Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 177, 22 July 1907 — Page 2

THE KICIOIOND I'ALLADIU3I AND SU -TELEGRAM, 3IOXDAY, JULY 23, 1!K)T

PAGE TWO

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SUNDAY'S GAMEWAS Jl PITCHERS' BUTTLE Fleming and Nonemaker Pit ted Against Each Other And Did Fine Work. SEVEN HITS IS THE TOTAL VISITORS LOST THE GAME ON ERRORS SOME FAST FIELDING WAS DONE KICKS ON THE UM PIRING. (BY TORT.) RICHMOND 3; MARION 2. In the presence of numerous towns people, Mr. Fleming of Richmond and Mr. Nonemaker of Marlon engaged in n polite pitchers dispute Sunday af ternoon at Athletic park. Thanks to miscues on the part of his assistants, Nonemaker was forced to submit to the tin can. With proper support Nonemaker would have won his game 2 to 0. As it was the locals appropriated the contest 3 to 2. Both twirlers pitched magnificent hall, Fleming allowing four hits while Nonemaker "held the Quakers to three bingles Doc Endsfield, gentlemanly custo dian of the park, in the absence of B "LaEy, attempted the role of Umps Today Mr. Endafield Is writing the first chapter of reminiscenses entitled 'The Trials and Tribulations of an Umpire." This literary effort will Include five volumes. Doc got a bad start. He neglected to have his eyes tuned and his voice sandpapered, consequently the populace became irritated n fact thumbs were turned down on Mr. Endsfleld early in the contest. Before the close of the proceedings said populace was demanding his gore. It was alleged by the bugs that Mr. Endsfield was partial to the home team, and there appeared to be grounds for this complaint. Ills decisions on balls and strikes were wlerd while his rulings on the bases were wierder. How Runs Were Made. In the first inning Ritter drew his base on balls and was sacrificed to second by Cameron. Jessup flew out to left and then Wiltermood hit a sharp one through the second baseman, bringing Ritter home. Ridgely struckout. In the third, with one down, Nonemaker drew his base. Pence singled and scored with None maker on F. ' Martin's long single to center, which was poorly handled by Ritter. A sharp double play by Ridgely, Minzler and Cameron then ended the inning. In the fourth Richmond took the lead which was maintained to the end. Wiltermood drew his base but died on Ridgely's fielder's choice. Minzler singled and Cunningham skied to left fielder. Fisher, next up, smote a long one to Pence who dropped it, allowing Ridgely and Minzler to count. Fleming made the third out on an infield tap. Some Pretty Fielding. The game was marked by some pretty fielding. In the seventh Pence, in center for Marion, saved two runs by a remarkable catch off Jessup's bat. Fleming and Cameron were on the bags when Jessup poled a long one to deep left center. It looked good for at least two bases. Pence, under a full head of steam, dashed after the ball and up the side of one of the left field mountains. Reaching the summit he made a hfgh jump, speared the sphere and then fell from his lofty perch. Enroute to the val ley below. Pence looped the loop and the gap of death but he came up feet first still holding the ball. Fisher and Minzler pulled off some fast work. Ritter made a pretty running catch. Martin at "third for the Owls covered acres of territory. The score:

Richmond. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Ritter, cf.. .. .3 1 0 1 0 1 Cameron, lb.. 2 0 0 S 0 0 Jessup, c 4 0 0 6 0 0 Wiltermood, If 3 0 1 3 0 0 Ridgely, 2b.. .4 1 0 3 3 0 Minzler, S3..4 1 1 4-4 0 Cham, rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 Fisher, 3b.. ..3 0 1 2 3 0 Fleming, p.. ..3 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 29 3 3 27 11 2 Marion AB. R. II. o. A. E. Pence, cf 4 1 11 0 1 F. Martin, 3b .4 0 1 0 fj 1 VanBlaricon 2b 4 0 0 1 2 2 Porter, ss 4 0 1 3 2 0 Cummins, lb ..3 0 1 11 0 0 Doyle, If 3 0 0 4 0 0 Underwood, c .3 0 0 4 0 0 W. Martin, rf..3 0 0 0 0 0 Nonemaker, p .2 1 0 0 2 0 Totals.. .. 30 2 4 24 12 4 Richmond 1 0020000 x 3 Marion 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 02

