Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 112, 21 March 1914 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1914
ST. MARY'S PLAYS
Y, M, C, A.
TQHIGH
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Buckeyes Reputed to Have Fastest Team Obtainable in Gem City. The Richmond "Y" basketball five meets St. Mary's, of Dayton, tonight, at the association gym. The local crew is determined to avenge itself for last Saturday night's game with the Dayton Gyms, and will put up the Btiffest opposition offered this year. The Buckeyes will invade Richmond with the best team obtainable in the Gem City. St. Mary's tonight will present a line-up that is the pick of Dayton's premier teams the college and the cadet aggregation. Dayton will be accompanied by a band of rooters. St. Mary's and the Gyms, that played here last Saturday, are considered the best teams in Ohio. In games played in the past the St. Mary's .team has had the advantage over the Gym team, that administered the first defeat of the year to the local five. The dope would seem to favor St. Mary's from this fart. Richmond will try a new line-up tonight. Parker, the big guard, who has shown such class in goal shooting here lately, will be yanked up to forwiirrl. Roach, the big sub-guard, will fill Parker's place. Roach has shown his ability in the last games, and with his height and weight, ought to make a fit running mate for Dutch Brunton. Brown will likely go in the second half. The teams will line-up as follows: St. Mary's. Y. M. C. A. Sachstater Lanning Deveraux Parker Forwards. Mahoney Duning Center. Mahrt Roach Salamoni Brunton Guards. Nothing Wanting. Some time when you have a bad cold give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a trial and you will find nothing wanting in that preparation. It loosens a cold, relieves the lungs, aids ' expectoration and enables the system 10 throw off the cold in much less tinif than the usual treatment. Mrs. 1. K. Allison, Logansport, Ind., says, "I have never found anything that gave me relief like Chamberlain's Cough Remedy does." For sale by all (WlTS. Advrt IseirsenO
STAGE IS SET FORJELECTION (Continued from Page One.)
tion reeulits, when they carried every ward in the city. Sunday Meetings. . The drys will keep up their fight until the last minute. Sunday afternoon and evening there will be meetings at the tabernacle, which will be addressed by Seaborn Wright, of Georgia, author of the prohibition law n that state, and Monday night I. E. Honeywell, the evangelist, will speak at the tabernacle. Monday all the saloons in the city will be closed, not to be opened again until after the polls close Tuesday evening. All preparations for the election have been completed, including the counting and sealing of ballots by the election commissioners, John Bayer and Clem Gaar, respectively representing the wets and the drys. The J. M. Coe company printed 8,650 ballots to be distributed to the various polling
places and 950 to be held in reserve. Sheriffs on Job. Each faction will have a sheriff -at each polling place and a careful tally of all voters will be kept by the watchers for each faction. There has been the usual talk about probable disorders at some of the voting places, importation of "floaters," etc., but there is no doubt that the election will be conducted in the most orderly manner. Stories circulated about election day troubles haye, without one exception, originated with over-zealous partisans. Voting Place. The voting places are as follows: No. 6 County assessor's office in the court house. No. 7 No. 19 South Sixth street, first alley south of Main. No. 8 St. Andrew's old school building, southeast corner Fifth and South C. No. 9 Dwelling of Mr. Ben Weaver, No. 632 South Sixth street. No. 10 Front room of Thomas Shesler. No. 21 Ft. Wayne avenue. No. 11 City building, North Fifth
i street.
No. 12 Store room, No. 313 North D street. No. 13 Barber shop at No. 173 Fort Wayne avenue. No. 14 Residence of Sanford Henning, No. 205 North Kighth street. No. 15 No. 411 North Eighth street. No. 16 DeArmond's residence. No. 802 North F street.
; No. 17 Residence of William II. Blose, No. 715 North Tenth street. ; No. IS K. of P. temple on South I Kighth street.
No. 19 Office of Benning & Son,
livery barn. No. 11 South Eleventh street. No. 20 Residence of Joe Shepman, No. 242 South Eighth street. No. 21 Bentlage grocery. No. 401 South Eleventh street. No. 22 No. 4 hose house, corner South Ninth and E streets. No. 23 Shaffer's tin. shop, North A, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth. No. 24 Kidder's shop in rear of 202 North Fourteenth street. No. 25 North Fourteenth Street Mission. No. 26 Hodgin's shop on North B street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets.
