Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 202, 21 August 1907 — Page 2
TWO.
THE 11IC1I3IOND FAIXAD1U31 A'D SUN-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1907.
gemeira.il. sporting mews
WOII THE GAME III
THE FIRST
G
Portland Landed on Horn and Secured Three Runs at Outset of Contest.
IT WAS ENOUGH TO WIN.
QUAKERS WERE NOT ABLE FIND WAGNER, GETTING FOUR HITS Fl ANT WAS SECOND BASE.
TO BUT AT
I. O. LEAGUE STANDING.
Won. Lost. Pet. Portland 13 8 .619 Richmond 12 8 .600 Decatur 10 10 .500 Kokomo 10 11 .476 Vanwert 9 12 .429 Bluffton 7 12 .368
Games Wednesday. Richmond at Portland. Kokomo at Bluffton. Decatur at Van Wert. Portland, Ind., Aug. 21. Portland won the opening game of the series nith. the Quakers, by batting Horn hard In the first Inning. Casey was
Jolted four times for three runs in this
Inning. After that the big fellow settled down and the remainder of the game the Jays were only able to get fire scattered hits off him. Wagner pitched a beautiful game for the locals, shutting out the Quakers for eight Innings with only two hits. In the ninth the Quakers made a rally which the Jays smothered to death after one run had leaked over the pan. Fred Flant was at second base for the visitors and he played a nice game considering the fact that he has been on the retired list for the past week or two. The Quakers played a nice fielding game, little Minzler doing especially nice work at shortstop. Portland earned all of Its three runs by hard clouting. In the ninth Weaver and Jessup each singled and were advanced on Hick's out. Weaver
scored on Minzler's Infield out. The score:
Mainstay of the Yankees. 1 "isft A?A xJ Wv0Vt ij&M ;X
nil
THE BASEBALL RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING.
-.if.
4. ir
. V Vv"'
Won. Lost Pet. Chicago.. SO 30 .727 Pittsburg ..62 43 .590 New York 62 43 .590 Philadelphia 56 4S .533 Brooklyn.... .. ..51 59 .464 Cincinnati 47 62 .431 ' Boston 40 67 .374 j St. Louis 34 SO .293
FEELING EFFECT OF LAW ON PLATFORMS Loading and Unloading of Cars And Building of Switches Is Involved.
Tuesday's Results. Chicago 6; New York 2. Brooklyn 9; Cincinnati 3. St. Louis 3; Philadelphia 1. Boston 9; Pittsburg 8, ((11 Innings.) AMERICAN ASSN. STANDING. ' Won Lost Pet
EMPLOYES ARE PROTECTED
IN MANY INSTANCES THERE WILL HAVE TO BE MUCH REBUILDING IN ORDER TO COMPLY WITH THE LAW.
Toledo ..72 48 Columbus.. .. .. ..68 51 Minneapolis .. .. ..65 58 Louisville 63 60 Kansas City 60 62 Milwaukee 54 64 Indianapolis 56 ' 67 St. Paul 47 74
.600
.455 .3SS
Tuesday's Results. Columbus 8; Minneapolis 5. Kansas City, 5; Louisville 0. No other games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won Loat Pet j Ihiladelphla 63 42 .600 Detroit 62 42 .596 ; Chicago 66 46 .589 Cleveland 62 47 .569; New' York 50 56 .472 j Boston 47 61 .435 j St. Louis 43 61 .424 Washington 31 71 .301 I
Tuesday's Results. New York 6; St. Louis 3. Cleveland 3; Washington 0, (first game.) Cleveland 1; Washington 1, (called end of twelfth; darkness.) Detroit 3; Boston 0. Chicago 4; Philadelphia 1. CENTRAL LEAGUE STANDING.
RICHMOND. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Ritter, If.. .. .4 0 1 4 1 0 Wiltermood, rf 4 0 0 1 0 0 Weaver, cf .. .3 1 1 2 0 0 Jessup, c 4 0 1 4 1 0 Hicks, lb 4 0 0 7 0 1 Minzler. ss.. ..4 0 0 0 6 0 Flant, 2b 4 0 0 4 1 1 Fisher, 3b .. ..3 0 1 2 1 0 Horn, p 3 0 0 0 3 0 Totals 33 1 4 24 13 2 Portland ad. r. ii.o.Ar e Parker, 2b .. .3 1 2 2 5 0 J. B'baugh. 3b .4 0 0 0 0 1 Grey, If.. .. .4 1 1 0 0 0 Stewart, ss..- ..4 1 1 2 2 0 Durham, cf .. .3 0 1 2 0 0 Jo. B'baugh, rf 4 0 0 4 0 0 Carmony, lb . .4 0 2 9 0 0 Harms, c .. ..3 0 0 7 0 0 Wagner, p .. .4 0 2 1 2 0 Totals .. ..33 3 9 27 9 1 Richmond 0 0000000 1 1 Portland 30000000 x 3
AL ORTK
Orth has been doing- more box duty than any other member of the New York American League team, maid is cutting a figure In the league race by beatina the leaders frequently.