Left on bases Richmond 6; Marlon Earned runs Marion 1. Sacrifice hit Cameron. Stolen base Wiltermood. Double plays Ridgely, Minzler, Cameron; Fisher, Ridgely. Cameron. Struckout Fleming 6; Nonemaker 4. Bases on balls Fleming 1; Nonemaker 3. Time 1:30. Umpire Endsfield. ' Attendance 1,500. C., C. & I ticket agent will sell yp Bleeping car tickets to Chicago for their 11:15 P. M. train. Call on him. .,- apr6-tf

Results.

NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.

Won. Lost Pet Chicago.. 61 21 .741 New York.. .m .. .48 SO .615 Pittsburg.. .. ... ..48 31 .608 Philadelphia.. .. ..43 .34 .553 Brooklyn... ...... 38 45 .458 Boston... .. ;..33 43 .423 Cincinnati 32 49 .395 St. Loui3.. ..19 67 .221 No games scheduled Sunday. AMERICAN ASSN. STANDING. Won Lost Pet. Toledo 53 35 .602 Minneapolis 51 39 .567 Columbus.. .. .. ..49 39 .557 Milwaukee.... . ..45 43 .511 Kansas City. 45 44 .506 Louisville.. 39 49 .443 St. Paul 38 53 .418 Indianapolis 37 55 .402 Sunday's Results.

Minneapolis 3,; Indianapolis 1. St. Paul 2; Columbus 0, (1st game.) St. Paul 2; Columbus 1, (2nd game.) Toledo 12; Kansas City 1. Milwaukee-Louisville (rain.)

AMERICAN LEAGUE .STANDING. Won Lost Pet Chicago 53 31 .631 Cleveland.. .. .. ..48 3:j .593 Detroit.. 46 32 .590 Philadelphia 45 34 .570 New York 3S 42 .475 St. Louis 34 48 .415 Boston. . 31 49 .388 Washington.. 25 51 .329

Sunday's Results. Boston 3; Chicago 0, (1st game.) Chicago 4; Boston 2, (2nd game.) New York 7; St. Louis 2, 10 innings. CENTRAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost. Pet. Wheeling 44 32 .573 Springfield 43 Canton . . . .40 556 Evansville 43 Dayton 38 6t 40 .487 Terre Haute 37 Grand Rapids 33 South Bend 31 42 .468 j 43 .434! 49 ' .3SS i Sunday's Results. Evansville 1; South Bend 0. Canton 3; Dayton 2, (1st game.) Dayton 5; Canton 4, (2nd game.) Springfield 6; Wheeling 0, (1st game.) Wheeling 3; Springfield 2, (2nd game.) Grand Rapids-Terre Haute (rain.) CAP. HARE WILL COACH THE HOSE POLY TEAM He Has Made a Verbal Contract to This Effect. COMING HERE ON NOV. 2. Cap. Bunny Hare, if he does not return here this season to play ball, will come next fall with the Rose Poly football team as coach. That team is to meet Ear'ham here on November 2. A Terre, Haute dispatch says: "Bunny" Hare, Indiana University's famous quarter back and captain, is to coach Rose Polytechnic's football team this year. He has entered Into a verbal contract with Manager Paul Lindeman and a written contract is now in his hands for his signature. "Bunny" undoubtedly is the fastest man that ever donned the moleskins for the state team. He made the team during his first year in college, while "Jimmie" Home was coaching the cream and crimson. Hare's excellent kicking and his almost perfect handling of the ball won him the captaincy of the team the next season and he was again elected captain last year. Hare is Eckersall's only rival in the west, not only in the art of drop kicking and punting, but in earning the ball. As a field general he is reputed to nave jckersall "backed off the boards." Rose Poly has been handicapped for years because of lack of good coaching, and it is hoped that Hare's advent will bring out a winning team. Heretofore the Rose boys have been accustomed to loaf during the greater part of the season, but the Indiana man has absorbed Sheldon's views about working and will keep the Rose team plugging from the beginning to the end of the seuya. MINOR SCORES. Sunday. Dunkirk 5; Portland 2. New Castle 5; Rushville 1. Lebanon 4; Connersvllle 3. Fort Wayne Shamrocks S; Findlay 0. Saturday. Bluffton 4; Kokomo 2. Lebanon 3; Atkins 2. Dunkirk 2; Portland 1. LOSERS MAKE A COMPLAINT Say Defeat Was Due to Renk Umpir ing and Bad Field. Campbellstown, O., July 2 Al though the Richmond Browns outbatted the Campbellstown Ail Stars, they were defeated by rank umpiring and a bad field, which is not only a ball diamond but a barn yard as well. Score: Browns 12-12 9. All Stars 13-7-3. Batteries Cummings and Goehner; Bittelon and Moss.

