Richmond Palladium (Daily), 15 November 1904 — Page 5

PAGE rivu wxtsm THE GOOD ' SAMARITANS POSITIONS TODAY WE ARE UNABLE TO FiLL. WHY 1 ul NOT PREPARE FOR SOME OF THESE? RICHMOND BUSINESS COLLEGE COMPANY

.ZlTZqjUWQW 15, 1904.

THE QUUAKERS WERE IN GOOD FORM AND WON EASILY

ELWOODIAHD THE FOXY FIVE Were the Other Victors Large Crowds Witnessed the Opening Games. p (Special to the Palladium.) .Anderson, Indlt 'November 14. Before .1,200 people ...Richmond defeated Anderson tontght-by the score of 4, to ii.in a gauithat was devoid of .; features, save the clever floor work of the visitors. The Anderson team was weakened by the absence of Mercer, who failed to arrive, and n Tnp.al nmntoiir. Tnvlor. rns suhstituted at second rush. The Quakers played in good form, while the locals' work was ragged, notwithstanding the fact that Anderson has been in training for over a week and the Champions had only. prac tice a together once. In the first period. Miller, after three minufes of play, smashed the ball into the draperies back of Captain Jessup, and the fans had their first opportunity of the season in -letting off their pent-up enthusiasm. Richmond immediately took . a brace "and Bone worked the floor like a demon, tieing the score five minutes later, with a beautiful drive into Mallory 's cage. With a half minute of play left Bone ended tlu more putting the ball behind Anderson's pocket edition goal tend. Two minutes after the gong for the second period had sounded Bone roi1 Tnvvnrd f1osn nf flin nor. lod noatke ueu tne score uy mailing two goals in rapid succession. Anderson's defense braced in the third period and Mai lory, by , spectacular play withstood the attacks of the Quaker rushers for ten minutes, but as a fast one of "Bone's finally sifted through the gentleman with the thousand legs and the first game of the season was lost to Anderson. The lineup: Anderson pos. Richmond Wodtke rush Bone Miller-Taylor, .rush . . . Cunningham Miller-Gardner, .center . . Mansfield Moran .... half back .... Doherty Mallory goal Jessup Score Anderson 3. Richmond 4. Rushes Bone 7, Wodtke 1. Fouls Doherty'' and Moran. Stops Jessun 39, Mallory 32. Referee Waller. Attendance 130. rirst Period. . i I ! Miller 3:42. 11 Bone 5:11. " Bone-5:3t. ' ' Second Period. - Bone 2:57. - Wodtke 7:43. Wodtke :29. Third Period. Bone -10:12. Muncie Was Easy. (Special'-to the Palladium.) Muncie, November 14. Lewis and Jean, of Marion, was a combination that Muncie was unable to solve this evening and the, home boys went down in defeat by - the score of 7 to 3. Lewis and Dawson played - a great game on the rush line. Holderness and Farrell pulled together in the third period and kept Marion from scoring. The lineup: Muncie Higgins . . . . , nart Farrell . . . . . pos, Marion . . rush ....... Lewis . rush ..... Dawson . center . .". . . Jean Holderness . half back Cashman goal . . Cameron . Burgess Score Muncie 3, Marion ; 7. Rushes Ilisrgiris 6, Lewis 7. Fouls Lewis. Stons "Cashman C3, Burgess 34. ' Referee Arundel. - ! . ''' Attendance 2,000. First Period. Hart-S:20. Dawson 2:47. IIart-l:34. Lewis -:34. Second Period, nart 4:44. ' Dawson 3:12. Lewis 4:35. Lewis-10:f)l. Dawson :27,

. Dawson :07. Third Period No goal. Loses the First. (Special to the Palladium. ) Ehvood, Ind, November 14. Elwood had no trouble in winuing from Manager Cohen's aggregation this evening and defeated it o to 2. The Indianapolis players played with half-hearted interest and it did not seem to be a matter of life or death with -them. Whipple of Fort Wayne, assisted the visitors on the rush line. ' . The lineup: ' Ehvood : v pos. Indianapolis Roberts O- rush Dalton O 'Malty .. rush Haughton-Whipple Devlin ..... center .... . Coggshall Lyons halfback; O'Hara Starkic .. - '.' goal J Harper Score Elwood 5? Indianapolis 2. Rushes Roberts, Dalton 2. " Fonls Wliipple , I . ; Stops--Harper, 42;VStarkie 23.''. Referee Latham! " Attendance 2,000. First' Period. Roberts-14:22. O'Mally :13. Second Period. Roberts 2:12. O'Mally 2:30. Whipple 4:24. Third Period O'Mally -3:44. Pal ton-1:30.

