Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 279, 4 November 1915 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

Bringing Up Father

I SALOONKEEPERS MUST CLEAN UP SAYS BARNARD Saloonkeepers In Richmond wtll - toon find that a new and unexpected ouncn of trouble is camping on their crail unless they keep their establish mentn scrupulously clean. The state food and drug commission er, H. IS. Barnard, has announced his -intention to close up any saloon that does not comply with the statutes covering sanitary and healthful conditions surrounding the serving of meats or r free lunches,' or the dispensing of beer and liquors. Dr. Barnard says many saloons are so dirty and filthy as to be actually repulsive and are a menace to the health of the community. Furthermore it is alleged by Dr. Barnard that many of these places have cooks and other employes that are diseased and dirty; that floors and walls have been found Ultliy and kitchens abominable. PARALYZED t. , ICont'nuee' Fr0IT Pafle One. fhis year about $300 was taken ,Iyo:n.j the safe. Although the postoffice of- i ficials refuse to state how much wm3 I obtained in last night's wild west raid, it ia reported about town that the amount was less" than in tho March robbery- Tho skimp.-; are kept in the vault st she National bank. I Hesrs Five Explosions. j Frank Bimngardnrr. one of the sev-i eral eye witnesses to the robbery, was! awakened by the noise of the bandits. Mr. Baunigaidntr s roeni is on the sro.oml flocr cf the S. E. Samuels heme and adjoins the postoffice. He lca:icd from his window about 1:30 o'clock, and, demanded of the man standing in the yard what was going cne. Kcr reply he was told that it was none of his business. He insisted 1hat it was, because the postmaster wa3 hij friend. The sentinel insisted lhat they wern't harming the postmaster, but were getting something oft the government, concluding with a bitter tirade against the government. While Baumgardner was arguing with the guard, he heard Ave distinct shots inside the postoffice, where the forms of two men were dimly disconible. In another part, of the darkened Samuels home v Miss Grace Samuels and her mother, Mrs. S. E. Samuels, watched the sentinel and beard the Vonvejgation with Baumgardner. Shoots at Stragglers. When Baumgardner was at last driven from his place in the window, by being told that he would, be shot, he went to the telephone and spread the alarm throughout the town. By this time a number of shots had been fired in the streets by the other bandit guards, who made no attempt at concealing t their presence, but devoted their energies to frightening the citizens with their reckless shooting. When the men, drowsy from their election vigil of the night before, fere aroused, they found a large part of the town in darkness. The bandits had taken a long piece of barn door rack from the Ashman garage, near tho postoffice and smashed street light bulbs in the neighborhood of the postoffice and near Postmaster Charles Marshall's home." left in the dark and with nb weapons excep't shotguns, for which they could find no shells, the male citizenship failed to mobilize. Italian's Cheek Burned. When the band of Italians, who had walked from Richmond, came up the street toward the postoffice, it was fired upon by one of the guards,' the bullet burning one of the men's cheeks. The sentinel posted nearest to the postoffice saw the foreigners and heard the shot. He called tj one of the men on the inside, saying: "Give her hell, George, they've got a whole damned mob out here." No one could be found this morning who had any idea of where the men went or how they made their escape, whether in automobiles, on foot or on horseback. They just disappeared. The only clue available is that offered by Dr. C. H. Harris, who was called to attend a patient west of " town about 11:30 o'clock. As be neared the railroad crossing he noted the forms of four men lurking near the tracks. Dr. Harris swerved his machine in an attempt to throw the lights on the men, but they slunk out of sight. Reports that strange men have been seen in all parts of the county were current this morning. ; The robbery has been reported to federal inspectors it Cincinnati. - Postmaster " Marshall is ill at his