MP DUBLIN WRITER'S FAITH IN CONNER He Predicts That Manager Jessup's Latest Find Will Make Good. THINKS HIM A WONDER. CONNER IS NOT AFFLICTED WITH FftflTISM AMH iKirrNnc TO WORK HARD TO REACH THE TOP. Dublin, Ind., July 22 The Palladlum, together with its sporting writer

at Dublin, is responsible for the dig- ora Breaking crowa, ine auenaance ue- . . . . ,f I ing estimated at 1,500. Umpire Jot

& v Jessup's pitching find, who pitched such a splendid game Saturday against Van Wert, defeating them 3 to 2 in 10 innings. For two years the Dublin writer has been digging away through the columns of the Palladium-Sun-Tele gram, giving notoriety to the remarka ble pitching feats of young Conner while serving slants for the Dublin and other teams of the amateur class. Just a few weeks ago it was predicted in the Palladium that Manager Jessup . . . ... . . would do wen 10 give Conner u uuduce , am at tw hvA the y 1 1 ii 1110 . v. unit v .j -- - r.t,iA uns" rtpninrk ,-f!r, f "Tir-v was merely through personal regards of the Palladium's writer. Confident that . .. , . -ii ii..i young TICK wouiu prove an mat who said of him. the "write ups" still continned to call attention to his great work and right here let it be known that young Conne ris not to stop in the Richmond professional class but the writer of this article hastens to rredirt that he will continue with his remarkable work until the managers of the big league teams will be clamj oring and falling over each other to claim his services as a dox artist. i However, the writer wa3 only a week ago told by three Dublin "supposed to be" loyal fans that Conner did not amount to much as a pitcher. It is well known that Conner has never had many supporters at Cambridge City and for the past month the "knockers' club" of that place has been working their hammer over time In order to rob Conner of his fame. Conner Is a young man of very reticent manners. He is not putted up over his success and takes it very considerate. He intends to work nard to get to the. top therefore obtaining the goal of his one ambition. PREPARE FOR COUNTY' FAIR Newcastle Is Busy Getting Ready for Big Annual Event. New Castle, Ind., July 22 With less than three weeks remaining until the opening of the thirteenth annual Hen ry county fair in thi3 city, becretary Risk and his assistants are busily engaged in getting ready for the annual event. A force of workmen are now engaged at the grounds repairing the buildings and getting the grounds in condition, secretary uisK .txci.mM many inquiries irom personb aebiung to make entries in tne premium aepartments ana aiso num ui norses wno win euier m SBVeidl syt-t-u cclitB. . As the purses are higher this year iiiuu uavt; utffii uneieu piuviuusif they are expected to attract some fast ent time, are that every contest will- be wpll fillpd. Cnnntv KiirFrintpnr?fmt Roberts of the county schools is gettins- rpadv fnr th evhihft thnt Ho m n A it. A 1 0 1 . . VL wJC u.k ui senooi enndren. lue -H-'iauonnas ottered iuu in Cunum lor wis department and .c- Q1C xiumuer ui entries OI naoAe. t :. j . . .1 o-jo, aua otner senooi i7J' , l T as created 1'iuvfu very popular, oe.v.o cm-uuiagius me senooi children to their best efforts. NEW CASTLE TEAM, SHUT OUT Hagerstown, Ind.. July 22. The baseball game Sunday between New Cas tle and Hagerstown resulted IP. to O i A tne dojs irom New Castle makin runs. no ARE ABUSED BY. SOflAEOF THE BOYS Complaint Is Made Against Certain Practices. LAD ROUGHLY HANDLED. There is a practice being carried on by the boys of Richmond, or at least some of them, which is becoming a nuisance and is brutal. Several of these youngsters make the rounds of the hitchracks in the western portions of the uptown district, and strike the horses over the nose with clubs in order to see them jump. They also hit their legs and do other things to torment the beasts. A farmer caught a youngster striking his horse across the legs with a club at the South Seventh treet hitchrack j Saturday afternoon and the shaking the boy received probably will cure him of the habit Unless the practice of the 3'onngsters is stopped both the humane officer and police will be appealed to. In some instances horses have broken loose from the racks when tor-' niented. causing a great deal cf an-j noyance to their owces. - J

