Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 157, 2 July 1906 — Page 8
V""'. Page Eight The Richmond Palladium, Monday, July 2, 1906.
Look for Sign N. &-N. Shoes Look for Sign N. & N. Shpfs Look for Sign N. & N. Shoes
CO o CO
03
CO
o O
I o CO
3
CO
I
Oipoed aljday the Qtfo
That means we rrfst do three days' business
on Monday andjruesday. VJe are ioadjd with Oxfords, Slip-
, Sbndals, Tennis and
perSi
Black, White dfid Tan Oxfords, Men's and Boys' Outing Canvas Shoes or Oxfords
and Children's Slippers.
Don't ruin your feet and your disposition
Put yourself in condition to enjoy the 4th
and COMFORTABLE FOR YOUR FEET a thing you. may need.
ly weaJ
m m
by &
ing heavy, hot footwear.
etting something COOL
on't fail to see us for any
MEFT & NUSBAUIV1
CO (Q 3
Co
CO o CO GO
o o
CO
CO o CD CO
Look for Sign N. & N. Shoes Look for Sign N. & N. Shoes Look for Sign N. & N. Shoes
HID III ICE COOLER TO EVADE OFFICER
Butcher Nearly Froze to Death Before He Finally Surrendered. .
JVAflTED AS A WITNESS
ABLE TO GIVE TESTIMONY AFTER THAWING IN WARMER AIR
FRIEND CONVICTED BAULT AND BATTERY.
A8-
: Hartford City, Ind., July 1. (Spl.) iWhen Marshal Nelson Worley called tat the . Carroll meat market to subpoena William Duffey as a witness in the (trlal of Herbert Witmer, charged (with assault and battery' on John Ducey, he was unable to And his man. ; Duffey had seen the officer coming and attempted to elude the officer by hiding in the big cooler. The offiicer, on finding that he was not in the
store, decided to wait. In the mean-
ime, Duffey sat on a box in the cooler
until he became so cold that he had
to come out. Then Marshal Worley read him the subpoena and took him to the mayor's office, where, after he had thowed out, he made a very good .witness. Witmer was found guilty and was fined $11.20.
Saturday's Review
i For the benefit of those who did not ee the Sunday issue of the Palladium the following brief index of the most ' Important news is given:
i Domestc ! School of vice of Murdered Architect White had many prominent men as patrons. Two men in reathitt county jail, Kentucky, confess to assassinating three during a feud.
' Washington. Congress adjourned; President Roosevelt dominant figure in closng .'scenes; discovered error and stopped ,$3000,000 grab; vaudeville in the house. Senator Cullom reviewed work of congress; said session was -most notable in history of nation for years. Speaker Cannon in speech adjourning house said It was most notable 'congress In thirty years.
! New York. Heat caused ten deaths, one attempt at suicide and three cases of insanity In New York. Vessel sailed to carry hair tonic to millions of Malagasy, stricken .with baldness.
Foreign. Goremykin Cabinet is Russia.
doomed in
State. t Wind ttorm accompanied by heavy Tain and severe lightning sweeps over north part of state and four persons are killed.Officers elected at the biennial contention of the State Epworth League at Logansport, Bryan's name is cheered wildly at Democratic convention held at Monti-cello.
Local. That Mary Bertram suicided is firmly established by a letter she left behind. Council committee will recommend that city financially aid P.eid Memorial Hospital. County has forty-two-June brides. Mr. Fred Carr and Miss Juliet Hoillngsworth married.
Call Up (either phone)
iWo take your Want V Ads By Phone nnd Choree Them
A -. A A A. A A. -- A A. A A A. A A if i if -- A A J rMr l ir w " 4 JF F " 4 e V 'Mr T t
t t 4. i i . n i " it
New Laws in Brief
Among the important bills passed by the fifty-ninth congress w.-e the following: Railroad rate measure. Pure food bill. Meat inspection bill. Deficiency bill. Omnibus public building measure, ' Lake Erie and Ohio canal bill. Naval appropriation measuer. Immunity of witnesses from prosecution who give testimony jafore federal courts. Type of Panama canal fixed. Internal revenue tax on denatured alcohol removed. Reorganization of the consular service. Appropriations ' amoBnt to $900,000,000. Plans to be submitted for the greatest battleship afloat. Bill passed to preserve the scenic beauty of Niagara Falls. Tariff on goods entering Philippine Island trade revised. " Employers' - liability bill passed. One million, three hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars to be expended by government at Jamestown tercentennial. - Nearly $5,000,000 in cash and supplies donated to California quake and fire sufferers.
