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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 5

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ENQUIRER, ICiNClNN ATI, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1927 lleves the radio is the World's great' ONE KILLED, ft" VITAL FACTOR fSBBSSBMOTSWaSJSMSSMSMI In Curing Disease. Willard Saulsbury Succumbs; Third Senator in His Family Six i Hurt in Crashes. FIRE LOSS IS $1,000. Cigarette Believed To Haye Caused Blaze In Harrison Building. Fire, believed to have been caused by a carelessly thrown lighted caused a damage estimated to be about il.OOO In the Harrison Hall, en the third floor of the Harrison Building, Gilbert avenue and McMillan street, last) night.

Firemen, under Marshal Wuerth confined the blase to the third floor. The hall was the meeting place of several lodges and it is believed thai the cigarette was dropped by a member of, one of them at a meeting conducted earlier In the evening. mile north of the city. He war truck by an automobile driven by Cart Ingram, 369 South' street, who aid he was going aroTind another car and did not' see RUey. Riley lived In City View suburb.

Robert Speer, 6 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Speer, Chicago. la near death with a fractured skull in a hospital, here, tonight. The child and his-parent! were injured this morning when their automobile, skidded on the Ice-covered Dixie Highway at a curve just North of Sprlngdale, and crashed sideways Into a truck driven by Russell Abrams, 20, of Hamilton, Company, Cincinnati.

Abrams said was driving north at a rate of 10 miles an hour, when the Speer sedan rounded the curve In the opposite direction and began to Is Finding Cause, Welfare Body Asserts. Child Near Death at Hamilton, Ohio, as Result of Accident v. on Slippery est Invention. i Checkers are his hobby. A He figures 4hat In the last 20 years' ha has played 14,000 games with his 'pal, Henry Gallagher a youth of 65.

slide sldewise. The sedan, he said, truck his truck near the rear, knocking the truck from, the road and causing the other car to bound back to the other side-of the highway. Columbus, February 20. Edward Bruncr, 24 years old, of this city; Flossie Brown, 15, and Mabel 14, of Anderson, were Injured severely today when an automobile In which they were riding crashed Into a small building 'In this city In which a fish market was operated by Curtis Davis, 40. wrecking the car and completely demolishing the building.

After demolishing the building, the car that police who investigated the accident, said was being driven at the rate of SO miles an hour, hit a telephone pole, breaking the pole In three piece. Davis, who was alone In the building at the time of the accident, escaped serious injury. He reported to the police that while he was. help Co-O'peratlon ot Public To Fight Mental Maladies Sought By Ohio Association. management of the.

democratic party In Delaware. At the legislative' ses-slon of 1897 he was an ajplrant for the United States senatorial noriiina- tlon, but was defeated by Richard Kenney, of Dover. Later he' was, designated In several senatorial' cotv test 'by Democratic and finally was' elected in 112, when the Democrats succeeded In electing a majority of the State Legislature. Thus, he was the last Senator to be chosen by the Legislature. Ha.

was nominated for re-election by the state convention In 1018, but at the election was defeated by the Republican nominee, Lewis Helsler Ball. During the last two years of his term Senator Saulsbury was President Pro Tempore of the Senate. Senator Saulsbury was Chairman, of the Democratlo State Committee of Delaware frorn 1900 to 1906,. Two years Inter he was elected a member of the Democratic National Committee and served continuously In that capacity until 1920. He was a delegate to the DomoAatic National Conventions of 1896.

1904, 1912 and 1920. At the Democratic National Convention of 1924 Senator Saulsbury. was put forth by the delegation from his state as a candidate for the presidential nomination and received a number of votes during the Nearly balloting. goal of the Saulsnury family, resulting In a notable content in' the Democratic caucus of the Delaware Legislature of Willard Saulsbury, father of Senator Saulsbury, had Just completed a term In the fionate-and seeking a re-deslgnation was opposed vigorously by two of his brothers, Oove Saulsbury, who at tho time had just retired as Governor of Delaware, and 11 Saulsbury, a lawyer of Dover. Kit was chosen and was re-elected In 1177 and 1888.

Seeking a fourth term In 1888, he was defeated In the Democratic primaries. Willard Saulsbury, was born at Georgetown, April 17, 1361. After his preliminary education in PKCUl DISPATCH TO TBI KQtIM. Hamilton, Ohio, Februarys 20. John D.

Riley, 49 years old, father of 10 children, was killed today when walking on the Seven Mfle road, a 'WAVE MAKER" DIES. Wilmington, February 20 (A. Former United States Senator Willard Saulsbury died at his home here today ot heart disease. He was 66 years old. Mr.

