Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 4, 14 November 1913 — Page 9

PAGE NINE RiOIANA EXHIBIT TO OPEN TONIGHT Heiress to Aid Return of Football to Trinity ENTHUSIASM RIFE OVER FIRST GAME TO INVESTIGATE TRUST REGULATION IF BACK HURTS USE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Eat less meat if Kidneys feel like lei or Bladder bothers you Meat forms uric acid.

TmSTlICHMOTTO PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1915

Twenty-two of the SixtyFour Exhibitors Are Richmond Artists.

D I S PLAY 1 32 WORKS

&rt& and Crafts Exhibit Expected to Be Exceedingingly Interesting.

The seventeenth annual exhibition of Indiana artists, will open to th public art gallery tonight with almost 200 exhibits The number of exhibitors totals sixty-four, of which twenty-two are Richmond artists. The members of the jury of awards for the Mary T. R. Foulke prize of $50 for the most meritorious painting by a resident Indiana artifct. will judge the paintings tenighc The exhibit will close December 1. The exhibition has been hung in the art gallery in the high school and is ready for the opening. It has been reviewed by the officers of the Richmond Art association and .pronounced the beet which has been shown here. There are 132 paintings displayed, one piece of sculpture and sixty-one exhibits in arts and craft. The fortyeix Indiana artists include eleven from Richmond while in the arts and crafts section, eleven of seventeen exhibitors are of this city. A large number of pieces made at the Over beck pottery in Cambridge City are shorn, some of "which were made by the Overbooks and others by their pupils. Artists As Judges. The jury which will select the picture to receive the Mary T. R. Foulkf annual $50 prize consists of three artists known throughout the country. They are William Forsythe, chairman; Herron Institute Indianapolis; Dudley Crafts Watson, Art Institute, Chicago; J. Edgar Forkner. Seattle. The officera of the Richmond Art association are Mrs. Paul Comstock, president; J. T. Giles, first, vice president; W. D. Foulke, second vice president, Frank CJ. Pickell, secretary, Demas S. Coe, treasurer. The T-ydia Morrisson memorial prize of $5 will be awarded for the best piece of handicraft, having artistic merit, made by a resident of Wayne county. Mr3. .lohn B. Dougan will give a prize of $2 for the best poster by a high school pupil, announcing the ex

hibit, a prize of $1.50 for the second

best, poster and a third prize of $1. Another prize by Mrs. Mary T. R. Foulke is the Richmond prize of $25 to be awarded to the best painting by a Richmond artist. There will be fiftytwo entries eligible for this prize.

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High School Students Turn Out En Masse Tonight.

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TEAM IS CONFIDENTj

Basketball Season Here Start With Victory. Saj s Nohr.

to

When the whistle pound at 8:15 tonight at the V. M. C. A. pymnasium.

i practically every member of the Rich-,

mond high school, who is not unavoid- ; I ably kept away vi!l be on hand to see j the high school hnskctbaU team in ac- ' tion for the first tiir. ttiia season. i

! 1 ne inch ester mtrh luiol tram ,

will be the attraction of the evening, j This team has a I read v defeated Union

j City by a very one-sided score and

bide fair this year to come back to its j standard of several years ago when it ' presented the most formidable basket- j ball team in Eastern Indiana. The visitors wll be accompanied bf their coach, C. K. McKinney, an old DePauw star who played with the Methodists eisht years aeo. While the visitors have been touted highly Physical Director Nohr expects his boys to defeat them handily and thug make a flying start lor the harder same to come later in the season. The Richmond team will line up tonight as follows Hoover, riffht forward: ". Meranda. left forward: Quigf?. sub forward; Pal'.. center; 1 Thornhurp. right guard; Hart, left ?uard; Beismau, sub guard.

V- : . -rr J

Miss Mary L. Duke, daughter of Benjamin N. Duke, the multi-millionaire head of the American Tobacco company, is th Beroine of the Trinity college .students as a result of her promise to use her influence in the students' movement to have football re-established on the athletic programme of the college. More than a decade ago the faculty 9i Trinity decided that football must be abolished from the college sports because of its alleged excessive brutality. Benjamin Duke has been one of the largest benefactors in Trinity and the family voice will undoubtedly be given a hearing in its plea for the return of football.

Joseph E. Davis, chief of the bureau of corporation!, is to conduct a scientific investigation by his bureau into the matter of trust regulation. The investigation will endeavor to as

certain whether a competitive system j of large units or h monopolistic system j

is most advantagous to society. The administration8 position in the matter of trust regulation will be largely influenced by the results of the investigation. Mr. Davies is one of the new officials in Washington and comes from Milwaukee.

Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels. :et slv.gsish and oloc-

i ged and need a flushing occasional!? . I else we have backache and dull mis 1 ery in the kidney region, tetero head laches, rheumatic twinges, torpid lifer.

acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and can. and th moment you feel an ache or "pain iu the kidney ret ion. get aVout four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonrul in a glass of ter before tieaVtat for a few days and your kidnes iil then act fine. This famous salts is made from th acid of grapes and Uniou juice, combined with liihia. and is harmless to flush clogged kidney and stimulate theru to normal activity. It also neutralize the acids iu the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive, makes a delightful effervescent lithiawater drink which ever j body should take now and then to ker their kid neys clan. thus avoiding sertons complications. A well-known local druggist sars ho sells lots of Jad Salts to follts who be lieve in overcoming kidney troubl while it is only trouble.

