Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 88, 21 February 1913 — Page 7
THE KICIOIOXD PALLADIU3I AND S U N-T E L E G R A 3 1 , F R I D A Y , F E I 1 1 U A I Y 21, 1913.
PAGE SEVEN. .
CASE OF R, WEAVER IN HANDS0F JURY A Former Lewisburg Man Charged With Forgery in Eaton Court.
CLUB TO REORGANIZE The West Alexandria Postmastership Is Finally Settled. EATON, O., Feb. 21. All the testimony in the case of the State against Russell Weaver, charged with having raised the denomination of a check from $1 to $100, was heard Thursday in the common pleas court before i Judge A. C. Risinger and went to the jury about noon today. Weaver is alleged to have committed the forgery while engaged in the retail meat business at Lewisburg. The check was originally given by Joseph Ware, a prominent farmer living in Monroe township. Weaver discontinued the meat business shortly afterwards and when taken into custody was residing in Dayton. Large Attendance. A new record for attendance at public sales in Preble county was made Thursday when a crowd estimated aW more than 1100 people attended an auction of livestock and farming implements at the home of Ed. Lincoln, west of Eaton. Nearly every section of the county was represented and the great number of conveyances resembled one of the big days at the county fair. Horses sold at the remarkable average price of more than $150 per head. The sale totaled $4,782. Glander Reappointed. Despite the efforts of many Democratic applicants to land the postoffice appointment at West Alexandria, Herman C. Glander has been re-appointed for another f6ur-year term by President Taft. Some of the applicants had circulated petitions for favor among the patrons of the office. Club To Reorganize. In an attempt to awaken the organization, members of the Easton Commercial Club will hold a meeting next month for the purpose of affecting a re-organization. Secretary Logan L. Brown has been the leading spirit in the club and it is generally believed he will be re-elected. On the program to be arranged for the meeting will be several out-of-town visitors. LIFE IN MACEDONIA. It la Very Much In the Open, With Little or No Prjyacy j We arose early one February morn.ag and left our fairly clean hotel in j Xeopotis for four hours, of travel over the modern road near the Via Egnatia, which should take us to ancient PbilippL Our vehicle was a somewhat dilapidated hack, such as Americans are familiar with at almost every considerable railway station, but a surprisingly comfortable conveyance for this part of the world. Rattling down some steep, roughly paved streets, we came to the center of the old Neapolis, pass ed near the great Roman aqueduct and ascended another steep street on the other side of the market place. Early as it was, we found that the people of Kavalla were up and doing. The stalls of the fruit men were attractive with oranges, pomegranates, lemons and dates. The vegetable dealers displayed a tempting array of canli flowers, cabbages, onions, okra, leeks and potatoes. As in all eastern cities, there was no privacy. The cook was preparing his breakfast on the sidewalk, the shoemaker was plying his awL the tailor his needle, and the blacksmith was shoeing his horses almost in the very street Christian Ilerald. A MOTHER'S TRIBUTE. Pathetic Ceremony at Night on an Atlantic Ocean Liner. Strange, perhaps, to us. but very touching, is the tender, intimate solicitude of the Latin races for their dead "I nostri morti." as the Italians are wont to call those whom they have lost. There Is a simple pathos in the incident that was related by a passeuger on one of the great transatlantic mall boats. A few days before the steamer sailed from Havre its captain received a letter from a peasant woman of Indre-et-Loire. In it she explained that her only son had been a cook ou the Titanic and had gone down with the vessel. She was sending, she wrote, a cross which she begged him to drop int the sea at the spot where the disaster occurred. The cross came in due time, a simple cross of wood, fashioned rudely euough by the mother's fingers, and one uight, as the great vessel neared Newfoundland, for the space of a minute her eugines ceased to pulse, and the little wooden cross, weighted with lead, sank beneath the waves of the AtlanticParis Cor. Philadelphia Telegraph. Stevenson on Invalidism. Robert Louis Stevenson, himself the most heroic of Invalids, would have agreed with Sir George Bird wood in bis contempt for the valetudinariau. "To forego all the issues of living In a parlor with a regulated temperature," he writes, "as if that were not to die a hundred times over, and for ten years at a stretch! As If it were not to die in one's own lifetime, and without even the sad immuuities of death! As if it were not to die. and yet be patient spectators of our own pitiable change! The permanent possibility is preserved, but the sensations carefully held at arm's length, as if one kept a photographic plate in a dark chamber. It is better to lose health like a spendthrift than to waste U like a miser It is better to live and be done with It than to die daily In the sickroom." London Chronicle.
