Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 131, 3 June 1907 — Page 2
Tne rticiimonu k-aiiao'ium and oun- reiegram, ivionaay, June 3, 1907.
rage two.
to Cameron who fielded it like a flash, and tossed It to Cunny to catch Berte. The play could hare easily been turned Into a double play but Cunny dropped the ball and both Berte and Hassett were safe. Berte was caught off his base but Hassett tied up the game by scoring on Becker's fourth hit of the game. The side was then retired. The tenth passed without incident and then came the fatal eleventh described above. A more detailed and damaging description could bo given but being a member of several charitable organizations de refrain. Score:
GREAT SOCIETY BELLE LEAVING.
Richmond. Bitter, cf.. . Cameron, lb Miller, 3b .. Jessup, c. Mlnzler, ss.. Cnnham, 2b Wearer, If.. Horn rf . . . . (Fisher, p..
AB. .5 . .5 A .5 .5 -..4 ..5 . .5
R. 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0
H. 1 0 1 o 1 1
O. A.
10 2 9 0 6 1 1 1
O 1 2 5 0 1 0 4
Totals .'. 41 4 11 32 15 10 Con'vllle AB. R. II. O. A. E. Beckr,.cf.. .. 6 2 4 2 0 0 Felgert, rf.. ..6 0 2 2 0 1 Pritchett, 3b ..5 0 1 2 2 1 Ievings, 2b 46 0 0 2 3 1 Ehlen..ss.. ...5 0 0 1 4 0 Bosler, lb.. ..5 0 0 12 0 0 Berte, C......4 1 1 5 0 0 Hassett, If.. ..5 3 2 6 0 0 IJndsley, p .. .5 2 2 1 4 0 Totals.. .. 47 8 12 23 14 3
Con'vllle. ..0 010200010 48 Richmond ..0 0 0 3001000 0 4 Earned runs Connersville 3, Richmond 3. Left on bases Richmond 11: Con-
jnersville 12. j Double plays Ehlen to Levings to Bo6ler. ! Two base hit Hassett. Sacrifice hits Pritchett.. , Stolen bases Miller, Jessup, Fishier,? Becker, Feigert. i Struckout By Fisher 6; by Linds!ley 3. ' Passed ball Berte. ! Hit by pitcher Cameron.-. ; Umpire Lally. ; ; : Attendance 1,800. DUNKIRK 3; BLUFFTON Jr. "
Dunkirk. Ind., June 3. Despite muddy grounds and shivering cold weather nearly 300 enthusiastic fans
turned out to witness the defeat of
the new Bluffton club at the hands of ; the Dunkirk bunch Sunday. Center ' Fielder Campbell was easily the star of the game, making three sensational catches in the outer garden. George Moris, last season with the locals, who has been playing in the Texas, league, has arrived to join the team,' Score: ; - Dunkirk, .0 0000021 x 3 10: 3 Bluffton. .0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 12 S 2 Romine and Wolfe; Grubbs and Vo-. gal. :
" '
L
MISS MAY VAN ALLEN. :, Frlenffs or Miss May Van Allen, of New York, wnose picture Is here shown, were surprised to learn that she had decided to quit the United -States indefinitely and live at the English estate of her father, James J. Van Allen in Devonshire. Miss Van Allen has cabled to Newport to have her horses, harness, carriages and automobiles sold at auction as soon as possible.
THE CAMBRIDGE GRAYS DEFEATED DUBLIN S i ' Score Was 4 to 3 in Contest ; On Sunday.
CONNOR'S FINE WORK;
' Dublin, Ind., June 3. In one of Jhe best games seen this year the Cambridge City Grays' defeated Dublin by a score of 4 to 3. The Grays had'the Dublin team shut out up to the ninth inning, when they scored three runs.' Cambridge City scored its four runs in the sixth on good hitting, coupled with errors by Catcher Paul and third baseman Groves and a bad misiudgment of a fly by Smith in left field. iThe Grays hits came in a bunch while those of Dublin's were scattered. There is much rivalry between Dublln and Cambridge City and both
teams were strengthened by the addition of a battery, Dublin's famous
pitcher. Teck" Connor and Paul of New Lisbon catching him and Murley
and Caldwell of the Bentonville team did the work for Cambridge City.
