Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 140, 12 June 1907 — Page 2

THE K1C1I310M rALliAUlUJL AADbUA-TELllGltAJl, Ui)i)AESUAl,JLM: lUOTt

PACiE TWO.

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Tell Them You Know! 4c

ion cti? "say-so that when they Btsy a package of the genuine ABtsckles Actios a Coffee they get the feest of the

coffee tz&de

No coffee of equal quality can be sold in this town for the same price, whether it be sold out of a bag or a bin, or under some romantic trade-mark. You may tell them you know and that Arbuckle Brothers, the greatest coffee dealers in the world, will stand for it.j

1AJRB UCKX.E BROS- New Yrk CItv.

It is estimated that 0,000 laborers Hill be needed during this season in Ilfferent sections of Canada in contracting new railroads. New steamrs are going into commission and all ivailable ones will be chartered for the Sew immigrants that are booked in Great Britain for the Dominion. As an Inducement, laborers have only to pay LSrt on. their passage, the balance to

be deducted from their wages, are guaranteed $2 a day.

They

LEBANON CANCELS ITS GAME- F0B SATURDAY No Reason Assigned in Message to Jessup.

HARLEMS NEXT SUNDAY.

Home coming entertainment this

evening S:00, High School hall, admis

sion 10c.

Come see John Carroll talk with chalk at High school hall this even

ing.

Uttn S1.00

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The best for every kind of wear, giving Fit, Style and Durability. Dutchess Trousers are sold under a warranty that insures satisfaction.

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June lOtii to 15th

50 Stamps With One Pound of Tea at 70c.

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40 Stamps sn fE 1C Stamps rith one pound of Tea 13 w5tn 2 woxes of A- & at 50c. ? P. launch Cocoa at 10c a box. 10 Stamps SiampS 15sTam with impound can of r q a & A & P. Cocoa at 20c Witti P- Extract ai 23c a One Pound Unusual Amount oE lU Stamps of Tea Extra Stamps -vith all with 2 boxes of toilet our coffees. Always soap at 10c a box. OUC 1 IU. fresTi ,oaste(L

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The Great Atlantic I!

& Pacific Tea Co. 727 Main Street Old Phone 53 W. New Phone 107

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ROLLS OF THE CRISP KIND where are they? You want them not only for breakfast, but for lunch and dinner, with your soup. But where are they to be had? Answer easy: At Zwissler's bakery. Cakes, pies and pastrj", too. Zwissler's Home Bakery and Restaurant, 908 Main St. Phone 366

..J. H. RUSSELL,, Patented Ventilating , Awnings Made to Order UPHOLSTERING AND AWNINGS. Parlor Fur Couches, Sht Waist Boxes Made to Order. UPHOLSTERING MATTRESSES. Repairing a Specialty; All Work Guaranteed First Class. Home Phone 593. Old Phone 409R. No. 14 South Seventh Street.

-HOT AIR

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S and all Supplies

I Platcs Paper always fresh 11 1 w. H. Ross Drug Co. 804 Main St. ROSS' STRAW HAT CLEANER, TN CENTS

Manager Jessup has received a tele-, gram from the Lebanon base ball team cancelling the game here for Saturday. The cause is unknown, but "Shorty" will make an endeavor to J land another game for that date. The! strong New Madison team will line upj against the local aggregation Friday

afternoon at the local ball park. The New Madison ball tossers recently defeated the Richmond Giants by a large score. Thursday afternoon the benefit game between- the Richmonds and the

Q. & B. bunch, for Roy Sehattell, will be played and promises to attract an

exceptionally large crowd.

On next Sunday the Cincinnati Har-

lems will journey to this city and proceed to "get took,"' as slang would

have it. The Harlem's, however, is a

strong team, and Manager Jessup and

his aides will have to be up and doing

every minute if they register a vic

tory'-

Base BatiB Results, NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.