CITY WILL NOT BE raURTHLESS There Will Be Festivities at ' Both the Parks, Baseball and Bicycle Races.
MANY PICNICS PLANNED
THERE WILL BE BALLOON ASCENSION AT JACKSON PARK IN AFTERNOON CONCERTS AND FIREWORKS AT GLEN.
The Fourth will be celebrated in this city with a little more than the usual pomp and display. Both of the parks will have band concerts In the afternoon and evening and along with this there will be dancing. . Many pic: nlcs are dated for the day and Glen Miller will be packed with lunch baskets, and merrymakers. There will be an influx of picnicers from the surrounding towns and an excursion from Dayton will lend an added population to the Glen. In the afternoon under the auspices of the local sportsmen there will be bicycle races at Earlham. These will be for. various holiday prizes, which will be contributed by local merchants. In the evening there will be fire-works displays at both parks and throughout the city. The exhibition at the Glen will draw many persons as this display promises to be very beautiful, in that it will be over the lake. Base ball will claim the atendance of the "fans" both at the Athletic Park and at East Haven. At Jackson Park there will be a baloon ascension in the afternoon.
WATS
LEADS
IH THE SINGING Last Day in the House Is Given Over to Singing Many Patriotic Airs.
MANY SENATORS LOOK ON
SIXTH DISTRICT CONGRESSMAN LEAVES SICK BED TO GO TO HOUSE TO LEAD IN GREAT CHOIR WORK.
MURDOCK GETS ANOTHER
BUYS THE STOCK OF E. & P.
Traction Line Built by Perry J. Freeman Has Been Sold to MurdockMarshall Syndicate of Lafayette Will Extend Line.
Louis Ludlow, writing from Washington, says: Indiana men were conspicuously in the lime light when the first session of the Fifty-ninth congress faded into history Saturday. Representative "Jim" Watson, whose singing is pronounced by Speaker Cannon the sweetest of all earthly melody, performed in the role of choir leader in the House. The senators are too dignified to permit singing in the Senate chamber, but many of them stole quietly over to the House and enjoyed the feast of music. Watson stood in one of the aisles and beat time with an Imaginary baton. He left a sick bed to go to the House, and although the perspiration rolled in great beads from his face, his musical performance seemed to do him good. The fun started about 11:30 when the House took its first fifteen-minute recess. That was when Watson got up and turned loose the opening word: of "My Country, 'Tis of Thee." Gen. Keifer of Ohio, who was speaker of the House longer ago than most people care to remember, climbed over a dozen or so seats, plowed through a group of his colleagues and joined the choir leader. The general is proud of his singing and he -never loses an opportunity to exercise his vocal chords. Chairman Tawney of the Appropriations Committee, who was once a real actoiv and Olmstead of Pennsylvania, who thinks he missed his calling by not going on the concert circuit, joined in to help out Mr'. Watson. In a little while pretty nearly everybody on the floor able to speak above a whisper, had joined in the refrain and the grand old song was thundered out by 300 voices until it shook the glass skylights.
HAS MADE GREAT
AT YALE
RECORD
The stock of the Evansville and
Princeton Traction company wa
transferred last Saturday to the Mu,
dock-Marshall syndicate of Lafaye
Judge P. J. Freeman started the b Mind
ing of the road about three yeararago.
Within the past thirty days theorigi
nal stockholders, Including
Freeman, have been unload
holdings, and Saturday the
consummated. The work
Judge
their was
extend-
leal
ing the line to Vincennesf will begin
at once.
A PURE T. BORATEDll !
ileum
DAINTILYVer FU MED.
i vuiiin'iis in rwru i nivu ur wag
M. J. QuIgieyT E?"
DEATHS AND FUNERALS.
BACKMEYER Caroline Backmey-
er, aged 74 years, widow of William
Backmeyer, died yesterday morning at the home of her daughter Mrs. George Bullerdick, 100 North 6th St. Time of funeral will be announced later. SCHALK Peter Schalk died yesterday morning at his home In East Germantown. The funeral will take place from the home at 1,0 o'clock Tuesday morning. Please omit flowers. SHARKETT James J. Sharkett aged 65 years, is dead at his home. 2126 N. F street after a short illness. His wife, five sons and one daughter survive him. .The funeral will be held from St. Mary's church Tuesday at 9 A. M. Body will be placed In the vault at Earlham. One son is on the way from San Francisco. Kindly omit flowers.
Fid" Jackson, Who Learned Baseball in Richmond, now A College Hero.
A VERSATILE ATHLETE
AS PITCHER, FIRST BASEMAN AND GOOD BATSMAN JACKSON HAS HELPED YALE TO MANY VICTORIES.