Saulsbury haii suffered from heart attacks sine: bctnr stricken three years ago while at his summer home in Maine. He had been virtually an invalid. He Is survived by his widow, the former Miss May Dupont. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday, with interment at Dover. Willard Saulsbury, the last United States Senator elected by the Legislature of Delaware, came from a family tiat has been Identified prominently with Democrallc politics In Delaware for many years and which sent three of Its members to the United States Senate.

The upper House of Consyess seemed to bo the particular political SrSCUlf BISrATl'H TO THS ISQCI. Martins f'erry, omo, fcoruary zu. Finding the cause of the disease Is the moat, efficient method of effecting a cure. The Importance of tracing the cause of. mental illness Is emphasised In the weekly article released by the Ohio Association' for the Welfare of the Mentally Sick.

Dayton, Oh'io. By enlightening the public on the 'JThe man who made the waves," James Martin Hill, 65 years old, supervisor of SO United Slates Government looks and dams in the Ohio River between Wheeling and Hunt private schools. Senator Saulsbury ington, died today at his home In Warwood, W. of heart disease. It was Hill's duty to cause artificial rises In the river to faclllate tho subject of Insanity the association ing to give first aid to the injured was graduated at the University Virginia and then read law In the office of his father, who then was rhuncellor of Taking naturally to politics, Senator Saulsbury since early manhood had boon active In the leadership and movement of coal fleets from West a cash box In his market, containing, hopes to obtain the co-operation of 1X3, was stolen.

the entire state in dealing with Ohio's Virginia and Kentucky mines ta Mississippi River points. problem of increasing Insanity: IS Big Stone Gap, February Rhea, 42 years old, coal operator and lumberman of Lee County, in dead today as a result of an accident at Pennington Gap, near his home last night, when his body was crushed under the wheels of an I and N. passenger train operating on a branch line between Pennington Qa.p and "St. St. Charles.

Rhea was walking on the railroad track In returning horns from his mine on Reed Creek. The Why of the q) rate of the SAUiHGS ANB LOAfi ASSOCIATIONS Savings, Building; and Loan Companies are mutual Institutions that share their profits with their patrons. For this reason they pay you more. Why should you take less than 5 for your savings? Low Operating Cost Building and loan Qpmanies can operate an average cost of 1.3 of their resources. Ordinary business concerns require a profit of least 30.

That is why we can pay you generally a 5 rate on your savings, with a high degree of safety. Nearly two million Ohioans are saving with building and loan companies because they get more and are protected most. Are You One of Them? Thousands of Cincinnati people are losing interest money every year because they are not getting full value for their savings. Save with us, where your money brings yon a better rate. Easy Sledding Now; First Hundred Over Central Falls, R.

February 20 (A. P).) If the first hundred years are the hardest, all clear sailing now Logee started his second century for Leprelet Logee. HART SCHAFFNER MAK2C CIsOTHES .1 4 i ii Ull i i i It 11 11 I .1 .111,11 w- HWMHIMII II Will jr The article released by the Ohio Association says: 'The great medical profession has for many centuries realised that the most efficient treatment ot any disease is first the removal of the cause of the disease and then such treatment as will build up the resistance of the patient. Treatment in any case Is simply that of assisting nature to do the work. "The treatment of the mentally sick 's dependent upon the tame underlying principles as the treatment of any other Illness.

It depends upon discovering the cause and then treating It, at the same time doing everything within the bounds of reason to talse body resistance. treatment of this class of patient in the past has hr-en handicapped because we did not know the cause. We thought the cause was such things as poor heredity, stress In the form of worry, fear, fright, religion, war, business reverses, etc. We now know that such supposed causes were In reality symptoms of' the disease as fovcr is a symptom of pneumonia, "The real causes behind mental sickness are about the same as the real causes behind rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia, some toxlo or poisonous material manufactured In some portion of the body and traveling to the brain via the blood stream. The treatment" then resolves Itself Into discovering the seat of the toxic material and correcting the cause.

"So long as we thought that mental sickness was1 due to sue)) untreatable things as were previously thought to be the causes, we naturally could provide no better type of treatment than custodial or asylum care, which consists of locking the patient away from the world, three meals a day and a guard to watch him. As soon, however, as we realize the real causes -of mental sickness we can then provide the appropriate treatment which will be the same as accorded any patient In any general hospital. "The Ohio Association for the Welfare of the Montally Sick has as one of Its purposes providing such per MOM HOMES CAMPAIGN Hamilton County League of Building Associations. W. MEREDITH YEATMAN, Chairman.

this February with modern ideas, an undlmnished apne-tlte for a good cigar, and a memory that takes him back to the days of the Mexican War. Logee likes flappers and considers short skirts more sensible than the hoops and pantalettes of. half a century He sea I Ij feint tocte no harm in the Charleston or Black Bottom. He became a Mason, X8G8. i Logee quit work 40 years ago, but has followed events with keen Interest, especially 'mechanical developments in the textile business.