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MOTOR FIRE TRUCK DRIVES OUT HORSES J3ATON, O., Nov. A. H. J. Taylor and his son, Cassius Taylor, for a long time employes of the city,' have been dismissed from service by council and are succeeded by Charles Lounsbury and Jacob Johnson. For twenty-eight .years the elder Taylor was employed as driver of the fire department's hose wagon. His son had been assistant janitor of the city hall for ten years. Their dismissal followed council purchase of a motor fire truck to replace the team of old horses which have:' been in service many years. The team probably will be retained by council and placed upon pasture lands at the water works station. The salary of the new employes has been fixed at $60 per month each. AREA Rv. and Mrs. David Coppock and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coppock, who lives south of Fountain City, visited Sunday with relatives near Ludlow Falls, O. . J Mrs. John Gross is spending a few days this week with Ira Musselman and family. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Smock, who resides west of Lynn, spent Sunday evening with Rev. Percy Thomas and family... ' Kelso Mikesell and family spent the first of the week visiting near Bartona. Mrs. Lina Ketring and Mrs. Tarly Myers comprise the sick list this week. Russell Burkett and wife and Miss Maria Burkett were the Sunday guests of Kd'Hockett and family of Lynn. -; Mr. and Mrs. Sol Colvln visited in Lyun Sunday with V'red Mann and family. Muster Hcvald Bowen, son of Mr. and M-s. Raymond Bowen of Lynn, is ependin;; ;i few days with his grandparents. Will Bowen and wffe. SPRING GROVE TOWN BOARD. The Spring Grove town board, since election Tuesday, consists of George Biles, Clark Stevens, I. T. Dougan and William Wood, with L. J. Woodard clerk and treasurer. GAS EXTENSION Continued From Page One duction of the electric rates in Richmond. The company has requested the Commercial club to seek to enjoin the city from proceeding with its condemnation action A few weeks ago Supt. Kleinknecht of the municipal plant in a public statement charged that the company had been resorting to "cut throat" competition with the city plant in violation of the commisston's regulations for the two local electric plants. Dr. W. G. Huffman and Dr. A. L. Bramcamp notified the board this morning that each had erected a flat building on South Ninth street, south of H, and that their request for an extension of the gas main down that street had been refused although' only a 600 foot line would be required to serve thirteen families. "The street is not an improved one and I have been instructed not to make main extensions on unimproved streets unless they are down to grade, which South Ninth, below H street, is not." replied Johnson. "Under your franchise you are required to make an extension when so ordered by the board, if there is to be one consumer for each 100 feet of the extension," remarked the city attorney. "If you persist In refusing to make this extension we will have to see if we cannot put the screws to your company." "That involves a question raised in your suit to restrain us from putting up poles for business outside the city whether we are operating under a franchise. It is my opinion that we are not, having surrendered our franchise to operate under an indeterminate permit given us by the commission," Johnson retorted. "That's a Hell of an argument," the city attorney answered somewhat heatedly. "You might as well contend that the street railway company, operating under an indeterminate permit; would have the right to operate locomotives on our streets. You fellows can't do such things any more since we have put the saddle on you." Johnson then declared that under no consideration would the South Ninth street extension be made unless the Jn Baltimore, as a result- of an investigation, experts figured that " the minimum amount on which a single woman could live decently was $5.70 a week. Eighty-one per cent, of the department store women in Baltimore

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGHAlI, THURSUAr; WUV. 4. ivio.

f amd 1 MAEUtHlTt" v "company is compelled to make it" He said no more main extension work, any place In the city, would be undertoken this fall. ' The board president then notified Or. Bramcamp and Dr. Huffman to file a petition for the main extension, saying it would be acted upon promptly, meaning that another suit would be added to the city's already extensive list of litigations against the Light, Heat & Power company. Prior to the argument over i the South Ninth street main extension Mr. Johnson demanded payment by the city of its share of twenty-three poles, erected seven years ago. The amount involved is $94.75. Bond and Kleinknecht opposed such action on the part of the city because most of the poles had been appraised by commission engineers as the exclusive property of the company. PASTOR BECK Continued From Page One. the ravages of old age, left the Rev. Mr. Beck in an unconscious condition early in the week. He was unable to converse with his family. The Rev. Oscar Tressel, of Dayton, O., who was to have been installed as active pastor of Trinity church' next Sunday, spent Tuesday at the bedside of his predecessor. When death came last night the Rev. Mr. Beck had been unconscious for many hours. The body will lie in state Saturday at church from 4 until 9 o'clock, when the casket will be closed. Short services will be held at the home Sunday at 2 o'clock, and at 2:30 at the church, with the Rev. Oscar Tressel in charge. It is requested that flowers be omitted. Surviving Members of Family. ; . The Rev. Mr. Beck is survived by his widow, one brother, Henry Beck, a banker at Independence, Kan., and three grandchildren. Warren, Marjorie and Henry Beck, all of this city. Resolutions of sympathy and condolence were drafted today by the Rev. A. J. Feeger, president of the Wernle Orphans' Home board, of which the Rev. Mr. Beck was a member for many years. Members of the board will attend the funeral. - Press dispatches say news of the death of the Rev. Mr. Beck was received with deep regret in Columbus, O., where he served for many years, and at the headquarters of the Ohio synod, in which he labored with distinction, having served on the home mission board and held other important assignments. Esteemed in City. The Rev. Mr. Beck was held in high esteem by members of the Trinity church, who appointed him pastor emeritus when he saw that he was no longer able to do active pastoral work. He was organizer of the church and its only pastor. Public services were held in his honor when he celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his ordination last year. Among the clergy and laity of the city, the Rev. Mr. Beck was respected and honored for his dignity and affability, his uniform courtesy and his high regard for the duties of his office. The departed pastor had hoped to CUT THIS OUT Old English Recipe for Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises. If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. In England scientists for a long time past have recognized that catarrh is a constitutional disease and necessarily requires a constitutional treatment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middle ear which frequently means total deafness, or else the disease is' driven down the air passages towards the lungs which is equally as dangerous. The following formula which is used extensively In the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favorable climate conditions. . " " ' Secure from' your druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double strength). Take this home and add to it Vi pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and bearing improve as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Parmint is used in this way as It acts directly upon, the blood and mucous surfaces of the system and has a slight tonic action that facilitates the recovery of the patient.' The preparation is . easy to make, costs little and Is pleasant to take. Every person who has catarrh should give this treatment

