Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 104, 3 May 1906 — Page 3
The Richmond Palladium, Thursday, May 3, 1906.
Page 3.
Local pOirftSinig C3eS General
LOSES ANOTHER BIG GAME Reds Going Fast on Downward Toboggan and All Their Pitchers Fah . GIANTS DEFEAT BOSTON IN 10 INNING GAME IN BOSTON YESTERDAY, NEW YORK INCREASED HER LEAD SEVERAL P0INT3. NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost PCt. New York 14 3 .823 Chicago 12 6 .066 Pittsburg 10 G .623 Philadelphia 9 8 .523 Hoston 7 10 .412 St. Louis 6 9 .400 Cincinnati 7 14 .333 Brooklyn 4 13 .235 RESULTS YESTERDAY. New York 4; Boston 3, (10 innings.) Pittsburg 4; Cincinnati 1. Chicago 5; St. Louts 1. Publishers' Tress ' Cincinnati, May 2. The Pittsburg Nationals hit Dorner harl in the early innlgs of today's game and the result was never in doubt, the Reds going down to defeat. Score: R. H. E. itts ....0 1120000 04 11 0 Cln 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 01 7 3 Batteries Willis and Peltz; Dor. ner and Schlel. Umpire Johnstone. TEN INNING GAME. Boston May 2. The New York Nationals won out In the tenth inning from Boston today. Strang batted for McGlnnity In the eight inning and hit for two bases sent two men across the plate and tied the score. Marshall hit scored the winning run in the tenth. Score: R. H. E. N. Yk..0 10000020 14 9 4 Bos ...2 00000100 03 9 1 Batteries McGlnnity, Ames and Marshall; Maroney and Needham. Umpires Emslle and Conway. CHICAGO COLTS WIN. St. Louis, May 2. The Chicago Nationals scored two runs In the third Inning today and this proved enough A 1 -Sil 1 A. - 1 . to win uiw game, aunougn me uoiis knocked out three more runs in the eighth and ninth Innings and St, Louis was easily defeated. Score: R. H. E Chi 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 15 12 0 St. L. 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 01 10 3 Batteries Lundgren and Kllng; Egan and 1 Holmes. Umpires Klem and Carpenter. OPENING GAME AT MARION Usual Program will Be Followed Ex pect Much of Manager Jessup. , Palladium Special.! , Marion, Ind.. May 2. The usual uro gram will be followed in this city to morrow, on the occasion of the open ing of the interstate Association base ball season, with the Lima. O.. team There will be a parade with music, and the first ball will be pitched by the mayor. There Is much interest In the sport in this city, and the nros pects for a good season are bright The fans have confidence in the ablli ty of Manager Jessup to provide a winning combination. JUST CAUSE, THAT'S ALL BRIDE REFUSES TO MARRY The Bridegroom Waited and the Wed ding March Had Been Played When the Stubborn Girl Decided that She Would Not Wed. Publishers' Tress Wichita, Kan.. May 2. After a II cense had been issued, with relatives and friends gathered for the wedding, two miinster8 present to perform the ceremony, the bride attired . in her wedding gown and even as the, wed ding march was begun, Miss Ada Mae Ballard, a well known young woman of this city, declared today that she would not become the wife of the man 6he had promised to wed. Relatives and the embarrassed groom, Georgo li. Brown, a prosper ous farmer, gathered around ' the defiant bride and pleaded with her in vain Relatives and the embarrassed vain. The girl refused to go on with the ceremony and also refused to say why she would not. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla create an appetite and Rive you strength.
IIC TAT!
Games Today.
NATIONAL LEAGUE. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Pittsburg at Cincinnati. Chicago at St Louis.' New York at Boston. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Detroit at Chicago. St Louis at Cleveland. Washington at Philadelphia. Boston at New York. 't AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Minneapolis at Columbus. St. Paul at Toledo. Kansas City at Indianapolis. Milwaukee at Louisville. 110 BASEBALL AT LOUISVILLE ROW .ouisville-Milwaukee Games Scheduled for This Week ' Postponed for Races. SLUG-FEST AT TOLEDO PITCHERS ON BOTH TEAMS AL LOW THIRTEN HITS EACH, BUT TOLEDO WON BY SCORE OF 10 TO 8 INDIANAPOLIS LOST.