WHY NOT
That Is, Put Our Symphony Orchestra on Its Feet Financially So It Can Continue Its Existence and Give the Town Musical Reputation and Prestige?
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. j Why doesn't someone endow our , symphony orchestra? i Just at the present moment it needs , to be financed. No matter what the enthusiasm of its members or, how disinterested or how civically patriotic or how imbued with the spirit of art, it remains that you can't run a symphony orchestra or any sort of an organization without funds. Mr. Earhart organized and concentrated the artistic energies of this body of musicians. And it was kept together through the force of his personality. This year some arrangement was intended through which the professional members of the orchestra could be paid for their services at rehearsal. Rehearsals occur every Sunday afternoon. Naturally men who spend the other six days of the week in the pursuit of the dollar for necessary purposes feel that their time on the additional afternoon should be paid for. In other words the professional musicians namely, those who play in professional bands and orchestras feel that they must receive some remuneration for their services. This is as it should be. And as it is in all cities where a symphony orchestra is maintained. The Indianapolis Symphony orchestra, in instance. Which has been in existence several years. And which has, for two seasons, given orchestral concerts in the Murat theatretwice each month on Sunday afternoon. On February Ninth they celebrated their second anniversary in the latter phase of its activities. Incidentally this is pointed to as an interesting manifestation of the art spirit of the state. That this fine musical organization has been able to give these Sunday afternoon concerts for two years is due to that public sentiment which sustains it. You can't legislate against public sentiment. And public sentiment in this state is for the Sunday afternoon high class concert. Neither are the Indianapolis Symphony concerts "sacred." They are straight programs just as are given by my orchestra, at any time, in any place. To make this organization possible, the orchestra is financed by an orchestral organization made up of -leading citizens of Indianapolis, who enable this body of musicians to remain together by payment for their attendance at rehearsals. And the citizens of Indianapolis who do this are among the leading men of the capital city. This is true every place where an orchestra is maintained. It cannot subsist on love of art alone. People must live. Musicians as well as the rest. Therefore these musical bodie3 must be financed. The Minneapolis Symphony orchestra which recently visited this city is made possible by the public spirited citizens of Minneapolis. Every year these latter guarantee $65,000 for this purpose. And it is one of the best advertisements Minneapolis has. Its February tour included twenty cities. And its Spring tour nine weeks. For many years the Chicago Symphony orchestra has been able to keep up a robust existence in the same manner. Theodore Thomas struggled long and hard before he was able to bring this about. Finally Chicago recognized the municipal asset such an organization could be. And organized for its emolument. Making it one of the famous orchestras of the world. The Boston Symphony, admittedly without a peer on two continents, was Nervous Energy in the human body is similar to electricity in a storage battery. It's the force that "makes things go." This force in the body comes from the digestion and assimilation of Right Food; the kind Nature requires for building and maintaining healthy brain and nerve cells. Grape-Nuts FOOD contains the elements Nature has stored in wheat and barley, including the phosphate (grown in the grains) absolutely necessary, in combination with starches, sugars and albumens of the cereals, for normal cell-building. You can keep Nervous Energy up to par on GrapeNuts. "There's a Reason"
ENDOW IT