Earned run si Portland 3. Three base hits Parker. Bases on balls Wagner 1; Horn 2. Struck out Wagner 7; Horn 3. Left on bases Portland 7; Richmond 6. Wild pitch Horn 1. Hit by pitcher Horn 1. Umpires Romalne and Cunningham. Bluffton, 9; Kokomo b. -Kokomo, Ind., Aug. 21 The Kokomo baseball management declares that It was outrageously treated In not being apprised before the start of the game at Bluffton Tuesday, of Catcher Noble Orr being released by the league management for striking Umpire Turner on the head at Athletic Park, In this city, Sunday, and that this fact placed the Kokomo team In a certain disadvantage; not having any available substitute, Catcher Raines having been released Sunday. This necessitated placing Grimes, pitcher, behind the bat, and at present the management say he was totally disqualified and ; the Kokomo team went to pieces in the game. The Kokomo management declares that one of the batters pushed aside the ball with his bat, which was near the home plate, making runs possible. Kokomo proposes to plav today at Bluffton, leaving Tuesday's game under protest which they say Bluffton can have 9 to 0 or play it over again. Tho game was stopped in the sixth inning, the score being 2 to 1, the Ko
komo team leaving the diamond. McElwain, first base; Raines, catcher, and Prater, pitcher, have been released. Zell of the I. I. I. League, center field, has been ordered to Kokomo and negotiations are on for a new catcher. Carl Miller of Indianapolis will catch for the locals today. Kokomo is also on the fretful seat still against Umpire Thompson, who appeared on the diamond at Bluffton again today. Van Wert, 2; Decatur,!. Van Wert, O., Aug. 21 Van Wert won a fast ten-inning contest here Tuesday from Decatur by a score of 2 to 1. Moore, the local pitcher, had the visitors at his me,rcy and let them down with one hit. Score: R. H. E. Decatur 000010000 0 1 1 0
Vanwert 000100000 12 9 4
Batteries Way and Johnson; Moore and Wolf. Umpire Arundal.
GOLF CONTESTS ABE ON Two Contests Are at Stake in
The Playing.
Won. Lost. Tct. j Springfield 72 41 .637 i Wheeling 58 50 .537 j Evansville 59 56 .513 j Terre Haute 58 56 .50S j Canton 54 55 .495 j Dayton 54 58 .482 Grand Rapids 49 63 .437 South Bend 45 70 .391
Factory owners in Richmond and Wayne county are beginning to feel
: the effects of the law enacted by the 5S ' "r?!last legislature to regulate the cou.492 structin of platforms for loading and .453 ! unloading of cars and building of
switches. This was one of the few acts imposing burdens on the manufacturers placed upon tho statute books by the last Indiana legislature. Two requirements are placed in the law, both to safeguard railroad employes. One is that platforms in loading and unloading freight shall be five feet from the rack, and the other, that the tracks entering the factory building shall have a clearance of twentyone feet so that an employe of average height might stand erect on a
tions. The Pennsylvania railroad as well as the C, C. & L. have .brought the requirements of the new law to the attention of local manufacturers and in several Instances there will have to be much rebuilding done to comply with the law. In some instances the new law will work hardship with local manufacturers and switches will either have to be taken up or entire walls torn out and rebuilt farther in, that the factory owners may comply with the rule stating that five feet spaces shall be left between the platform edges and the tracks. It Is thought in Richmond that the law will be winked at in many Instances, as improvements which would thoroughly meet all the requirements of the law would be more expense than was really necessary according to some opinions.
ASKING $100,000 DAMAGES.
I
'
Tuesday's Results. Dayton 5; South Bend 0. Canton 3; Terre Haute 0, (nrst game.) Terre Haute 2; Canton 1, (second game.) Springfield 9: Grand Rapids 0 .
Wheeling' 2; Evansville 1, ((11 nings.)
In-
Two very warm contests are being
waged on the Country club golf links
Chas. S. Bond playing Howard Dill for the club championship, while George Seidell is playing J. Y. Poundstone for
the president's cup, the consolation
prize. A large number are witnessing
the play.