The Indianapolis Star yesterday said: 'Fielding Vaughan Jackson, the Richmond, (Ind.,) boy who proved to be a wonderfully successful pitcher on the Yale varsity nine last season, has proven that he is one of the most versatile of college players by playing a game at first base for Yale this year. In the deciding contest with Harvard last Tuesday his stick was the big factor in the Yale victory. He got three of his team's eight hits. Throughout the season he has been fielding and hitting in excellent style. An injury to his arm prevented lis pitching again this year, but he proved just as valuable to his team as an infielder. It will be remembered that last season, while pitching he defeated Harvard by a timely hit in the last stages of the game. "Jackson learned to play baseball on t.he town lots at Richmond, and he aledv acquired there a physique that made him, with comparatively little training a good football player. He learned the rudiments of the latter game at Exeter and had no difficulty in making the Yale team. His cour
age and coolness while on the playing field are said by his admirers at Yale to be the factors in his makeup that made him a powerful member af any team.
Jackson Good Sportsman. "Jackson is only 21 years old an Is declared by those acquainted with present undergraduare life at Yale to be one of the best sportsmen in the school. He is a charitable winner and a good loser. He never loses his head in any game, no matter how inense the situation may be, and that Is largely what made him a winning pitcher and a great pinch hitter. When only 10 years old young Jackson let the baseball microbe sink deep Into his anatomy. It will never be removed unless "Old Age" turns an X-ray on him and destroys it. Spending nearly all his four years of "prep" work at Exeter save a short time spent at the Episcopal High School at Alexandria, a., Jackson made his name one that the alumni of Exeter honor. The love for outdoor sports Impelled him to try for the football eleven. He made it and showed wonderful strength and 'intuitive football sense.' But the latter did not save him from an injury that might have kept a youth of less physical strength out of athletics for the remainder of his life. He played baseball too, at Exeter and did well. Yale appealed to Jackson. He liked the stoicism that her athletes possessed. He believed in her discipline and longed for the day he could walk from New Haven a Yale "grad." Makes Freshman Team. "Scarcely had he been at New Haven a week before he made the freshman football team. Throwing himself into the practice work on the gridiron he became a central figure in the hard scrimmage between the varsity and the "chopping block" eleven. It was a labor of love with him to be a scrub. It was for Yale that he left his cuiticle along the gridiron. "But the less strenuous work of the diamond also appealed to him. Here too, Yale found an admirable candidate for high honors. He pitched so well that the coveted "Y" was his. But sickness, a sort of malaria, overtook him, and for one season Yale was without his services in the big diamond encounters."
THE CITY IH BRIEF,
Robert Hutchlns. and Xonrad Mc
Means of Indianapolis pent Sunday
with friends in this
Teeth extracted Xfrithout pain or
no charges. C. J.VIendenhall. Dentist
DECKS CLEAR TO DATE
NO MORE IMPROVEMENTS
Street Commissioner Genn Has Completed all the Work Outlined for Him and Will Wait Till After Fourth to Begin Again.
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Njfris and Mr.
and Mrs. Cal LamberJT of Anderson,
spent yesterday in JHe city with W,
B. Dye and family.
Teiepnone thff menmona eam
Laundry to gewyour laundny tf,
Richmond Commajid
Templar, meets Monde
2, for business only
"Street improvements are all cleared up to date," so says Street Commissioner Genn. Meaning by that that there is no more work to be done by him until the board hustles around and finds something to occupy "Doc's" mind and time. The work of putting in brick crossings along North Eleventh street is now finished. The National Road from West Fifth street to the entrance of Earlham cemetery, which was recently taken into the city, has been rolled and the grass on each side cut down. The road is now eight feet wider than before and is considered to be in better form than .uany of the city streets. The board las several street improvements unler consideration, which will be taken up at their next meeting. No more work, other, than keeping the illeys clean, will be attempted until after the Fourth.
Miss Ida Manger Is spending a few weeks visiting her parents at Columbus. Ohio.
Fire Works, Baloon'
chute drop, Shootin Bartsl's, 925 Main.
V tf.
Kjhts
NCvenvvr, July
s&M.y Para-
Crackers at l-2t
Rev. James Sheerin, of Clinton, Mass., leaves for his home this morn-
The city council meets tonight.
Ramsey Poundstone is confined to his bed with asthma.
The new cement tvalk in front of the Gennett theatre has been completed.
The foundation of Ben Barters house on South ISth street has been completed and the erection will be begun today.