SUIT ON ACCOUNT FILED BY COMPANY

CHURCH TO GIVE SACREDCONCERT

Fifth Street M. E. Arranges Program For Sunday Evening.

T,

BURNS

MURDERED

Body of Famous Jockey Was Found Late Last Night.

ARMY AVIATOR FALLS TO INSTANT DEATH

MANILA. P. Ir Not. 14. While making a flight round the Asiatic squadron In Manila bay today second lieutenant C. Perry Rich, of the aviation corps of the Philippine scouts, U. S. A., fell into the bay with his hydroaeroplane and was drowned. A launch from the torpedo boat destroyer Decatur put off and picked up the body. Second I lieutenant C. Carey Rich of the Philippine Scouts, was a native of Indiana, bcrn January 1, 1S83. He enlisted as a private in the Sixth cavalry In 1901.

A sacred concert will be given by the choir of the Fifth Street Methodist churc'a Sunday evening at 7:30

o'clock. The program will be conduct

ed by Jesse Woods, director. Miss Lela Longman is organist and Mise Emily Plummer, accompanist. The program folio wet

Prelude Nun-dank-et TV8tCoat

XEW YORK, Nov. 14 The body of a man killed under mysterious circumstances at the Elm Place station of the elevated road in Brooklyn late last night was identified by the police today as that of "Tommy" .Byrns, the famous American jockey. TJitj . body

was picked up on the tracks, but the

victim's fur lined overcoat was later found in the station waiting room, some distance away. A letter of introduction in the over-

gave the first clew to the dead

AGED MAN SHOWN LENIENCYJN COURT IvO Grande Byington Pleads GuiKy to Charge of Iarceny.

A demand for $240 filed in circuit, court

on account was today by W. J.

Holliday Hardware company, of Indianapolis against William J. Lair and William M. Harding, hardware dealers of Cambridge City. The plaintiffs allege that the account has been running since 1911. Attorney fees and the costs of the case are Included in the demand.

YOU LIVE ACCORDING TO YOUR LIVER

i iuse of hisAige and feebleness cy was shoni LeGrande Bying-1

REPORTS CONFIRMED OF ARGUS SINKING Big Reamer With Crew of

iei As

st.

CLEVKLAXO Of the i trainer a dispatch from

.Nov. 14. The owners Argus tocay received Kincardine, Ont, con

firming the report, of the loss of that steamer with a crew of 23 men. Wreckage from the Argus littered the shore near Kincardine and nine bodies have been washed ashore. Two more Cleveland steamers, the Hydrus and I. M. Scott, and one tug were still missing today. Their owners have given up all hopes. The total casualties figure to 250. Confirmation of the sinking of the Henry B. Smith of Cleveland with 2S men added to the already long list of disasters. The revised ships lost or missing follows: Lost Henry B. Smith, 2S dead; John A McGean, Cleveland, 27 dead; Charles V. Price, Cleveland, 28 dead; James Carruthers, Toronto, 25 dead; Regina. Toronto, 20 dead; Wexford, Toronto. 20 dead: Leafild. Sault St. Marie, 15 dead; barge Plymouth. Monominee, 7 dead; lightship No. S2, Buffalo, 6 dead; William Nottingham, Cleveland, 3 dead; Argus, Cleveland, 20 dead. Total dead 195. Missing I. M. Scott, Cleveland, 2S on board; Hydrus, Cleveland, 20: tug Lafayette, 12. Total missing 60

Miss Lela Longman Hymn No. 246. Devotions Rev. Arthur Cates Praise Ye the Father Gounod Choir Solo Open the Gate.. Mrs. Jos. Kapp Mrs. E. E. Meyer. Nearer My God to Thee Peake Choir Come Holy Spirit Roswig Double Quartet Offertory Adoration Ashford Miss Lela Longman Solo My God and Father While I Stay G. W. Marston Mrs. H. S. Stillinger How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings J. WT. Wolcott Mlas Edith Hilbert and Choir Hymn Whiter Than Snow Wm. Fisher Choir, unaccompanied

Abide With Me Fearis !

Ladies Chorus Te deum in A P. A. Schmecker Choir Benediction Postlude Onward Christian Soldiers Sullivan

man's identity. This read: "Dear George: This will Introduce Mr. "Tommy" Burns, our crack American jockey, now riding in Europe. He is a pal of mine and he has a button. (Signed) Max. It was addressed to George Stuzbach, 43 West Thirty-fourth street. In another pocket of the coat was found a contract to ride at a race meeting in Berlin signed by Baron E. Von Benigeen. The ticket seller said that the victim was one of a party of half a dozen men who entered the statjoti a few minutes before the tragedy. V;4,-. Burns was at one timevifeWorld's premier jockey, outshiniiifn Tod Sloan. Because of his sf yleC dressing he was known as the Beau Brummel of the turf. Burns was thirty-five years old.