Won. Lost PcL Chicago 33 10 .77S New York SI 14 .6S9 Philadelphia . .....27' 18 .000 Pittsburg .... 23 IS .D61 Boston 18 27 .400 Cincinnati IS 2S ..101 Brooklyn 15 SO .,"133 St. Louis 13 36 .333

AT CHICAGO. It. II. K

Philadelphia 6 S 2 Chicago 5 S 2

Corridon, Dooin; Frazer, Moran. AT ST. LOUIS. R. II. E New York S 9

St. Louis ..7 11 3 Taylor. Bowerman: McLinn, Mar

shall.

AT PITTSBURG. R. Brooklyn 4 Pittsburg 7 Bell, Butler; Leever, Gibson.

H. E.

11 13

STAR ATHLETE TO RETURN

Clifford Carey Coming Back

To Earlham in Fall.

HE HAS BEEN AT PURDUE.

Clifford Carey of Carmel, Ind., is here in attendance at the Earlham col

lege commencement exercises and today announced that he would return to Earlham this fall. Carey left Earlham at the close of the football sea

son last fall and went to Purdue. Ca

rey says that he likes a small college

much better than a large university-. He has arranged his difficulties with the faculty and will be a full fledged

Earlham student again next year. Carey is a star football and track team athlete and he will be a great help to the Quakers in- athletics.

LEBANON BEATS DECATUR.

Lebanon, Ind., June 12 The Leba

non team defeated Decatur Tuesday by a score of S to 4. The feature of

the game was Carrol's hitting, his

three-bagger scoring three men in the

second. Tyre was knocked out of

the box in the sixth. Score: Decatur... 20000002 0 4 7 3

Lebanon. 0300 1 400 S 12 1

Batteries Tyre, Burns and Wing

er; Carroll and Lindsay.

AT CINCINNATI. R. II. E

Boston 2 11 1

Cincinnati 1 7 0

Dorner, Brown; Mason, McLean. Second Game

Boston 3 S 3 Cincinnati .....7 13 0 Lindemann, Needham; Ewiug, and

Schlei.

AMERICAN

LEAGUE STANDING

Won. Lost. PcL

Chicago 30 Cleveland 30 Detroit 25 Philadelphia 24 New York 20 St. Louis 19 Washington 14 Boston 15

15 17 17 21 28 27 30

.667 .C3S .595 .533 .476 .404

AT WASHINGTON.

Chicago-Washington, wet grounds.

AT NEW YORK. R. II. E.

Detroit 10 13 1 New York 2 5 5

Donovan and Schmidt; Brockett

and Kleinow.

Cleveland . . Boston

Joss, Bemis;

AT BOSTON. R. II. E. .., 0 3 1 2 6 2

Winters, Criger.

BLUFFT0N, 1; DUNKIRK, 0.

Bluffton. Ind., June 12 Bluffton de

feated Dunkirk Tuesday by the score of 1 to 0. The features of the game

were tne pitcning or uoyn ana nonstop Thomas's fast fielding for Bluff

ton. Score: Bluffton 00001000 0 1 6 1

Dunkirk 00000000 00 2 1

Batteries Boyd and Harin; Tom-

lin and Wolfe. Attendance 400.

AT PHILADELPHIA.

R. H. St. Louis 3 8 Philadelphia 0 5 Pelty, Buelow; Plank, Schreck. AMERICAN ASSN. STANDING.

E. 1

Won Lost Pet Columbus 29 17 .670 Minneapolis 24 20 .545 Toledo ...24 22 .522 Kansas City 22 22 .500 Indianapolis 26 26 .500 Milwaukee 23 25 .479 Louisville 20 25 .444 St. Paul 19 30 .3S8

TOWN CRAZY ABOUT BALL.

Connersville, Ind., June 12 The or

ganization of the Kentucky-Indiana-

Ohio League is being watched with much interest by this town, which is

crazy auont oaseDan. (jonnersvnie

has one of the best teams in the state and the people are giving it

great support.