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. . ' see his successor Installed next Sunday. '- 'V-...,-, - - - The Rev. Joseph Beck, one of the oldest and best known members of the Lutheran joint synod of Ohio, has a record of note both as an establisher of mission churches and as the holder of many offices in the synod. . The Rev. Mr. Beck was born on a farm in Fairfield county, Ohio, in 1840, attended a country school daring his early youth, and at the age of 18 went to Columbus, O., where he attended the Capital university, graduating in the summer of 1861. In the fall of the same year he entered the Theological seminary, from which institution he graduated in 1864. He was ordained at the meeting of the synod at St. Paris, O.. August 22- 1864. Immedltely after his ordination he received a call from a Lutheran mission in Columbus. This call was accepted by the Rev. Mr. Beck; and from the nucleus of this mission he organized the First English Lutheran church for that city. Ofter working hard in that locality for eight years, during, which time the mission grew and erected a church valued at $10,000, the health of the young minister broke and after dedicating his new church in the city he accepted a call from a country charge in and about Lithopolls. Serves Eleven Years. The charge at Lithopolis embraced two congregations, and to these duties the Rev. Mr. Beck added the work of establishing a mission. One of these congregations was in the town itself, but the other two were five and sixteen miles, respectively, from the town. In spite of the great distance, the Rev. Mr. Beck officiated at each of these localities every Sunday, making a trip of more than forty miles with his horse and carriage. After continuing In this field for eleven years, the Rev. Mr. Beck received a call from. Grace congregation in Columbus, but the congregations in , his Lithopolis charge refused to dismiss him. After the call had been repeated, f How to Rub Out Wrinkles 1 I And Other Beauty Secrets Most important to the average woman is how to get rid of those tell-tale signs of age wrinkles and crow's feet. Much has been written on the subject, but the only treatment worth while is the one that does the work. Any woman can prepare a . wrinkle cream in a few minutes that will certainly give Old Father Time an awful tussle. Women who have tried it pronounce it almost magical in results. It is very simple and easy to prepare. Get from any, drug store about two ounces of powdered eptol, dissolve it gradually in half a pint of hot water. Then add a tablespoonful of glycerine. This will give you a wrinkle remover that cannot be excelled. Use freely night and morning, and you will soon notice results. Walsh, the great authority on the hair, says we have much to thank bacteriology in the care' of the hair, as it is the little dandruff germ that eats away at the roots, causing it to become lifeless, fall out and become thin and scraggly. Any woman with these hair troubles will do well to get from her druggist one ounce of beta-quinol. Mix half a pint of water and half a pint of alcohol, add the beta-quinol, and you will have a tonic that will, if used faithfully every night, correct any hair trouble. The head should be thoroughly washed at least every two weeks to get rid of excess oil, dirt and greasy accumulations. - For a clean and inexpensive head wash there is nothing that can equal a teaspoonful of eggol dissolved in a cup of hot water. Twenty-five cents' worth of eggol will give1 you a dozen shampoos. Adv.

; I his Fall's models are unusually inviting.. Creations that will instantly appeal to you because of their ; smartness of style and superior materials and work-j manship. Genuine Silk' Velvet Hats; trimmed with the finest imported fancies, flowers, ribbons, gold and silver novelties. ' V r . ' T Rliss Porter's Millinery Parlors Westcott Hotel Building.