Conner's pitching was a feature of
the game, allowing the Grays but six
hits and striking out thirteen bats
men. Unfortunately the hits by "the Grays were bnnched In the same inning when his support was lacking. The Dublin aggregation is woefully weak In batting and team work and needs practice badly. As yet no grounds have been secured at Dublin and th? prospects for base ball here ere not very encouraging at present. Score: J I C. City ..0 0000400 x 4 6 0 .Dublin.. .0 0000000 33 72 Murley and Caldwell; Connor and Paul. Unipire Barefoot.
FREIGHT TRAIN WAS
UND0ING0F CYCLISTS
Richmond Boys Blocked in a
Recent Race.
LOST
21
MINUTES' TIME.
' Hamilton, O., train defeated Brown, Robert
June 3. A freight Don Diaper, Elmer Graham and Sherry
Williams, the fast Richmond, Ind., cyclists, in the road races here Thursday. These boys were the favorites in the events. Graham and "Williams were scratch men. On their vay back to town they were stopped two minutes and a half at Schenck's station by a C. H. &. D. freight train. This was the cause of their defeat. Frank Venable of this city, who had a handicap of a half minute, received a punctured tire south of town while returning and was put out of the running. The finishes were as follows: Bob Miller, Hamilton, handicap 3 minutes, . won; time 32 and one-half minutes; "Cotton" Limerick, Hamilton, second, handicap, 3 Vz minutes; Robert Graham, Richmond, third, scratch; Don Draper Richmond, handicap one-half minute, fourth; Jettney Lewis, Hamilton, fifth, handicap three and one-half minutes; Elmer Brown, Richmond, scratch, seventh.
INTERFERES WITH
MEMORIAL OBSERVANCE
The Rev. J. 0. Campbel Spoke at Fountain City.
Owing to the heavy rains at Foun
tain City Saturday, the attendance at
the Memorial day services, which were held at that place, was not, as
large as usual. Neither was the pro
gram extensive. A choir selected for the occasion sang several patriotic
selections in roost approiuiate manner. The Rev. J. O. Campbell of this
city delivered the address in the K of P. hall.
LIQUOR LICENSES ARE GRANTED TO SEVERAL
IT WAS A "LUCE" GAME
Campbellstown Pitcher Prov ed to Be Invincible.
At the game played Sunday be
tween the Richmond Ramblers and the Campbellstown team, the Quaker City aggregation was defeated by a score of 4 to 3. The local lads attribute their defeat to the fact that
the Campbellstown team sprung a
new pitcher on them, who was almost
a wonder. The score is as follows: Richmond ;. ..3 fi Campbellstown 4 1
Iloor and Goehner; Luce and Luce.
Action Is Taken by the County Commissioners.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days, v PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any esse of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in . to 14 days or money refunded. 50c
COMMENT ON RECENT OCCURRENCE AT EARLHAM
(Muncie Star.) The expulsion of two Earlham hazers, and the arrest of four by the police, look like practical departures from tie establishment of sickly sentimentality about "boyish pranks." It is a valuable part of education for boys to learn that law is law. - (Indianapolis Star.) But why should those Earlham hazers be released without prosecution by the authorities of Wayne County? If stripping a man and rubbing his bare skin Is not an assault and battery in Wayne County, the next Legislature should take steps to have it Included In the State of Indiana.
BILL WAS CONSIDERED.
The county commissioners granted liquor licenses, as follows: Joseph P. Iliff, Louis Wrede, Henry P. Miller, Henry Rohe, Harry H. Fee, Benjamin Bowing, Thoma3 P. Mayer, John H. Sullivan,' Edward P. Muey, all of Richmond, and Charles A. Morgan, of Ha-
gerstown. The commissioners also considered a number of bills against the county. "When President Wiley was asked if the commissioners intended to allow Sheriff Meredith's bill for fees alleged to be due him for attending commissioners court, be stated that he did not know the sheriff had any such claim to file.
TJj? Place. "What! Fishing on the Sabbath? exclaimed the clergyman reprovingly
"Don't you know that little boys who
fish on the Sabbath go to the bad place?" "Huh, I guess dat's right," replied the bad boy disgustedly. "I couldn't 'a' struck no worse -place dan dis." Philadelphia Press.
PRESBYTER1AL SOCIETY MEETS HERE
Missionary Body Will Convene At Reid Memorial Church On Tuesday Evening.
LASTS THROUGH TWO DAYS
MANY TOPICS OF INTEREST WILL BE DISCUSSED AND REPORTS WILL BE SUBMITTED BY THE VARIOUS OFFICERS.
