 P Main street. )
THE BLUE BIRO" TO
Maeterlinck's Great Play at the Murat for a Week Followed by Sothern and Marlowe. Irreparable Loss in Death of Musical Critic.
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Two theatrical happenings of interest to the entire state will close the season at the Murat in Indianapolis. One of them the presentation of Maeterlinck's "Bluebird" for the week beginning on April twenty-second with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday. The other,, later on, Sothern and Marlowe in a Shakesperean repertoire. Maeterlinck's popularity, both as a dramatist and poet, and, indeed, as essayist, is a little hard to explain. That is, from the ordinary standpoint. The standpoint of the more or less mythical personage known as the "average" reader and the average theatregoer. According to the authorities on the latter, Maeterlinck is the last person who will make an appeal. For Maeterlinck is a mystic and writes in obscure and involved symbols. According to an article in a recent number of the Harper's Weekly, the average reader takes to science because he wants to know what life is. To philosophy and religious literature to find out what life means and to romance for its interpretation. For poetry and essays he has little use. So says the diatribe in the Weekly. But the popularity of Maeterlinck would seem to refute this. His essays have had an enormous reading especially in this country, that on "The Bee" being familiar to the most superficial reader. "Pelieas and Melisande" one of the recent successes of grand opera, was the joint product of the great Danish writer and the French composer, Debussey. Its hold, since its music is not of the climatic or coloratura character, which takes with a mixed audience, was more or less inexplicable. But it is in the "Bluebird" that this extraordinary genius has reached the climax of his reputation as a dramatist. Through this Avonderful symbolic play, Maeterlinck is known to thousands who would never have heard of him otherwise. It has been one of those mystifying theatric successes which cannot be explained by the usual processes of reasoning but must be put down to balffling human psychology. However, on the ground of a spectacle alone it is worth the seeing without any delving, or1, indeed, comprehension, of its meaning or its symbolism. The latter is easily translatable into terms of life. It is emblematic of that spiritual happiness which is tne quest of humanity, either acknowledged or unacknowledged, -expressed or submerged. And it is manifested through the medium of children, birds and animals. It is epic in conception and lyric in presentation. It is a pageant and a poem. No one who wishes to see the highest expression of modern theatric art should fail to go. In Sothern and Marlowe the American stage has its most superlative Shakesperean impersonators with the exception of Robert Mantell. That they can make "Shakespeare pay," as the uncou have it, in this day of theatrical chaos, is a tribute from the public to genuine dramatic art. For strange as it may seem and another of those singular psychological manifestations the great public has now and then, a canny appreciation of the apogee of all phases of art. r$ut it is in the manner of handling, perhaps, as the painters say, that the interpretation is made. The master understands how to mix his paints and throw them on the canvas. How to tune his instrument. How to bring out its melody. It is in this that Maeterlinck is the groat artist. He translates life into simple harmonies, into direct color, into understandable quantities. And it is only as these great mediums through which life is. explained and expounded in so far as it can be speak, that the world is able to attune its ear. Julia Marlowe is a groat actress. - : The Taste That lingers Chocolate Creams .Made By Us Try Them Greek Candy Store HOUSECLEANING TIME Is here and you may have need of some extra Cash. If so call on us. We will lean you any amount from $10 up, and your personal property will serve as security. You can pay off your loan in small weekly or monthly payments. If you can not call at our office, write or phone and our agent will call on you. Take Elevator to Third Phone 2560 Floor
BE IN INDIANAPOLIS
She gives perfect artistic satisfaction. Hers is a flexible, an adaptable, a skillful art. More so than that of Sothern, whose reputation was made in the lighter comedy roles. But. in certain Shakesperean characters he is inimitable, in his way. As Hamlet the writer, for one, did not find him convincing, on account of his physique. Measured up against that other modern Hamlet, Forbes-Robertson, Sothern suffered. That is in the mere physical effect. Sothern was taking on avoirdupois and Hamlet's personality is interpreted as one of slenderness and grace. Notwithstanding heavy cannonading j from certain of his own profession, ; who declared that Forbes-Robertson, as Hamlet.'was not convincing and utterly lacked in a comprehension of the poetic and theatric potentialities of Hamlet's character, the great English actor's "Hamlet" was acclaimed from one part of this country to the other. In London it had a prolonged run on its first presentation and even as caustic a critic and sardonic a humorist as Mr. Bernard Shaw commended Forbes-Robertson's interpretation of the Prince of Denmark. It is said, by