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you oars, talk BACK TO' ME his charge then accepted his resignation, and be returned to ' Columbus in 1883. " " . y ,; Rev. Beck stayed . with' this charge for nine years, and besides bringing the Grace congregation to a, very flourishing state of affairs, he organized two missions.' The first of these, organized on the north side of the city, was given a great deal of attention by the pastor, who bought a lot and erected a church for the small band of church people, aided by the : church building board. This mission, now St. Mark's Lutheran church, bac grown to a membership of over three hundred. The second of these missions was organized in the spring of 1892 on the west side of the city, where there were a great number of Lutherans. The meetings of this body were held in the west side market house. In the summer of 1892, the mission board of the synod recognizing Rev. Beck's ability as an organizer of missions, called him to this city to organize the younger Lutherans who were breaking off from the German Lutheran church. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran church of this city, was successfully organized, and during the twentytwo years which Rev. Beck had charge of the congregation it grew until its communicants now number over three hundred. Church Grows Fast. In 1905 the congregation had grown so large that the little church which It had purchased at the time of its organization was entirely too small to accommodate the membership so a And You Wake Up With 1 Beautifully Curly Hair! ! - (Town Tattler.) This is a secret that will,-1 know, be appreciated by my lady, who dislikes the tedious , and "nervous" task of twisting her locks around a heated iron, perhaps singeing the hair,-burning off the ends, and blistering fingers or scalp in the operation.. From any druggist procure a few ounces of pure liquid silmerine and at-night pour a little onto a clean tooth brush ' and draw this down the full length of the hair. A simple thing to do, but remarkably effectual, as will be apparent in the morning. The hair will have a wonderfully soft, fluffy curliness, much more natural looking, glossier and livelier in appearance than where a waving iron has been used. Silmerine doesn't make the hair sticky or greasy, and there will be no trouble doing It up in any style desired. Olga Ormsbee. Adv. Look for the Ice Display at Brusso's Chocolate Shop. . EYES TESTED GLAS8ES FITTED Office -N. W. Corner Sixth and Main Streets. Hours 8 a. m. to 11:15 a. m. 12 a. m. to 5:15 p. m.; 6 p. m. to 8 p. m". y "Hoelscher, Oph. M." i Optometrist.

Fall Pviillinery Sale Of Evey Trimmed or Untrimmed EM. II STOCK

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large addition was built and the building was re-modeled. The Rev. Mr.. Beck has not . only been active in caring for his congregations, but his work in the synod uas been a matter of considerable comment. In the fall of 1864. immediately after his ordination, he was elected a member of the board of trustees of Capital university, and seminary. . At the first meeting of this board he was chosen secretary, a position which he held until 1882. During this period he was also business! manager of -the Lutheran Standard. In 1882 he left the board of trustees of Capital university and entered the newly formed mission board, of which he became treasurer. This office he held until he came to Richmond in 1892, when he was appointed a member of the board of trustees of the Wernle Orphans' home. He has been First National Bank 3 , on Savings ' Resources Over

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EELdDW2 : MflMfUlfo Mii i n Ftow pemi And you can now drive right down to the Star Grocery's front door. . .

Unlimited supplies In table, commodities. Give us a call, either 227 North Sixth St. and Fort Wayne avenue, or call telephone 1204. . You will now find our service as good : as the best In town, and we are trying each day to make it better and would appreciate any suggestions along this line. . If you don't see what you want, ask for It. . . - " :'..'-; '", 7, TOffl EPEQlk

10c size Cocoa, per can . .9c (3 cans for 24c) Canned Pumpkin, 15c size cans. 3 for .....25c Canned Sweets. 15c cans 10c Sugar Corn and June Peas, 3 cans for 23c Koweba Hominy, per can 8c (3 cans for 20c) , PONY VOTES WITH-ALL CASH PURCHA8ES. Extra Fine Bacon. Swift's Premium Hams. Fancy Creamery Butter at ,..32c

Old Dutch Cleanser, 2 ten cent cans .v, J . . 15c'Cream Laundry Soap, 7 bars, 2 days only, for 25c Parlor Matches, 3 five cent boxes V. . . .". . . ;.10c.,

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the' financial ' secretary of this boar for the last twenty-one years. . ; While these offices . were occupied by the Rer. Mr. Beck, he had served as president of the district synod thre different terms and as secretary, ot the same body for three terms. Hl work . Included the . building of four churches, and during the half century of. his. services he had charge, of eight congregations. . He worked in Lithopolis eleven years. In Columbus seventeen -years,-and-this city over twenty-one years. ,

WANTED DRESSMAKER. APPLY IOOMrse, KELLY BLOCK.

The handling of an estate is a business in itself and fewi individuals have the ability or ; inclination for it. v ' The Trust Department of this Bank is equipped and organized for the express purpose of acting in trust capacities. Its service is efficient, economical and impartial.

-t. ' Fancy Sweet Oranges Fine Grape Fruit . Good Bananas;. Large California Figs New Dates New Cocoanuts Sweet Potatoes . Carrots Parsnips Lettuce . " Celery ..... Ti Cranberries .... Cabbage .-. j.Large Sweet Onions! a-

a trial. Adv. '