CENTRAL LEAGUE

P. W. L. Pet. Ft. Wayne ...0 7 2 .778 Danville . . .10 7 3 .700 Terre Haute ..8 4 4 .500 Lafayette 9 4 5 .444 Kokomo 7.3 4 .429 Logansport ...9 2 7 .222

Danville Game. (Special to the Palladium.) Danville, III., November 14. Danville had an easy time with Logansport tonight -and won 6 to 2. Danville lost a goal on fouls. A small crowd witnessed the game. The lineup: Danville pos. Daly rush ... Campbell .... rush . Murtaugh .... center Hardy .... half back IlefTermann .... goal Logansport . . Spencer . . r Lincoln . . .Wihting . .. Griffith .... Berry . Seore Danville G, Logansport 2. Rushes Daly !), . Lincoln 3, Spencer 1. Fouls Murtaugh 2, Olio and Daly Stops Heffermanu 15, Berry 34. Referee Moran. Attendance 850. First Period. Campbell :33. Dal v 7:27. Campbell 2:22. Daly 2:03." Campbell :31. Accidental, Danville :33. Second Period. Whiting-3:30. Third Period Campbell 5 :34. BEFORE BREAKFAST A Few "Bites" While Waiting for Coffee, :. - HERE'S A BITE OR .TWO 5 What has become of the old fashioned woman who wore a, nubia The weather last night was as cold and raw as aa old maid's second love. , '; If a man can get. into a bank after banking hours he considers himself a prominent citizen. ...... -XA woman' can board a train without a ticket, do a little crying and go wherever she pleases. if Along . about this time of year there are only a few votes between a hero and the other kind of a man. -XAbout the third cr fourth day after an election we have remarked that people are thoroughly tired of politics. Tastes are about evenly , divided. TIalf the people want their pickles sour and the other half want them sweet.

RICHMOND POLO MANAGERS GOOD FOR EVIL

MANAGER MR. COHEN Of Indianapolis is Paid Back in Coin of Another Realm Than His Own. If nerve was all .that was required to - win . the penant in the Western Polp-League Manager Cohen and his Indianapolis team would win in a walk., After brow beating the 'Richmond Ueam, the Richmond management and everything connected with Richmond for over a-year and then have the nerve to get down on his knees and send friends to plead for him to the Richmond management to loan him a player so that he would not have to leave the league, Kinfli have been the actions of. Manager Cohen, erstwhile pawnbroker, of the Indianapolis polo team. Richmond managers played the parts of the good - Samaratains and let him have "Kid" Haughton to save him frem being thrown from the league. What have the Richmond managers ever received from the officials of the Western League that would have called for such an action? Not one thing. What they should have done after the treatment they have received in the past from the Purbin-Co-hen aggregation, would have been to turn a cold shoulder to all of the entreaties of the Child of Israel and let him look some place else for a rush. He showed his true calibre when he did not ask the Richmond management personally, but sent his dear friends Norton and Durbin, both of whom love Richmond about as well as he, to intercede for hirn. It is a safe bet that inside of two months all of the officials of the Western League will have forgotten the kind act that the Richmond managers did last Sunday and Richmond will have as hard a time as ever. If polo fans will let their minds drift back to the ending of last year's polo season they will remember that Mr. Cohen, when he knew that Indianapolis bad no chance of winning was .so kind as to let Marion have one of his best players so that Marion, could beat Richmond, but the dope- did not seem to work just right and Richmond won any way. Some of this is coming back to dear Mr. Cohen, as MeGilvary, the man who was dumped at the end of the season, refuses to sign with the pawnbroker aggregation, and it is not likelv that he will come back. FIRST GAME Polo : Enthusiasts Witness Game at - t Coliseum Yesterday. A few polo enthusiasts gathered at, the Coliseum yesterday afternoon to see the first practice of the season. Bone, Jessup, Mansfield and Doherty of . the regular team were out in suits -and battered the ball around the floor several times. Perry an amateur of this city was also out in a suit and practiced with the regular team. ' Cunningham was not out in a suit yesterday afternoon. ' 7 '' GARFIELD Defeated High School Sophomores . t . in a Speedy , Game. . The speedy Shamrocks from Garfield defeated the high school Sophomores 7 to. 6, in an Overtime game at Garfield gymnasium. The winning goal was made by Pierson on a pretty pass from Cox in six minutes overtime. The lineup: Shamrocks pos. High School Coggshell rush Cane Cox rush Mote Pierson center McClellan Shuman .half back. .Knollenberg Essex croal . ; Kye I Referee Schafer. AL -V- .V. Yesterday afternoon the Shamrocks defeated the .Victors 35 to 2.,