AMERICAN ASSOCIAT'N STANDING Won. Lost. PCt. Louisville 10 '4 .714 Toledo 10 4 .714 Columbus 9 6 .600 St. Paul 7 7 .500 Milwaukee 6 6 .500 Kansas City 6 8 .428 Minneapolis 5 10 .333 Indianapolis 4 9 .308
RESULTS YESTERDAY. Louisville-Milwaukee game post poned account rain. Toledo 10; St. Paul 8. Columbus 9; Minneapolis 4. Kansas City 9; Indianapolis 3. r Palladium Spec!:!. Louisville, May 2. On account of the races here this week, the American Association baseball game scheduled to be played by the Milwaukee and Louisville teams, have been post poned until later In the season. TOLEDO WINS THIRD. Toledo, May 2. In the third game of the series here with the St. Paul team, the locals won by a score of 10 to 8 in a fast , exciting game. Visitors had no errors, but locals bunched hits and sent men across home plate. Score: R. H.E. St. Paul 201 1 0020 2 8 13 0 Toledo ..2 0121013 x 10 13 3 Batteries Slagle, Disch and Dull; Pratt and Abbott Umpires Owens and Haskell . COLUMBUS WON. Columbus, May 2. The Columbus team took the lead in the first inning in the game with Minneapolis today and with five runs to start with, won the game with fair margin. Score: Minn. .. 10001001 1 4 9 4 Colmbus 51001020 x 9 13 2 Batteries KKilroy and Yeager; Veil and Ryan. Umpires. KaKne. TAIL-ENDERS LOST AGAIN. Indianapolis, May 2. Kansas City defeated the Indianapolis American Association team here this afternoon in the seventh and eight Innings, af ter the locals had the score 3 to 0 in their favor. Score: R. H. E K. Cy 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 5 09 9 3 Ind 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 03 14 4 Batteries Frantz and Sullivan; Summers, Kahol. Umpires Egan and Sullivan. TRY TO GET DUKE CASE DISMISSED (Continued From Page One.) The court over ruled the motion, however, and the first witness for the defense was introduced. The witness was Fred Relnert a city surveyor", of New York ,who produced maps and drawings of Mrs. Duke's home in West 68th street, to offset the testi mony' of a previous witness who had said that she had seen the defendant and Huntoon enter Mrs. Duke's room on the third floor, by leaning over the banisters on the fifth story Witness also testified that it was im possible to see into Mrs. Duke's room from the street as the view was oh structed by a screen which was offer ed in evidence. William Thompson, a Manhattan photographer, was next called and identified some photographs that he had taken of Mrs. Duke's house. These pictures were offered in evidence. No Definite Understanding. Owners of the . Remy Brothers Electrical Company, of Anderson were here yesterday to make arrangements with the South Side Improvement Association in regard to the site which the company is to be given when it locates here. There is some small difference between the Improve ment Association and the factory men in regard to this site and it was not satisfactorily arranged yesterday. The Anderson men returned home with no definite understanding in the matter,
CLEVELAND WINS A HARD FOUGHT GAME
Climbed to Second Place by Taking Close and Interesting Game from St. Louis. RAIN POSTPONED GAME TEAMS COULD NOT PLAY AT NEW YORK ON ACCOUNT OF WEATHERDONOVAN SCATTERS CHICAGO'S HITS. AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost PCt Philadelphia .. 9 5 .643 Cleveland .. 7 6 .538 Washington 8 7 .533 Chicago 7 7 .500 Deroit 7 7 .500 St. Louis 7 8 .466 New York 6 8 .466 New York 6 8 .429 Boston 6 9 ,359 RESULTS YESTERDAY. Philadelphia vs. New York, postpostponed; rain. Washington, 3; Boston, 2. Chicago. 2; Detroit, 5. St. Louis, 1; Cleveland, 2. Publishers' Pressl Cleveland, May 2. Both teams played an errorless game in the field today, and the Cleveland Americans won a close and interesting game from St. Louis. Score: R. H. E. St. Louis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 7 0 Cleve. .. 10000100 x 2 5 0 Batteries Glade and Rickey; Berhart and Clark. Umpires O'Loughlin and Connor. RAIN AT NEW YORK. New York, May 2. Rain caused a postponement of the game here today between the Philadelphia and New York Americans. DONOVAN PITCHED FINE GAME. Detroit, May 2. Donovan at all times kept the hits of the Chicago Americans well scattered and the Detroits walked away with today's game. Store: R. H. E. Chicago .0 000011002 7 4 Detroit . .3 0000200 x 5 7 4 Batteries Owen and Sullivan; Don ovan and Schmidt Umpire Con nelly. CY YOUNG HARD HIT. Boston, May 2. Cy, Young was hit hard in the first inning of today's game, the Washington Americans scoring two runs, which lead the Bostons were not able to overcome. Score: Boston ..0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 9 1 Batteries Patten and