put on a permanent basis in a like manner. V V u , J v. J , orchestra should not be maintained in .. . . , . . . . This body of musicians achieved re- . j t, . t, . . .v . finite rnnoi1 A T 1 iH ya V. - t An r f ,u , They were in a fair way to become a ' nprmanont Institution ! For three years they played for the tav pvctitr!i iin ion nH iqi9 1910, 1911 and 1912. In 1911-1912, they gave two purely orchestral concerts which were a pronounced success. This season it was the intention to give four. And, if possible, to arrange for them 1 on Sunday afternoon, as is the custom in all cities where orchestras are main-1 tained. But the departure of Mr. Earhart for Pittsburgh threw the plans of the orchestra into confusion and this has not been consummated. These organizations of citizens in the communities where orchestras j exist are made up of a number who contribute so much each year to the guarantee fund. So that no one person is drawn on to excess. An orchestral association should be formed here which would make up a guarantee fund from which the members who were unable to give their time without remuneration could be paid. This is what should be done. And done at once. Such a body of musicians as this should not be permitted to disintegrate after such remarkable ama- i tuer accomplishment. For a city of this size this organization was phenomenal. Rarely do you find a small city where there are five French horns and an oboe player especially of the proficiency of the ones included in the Richmond symphony. This is not usual in tovn3 of this population. And was regarded with incredulity by outsiders. We should realize what we have right "in our midst." If this organization is permitted to lapse in a town where there is as much wealth as there is here, we should be forever derided and flouted in our pretensions to being a musical center." Although just what is means by center" is lost in vagueness. "Centers" are generally whirlpools of activity. Of whatever designation may be made. And Richmond is not a "centre." For anything. But it might be a centre for its im mediate environ in a musical aspect . if it would support its own organiza-. tiOn. 1 There is no reason on the face of j the earth why this excellent musical I body should be permitted to lapse merely for the want of a little money ie warn 01 a mue money..
There are people here in town who!.m.B, pl,ro tht nilstinntinn aTui
could put it on its feet if they would , only take the trouble to do so. The town should take the matter up Agitate it. And see that the Richmond Sym phony orchestra Is kept intact put on , its musical and financial feet, and thus )
The Minneapolis Symphony orche9-ieriy
tra is one of the best advertisements that city has.
And, it might be Incidentally re- j rlsburg, a., says: -ur. taiawen s syr- avoia nain i-amum, iui,iin, marked, is a good advertisement fcr.up Pepsin gave me almost instant re-, pills and salts. the city in which it appears. t J-ef from stomach and bowel trouble, j If no member of your family has Richmond is one of the twenty on I now eat anything I want and sleep !eer used Syrup Pepsin and you would its February tour and is included In i well." Many others will tell you that j like to make a personal trial of it bea booklet that is distributed all over ; they have tried most things recom-. fore baying it in the regular way of the country. j mended for this purpose but have a druggist, send your address a posWe appear on the list between ' found Syrup Pepsin the only one al- tal will do to Dr. V. B. Caldwell, 417 Louisville, Kentucky, and Columbus ,' ways reliable. A bottle can be ob- j Washington St., Monticello, 111., and a Ohio, and just one step further Pitts- tained at any drug store for fifty , free sample bottle will be mailed you.
Eggeineyer Grocery
Two Stores
A Fish Spoiai tor Lent
FAT HERRING IN TOMATO SAUCE (13c cans) FAT HERRING, KIPPERED "OVALS" (15c Cans) Your Choice, 1 Can of each or 2 cans of any one, ALL for
TOMATO SOUP Snyder's 10c Cans 2 Cans 15 Cents BAKING POWDER Royal Full One Lb. Cans 39 Cents EGGS .Strictly Fresh. Guaranteed 25 Cents Dozen 3
GIANT CREAM CHEESE NO. 4 GIANT CREAM CHEESE ACTUAL WEIGHT 1126 POUNDS The Fourth Prize Winning Full New York Cream Cheese, Since October 18th, Showing a total weight in all of 4,864 POUNDS. Quality only makes this possible. Try a pound and be convinced.