No. 27 Residence of C. R. Tingle, No. 321 North Nineteenth street. No. 28 Room at southwest corner of Thirteenth and Main streets. No. 29 House on corner of Sixteenth and Main streets. No. 1603. No. 30 Residence at northwest corner Thirteenth and South E, No. 454 South Thirteenth. No. 31 Residence of Bessie P. Menke, No. 224 South West Third. No. 32 Nunson's residence, No. 241 Pearl street. No. 33 Healy's barber shop, No. 101 Richmond avenue. No. 34 Residence of Albert C.
i Baldwin, 216 Charles street.
No. 35 West Side Republican club, corner Hunt and Maple streets.
Housekeeping," was the subject of an address of Mrs. A. D. Cobb last night before the women's auxiliary of the Jefferson Township Farmers' association. County Agent Cobb addressed the men on hog cholera and
also explained the care and selection of seed corn. About 145 members of the club attended and it was the most successful meeting the organiratlon has had. A meeting of Perry township farm
ers will be held Monday in Mendenhall'a orchard at Economy. Agent Cobb will demonstrate the care of fruit trees and will show how pruning and spraying should be done in the spring in order to prevent tree
disease and to augment tbe growth of the plants. The meeting will start at 1 o'clock In the afternoon. The Columbia Farmers association will hold its regular meeting next Thursday night.
FOR SATjE Several good second hand sewing machines. R. M. Lacey, 9 South 7th St.
ROMANCE KILLED
GARY. March 21. The remance of Mrs. Ethel Smith Kline for whom
"Billy" Rugh, a crippled newsboy died, received a severe shock today when ! Ieon Kline, with whom she eloped jlast January, was arrested in Muncie,
charged with larceny by his former employer, Harry Wilt of this city. Billy Rugh gave the skin from his crippled leg that it might be grafted on Miss Smith's back. Mrs. Kline could not be found today. It was believed that she had gone to Muncie to try to help Kline out of his predicament.
with its large German-American population. There appears to be no reason to doubt that it will give a substantial wet majority. The First ward, however, is the only one the drys will concede to the wets. On the other hand, the wets are claiming a repition of the 1909 option elec-
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RICHMOND, INDIANA
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The Palladium's Weekly Simplified Piano Lessons
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GROVE'S MUSIC SIMPLIFIER.
ECOND LESSON THIRD lesson NEXT SATURDAY, sr
Entered According to the Act of Parliament of Canada at the Department of Agriculture in the Year 1906.
SECOND EDITION, Copyright, 1905, International Copyright Secured. Copyright 1903-4 by W. SCOTT GROVE, Scranton, Pa. The second lesson in these simple instructions for the piano or organ takes up the key of G and its corresponding key cf E minor. It is proposed to give all of the fundamental chords used in musical composition. There will be ten more lessons before this 12 weeks' course in music is completed. The pupil is expected to learn these chords, so they can be played almost intuitively. This means diligent PRACTICE. When thig lesson has been mastered the student will h fnllv nnalified to take nn the stndv of the third lesson, which will anDear next week.
INSTRUCTIONS Fold the paper across the page half way between the two charts and place one of the charts at right angles to the keyboard of your piano or organ so that the small white letter D at the bottom of the chart is directly over the key D on the keyboard. The other spaces on the chart will then be over the white keys and the black spaces over the black keys. Each series of letters on top, middle and lower section represents a chord. When playing these chords begin at the top section and play the white letter first with the left hand, it being the bass, and afterwarda the black letters on the same space simultaneously with the right hand, making the harmony desired. Then play the letters in the middle space in the same manner, followed by those on the bottom space, return to the top space, forming a complement of chords. Turn the folded paper from right to left and use the other chart which will then appear riorht side up in the same way. The small white letter D at bottom of chart with a dash above it, is only to indicate position, and should not be played. During the week preceding the next lesson the chords shown here should be played over and over again until you memorize them and can play them without the charts. Then you will be ready for the next lesson. Memorize the letters alo, so that instinctively hereafter you will recall what letters or keys make up the various chords. A knowledge of the chords of keys in which music is composed is the foundation stone for future skill in reading music fluently.
The black letters are played with the right hand and the white letters at the left are the bass, and are played with the left hand. Every triad in black letters is marked 1, 3, 5. Always read triads 1, 3, 5, no matter what position. Triad marked third position, 5, the highest; always read it so. G, first position, 1, the highest; read cegoce second
These lessons in object teaching so thoroughly impress the pupil by seein a.nl hearing at the eam time that they are easily remembered, and onc acquired will never be forgotten. The pupil, in this manner, learns the fundamental triads and chords, that ore the leading and soverning elements of harmony of each key.
position, 3, the highest, read c e g
and so with every triad major or minor.
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