Heyden; Young, Winters and Graham. Umpire Sheridan. Moulders Get Increase. Publishers' Press! Cincinnati, O., May 2. One thous and iron moulders in Cincinnati, Cov ington and Newport, Ky., today se cured a nine hour work day without reduction of pay. This was agreed on late this afternoon at a conference between representatives of three unions and the Cincinnati branch of the National Founders Association. The workmen have been working ten hours without a wage scale agreement for the last two years. WAS A SEASON OF DISASTERS The Shipwreck List During Winter and Spring Was Unusually Large. MANY MILLIONS ARE LOST TOTAL OF EIGHTY-FIVE LIVES LOST DURING THE PERIODPARTIAL LIST OF BIG DISASTERS. IPublishers Press New York, May 2. Four million dollars is the estimated Ios3 of marine underwriters for the past winter. In addition to this insured property loss, the North Atlantic alone hai exacted a grim sea-toll of at least eighty -five lives. The past five months have been particularly disastrous for shipping. Off the New England coast and the mari time provinces of Canada, fifty-four ships have gone down. As usual, the schooners suffered most severely. Thrity-seven craft of this description nine steamers and eight barges com prise a list of disasters representing a money loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars in addition to the human lives swallowed up by the wave3 .' The worst disaster of the si inter in our waters was the wreck of the steamship "British King." off Sable Island, March 11 ,on her way from New York to Antwerp. At least twenty lives were lost The winter's list of wrecks began In November with the sinking of the Norwegian steamer "Turbin" ia sight of Clark's Harbor,
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CHARLES S. FRANCIS, NEW AMBASSADOR TO AUSTRIA. ' Ambassador Francis, who succeeds Bellamy Storer at the court of AustriaHungary, has been since 1900 minister to Greece, Including Servia and Roumania in his Jurisdiction. lie was born in 1S53, was a note'l athlete in college and started life as a printer and country newspaper man. His father was also minister to Greece. Mr. Francis owns the Troy (N. Y.) Times and at one time was chairman of the executive committee of the National Editorial association.
N. S. Fourteen men went down with the "Turbin." A fortnight later the British steamer "Lunenburg" sunk a few minutes after striking a rock oK the Magdalen Islands, resulting in tin loss of a dozen lives and the cargo From then until the end of MarcL there was hardly a week without it shiywreck. Suggest Some Changes. At a meeting of the Wayne County Board of Education Tuesday, several resolutions favoring a change in the present school system were passed and will be presented to the State Board of Education at its next meet ing. The most important points are the favoring of a nine year common school course, instead of eight, with the same number of subjects, and that the grades throughout the com mon and high school be numbered from one to thirteen, eliminating the four years called High School years and having the whole system graded with numbers. OASTOniA. Bears th KM You Have Always 30w Signature of VALUE OF SEAWEEDS. The Use of Irish Moss as a Food and a Medicine. Irish moss is used as a foundation for many desserts in the dietary kitchens where especial dishes are prepared fo! Invalids. An fiuthority on the questic: of seaweeds states that scurvy, tb dread of sailors, caused by the absent of potash in the salt meat which fori; a part of every ship's provisions, woui be ameliorated by the liberal use of so moss jelly, which is rich in potas! Irish moss has always a place In th medicine chest of the old fashione. housewife, who pins her faith to it healing properties for colds, son throats, etc. On the coast where the moss is gathered and also in the majority of Irish families the moss is boiled, strained, boiled again with lemon juice and sugar, until it is of the consistency of sirup. It is taken hot, a teaspoonful at a time, and is said to be a very good remedy for the maladies referred to. The Indians use the ashes of seaweed for granular swellings. It is also used by the Chinese, and so highly is it prized by them both as a medicine and a food that it is gathered in some parts of the Tacifiefcoast, principally at Monterey, and sent back to China. The supply of seaweed of every description seems inexhaustible, as that pulled or reaped from the rocks is replaced by another and a more luxuriant growth the following year. On the Atlantic coast it is harvested only during the months from June to August, but at Monterey it is gathered every day all the year around. Leslie's Weekly. SLOT MACHINES. Thr Were I'aed Dnrinar the Time and Rela-a of Rameaes. A correspondent of the Boston Her ald writes: "It is true there are few things new under the sun. 