HORSES

CAMBRIDGE GRAYS

TOOK THE SERIES Defeated New Lisbon Sunday Afternoon in a Most Interesting Contest. TWENTY HITS WERE MADE. GRAYS BUNCHED THEM IN THE NINTH AND BROUGHT IN THE WINNING RUN SOME PRETTY FIELDING. S Cambridge Citv. Ind.. July 22. In the last game Gf a series, played between the Grays of this- city and the fasc New Lisbon team, the former came off victorious by a score of 3 to 2 yesterday afternoon. The game was played on the local diamond, to a rec1 J A A -3 VGoar of New Lisbon, called the game t 2 4 lth shiverdecker in the box and the visitors to bat. It proved to be a veritable swatfest from the beginning and every man on the local team secured at least one hit, "Rusty" Stombaugh making a two fegger, the only one secured during the entire game. The score stood with two runs to the credit of either side in the ninth, but by bunching hits in the last half, with two men out, Riddle sailed over tne nan. bringing victory to the home team. Anions the features or tne same were a running catch made by I . . . . . Dishman of the locals in tne nrtn in ning, and two fast double plays by Jimtown. Yesterday's game was one of the fastest that has been played thi spssnn tVif time hrine- 1 hnnr and minutes. ine score C. City. OIOIOOOO 13 12 1 N. Lisbon ..OIOOIOOO 0-2 8 2 Two base hit-btombaugh Innings pitched By Shildtkneck, 4; by Gilbert, 5; by Shiverdecker, 9, Bases on balls Shiverdecker, 2. Struck out By Shiverdecker, 6; by Shildtkneck, 1; by Gilbert, 4. Sacrifice hits Shiverdecker and Enyeart. CHARGED WITH COLD FEET. Greensfork Is Displeased Over Cam bridge City's Action. Greensfork, Ind., July 22. The Cam bridge City Grays were to play at Greensfork Sunday, July 2S, and Greensfork was to return the date Aug. 4. Cambridge City's reason for breakmg the date Is that it Is too hot to drive to Greensfork. The Greensfork manager offered all kinds of proposi i tions not to break the date for Sunday, as the game is well advertised Greensfork woulo like to play a game Kith Cambridge City for ?50 a side on neutrai grounds BENTONVILLE WAS BEATEN Score at Greensfork on Sunday Afternoon Was Very One-Sided. Greensfork, Ind., July 22. The Greensfork ball club defeated the Bentonvine CUD by a score of 13 to 3, SnT1rtav . srfire. Greensfork O40O113G 0-15 14 3 Ben'vllle O 0 O 1 O O O 2 O 3 3 66 Two base hits Wise 2; Ellis 2: stackhuose 2: Gunckle, Murley, Scott Home runGunckle Baseg on bals0ff Mliriey, 10; off e. Ridge, 0; off F. Ridge, 5 Batteries Greensfork, E. Ridge, F. Ridge and Wise; Bentonville, Murley land Scott LITTLE GIANTS TOOK GAME. Trimmed Up the Casket Trimmers by IO O OCOre Cambridge City, Ind., July 22. The Little Giants, with Drischel in the box defeated the Casket Trimmers by Srnre of O to H in n eamfl tilntrl on " " the Lake Erie diamond Sunday morn lng. The game was umpired by Robert divers CENTERVILLE VS. BUCKEYE Hotly Contested G-me Resulted In 11 To 9 Score. Centerville, Ind., July 22 The rCenterville Combination defeated the Buckeye ball team Sunday afternoon in a hotly contested game by a score of . 11 to 9. Batteries Centerville Jones, McCarty and Tibbitts; Buck eye: Burris, Hawkins and Moore. PITCHER BOYD IS SICK. Greensfork Twirler Is Confined to His Bed. Greensfork, Ind., July 22 Lowell Boyd, who was to be given a try out Sunday by Manager Jessup at Rich mond, took sick Sunday morning and is confined to his bed. WILL MAKE A PROTEST County Officials to Appear Be fore State Tax Board. County Treasurer B. B. Myrick, Jr., County Auditor H. J. Hanes and County Attorney John F. Bobbins have left for Indianapolis where they will appear before the state board of tax commissioners and enter a vigor ous protest against tne proposed 1U per cent increase on the assessment of real estate in Wayne count-. ANNIVERSARY OF PATRON SAINT. Next Sunday the St. Anne's Ladies society of St. Andrew's church will celebrate the annivers.irv of its patron saint, St. Anne. Special services will he heWU - . -