ALMANACH DE GOTHA.
DOBBINS INNEW BOLE Former Theatrical Man Is a Newspaper Circulator.
Clear white clothes are a sign that the housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2 cz. package, 3 cents.
(Springfield, 111., News.) R. F. Butts, who has been the cir
culation manager of The News for
the past year, has resigned his position here to become the manager of the O. H. Paddock Lumber company of Nokomis, III. He retires from The News today, and will be succeeded by J. H. Dobbins, who has acted as assistant circulation manager for tliis paper for the past seven months. Mr. Dobbins was formerly mauaser of the -Phillips theatre iu this city.
The most important of the essential oils produced in India is geranium or palnia rosa oil. Tbe distillation inethnl is the same ei'tt- mn;S ana. Tbe bydra fuses, a sort of polypus, may be turned inside nut like a glove and win continue to live and eat ns beartllx as pv-
tlifory of This Old and World Fkjuoaa In.rt i tatiou. The Almanach de Gotha is moreth.in an almanac. It is an institution. Bravely arrayed in red and gokl, it lieon the table of every diplomatist, is in
constant request in the newspaper offices cf all countries and makes a wider and more international appeal than anyother annual of reference in the world. It is to Europe what Burke and Debrett and the other peerages are to the British isles, and it is also tbe lineal ancestor and model of such topical encyclopedias ns our TVhittaker, our Hazell and our Statesman's Yearbook. A political and social history of the world for the last l."0 years could be written from its back numbers if these were readily accessible to students. But they are not. The Alrnanach de Gotha began to appear in 17C3, but tbe purchasers did not file ic for reference. The earliest numbers in the British museum are those for 1774 and 17S3, and a complete set can "do consulted nowhere except in tbe editorial oftlct in Frit'drich's Alice in the little TlUii-kigian capital. Probably not one in ten thousand of those who cur
rently use the almanac has n.ny knowi edse of its interesting history. It had cf course its predecessors. The bibliographies o almanacs are lKndrous tome?. avA the usidcla of the eighteenth century was" the golden age of this kind of literature. In Paris a!o:ie ss many as seventy-three almanacs were published iu the year ITtfa including a royal almanac, an almanac for merchants, an almanac for Freemasons, an almanac of beasts, an almanac of badinage, etc. The ity of Gotha itself bad its own almanac from a btill curlier date In the shape of an -improved Gotha genealogical and writing calendar." the origin of which Is lost in"tbe, mist of antiquity, though n -opy datcl i"4 survives. Francis Gribble in Scribner's.
The twenty-fifth annual meeting of the Presbyterlal Missionary society of the Prasbytery of first Ohio, will con
vene at Keid Memorial church Tuesday and Wednesday. The program which is of much interest, follows: Tuesday Evening. 7:00 Friendly greetings. 7:30 Popular meeting, S. R. Lyons, D. D., presiding. Devotions. Organ. . Address "Some Objections to. Foreign Missions Answered" Rev. C. G. Morrow. Music. Offering. Prayer. Announcement of Committees. Adjournment. Social hour. Wednesday Morning. . Devotions Mrs. E. G. Bailey. "Our need of the presence and pow
er of the Holy Spirit." Roll call. Response with a prom ise. Reading of minutes. Officers' report. 10:30 Music. Conference; The needs or the hour, 1. In the Home Field Mrs. N. D. Baldridge.
2. In the Foreign Field Mrs. C. C.
McCreary.
3. Present Need of the Holy Spirit
Mrs. Mary Scott.
Whv should the young women of
the church be enlisted in the cause
of missions Miss Elsie Johnson.
Music. Temperance and its relation to mis
sions Mrs. J. H. Spencer.
Business. Dinner hour and social time. Wednesday Afternoon. Devotions Mrs. F. G. Blair. The Christ-like spirit. Reports of societies.
Conference. Model Missionary
ciety.
1 The Officers Mrs. J. F. Brown.
2. Its Committees Mrs. M. II. Mil
ler.
3. Its Meetings Mrs. H. A. Kelsey Music.
Report of delegates to Women s
fieneral Missionary convention Miss
Cora McQuiston.
Greetings from India. Greetings from Egypt.
A Look Forward Miss Martha Wil
son.
A Glance
Brown.
Report of committees Business. Adjournment.
Cause of Horrible Tragedy.