'Air beds, or what we call pneumatic beds, were used by the Romans before the Christian era. The most remarkable duplication of an old invention is the nickel-in-the-slot machine. This was first used during the time and reign of Barneses, in the eighteenth dynasty of Egypt, for the purpose of supplying holy water, that which had beeif blessed by the priests, to the people who desired It. The machine was urn shaped, with a smajl cylinder inside, through which ran a rod connecting a valve at the bottom of the cylinder with one at the top. These were operated by a lever which closed the bottom valve while opening that at the top, when the cylinder would fill with a fixed amount of water. To obtain the water a cup was placed at the outlet; a coin of three drachmae, equal to about 75 cents of our money, was dropped Into the 'slot' on to a scale pan In the end of the lever. This opened the cylinder at the top and closed the lower valve, allowing the coin to slide off, the weight of water closing the top valve, opening the lower one and allowing the water to run into the cup. This is the basis of all patented slot machines of the present time and dates . back to nearly 3,000 B. C
Limited Da thin or. Dr. Somerville Hastings, lecturing at the London Institute of Hygiene on "Cleanliness Is Next to Godliness," said that people were much cleaner now than la the reigns of Queen Mary and Elizabeth, - when the washing of clothes was unknown. Cotton was hardly in use, and linen was expensive. The poor wore rough woojen garments, which were never washed, and the better classes adorned themselves with silks and velvets, which were dyed when they would no longer pass mus
ter in regard to cleanliness. It is recorded, continued Dr. Hastings, that Jaines I. never washed either hands or face during the period he pawed as the wisest fool in Christendom, but confined his cleanliness within the narrowlimits of wiping his finger tips upon a damp napkin. London Telegraph. 'ailadium Wane Ads Pay.
I 1 I a a is the accepted garmit these cool nights J . We carry a largeine in all the new colors and labrics, fron? $10.0D fo $25.00
For Thursday and
Michigan Potatoes, nice, large and 68cts.
Gold Medal the King of all Bread Bakers at 63c tamper sack, 50 lbs $1.25. Bob White none better for a Winter Wheat 50j, $2.00 per cwt. Pride Richmond, you al! know how good thisr is at per sac 60cts, per
CWl $1.43. SPECIAL: SPECIAL. ' 1 gal. Milk pans either round or to each customer. I Sweet California Hams 11cfa per Do not forget this will be tie last hams at the above price. I See the store that saves y Specials on the Dry Good!
u thpennies.
Sit We are saving you more rior self on aclose margin. . Finest line of Muslin, She! ing,
the city. Pomilla Suiting, just the thing for your white dresses and skirts for summer. Our Dress makers and people who know claim it is better than the Indian Head. 1000 yards to be sold at 124 ct Per yard. Store opened Friday night. Pictorial Review Patterns on Sale.
HOOD'S MODEL DEPARTMENT STORE
Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phone 1079; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411-413 Main Street. -
RHEUMATISM
iSUKYOfl'S Rheumstisia Vara pains In arm back. stiff or swollen Joints la ' a. fewhours. PoslUrely J3 cores In a Ifew daya. Contains no morphine or drug todeaora the pain, but neutralizes the acid ana diireaout all rheuniatlc poison from th vteou U CA 0 CA Cj C OUR NEW FORCH URE IJCST WHAT 6U WANT BEDDING PICTURES o o o o o riday smooth, while a ey last at per bu flat bottom at 5cts. Not over 10 pant lb. opportunity you will have to get and getting others to cut goods and Laces and Insertions of any store in
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921-929 jaln St,
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AHRW Shoe Specials nil fll This 111 In ONE LOT Of ladie ' hand-turned, all pat. t YA KiA I rTr sa, 4MW WW , plain toe, Gibson Shoes tic price $2.50 a pair. ONE LO Of ladies' white canvas Oxfords, trcbd stvle and last price 31.00 a pair. ONE LOT Of ladies' patent colt Low Shoes shape) price he new $2.00. ONE LOT or UAi rn M4f I hand-sewed welt, Gib son tie. a splendid wear Jng shoe, with lots of Cf le price $2 25. ONE LOT Of fntn'e UknA f Patent . Coltf or Gun Metal Shoes, latest toes -at $3.00 J pair. Sec Our Line Of Misses' Boys' and Children's Shoes Strong & Garfield's fine hand sewed! Shoes for men in all leathers. Price $5.00 low or high cut. IF YOU NT SHOES
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