Word: cincinnatis
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Harvard Club of Fairmont, James O. Watson '00, Secretary, Watson Bldg., Fairmont, W. Va.; Harvard Club of Cincinnati, Franklin H. Lawson '21, Secretary, Evans & Whateley Sts., Cincinnati, Ohio; Harvard Club of Dayton, Louis R. Mahrt, Secretary, 901-905 Winters Bank Bldg., Dayton, Ohio; Harvard Club of Michigan, John D. Rice, Secretary, 2288 First National Bank Bldg., Detroit, Mich.; Harvard Club of Chicago, Dwight Ingram '16, Secretary, 14 E. Jackson Bivd., Chicago...
Schenley. Lewis Rosenstiel wanted to get out of the whiskey business when the years of the locust began but his family would not let him. So he sat down in Cincinnati to wait. He bought up stocks of medicinal whiskey, concentrated them in a warehouse in Schenley, Pa.-a move which, because of Governor Pinchot's tax, he sorely regretted last week. Later he bought the distillery that went with the warehouse and a few other distilleries. Last summer, having acquired a distributing unit and with it three capable whiskey men all named Jacobi, he organized Schenley Distillers Corp...
...favor any one commercial house but the White House has to have a piano and in 1902 when Theodore Roosevelt accepted the $18,000 Steinway Gold Grand "in behalf of the nation," the die was cast. White House musicales began soon after. Mrs. Taft, who taught at the Cincinnati College of Music before she married, asked the Steinways to put them on. They looked around their office for some one both musical and businesslike who would not attempt to capitalize on the Presidential connection, decided on Henry Junge, one of their secretaries, a native of Hamburg who had planned...
...Cincinnati's Zoo last week Superintendent Sol A. Stephan examined the inflamed gums of his two-month-old hippopotamus Zeeko, got her an old automobile tire to use as a teething ring...
...Well-run Cincinnati voted nay on municipal ownership for an interesting reason. The citizens there decided against buying Cincinnati Gas & Electric's plant not because they were unsympathetic to public ownership but because they plan to get their electricity from Cove Creek Dam, the Tennessee Valley Authority's proposed power plant on the Tennessee River near Knoxville. The Cincinnati Southern, municipally-owned railway, passes within 10 mi. of the proposed dam-site. Transmission lines could be cheaply strung along the right-of-way into Cincinnati where current would be distributed by a publicly-owned system...