the way, that the latter actor is to tour the United States the coming season in this Shakesperean play. Be that as it may, every one able to do so should go to Indianapolis to hear two great actors in their season's Shakesperean repertoire. It is to be hoped that they will put on "Romeo and Juliet" as Miss Marlowe's "Juliet" is one of her most famous characterizations. In the death of W. S. B. Matthews, this country has lost one of its greatest musical critics and the Richmond Symphony orchestra one of its sincerest friends. At a time when the latter organization was in a tentative position toward the community and, indeed, toward itself, Matthews' visited Richmond and No more dirty water-closet bowls and no more unpleasant work keeping them clean. For SaniFlash will quickly make them white as new without scrubbing or touching the bowl with the hands. $am-Flush Cleans Water-Closet Bowls Sani-Flush is m powdered chemical compound disinfectant and deodorant easy to ate and harmless to bow and plumbing. Get a can to-day and be worried no more by a discolored water-closet bowl. 20 cents a can at your grocer s
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attended the first May Festival for which it played. He was surprised and delighted both professionally and as a layman. He wrote of its achievements aed possibilities, its personnel and its director, for leading musical journals
and for great metropolitan papers, ! thus giving the orchestra a prestige abroad it might have been much longer in attaining through less distinguished mediums. And it was discriminating praise that Matthews gave. Not fulsome or merely flattering, nor made up of many words with a fine sound but little substance when scanned carefully. An honest, sincere and thoroughly musicianly criticism of an organization built on altrurian foundations and with great embryonic possibilities. The orchestra benefited far more from this support than it can now realize, even though understanding its worth and deploring the death of so celebrated a friend. Matthews was a critic, as has just been said, of discrimination. He had not only an occult appreciation of art, but of art in its relation to
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life in the large, as well as in the concrete. He was not concerned With the mere mechanics of music. But with its spirit. Not alone with its technique. But with its sentiment. Matthews was erudite but more than that. A poet. And of the most lovable and compelling personality. His death is not only a loss to the musical world but to the entire social fabric. He is mourned by his friends and regretted by his confreres.
The Play of "Othello." -Viewed exclusively as a dramatic fabric, 'Othello is not only the best of Shakespeare's plays, but the best play in the English language," says William Winter in the Century. "No story could be more simple, direct, fluent and elementally tragic, but 'with what marvelous skill the poet has told it. with what ingenuity of invention, with what vibrant vitality of continuous action, with what ample and snperb drawing of character, what prodigious volume of feeling, -what tumult of surging and conflicting passion and hat perfection of ;oetie style!" TO $37.50 !
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CASE COMPROMISED
The case of Homer V. MeLeland versus the Grand Rapids & Indiana railroad company for damages, has been dismissed in the Wayne circuit court, the defendant having paid the amount demanded, the plaintiff paying 4he costs. When asked about the case this morning the local attorney for the railroad company declared that he did not know the case was dismissed. The plaintiff asked for about $160. alleging that fruit, valued at this amount, was absolutely spoiled, due to the negligence of the railroad comrany. Grease on Leather. Grease stains on leather in ay b removed by carefully applying benrlne or perfectly pare turpentine. Wash the spots over afterward with the well beaten white of an egg or a good leather reviver. You Want Good Tire Service and You Are Not Getting It, Or if you believe it possible to reduce your present yearly tire bill a comparative test of G & J on the same car with other brands will satisfy you that such a result can be had without extra cost over the price you pay for other tires. You can't do a better thing than try them out. Specify the old reliable G. A J. Tires, made at Indianapolis, Ind. RODEFELD CO., 96 W. Main St, Phone 3077. Local Distributors. H E AR8E Y-WI LLIS CO, Indianapolis, Ind., State Distributors WALL PAPER 5 Cents And Upward MOORMANN'S Fine Cut Glass Tumblers High Grade Patterns Only 48 Cents At HANER'S LASTS A LIFE TIME I painted Signs for Gaar-Seott. Henley. J. O. Barber, Kreimeier, Bee Hive Grocery and others, 25 years ago and are good today. All kinds of Painting, Etc C. Q. EGBERT 1100 MAIN ST. Special This Week WATCHES at Kennedy's, 526 Main St. E. C. HADLEY Meat Market Pboce 2S91 1236 Main There's Money in Your Old Clothes If Yoj Only new It. We Can Get It Out. Cleaning and Pressing Parlors. HAFNER & TONEY, &y2 North Eighth Street OLIVER VISIBLE TYPEWRITER For Sale Cheap. Perfect condition and does splendid writing. Could ship on approval and trial. Write to Charles W. Rickart. RosedaJe. Kans. MAKE NO MISTAKE. ByT USE For the olood. and Jcincred ails. Nothing better; try it- At all dnie stores.