! Beca i

1 icrnency was snown ieuranae Hying

ton, 70, of Cambridge City, who was 'found guilty of burglary last week. He was fined $5 and costs and sentenced

to the county jail for sixty days on a charge of petit larceny by Judge Fox today. Byington broke into two stores and stole a quart of whisky and a few pennies. He was apprehended and he pleaded guilty. The charge of burg-

lary was changed to that of larcenv !

ion the advice of Prosecuting Attorney were eliminated

Reller.

Your Physician will tell you that a la.y liver is the most common cause of that "run-down" feeling, lack of energy", constipation, etc. Do you want to know how to feel fine always to be 100 per cent efficientto get back into fighting trim in a few hours, and to Btay that way? Ask your friend, the druggist, if salts mineral waters oil and most laxatives affect the Liver? Ask him if they stimulate a flow of Bile? He will answer "No!" Ask him if Bile is nature's great antiseptic, if it is needed to cleanse the bowels and blood? Ask him if.

j poisons accumulate In the system j when the Liver is inactive? He will j answer "Yes!"

ask mm if I'odophyllin is a great Liver regulator. He will answer "Yes!" Ask him why Podophyllin is not oftener prescribed, and he will tell you its taste is bitter and it causes griping and nausea. Ask him "Suppose the bitterness.

griping and nausea of Podophvllin

without diminishing

Liver regulator?"

enthusiastically i

j its efficacy, would Podophyllin be the

ideal laxative and He will answer "Yes!"

Now this great object has been accomplished. Podophyllin as combined in a new formula called PoDoLax. Is pleasant to take, pleasant in ita action, and pleasant in Its after effect. PoDolx goes directly to the Beat of the tronble, the Liver, and releases the dammed up Bile. This Bfle (Nature's own antiseptic), cleanses and disinfects the intestinal tract, removing the accumulated debris. No wonder that PoDoLax is everywhere fast superseding common, halfway laxatives and dangerous Calomel. Get a bottle of PoDoLax today use it immediately at any time upon firtt symptoms of bad breath coated togii dizziness loss of appetite lack of energy constipation and laaetlv Liver. Remember the name PoDoLax darived from Podophyllin, its principal constituent, and "lax" indicating its laxative effect. E. E. Sutherland Co., Paducab, Ky. C Advertisement)

LIVERY AND FEED REASONABLE PRICES See me for your livery and fead. Honest Dealings. Taube's Barn, North Sixth St. W. A. RICH,

Money At PER MONTH On Household Goods. Pianos, Horse a. Wgons, Etc, Without Removal.

$25.00 Costs Yoti $4.10 For Three Months. That's AIL

Richmond Loan Co. PHONE 1545. Colonial Bldg., Room 8, Richmond, Ind.

I J

VA

7n

To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. V. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c. (Advertisement)

Hot Price's.

Chocolate with Wafers at

F

KLESi

Veil: Re-! Oihine !

Dcn't Hide Them With a movs Them With The

Prescription. This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by Leo H. Kihe under an absolute guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Don't hide your freckles under a veil: get an ounce of othine and remove them. Even the first few applications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; it is this that is sold ou the money-back guarantee.

Soda crackers are more nutritive than any other flour food. Uneeda Biscuit are

the perfect soda crackers:

Though the cost is but five cents, Uneeda Biscuit are too good, too nourishing, too crisp, to be bought merely as an economy.

Buy them because of their freshness because of their crispness because of their goodness because of their nourishment.

14

EXTRAORDINARY FUR OPENING AND SALE SATURDAY, NOV. 15

A GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO SELECT YOUR FURS FOR CHRISTMAS

Felog3

Always 5 cents, crisp and clean.

Always fresh,

NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY

r v.- --. 4

FROM our busiest department we are glad to announce that we can favor our customers with An Extraordinary

and Sale

VISIT OUR SECOND FLOOR AND SEE THIS GRAND DISPLAY OF FINE FURS SATURDAY

By one of the Country's Greatest Furriers. Giving all fur buyers and prospective buyers the opportunity of selecting Furs from an unsurpassing Fur showing in connection with our splendid stock. Twill be an extra-

unsurpa

. t T 1

event lor rur buvers.

NOT1C

I wish to notify my many friends that I have purchased the MURRAY POOL RCOM, Corner 10th and Main. Cigars. Tool, Candies and Soft Drinks. Your Patronage will be appreciated.

Clias. Do Fefeer

ordinary

FURS ARE NEEDED NOW AS WE SHALL HAVE FUR WEATHER NEARLY EVERY DAY NOW The Furs for this occasion are all perfectly new, made for this season's selling, of soft, pliable, beautifully finished pelts in the newest styles, guaranteed to be exactly as represented. All furs that can't be conveniently purchased now will be held to suit the purchaser's convenience by paying a small sum, thereby giving all advantage of this great showing.

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