Connersville is expected to mainain its own in its new company, al

though the league is composed of the fastest teams in Ohio and Kentucky. Connersville is the only town from Indiana that is represented. The locals will open the league season next Sunday when it meets the Hamilton (O.) Krebs, probably the fastest team in the Buckeye State, here. The league is formed of the following towns: Connersville, Ind., Hamilton (O.) Krebs, Cincinnati (O.) Shamrocks, Middletown, O., Miamisburg, O., and the Weidamans of Kentucky.

AN ERRONEOUS REPORT ABOUT JACKS FISHER He Is Still a Member of the Local Ball Team.

IS LIKELY TO REMAIN.

The bugs were plunged into fear, apprehension- and sorrow by a report sent out from Hartford City. The cause of all this nils-spent emotion was a fifteen-line paragraph which said that our own "Tacks' Fisher had vamoosed from the tribe of Jessup and had again taken up his residence with Manager Grant of the South Bend Central league team. The whole originated in the fertile mind of a Hartford City reporter who was working against space, as Fisher is still "neath the cheering smile of Manager Jessup and will probably remain in the Quaker City till the end of the season. Fisher was in, Hartford City Tuesday on a visit, but has returned to the Richmond ramp. Fisher's work .ince he has bt-eu here Las savored of league alibr and it wiu therefore that the fans wore thir-ty-six liit-h amen corner faees when

they heard of his supposed departure

to South Bend. Fisher has already

proved himself the best utility man on the Richmond team and an endeavor

AT INDIANAPOLIS. R. Milwaukee 3 Indianapolis 2 Goodwin, Beville; Summers,ingstone. Second Game; Milwaukee 2 Indianapolis 6 Ford, Shannon; Upp, Fohl.

K. E. 7 0 5 0 Liv-

S 14

AT TOLEDO.

St Paul

Toledo (Called in sixth inning, rain) Leroy, Irwin; Suthoff, Land.

R. II. E. .0 2 4

3 1

AT LOUISVILLE. R. H. Kansas City 3 6 Louisville 4 11 (10 innings) Crutcher. Sullivan;

liott, Hughes. Second Game Kansas City 1 10 Louisville 4 8 Case, Sullivan; Elliott, Hughes. CENTRAL LEAGUE STANDING.

E. 0 0 El-

Won Lost Pet. Wheeling 22 15 .595 Springfield 21 16 .56S Canton 19 15 .559 Evansvillo .22 18 .550 Dayton 19 20 !4S7 South Bend 17 21 .448 Grand Rapids 16 23 .410 Terre Haute 15 23 .395

Yesterday's Results. Springfield, 4; South Bend, Terre Haute, 9; Canton, 1. Dayton, 5; Grand Rapids, 1'. Wheeling, 9; Evansville, 0.

0.

GETTYSBURG VICTORIOUS.' Gettysburg, O., June 12 A fast game of ball was played Sunday afternoon between Gettysburg and Arcanum. Score Gettysburg 5; Arcanum 3. Earned runs Gettysburg 3; Arcanum 1. Batteries Gettysburg, Jennings and Heughs; Arcanum, Grubbs and McFaddin. The feature of the game was the pitching of Jennings who struck out 13 men. Attendance 300.

COMBINE BEAT FRANKFORT

2

Frankfort, Ind., June 12 The Ko-komo-Sharpsville team defeated the Frankfort team Tuesday in a fast, close and exciting game. But for an unfortunate fall by Williams, when rounding third base, Frankfort "would have tied the score and the game would have gons to extra innings. Score: Kokomo 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 f 2 Frankfort ..0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.01 5 2 Batteries KokomoShUirpsville. IJucy and Anderson; Frankfort, Mallicot and Hanna. Struck out By Lacy, o. l r -1 1 : . . t r . .

i-; uy .vLituicoi. t. Ditbes ou DailS Off Lacy. S; off MaUicot, 2.

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Our Goods Talk For Themselves

TIc(

liiallfy of McrM

Is Stamped on All Our China and Cut Glass Ware r New shapes and new decorations. Each and every piece has an lndT viduality about it which emphasizes the worth of the china. A combina. tion of such great beauty of design, rare color combination and quality was never shown In Richmond before. Anybody who delights in pretty chinaware, and people on the lockout for something new for the bride or graduate, cannot help being interested and should not fail to see our collection. JUST COME AND SEE and if you have the slightest china need, we'rt quite sure that you'll quickly decide to buy. Be sure and see our new assortment of China Dinner Sets. Especially

for tne June uriae.