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Buff Orpington Cockerel and Three Pullets Full brother and sisters to first prize pen at Richmond show. Quitting Business is reason for selling. You can buy these cheap.
0. E. OLER
So Ho Res. in Irish M. I, once declared with ' due solemnity. "Mr. Speaker. I can-. not sit still be re and keep silent without rislns and saying a few words!" London Telegraph.
BRAZILIAN BALM "The Old Reliable is magic for coughs, grip, croup, asthma, catarrh and quick consumption to th last, stare. KILLS THE GERMS! FOR SALE- A GOOD AS NEW FIREPROOF CYPRUS INCUBATOR, Pedigree Tray. E. M. MATHER. Spring Grove. S. C. BUFF ORPINGTONS. Eggs for sale from No. 1 stock. Strictly Buff.. Prices reasonable. A. C. HURRELL. Phone 2064. R. 3. North of Fair Grounds ITsa fJlnhf nnrl Purinn SCRATCH FEEDS For Sale at e W. B. GARVER'S 910 Main St. Phone 2198. aPRIZE WINNING S. C. W. ORPINGTONS Five Ribbons and 7 . Specials on 7 birds. Book your . order for eggs. Some extra good ! pullets for sale. Also S. C. B. . Minorcas. Milton Poultry Yards, Milton, Ind. ' A aV A A AAAeVA est 4 m ' s AAA SINGLE COMB WHITE LEGHORNS Eggs for Hatching. 50c per setting, $3.00 per hundred. Phone 5123-F. O. O. ACTON. R. F. D. 5 Richmond, Ind. FOR SALE ROSE COMB RHODE ISLAND RED COCKERELS .' And Eggs for Setting WILLIAM WILCOXEN. R. R. 7. A, FOR SALE ALL SIZES INCUBATORS . manufactured by J. G. Hinderer. Box 225.. Factory 212 Pitt St, Anderson Ind. FOrt SALE S. C White Orpingtons. Cockerels, Hens. Pullets, , Setting Hens and Eggs. . A. R. HOWSER. R. F. D. S Easthaven car at Delcamp grocery 'Phone your order now for settings and baby chicks from White Plymouth Rock. The kind that lay in the winter. Fairview PoulUry Farm. R. R. No. 7. Phone 4033. FOR SALE 2 PENS WHITE WYANDOTTE Phone 4155 RALPH COOPER, R. R. No. 3 EGGS FOR HATCHING From Tecktonius Strain, single and rose comb Buff Leghorn. Prize winner Richmond, 1912 Poultry Show. C. H. BENTLAGE 401 South 11th, or Phone 2162 FOR SALEROSE AND SINGLE COMB ! RHODE ISLAND REDS EGGS FOR HATCHING ,' Phone 2511. W w w w w w w w w w w w w BUY A PETALUMA INCUBATOR Oldest and Most Reliable Made .. SEANEY & BROWN 915 Main St. SACRIFICE SALE 45 S. C. White Orpington Hens and Pullets, $1.50 and $2.00 per head. Get first choice. A. R. Howser, 619 So. 9th SL, City 4 p p p p p p i White Wyandotte Eggs FOR SETTING ! 50c and 75c a Setting I am importing my roosters from ; the East from a 250-egg strain. C. E. SAINE. ; Phone 2484. 1230 So. I St. j
Dublin, Ind.