PARTY HAS LEFT DN

TRIP TO JAMESTOWN Palladium and Sun-Telegram Excursion Is Now on Way to the East. SEVENTEEN MAKE THE TRIP IT HAS BEEN ARRANGED TO PRO VIDE THE PALLADIUM WITH DAILY LETTER WHICH WILL BE PRINTED. Seventeen happy people left the city early this morning bound for the Jamestown exposition, six of them being the winning contestants in the Palladium's Jamestown Exposition voting contest conducted by this pa per several weeks ago. The party was in charge of Thomas J. Golding, circulation manager of the Palladium The party left the city on the C. C & L. train scheduled to leave Rich mond at 5.25 and went to Cincinnati leaving there tonight via the Norfolk and Western railroad for Jamestown The party will be gone ten days. A most pleasant trip is expected as the crowd leaving the city was a most congenial one. All expenses of the winning contestants for the trip are paid by the Palladium. The winning contestants in the recent contest are Etaa Stevenson, Eli zabeth Lashley, Harry Buntin, George Matthews. Nellie Williams, Marie Hodskin. Others who went are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Golding, Mrs. Geo. B. Dougan, Mrs. Cora Mull ins, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Watson, Daniel S Gates, Miss Hattie Lashley, Horace Iredell and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Scott. HOVii WE AHE FORMED. A Few of the Many Marvels of the Hu man Ccdy. On an average man's body there are 340,000 hairs. Plucking one every second it would take hiru twelve eighthour working days to pull them all out. In his blood there are 23,000,000,000.000 red corpuscles. Laid out side hy side they would cover a surface of 3,100 square yards. The whole of the blood passes througb a man's heart nearly twice in every minute. It weighs one-thirteenth of the entire body weight, and it moves in different parts of the body at speeds varying from ten feet to l.GGG yards (nearly one mile) au hour. The fat of your body is fluid. It becomes solid only when the body cools after death. It is one of your most useful constituents, forming a nonconducting sheath to protect you from cold, acting as pads to preserve from shock, ou the tips of the fingers, the toes and the heels and lying always ready as a reserve food supply when you can get nothing to eat. A little artery passes from your brain through the skull into the scalp, w hich acts as a safety valve when the brain is congested with blood. The ekln cannot grow ajrain once it is destroyed; hence the unsightly scars left by burns and severe wounds. Only the surface layer can renew itself. When the whole thickness is destroyed, It never reforms. This is the more curidus as muscles, nerves, blood vessels and bones, all less liable to injury than the skin, can grow again. You are really a water rather than a land animal. Although as a whole you live on dry land, your body consists of countless millions of separate living particles, end these are all Immersed in the water which constitutes four-fifths of your substance. Within the inner part of your ear, deep In the bone, is a quantity of fluid which acts as a spirit level and enables you to keep your balance. Chicago Record-Herald. A WISE BRITON. He Half Suspected at the Start That the Feathers Weren't Edible. A Brooklyn man who entertained an English relative tells this without the quiver of an eyelid: "My cousin from London reached New York last summer, along with a hot wave. The crowds were deep before the soda water fountains on lower Broadway. He remarked that he did not comprehend how Americans could swallow that 'nasty slush.' " 'A mere preference,' I explained. 'We have many curious examples of that kind In this country. One of the most remarkable evidences of insatiable appetite for froth rather than substance Is that of the American poultry lover who daily advertises In our NewYork papers for 1,000 feather beds. As you may well imagine, he Is said to have entirely lost his taste for the flesh of .the fowl.' "'Oh, reallyT exclaimed the Englishman In quiet surprise. Nothing more was said till nine months later, when I opened my ndjf one day and found a marked copy of the London Times, which he had eent to me. He called my attention to this extract In an article on mob rule nn-J lynching in America, 'It can hardly be possible that the supply of tar and feathers In the United States will be sufScfent at the rate the mobs are covering the bodies of the poor wretches who are tortured and humiliated before they are drawn and quartered or burned at ths stake. " 'I fnncy yon will see your error after reading this,' he wrote. 'It is quite plain the man wanted the beds for another purpose and not, as you believe, to eat. "Brooklyn Eagle. The Satirise Of tlfts. Infants and children are constaatlr ceedintr a 'axative. It is imports nt to know what to give them. Their stomach and bowels are not strong enough for salts, ptsrg-ative waters or cathartic pills, powders or tablets. Give them a rcijj, pleasant, gentle, laxative tonic like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which sells at ths small stun of SO cents or SI at drag- stores. It is the one great remedy for yon to have m tie bouse to jrira chillren when they ncsd it. "ALLAD1UM WANT ADS PAY.