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(GrCDo

W0 PenHen

604-608 Main Street.

RAISE FUNDS FOR

ENLARGING SCHOOL AT COMMENCEMENT (Continued from Page One.)

Friend. The address, which Dr.

Jones called "Types of Optimism" was

in truth, one of the best ever delivered

at the college on such an occasion. It was not a rosy picture of what lies before the graduates with nothing for them to do but conquer. Rather it was a representation of the stefn realities of the life before them and of the responsibility incumbent on them as participants in it. The address was full of timely illustrations and in spots tha audience sat in laughter as if listening to a series of amusing, yet timely, stories. Central Secret of Life. Dr. Jones showed bow the complexity of life made it difficult for one to place his finger on the central secret. He then; proceeded to show the different views held as to the chief asset of an education. After presenting various conceptions the speaker took as his chief denominator of all these estimates the spirit of optimism'. "The best equipment," he Faid," for any career is faith in one's power to do what he was made for; the power which makes the youth reply 'I can.' " Ridicules Soft Optimism. The speaker divided optimism into several different kinds. The first he characterized as soft optimism, the theory that everything Is easy, nothing ?s repulsive and that all will come out all right in the end if we just keep smiling. Dr. Jones thought there was some truth in the rosy view of the soft optimism, but held it to be very superficial and would not do for the rough and tumble of actual life. He !abed it as the view of "lotus eaters" rather than persons of heroic fiber. More Virile Optimism. Dr. Jones gave it to the graduating class that their optimism should be of a more virile and strenuous type. He urged the graduates not to close, their eyes to the hard facts pi life, but rather to open their eyes to the vision that would enable them to achieve the optimistic tone ia spite of the grit of the machinery and the tragedy in the web of life. Paul as Their Clue. The graduates were urged to take Paul, who was pictured as the most heroic character of history as their clue and to learn the secret that the world is in the making and that they were needed to bring the central purpose of good to its goal and fulfillment. Following the address Miss Mary A. Kaufman sang, "Burst Ye Apple Buds" by Emery, in a most pleasing manner. Roster of the Class. The complete roster of the class of 1S07 follows: B. A. degree Roscoe Beals of Westfield, Ind.; Edna Boomershine, Dayton, O.; Andreas Byrune, Stavanger, Norwaj-; Jennie Cartland, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; Ethel Cox, Richmond, Ind.; Durward Eaton, Liberty, Ind.; Marcellus S. Grahg, Ridgeville, Ind.: Anne Eves, Richmond, Ind.; Grace Frazee, Glenwood, Ind.; Oliver M. Frazer, New

Castle, Ind.; Frank Gardner, Liberty, Ind.; Grover Grimes, Salem, Ind.; Bruce Hall, Elizabethtown. Ind.; Mary E. Hallowell, Pendleton, Ind.; Carl J. Hawke, Oskaloosa, la.; Abbie Henby, Greenfield, Ind.; Edna Hoover, Richmond, Ind.; Mamie Hough, Richmond, Ind.; Naomi R. Huber, Richmond, Ind.; Arthur Johnson, Dunreith, Ind.; Edgar J. Llewellyn, Sheridan, Ind.; George E. McCreary, College Corner, O.; Eva M. Newsom, Elizabethtown, Ind.; Ida B. F. Parker, Richmond, Ind.; Ethel Peterson, Richmond, Ind.; Loren C. Petry, New Paris, O.; Olive S. Rogers, Amo, Ind.; Florence L. Shute, Richmond, Ind.; Laurence Smelser, of Centerville, Ind.; Birney D. Spradling, Rushville, Ind.; Isaac Stanley, Cajlos City, Ind.; Mabel Stewart, of Lewisville, Ind.; Margaret Thompson of Richmond, Ind.; Helen B. Tits worth, of Canton, O.; Clara Zeigler, Cambridge City, Ind. Master's Degree Clara Tlbbetts. Whlttier, Cal., and Oscar Moore, Wichita, Kan.