P0PET0PBES1DENT i Pius XII Sends a Greeting to Presi

dent Roosevelt. Washington;.- November 14. Archbishop ( hapelle, of New Orleans, Cuba and Porto Rico, who last week returned from Rome, where he spent some time in consultation with the officials of the Vatican, todaj- paid his respects .to President .Roosevelt. He presented, to the president a verbal message of esteem and good will from I 'op( Pius X., The president expressed pleasure at the receipt of the message. After a brief visit to Mon.signore O'Connell, w tor of the Catholic University, Archbishop Chapelle will go to New Orleans and thenee to Havana. ITALIANS In Madison Connty Suffering With Smallpox. Anderson, Ind., NovemWr 14.' Secretary Conrad, of the Madison County Board of. Health, visited a camp of Italian laborers, near Emporia, six miles south of this city. Saturday evening, and discovered that several men in the camp had been suffering from smallpox for a month or more, and that all in the camp and other laborers on a railway grade had been exposed. The camp was immediately quarantined and all who had been exposed were vaccinated and quarantined. The disease had been improperly diagnosed as chickenpox. Two cases of smallpox discovered in this city originated at the Italian camp, and were sent to the pesthouse, two miles east of this eitv. GOOD PRODUCER Is the Oil Well Drilled by Hines & Hamilton on Stont Farm. Portland, Ind., November 14. An oil well drilled by nines & Hamilinn nn th( William Stmif fSu-tn. in . ,. , Pike township, a few days aaro, came -r. " , , , , in dry. It was to have becm aban doncd, but yesterday it was learned that oil had raised several hundred feet in the hole, and that, it is a good producer. The . Cambridge City Oil company has a good producer in No. 1 on the W. J. Bone farm, northeast of Bry ; ant. REV.liiORTHY Of Earlham Called to Portland, In diana. Portland, Ind., November 14 -The Rev. M. S. Ken worthy, instructor in thp Pihliral dPnartment of Earlham College, at Richmond, has been called to the pastorate of the Friends' cu iu iuc paMoraw y church in this city.

commiSBioner general, jars, rugenio The members of the Ministerial M. Ambard, Jaime Annexy, Mrs. ! -Association at their regular meeting jairae Ahnexy, Nicolas Hernandez At., .the Vatican Monsignore Ken-

yesieruay mornmg snoneneu regular program and discussed mi -

nor, topics, ihe popular ;,Jecture miioner-gencral, Mrs. Stanley Bois 'Rome, November 14The-etiv-course was the principal , tonic dis-. p E Pieris, assistant commissioner, ities in honor of the juHlee' of: the cussed during . the morning. ". The, Morocco James W. Langerman.- immaculate' conception 1 may be said ministers are all interested in the 0,. . generali A. .U. Dan- ttf. have, begun today withC thoWdsuceess of this course. The paper. fwth -1 , general. ... ing of .1 brilliant consist bry,- wHich which was to have been read "by the , T)finniflrkr-Auiist Busch. sneeial was especially interestinsr,' as (be

Rev. M. S. Marble was continued until the" next meeting. ' Pointer for Parents.

Teach the boys as well as the girls j pt-.R g. Hunt, soecial repre- twenty-five, gathered in the hall to the proper way to put the bedclothes tative ; of the cpmmissoiner gen- the consistory at the ; Vatican; v half to air over two ehaii-S in the morn-. eraj'- ad ""reoresentetive of the art an hour before 'the ceremony, taking ing. and also occasionally giye the. committee of Great Britain. their places in three groups-carai-boys a lesson in. simple .cooking by j Belgium Emil Vauthier, special nals, bishops, cardinal-priests 'aad having them help prepare" breakfast. attahevof fine arts. ''.."'X cardinal-deacons - making.., phe.f The lad who can make a good cup. sweden -Carl Lidman, representa-'"' those imposing pictures -only Icnlfe of ( coffee, broil a steak and seryetive denartment 0f education, A. seen at-the apostolic palace. v a" them will lose nothing of manliness, gejUtdberg, representative depart-) The United States was representbut may find the. knowledge useful Tnert of fin0 arta Karl Ste;n renre- ed at the consistory by MonsignOre in after life. Exchange. ;. tentative department of mannfac- Kenedy, rector "of the 'American' (1- " ture, Ture Marcus, sneeial corres- lege here, and Monsiinore Secon, Health Office. pondent, Mrs. Ernst Lunbald. Herr titnlar archbishop of Helliopolis, o Births To Mr. and Mrs. Albert ' Carlson. Herr Oscar Falkman. Jersey City, N. J. -Monsicmore Ken-

Ptiener, .National Avenue. eirl, sixth child; to Mr. and airs. Louis Feltman, 225 Southwest' Third street, a girl, second child. s ' "JL." "i ZE. I Bears tia T&3 Rilld YSKl Hate AhaiS KEpt

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RICHMOND vs MARION WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOV. 16 AT COLISEUM