MaMeg Bread all Honnie Isn't a very pleasant occupation in warm weather. It may be all right if everything is lovely; the baby is a "perfect angel," and the stove draws fust right, and the oven is the right temperature, and various other "ifs;" but then it's never this way. Better buy Victor Bread and not take any chances. Yours truly, Richmond Balling Co.

FOUR HUNDRED ARE KILLED III A Explosion With Terrible Re sults Is Reported From The Province of Bungo. Toklo, July 22 An explosion has occurred in the Tokoke colliery, province of Bungo, Kyushu Island. Four hundred lives were lost. KINNEY FREIGHT SOLICITOR He Is Named for New Branch of the Pennsylvania. Guy S. McCabe, Richmond division freight agent for the Pennsylvania lines, has appointed C. D. Kinney freight solicitor for the new Pennsyl vania branch between Munclo and Converse. The road was formerly the C, I. & E. MRS. HOLLENBECK IS DEAD. She Was the Widow of the Well Known Publisher. Indianapolis, July 22. Mrs. Jennie Hollenbeck, widow of the late Charles E. Hollenbeck, founder of the Hollen - beck Press, one of the oldest and best known printing establishments in In dianapolis, dSed suddenly yesterday afternoon of apoplexy. INCREASE NOW IN EFFECT t Now Costs More to Get a Livery Rig. DOING A GOOD BUSINESS. The increased prices of livery. agreed upon by practically all of the local liverymen are now in force, and where a man formerly paid $l.."0 for a rig on Sunday evening, he now pays $2.0O. Prices on all day livery rigs have also advanced about fifty cents, while the liverymen are demanding IK per month for boarders. The prices are very steep, but the liverymen say they are In line with the Increased cost of feed. Notwithstanding the increased prices, the livery men are doing a land office business. SUIT IS FILED ON NOTES Action Against Harry M. YVestcott for $4,000. Harry M. Westcott has been sued on notes for $4,000, by the father of his divorced wife, Albert D. Heffncr of Columbus, O. In the complaint which has just been filed in the circuit court it is stated that one note was executed in 1807, an dthe second note was executed in I0O2. The principal and interesc on uiese two nuies uuw aniuuuv , to $4,Cnn. suit was filed by Attorney Henry U. Johnson. A Glasgow pnner thus analyzes the music of the bagpipe: "Big flies on window, 72 per cent; cats on midnight tiles, per cent; voices of Infant puppies, G per cent; grunting hungry pigs in the morning, 5Vi per cent; steam whistles. 3 per cent; chant of CTlokot 2 n.-r ront ; Forcing mand. There v.ns to Le a circus In town next day. nnd Robert wished to go and see It unload, ro he so-jght to obtain his fathers consent. The first queslicn his father put to him on being approached was. "Hare you asked you: mother? "Yes, sir." was Robert's prompt rtoly. "What did she say? the father pur sued. "She sc. id I couldn't go," was tinfrank rejoinder. "What Co y--i c:er.n, Robert, by coin lng to V arl: to Co a tiling nftei your mother biis toid yoa you could not do itr "Well, papa," the little fellow obi nearuyoa ear iasi wi-eu m you re t!:,-? o? this ranch, and I j trmn-tir ff vr-- r'-- t'rft fn- von fa tnOL0!:t U W.. ccon TO. jOU to assert yourself." Exehauce. - 1