JOHN 1. 401 & 403 MAIN STREET
OLD AT 40
Some Younger at 65 Than Others Are1 at 40 Years. So .many people whom you meet j about the time they reach 40 begin by saying "I can't do this, and I can't do that, because I'm getting old now." j they begin to act old, feel old and they . are older in appearance- than many I who are much more advanced in years. When you begin to feel old, when tmiii" AtiArvv Kocrine tr fail fornix vnir self up with our delicious cod liver and j iron u a wonderfal 'blood - maker and strengthened T T, ,, . .. ,. Mr. J. N. Kelley, aged 49 who lives ' at Lake Charles. La., says: "I took Vlno1 for a down condition, it not uuiy uuui uy my riiru6iu, lui l-i fifteen ear3 ouner than 1 did before , 'taking it." Thousands of old people have found in Vinol just the medicine they need to build up the feeble, weakened system and create strength. If it fails, we return your money. Leo H. Fihe, Druggist, Richmond, Indiana. ; p- S. Stop scratching, our Saxo i Salve stops itching. We guarantee it. j ( Advertise ment ) burgh, Philadelphia, Washington, New York. j tv. ..v. i 1 Y. .,,.1.1 . look alive it would find out that its symphony was one of its biggest i assets and combine to keep it in exisi-; ence. j ' The Heads on the Rails. Viscount Ilardinge, brother of the Indian viceroy, in a lecture in London on the Delhi durbar referred to a much criticised statement which he maintained was absolutely true. Whenever the viceroy traveled in India policemen were stationed along the railroad at intervals of a hundred yards. The policemen, he sad, often became sleepy and lay with their heads on the ralls to ,l5t,n ,or thf PPr'" " train. On one occasion no fewer than fifts- lost their heads. Lord Curzon asked him where he got the yarn. He replied, "I got it from my brother, and I do not think he would tell a "cracker.' "New York Times.
Over-Night Relief For Constipation
Small Dose on Retiring and You are Well and Happy by Morning. It is only natural that the simplest of ailments should be the most general, and so we have a whole nation suffering from constipation and indigestion, for they are closely allied. But common as constipation is many people do not seem to know they have it. They will complain of headache, drowsiness or biliousness, all unconscicus of the cause of the trouble. V,, ch.M,IH hiva a full nnrl fl'PO movpmnt. af ieast once a dav. If you Hav. ,.nn oonsHnated. und j j ' ith result Trill h that von will catch pnsilv hft. morp sprios . foresta,i stm graver troub,e take a I dose of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin j at night before retiring and by morn- ; ing relief will come, without disturbBnce from sleep or any inconvenience. 2 , -. : . 1 1 . . :n I xegions 01 people use it ieguiiij iu j such emergencies, some of them formcaronic. mvauas wuu uave ea irom ro,upuuu i .i Mr- A- B- Dannr. 326 Riley St., Har -
ROLLED OATS "Sunbeam" 10c Pkgs. 2 Pkgs. 15 Cents
GROUND PEPPER Best Grade 40c Quality y2 Lb., 10 Cents
FINE CORN Country Gentleman 15c Grade 2 Cans 20 Cents
FLOUR Gold Medal 25 Lb. Sacks 69 Cents
CORN MEAL Fresh Ground Steam Process Sacks 25 Cents
PRESERVES Pure Fruit 25c Jars 19 Cents
EGGKYER
FLASHES FROM OTHER CITIES
COXNERSVILLE Jacob S. Clouds, treasurer of this city, died yesterday after an illness of about three months. He served eieht years as city clerk before assuming the office of city treasurer. He was prominent and active in lodge work. He was the son of the late Rev. Geo. Clouds, at one time . !.-....- .f "M ;!.-., I v -.. H ,1 r , 1 u ia married to Miss Charlotte Uothermel, 1 a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Rothermel. at Milton about fifteen years ; ago. He was also a brother of the late j Frank Clouds a former well known newspaper man and of Mrs. Banes, of .ietaniora. wno was ai one lime uraca Matron or the Eastern Star, for ana. IndiMUNC1E The six Muncie druggists accused of selling cocaine to Alexandria youths have been acquitted. They said the sales were cf heroin, not cocaine. WEST ALEXANDER, OhioSuc ceeding the late Dr. James L. Quinn. of Eaton. -Dr. A. Clvde Hunter, of West Alexandria, has been appointed a member of the Preble county board . c .... ;.. SHELBYV1LLE A jury in circuit court this evening gave a verdict for ?30 in the case in which Ray