HOW HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY WILLBE ENGAGED Several of the Teachers to Be Quite Busy.

golf tournament at Terra Haute and after that he says Richmond will bo good enough for him. Mr. Torrence and Mr. Earhart have made no definite plans for the summer. ( Misses Nolte, Stahl, Hawkins and Mering have made no plans for extensive, trips. At present Mr. Davis Is the only teacher who has positively decided not to return next fall.

CHURCHES TO HAVE AID Money Will Be Sent Stricken Congregations.

The Christian churches of Indiana are to rally to the aid of their Bister churches in San Francisco that are making a struggle for existence. At a meeting of the ministers of the Christian churches of Indianapolis and of several cities in the state, held Tuesday at Indianapolis, plans were laid for raising a larga sum of money to be sent to San Francisco.

OTHERS PLAN VACATIONS.

The Richmond high school faculty will be engaged as follows this summer: V, E. Morris will attend Chicago University: this summer and take a course in Latin and English. D. R. Ellabarger will teach m?thematics at Earlham for six weeks and taen visit in Oregon and Washington state. Miss Edith Tallant will spend the entire summer in Mississippi. Miss Eliza Curtis will return to her home in Ogdensburg, N. Y., Friday afternoon. Albert E. Jones will take a business course at the Valparaiso, Ind., university. He is a graduate of that school. W. A. Fiske will spend a large portion of the summer in California. Miss Juliet Robbins will return to her home in Detroit after which she will make an extended visit to New York and Martha's Vineyard. Mr. Davis will remain in town until September 1st when he leaves for Washington state. J. F. Thompson will attend the state

$3.00 ROUND TRIP

Bring back youthful remembrance by seeing scenes of your childhood at High School tonight; admission 10c.

C. D. Pyle of Whitewater, was Richmond on business, Monday.

In

G. W. Bunch of New Castle spent Tuesday in Richmond.

CHICHESTER'S PILLS Wy-- TDK DIAMOND BBANn.f X

M-k-tw-, Ilo. d Rrma4yV liU ia R4 bo1 UoM mmlilAV MAid IV t til Rii V I J

kw. Bar fjrr V VIAVD JI&AND PlVlJt, far yuan known u Best, ftafatt. Alw.v. Rell.l.ta

SOLD BV DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE

CHICAGO, ILLS. Via CHICAGO, CINCINNATI & LOUISVILLE R. R. CO. Saturday Night, June 15. Train leaves Richmond at 11:22 p. m. Returning, leaves Chicago (Ills. Central Station) Sunday night, June 16th at 9:30 p. ra. These tickets will be honored in Pullman sleeping cars upon payment of Pullman fares which is $2.00 for double berth. For particulars ask C. A. Blair, P. & T. A. Homo Fone 41.

$1.00 ROUND TRIP TO CINCINNATI, OHIO Via the Chicago, Cincinnati & Louisville R. R. Co. SUNDAY, JUNE 16TH. Train leaves Richmond 5:15 a. m. Returning, leaves Cincinnati 9:00 p, m. Giving you a full day at Ibe Queen City. For further particulars, call C. A. Blair, P. & T. A. Phone 41.

Puts a Spring Into You PEPTONIZED Beeif, lFoe aedl Wnnue

An honest medicine sold on Its merita Purifies old and makes new blood, Drives away languor and "that tired

feeling." Price COc a bottle. M. J. QUIGLEY, Opposite Court House.

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Wc arc tne Vehiel c people of the town Why? Because we have the aoods and the prices. The celebrated DAVIS, and UNION CITY MAKE. A fine line of IMPLEMENTS and HARNESS. Can put you on the best RUBBER TIRE made. Yours for Bus.,

The McCoiiaha Co. Opp. Court House

ill be made to told tim hera-