MINE

JURY MAY GET THE CASE NEXT FRIDAY (Continued From Tage One.)

ard's testimony and the testimony on which the state relies for corroboration of the confession Is sure to be Interesting and lucid. Richardson is to have all of today's sessions and If he can not complete his argument he will be given more time. Clarence S. Darrow makes the final argument for Haywood and the Westem Federation, beginning Tuesday. He will speak two days and then United States Senator Borah Is to close for tho state. Darrow and Borah are expected to surprise themselves In their pleas to the farmers of the Jury. Both are noted orators, both have wit and imagination and It Is already known that the big courtroom will not begin to accommodate the crowd that desires to hear these two advocates. Sizzling heat has arrived In Boise. This Is one of the hottest (sections of the country In July and August. Some of the residents are prophesying that a continuation of Sunday's temperature is sure to cause an adjournment of the court during the week. Fear Heat Collapse. With the courtroom crowded to irs capacity and not a breath of air inside or outside, it would not be surprising ,If some of the officials or Jurors connecled with the trial should succumb and compel a temporary recess. .The jurors have been In close custody for eleven weeks and a day or two of Intense heat might cause one or more to collapse. Senator Borah Is anxious to get the case to the Jury. He says he will not talk more than one day. Darrow and Richardson show the wear and tear of months of strain they have been under, and like the others they are looking to the close with pleasure. Haywood's mother, Mrs. Carruthers, has overtaxed her strength and for the last four days was unable to attend court. Mrs. W. D. Haywood, an invalid for the last ten years, seems to have stood the ordeal better than any one. She is apparently as well and as strong as she was the day the trial started. Haywood Is In better health than two months ago. He has gone on a limited diet, and, as a re sult has lost the apoplectic look which he had during the early part of May, about the time he collapsed from Indigestion. THE NEWS OF FAIRVIEW Street Car Company Is Making Some Repairs. FESTIVAL FOR THE CHURCH. The street car company Is making some needed repairs on the line on Grant street. Married at the home of Harry Winkle on Charles street on last Saturday evening, Roscoe Spotts and Miss Jessie B. French, the Rev. O. S. liarrjSOn officiating. Mr. Siotts is a nephew to Miss Winkle. Both of the principles are of this city. The stewards of the Third M. E. church will hold an Ice cream social on the church lawn on next Wednesday evening for the benefit of the church. All are cordially Invited to attend.There was a large attendance at the Sunday school Sunday morning and good congregations at the preaching services. The people are waking up and the Interests of tha church look encouraging. storms invisconsiii No Trains Run Between St. Paul and Chicago. La Crosse, Wis., July 22 No trains are running between St. Paul and Chicago today on account of washouts. Great damags has been done by storm. One farmer lost one hundred cattla by drowning. ,f thJ, concerM Toa, c.re fully, tr. Caldwell's Syrnp Pepsin is positively guaranwanrenon, eonitlptMon, lick he(V offen,Jve breata. malaria and u-"ac arising from stomach Uoubla.