Walton was suing Martin Sorden for damages of $500. EATON, Ohio Because of an epiUCU11C Ul cai If L lot'i mirr oviiwio Dixon township and one in Washington township have been tmeporarily closed. No fatalities have yet resulted, ' although the condition of several of the victims at times have been serious. SHELBYVILLE Mrs. Jerry Gordon and her daughter were badly hurt when their horse ran away. The Shark's Teeth. A shark's teeth are movable at will and become erect at the moment the animal is seizing its prey. MR. A. B. DANNER !rpnts or one dollar, the latter size be- : ing bought by families already famil1 iar with its merits. j Syrup Pepsin is mild, pleasant-tast-ing and non-grining. Mothers give it to ; tiny infants and yet it is effective in i.n-,. ,r T f to f , 1- i . 1 1 -1 t"i .1 11-lirk cuf. giunuujo. i ifers from any form of stomach, liver .i.,.B... ---.o, v- , so delight you that you will forever Specials Two Stores Oc For two 15c cans BULK COCOA FinestQuality 'z Lb. 10 Cents TOMATOES Fancy Grade Sunlight 3 Cans 25 Cents GRAPE JUICE Full Quarts Our Brand 29 Cents. 1017 & 1019 MAIN STREET
& S0MS
TELEPHONE WIRE IS SUBJECT OF BOARD
S. X. Brandenburg, a grocer it 2115 ! North E street complained to the board of works some time ago about a guy wire from a pole belonging to the Richmond Home Telephone company. An Investigation was made by the board and it was found ha the wire i in a dangerous position in tae
Sage Tea Beautifully Darkens The Hair when Faded and Gray
Mixed With Sulphur Makes Hair Soft, Lustrous and Cures Dandruff. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She kept her hair beautifully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is muusy and out-of-date. Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy" you will (Adver
Weekly Market Quotations
BEEF Choice Sirloin Steak. .15 Round Steak from cornfed Beef 15 Native Pot Roast ll Prime Rib Roast ..132 Hamburg Steak, fresh chopped 10 Boiling Beef, good and tender 9 PORK Lean Pork Chops .... 14 Pork Steak 13 Spare Ribs H Neck Bones 5 Fresh Shoulders, fat and skin off 12 SAUSAGE Home made Pork Sausage at 11 Sausage Links ll Frankfurts ll Bologna 10 Head Cheese 10 Blood Sausage 10? Liver Sausage 10
SELLEKS BROS, New McGnlre Bntlding 1022 Main Street Phone 2555.
5: ws
THE NEW WAY
AT EMD(
$3.00, 4.00 and $5.00 values
We avoid every expense not really necessary, and refuse to pay high rents for ground-floor stores. We don't depend on classy fixtures and beautiful show windows to sell our goods because OUR VALUES CANT BE EQUALLED ANYWHERE. Just think of buying 15-button Boots in Brown, Black or Grey Suede, with Welt Soles, for $2.50. OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS Bo & (Go SAMPLE
SHOE PAML Room 201 Colonial BIdg., 2nd Floor . "ASK THE ELEVATOR MAN"
alley next to Brandenburg's gr.jcery. The telephone company was requested to remove it. Williem Bailey, superintendent of the telephone company informed tha beard that he did not think tha th-s entire cost of removing the wins should be paid by hi comparv. He stated that he had asked Mr. ladnburg to pay half of the cost but thi had oeen refused.
get a large bottle for about t0 cents. Some druggist make their own, which is usually too sticky, so insist upon getting "Wjeth's" which can depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and Is splendid for dandruff, dry. feverish, itchy scalp and falliug hair. A well-known downtown druggUt says his customers insist en Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because, they say, it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied--it's so easy to use too. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking on strand at a time. Do this at night and by morning the gray hair disappears: after another application or two, it U restored to Its natural color and looks glossy, tott and abundanL tlsement) LAMB Leg of Lamb 13H Choice Lamb Chops 12H Hind-quarter Lamb 12& Fore-quarter Lamb . . 11 Lamb Stew 9 SMOKED MEAT Boneless Hams, very mild, at 15 Picnic Hams 12 Small Pig Hams, Sugar cured 16&t Breakfast Bacon 17 to 20 FISH White Fish 14 Cat Fish 15 Trout 15 Salmon 14 $ Smoked White Fish..l7tf Fresh Mackerel .....15 VEAL Veal Roast 14 $ Veal Stew 12 Round Veal Steak 18 Loin Veal Steak 17 Veal Chops 15 THE fl(D)IP(B
ES