Henry Gennet's new electric motar car has arrived. It is one of the most . . . . it
improved ann nandsomest streetfwag-
ons in the city.
Horse trading has reacjied the zenith of its interest in thefity. Scarcely a day goes by that tmme ten or fifteen horses do not clmnse hands.
A
..CEO. M.AYER.. Western & SouffiCrn Life Ins. Co.
Rooms 33-34, ColoniaLsldg.
BOMI PHONE
' We earnestly solicit youVp&troaage
Closed All Day Wed n e s d ay , J u ly 4. 4 Open Tuesday Night
Until 10 O'clock,,
A FULL LI
Picnic
Nc OF
k5d
lies,
Ham, Cold Boiled
Bulk Olives, Ba
Tenderloin, Potato Chips.
DRESSEDSPRING CHICKENS
I
Extra gqo J size. 35c and 40c each
PHONE YOUR ORDERS
J. M. EggemeyQr 4th and Main Sts.
3
.Mitist,
in ail if I1 1 i II
o JLwmr nkfii. a iv viiu. Us nut uo
16 and 17 Colonial Building. 'Phone 1634.
Prices Reasonable and Sati'acticn Guaranteed.
ROBERT H ERFURT, Jr.. Manufacturer of Upholstered Furnture and Mattresses.1 Repairing & Refinishing. 3lUs. nttwsL Phone 323.
f ittttTttt T T ! ff
Y WOODf
,'IING M
kl supplies
553. Bell2eraV2
ft
I HARR
Wl
I CHAN
t ELECTRIC
$ Home Phone I
41 "S1 "f1 lJ"t "X "I1 f1 "J" 'V 41 't1 't gf f"!1 "i"
ARLINGTON
OTEL
Hop?
1 First class wcwIl byrst class bar
rbers, under stn&farifciutarv condi
tions. Your patronage solicit
I JEFF MEYERS, PRO!
: s.f.wei sry co. t
W
am
It
a m
r&Melffu
p.;
E. L. SPEtCER
m
WATCHES : CLOCKS :JEWELRY
Watch, Clock and JewelA vtepairj a Specialty. 704 MAIntET.
Home Phon 593 J. f. RLltSELL 16 8. 7th 8t. Manufacture ikd Dealer In f o Parlor Furniture, Mattresses j AWNINGS, Lounges, I o Couches, Easy Chairs, Etc. : : Repair Wft a specialty. I
i ?
I General furnit
upholst
ing. An
f specialty....
repairing, X
re-nrusn
rnlt
i 124 S. 6th. PHOilE 472
A .A A A. J'j w. .e .e. -&tVTVTTTVTttTtTi Jfr VTTTtTtt WE WILI7 HAVE I A FULL iNE OF
0RKS..I
At Wholesale Prices.
Colored Fire a Specialty. QUIGLEY & BABYLON
jfhone 145
I -Ml
t 415 N. 8th.
H
CARRIf.SE FACTORY A
47 NORTJ EIGHTH Ma
BuiWsAll find of new vehi
todjljvy V, Repairs Pptly &&f
Rubber Tire. Patched t and only the best of ne ones I
put on at lowest ra
ST
J
r
t
S
RICHMO
MONUMENT CO.
33 N. ElTttCrH ST.
''J
EICHMOBB, laxa. I-
Phone 1457.
The season is ITJ.. here for buying Jl OCcI
WE WILL TRY TO MAKE IT TO Y
WITH US ON ANY KIND
ir
hont
-WA-
v - w
t t
as Coal
INTEREST TO FIGURE. FUEL.
WE DO NOT SUBSTITUTE
RICHMOND COAL CO. Office with Union Ice Co., Cor. Weat Third and Cheatnut 8ta PHONES Home 941-Bell 10 R
When you want ieat for the lunch box
or picnic baskrt jask your dealer for
Coohel
PreoGeu Mom
PUT UP BY THE Richmond
Nothing better in the way of meat
No cooking required. Try it and be convinced.
JULY 4
...CRAN!
ATTRACTIONS
2
1
JULY4
JULY 4TH, AT JACKSON PffiWAND GLEN MILLER, AN ALL DAY SESSION OF PLEASURE a1d COMFROT. BAND CONCERTS AFTERNOON AND NIGHI A GRAND DISPLAY OF FIRE WORKS AT NIGHT. THE DANCING PAVILLfON AT JACKSON PARK WILL BE IN FULL BLAST AND GOOD MUSIC IS GUARANTEED. EVERYBODY COME WITH A FULL BASKET AND ENJOY THE DAY AND NIGHT. ' RICHMOND. STREET. A INTERURBAN RY. CO.