He be- SomiaexlMpg. New We have inaugurated a new. plan the "6ish and Carry Plan." Bring your suit or dress to any one of our three conveniently located stores. The savings will pay for the gasoline you use going to and from work, or will pay the cost of parking your car in a downtown garage. Try it and be convinced.

'Look Nifty! Garfield Cleaning Dyeing Co. Salt Hard Now Take Your Choice of Our $60, $65, $70, $75 Hart Schaffner larx SOlTS and sonnel snd equipment in every state hospital In Ohio as will permit the superintendent to treat the cases as Consolidation Clean Coal they should be treated. It will re Wkaleaale 808 Vine St. quire additional medical and nursing personnel, occupational therapy and social service workers to adequately meet the demands of the occasion. The aesoclatlon Is guided In these 25 Arcade South 44 Direct Frosn Our Mints Daily.

Call MAIN 4396 CKIOX CENTRAL BLDO. Canal 43. 4th and Main matters by the managing officers' of Ms. the Department of Public Welfare, who have already gone on record as to the personnel that they will sc ll ,1 tually need to carry on this great Work. "Your membership In the Ohio As soclatlon for the Welfare of the Mentally S)ck will give moral support to this grest undertaking.

OVERCOATS PLEASURE IS SHOWN By Philadelphia at Concert of Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. PRC lit, SISHTCH TO TH NQBIISI. 1 February 20. Scholarly and authoritative Frits Reiner, no stranger to this city, where he has conducted five Philadelphia orchestra concerts this season, came to the Academy of Muslo tonight at the head, of his own men from Cincinnati, This organisation now be "JVe that live to please must please to live' I it so spoke Samuel Johnson when he opened a London theater some century and a half ago. Today it is even truer of the people who advertise to Whether merchants or manufacturers whether they advertise hats or harnesses, powderpuffs or ploughs the permanent success of every advertiser who uses these pages rests squarely upon his ability to please you.

The goods he advertises must be right. They must meet your approval in open comparison. They -must please you in utility, design, quality, value and service. If they don't, you won't buy. And if you won't buy, the advertiser can't live.

i That's why advertised merchandise must be good merchandise and that's why there is protection, true economy and real satisfaction in reading the advertisements and being guided by them. lib longs to one of the older groups of symphony orchestras in the United States. It has, indeed, the honor of having been captained by Leopold Stokowskl before his entry into his present environment. Tonight's concert was due to the Initiative of the Philharmonic Society of Philadelphia, that, among olhor things, has been Instrumental In fathering visits of Important out-of-town orchestras to this city. Last year the Cincinnati players were brought here under the same pioneering auspices.

The fine musicianship of Mr, Reiner was displayed effectively on that occasion. The favorable opinion formed of Mm abilities was; confirmed during his recent 'guest directorate of the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Impression was reinforced this evening. Mr. Reiner has magnetism, that subtle the Instinctive beat of the true conductor, and an especially brilliant flair for the interpretation of modern music, was at his best, therefore, in Casella's Rhapsody, or Symphonic Poem, "Italia," that was the closing feature of tonight's program. Other numbers on the program, less frankly pictorial.

Included the lovely Second Symphony of Brahms, of which the conductor gave a clearly articulated presentation, but one not unmixed with certain Individual vagaries of tempo, especially In the first movement, and the sunny, sparkling "Bartered Bride" overture of Smet-ano. Faye Ferguso'n, a young blonde pianist, was the soloist, bfferln gthe ever charming Schumann concerto In A-flat minor. Miss Ferguson, as virtually alt present-day pianists, has an assured technique, but is apparently not entirely mistress of the tone color possibilities requisite for a glamorous reading of this concerto, She was received most cordially. The orchestra Itself Is a capable, well-trained organization, weakest In horrr choirs and woodwinds, strong In strings, especially cellos, and admirably responsive tothe conductor's persuasive methods, The stormy weather unquestionably affected adversely the tone of the brasses. There was a warm, greeting for the conductor and many tributes of applause for director and, orchestra at the close of each number In the wcll-choaen program, You get the choice of the very best part of our stock in this price range.

It includes all the best patterns, the finest fabrics, the best styles, perfect tailoring Ordinarily we do the big end of our business between $60 and $75 We prepare for it with great stocks of merchandise. Now, while our rebuilding operations are under way, we're making this important price concession. DUNLAP CLOTHES SHOP 417-423 VINE COR. ARCADE Home oi Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes Advertising guides you to products thai please. Read it regularly.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,924
Years Available:
1841-2024