BETHEL CHURCH HOW FREE FROM DEBT Entire Amount Needed Raised At Sunday's Rally.
j ACHIEVEMENT IS NOTABLE.
so-
Backward-Miss Clara
GNATION
ACCEPTS RES!
OF THE REV. SHIREY
Congregation of Second Pres
byterian Church Acts.
A congregational meeting of the
Second Presbyterian church was held at the close of the morning servyce on
Sunday to elect an additional eVier to grant a request of the pastor, ty.e Rev. C. "O. Shirey, for a dissolutio of the
pastoral relation existing between him and the Second Presbyterian church, and to select a committee to act in behalf of the congregation in securing
minister to fill the place made va
cant by this dissolution.
J. D. Haner was elected elder. The
Rev. Mr. Shirey, having received a
call from the Presbyterian church at
Polo, I1U which he desires to accept.
the congregation, knowing and appreciating the value of his services for the past five years, very reluctantly
granted his request. W. O. Wissler,
A. A. Mumbower, Frank Flumraer and
C. H. Ford were named as a committee
to assist in obtaining a minister to fill the vacancy.
The Rev. Mr. Shirey will continue
his services until Sunday, June 16.
DRUIDS' GRAND LODGE
The Annual Session Will
' Held This Week.
Be
The grand grove of Indiana, Ancient
Order of Druids, will hold Its forty-seventh meeting Tuesday and Wednesday
at Indianapolis. A feature of the
meeting will be the presence of three.
supreme officers. The supreme officers to be present are Emil F. Winkler, supreme arch, Supreme Representative Henry Weinman and Supreme Secretary. H. Frentienthal, who has occupied his present position for thirty-six years. On Tuesday evening the supreme officers will. be entertained with degree vrork, the woman's branches of the order participating. Following the degree woik there will be a reception. On the following evening there will also be degree "work. Following this, all the Druids who care to participate will meet the supreme officers in anilier social session. j
Members of Bethel A. M. E. church are highly elated over the fact that a sufficient amount cf money was raised Sunday to pay the entire debt owed on the parsonase and are free from all debts of any kind. Three months ago the pastor and trustees launched a financial campaign for $S00. Sunday the members and friends laid $S67 on the table and less than $100 of this
amount was collected from persons outside their own congregation. When the Rev. X. W. Williams came to Richmond last September, the church-owed over $900 all of which has now been ,paid and he says he is glad that ha Is .now free to devote his time exclusively to moral and spiritual work. Tho
church is in excellent repair and need not go in debt, at least for a number of years. Bishop Lee was in the city Sunday and preached two excellent and instructive sermons.
'RED MEN'S MEMORIAL
MISS ELIZABETH LOVTNQk - Kfcnmond, Va., June 3 The father of Elizabeth Loving, who is also manager of Thomas F. Ryan's fine Virginia farm, has been indicted for killing Theodcre Estes, a young man who i3 alleged to have abused Miss Loving. . '
NEWS OF HIGH SCHOOL; REV. SMITH SPEAKS
An Interesting Talk on Rules of Life.
the
SENIOR CLASS THESES.
The Rev. Mr. Smith of tho First Baptist church gave a very interesting talk on what he called five rules in
the game of life. Clyde Beck, who is teaching German at the Noblesville, Ind., high school was a visitor at high school. The exercises concluded the chapel work for this term. The orchestra. Is practicing for the commencement music and will give several pleasing numbers. Willard Jessup visited the school. The members of the senior class assembled in Miss Mering's room and listened to the reading of several of the theses written by the class.
There are no laws in Germany preventing the use of the checkrein on horses, with the exception of the police ordinances of Berlin.
There Were Appropriate Services Held at Hagerstown.
Hagerstown. Ind.. June 3 The local lodge of lied Men decorated, the graves of deceased brethren Simday afternoon. Led by the Red Mxus cornet band, the Daughters of Pocahontas Council and Miona Tribe, with many visiting brothers, marched to the cemetery where the beautiful lit-, ualistic ceremonies were performed.
Pa, he starts at early morn To face the wide, blue world. He gets his strength and health By using Rocky Mountain Tea, A. G. Luken & Co.
SID CONGER CONSIDERS POLITICAL NOMINATION. Indianapolis, June 3 Sid Conger of Shelbyville, state oil inspector and president of the State Board of Agriculture, Is trying just now to decido between being a candidate for the" republican gubernatorial nomination himself and devoting his energies and his influence toward assisting one of the other candidates to land the plum.
jgri.-rii
We Propose
10
ncrease Ouf
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