Tickets at Allord's Drug Store

COMMISSIONERS PASS THROUGH FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES AT WORLD'S FAIR WERE EHROUTE TO DAYTON Where They Will Spend Today Visiting the National Cash Register Company. a .... i.. i., il:.. special Pullman train carrjmg . the

foreign commissions of the Louisi-' march. Among the police officers ana Purchase. Exposition arrived in from different cities present were this city from St. Louis, enroute to 1 Anthony George, L. J. Forman, F. Davton, where they will snend the lU Hubbard, J. A. Brady and Andy , .... XT g- . i Sovengn, all of Marion, Mr. Sovlay visiting the National Cash Keg-! i , . - T J , erign is also chief of police of Jaister company.. The special train iapa. Henry Slate and Thomas was one of the most perfectly ap-.7acksonr represented the police' depointed trains that has ever gone ' partment of Indianapolis. All of the thmiih fhis vifv. T, following officers-were highly pleased with the

i - ! the list of foreign representatives on -board the train:

Groat Britain Captain Percy At- r. . , . , ,. , . . n i J , Everything connected with the ball kin. commissioner of education and . . social econom l- went oil in first class shape and a soeia economy. general good time was had by every KiiKsia Edward Grunwaldt (coun- it , , . , .. . , - one who attended. The large danccilor of commerce), executive com- ; a . , , . . . . . t.t .. . ing floor was crowded from. early m missioner, Max Borkowitz, commis- 4 .., , . , , v ,. ' ' the evening until the clock had tollsioner. , . , . . . . ... ,

I New Zealand T. E. Donne, repre0. T lr r, . Siam James 11. don1, royal com- . r ' tssioner general, Mrs. James H. t ' missioner gene i ore.

Peru Alejandro Garland, com- . , . , . t . . . . J , ,r , ,r funds derived from last evening's missioner reneral, Manual C. v e- tv . . . r y,--t- . ball will be given to the pension larde, E. E., secretary fund the dancc . Nicaragua - Alexander Bermudez, Qn Supcrintcndent Gomon a special commissioner, Mrs. Alexan- ,,i . . n. , 7 , ,r ' ttt-ii -rr ounced the polo score between Itichder Permudez. Mrs. William H. ...

Thomson Mrs N Cracsr Mrs. N M AlSii: tv... t n ar(j Augnstin Porras, Frutos Ale-' jiiss mum .xuvwunt x uui j. vjuerVenezuela Eugenio M. Ambard, jaime Annexy, jr. " . I j Ceylon-IIon. Stanley Bois, com(represeiitative of the" commissioner" general. . . Honduras Howarti' S. Reed, ex'pfi0 cAmmisainnpr a,Herr R. Jobon. Foreign! Press Paul Oeker, assist ant commissioner, to the foreign pre'ss, Mrs. Paul .Oekeir. . . . 1 nnatamala Cnrln F TrJcnvanj.! I T T 'special comTnissinuer. j n n lrtrron, secretary, Manual M. Giron, assist -

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: ant secretary. J Norway-;rrx'derick LrM.' Waaga ; (vice consul of Norway and Swpden) commissioner, Lieutenant " Oustav Thaulow, secretary to commissioner, j Argentine Ouillermo A: Puento, commissicnelr of manufactures and electricity, Alejandro S. Marquestau. Mexico Isioder Aldasoro, chief department of arts and ethnology, Isnaro Pustamante, assistant chief department of education, Lieutenant .lose Ortiz Monasterio, assistant chief department of transportation, C. F. Ueissig, secretary. Costa Pico Amando Cespedes, representative. Portugal Lniz Vidal, chief of exhibits, Gcrmano Courrege, commercial attache. POLICEMEN'S BALL Pnnf inn fpnm x ' present and took part in the rrrand recepiion aceoraeu mem ana tiad nothing but words of praise for SuTprlritmid.nf CI r rm rn on1 1,? nnn Richmoml ghowed lheir -.pp, iivu ui mo khhuui ponce jurce, , . . . 1 , . r . which the city possesses and turned . . , , ., flllt Tn icon t n hnln (hum n lloia . i , it .i nanciAn fnm wl no nil rP K a , aerson and tne crow - iSoftV bT the victory of the home team. j Vim VI V I IIH V uaaiBva nedy Represents United States. Pope lately bad been indisposedffnd -many persons wished', to "be assured of shis recorery. : A11 the :arditl livin? in Rome.- nnmberintr-ahout j nedy, at the private consistory, re-t-ceived the pallium for Archbishop . Glennon, of St. Loms. r I - -r - f, K V .v. Richmond Lodge of Masons will T n.1r in iYia on'nro1 onnrontlnfl uae wiiv "t'l1 degree tomorrow evening

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