BASEBALL GOSSIP. (By Tort.j
The Van Wert management, If It persists In accumulating more players like Hay and Van Anda, should take some steps toward preventing the squirrels getting their hired men. Harry Hay makes a noise like a hickory nut every time he moves but Clint Van Anda is In a class by him.
self. Rube addell has nothing on
Clint. The eccentric methods of the big cornfield sailor have kept him out of the major leagues. Last year he was the star twirler of the Grand Rapids Central league champions and at the close of the season was sold to the Baltimore Eastern league champs. Rather than suffer an attack of nervous prostration the manager of the latter team released Van eany this season and since that time he has been skipping from one league to another in a hopeless effor to escape the squirrels, who are hot after a good meal. Louie Hunt, who Umps Thompson relegated to the moth balls Jar ten days, was cunning like a fox Tuesday. Our pets take least kindly to the delivery of Wagner than of any other twirler on the Portland staff, consequently Hunt stuck him in ajjainst us Tuesday and all the Quakers could get were four hits.. Wo arn now hitting the high spot3 in second piace.
CROQUET GAMES AT DUBLIN
Dublin, Ind., Aug. 21. The local croquet grounds are in operation and
some spirited contests take place.
GETTYSBURG LOST, 9 TO 6.
Gettysburg, O., Aug. 21. Gettys
burg lost to New Madison by a score
of 9 to 6. Score:
R. H. E.
G'burg. ..0 0111110 16 14 New M. ..0 4 1 4 0 0 0 0 09 9
Jennings and Trakowskl; Burns
and Teaford. Umpire, Pence.
There will be a game next Sunday
at Gettysburg with Castine.
It is a Ood plan to wash js and dates before giving them to children, or, for that matter, to any one. Their sweetness attracts Insects, and their stickiness makes them a perfect home for dust asd Its undesirable germs. Yet msst people seem never to think of this at all. Washing will not Impair the flavor. On the contrary, It makes thera more agreable to the sight and touch as well as to the taste.
Yax-Mtilr. "It -was as mich a3 I could do to keep from laughing when Miss Guscher remarked that her fiance was so versatile.' " "Meaning Damley? Well, he Is rather versatile." "Nonsense! He's a regular idiot." "Tes, but be's so many different kinds of an Idiot" Philadelphia Press.
CLIP THE BALLOT. Clip the ballot below, fill It in properly and send it to the Palladium and Sun-Telegram office. The contest will run until September 14, 1907.
This Ballot Not Good After 5 P. M., August 2S PALLADIUM and SUN-TELEGRAM Pony and Cart Voting Contest (ONE VOTE COUPON)
This Ballot f s cast in Carrier boys are nat permitted to receive ballots from the patrons. Fill In the ballot, mail or br.'iig It to the Palladium and Sun-Telegram office, before the expiration ot the bove date, otherwise it cannot be considered. A new ballot will appear daily.
Toobralng I' p. They told the youngster to soak his feet in a tub of salt water if he wanted to toughen them. He soaked his heads too. "It's rretty near time for me to get a licking," he explained. "Tomorrow I'm going to sit In it" New York Sun.
Records of false weights and measures used in New York city show that the people are cheated out of ?13,000,000 a year by their use.
liiiiirrasia
When you want a quick cure without any loss of time, and one that is followed by no bad results, use Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It nerer fails and is pleasant to take. It is equally valuable for children. It is famous for its cures over a large part ol the civilized w- .
A CORRECTION Mistake in Rosenbloom, Buntin & Co's Advertisement. Yesterday's Palladium, in which appeared the advertisement of Rosenbloom, Buntin & Co., where it read H. S. & M. $18.00 and $22.00 Suits for
$13.00 should have read $18.00 and $20.00 Suits for $13.00. Also, in the
same advertisement it read $1.00
shirts 63c, should have been $1.00 for
85c. To the readers of the Palladium
we wish to state that it was a typographical error and the Rosenbloom,
Buntin & Co were not responsible for
the mistake. Palladium Printing Co.
At the beginning of the year the number of people living under statutory prohibition ia Maine, North Dakota and Kansas was only 2..Vt.),0o. By the end of the year Tennessee and Georgia will have nearly trebled the number.
f' h VAX-
For a remark alleged to have ben made by former Senator James Smith in the presence of Gov. Stokes of New Jersey, and within the hearing of several women. Assemblyman W. H. Wright, Jr., of Newark has begun suit against the Senator for $100,000 damages. This assertion objected to is: "It kept Charlie Bell, the wine-agent, busy keeping Wright supplied with wine and women." Wright's picture is at the top and Senator Smith's at the bottom. The Chilean government has purchased twenty-five heavy American locomotives to be used on the heavier grades of the state railroad. They are found to give better service than the English or German engines.
TheTheatorium 620 Main St. has as usual an Excellent Bill on for Wednesday and Thursday entitled "When Women Vote" and "A Curious Discovery, both screaming comedies .pure and wholesome. The comedy, "When Women Vote, shows the comical situations that may take place when the gentle sex are allowed to vote. Mr. Mylotte has a very pretty ballad entitled, "Will I Find My Mamma There? Pictures are changed Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Visit the Advanced Motion Picture house, admission 5c.
HOW WARRIORS DIED.
The Danes seem most addicted to suicide. Their average Is 25fS self-murderers a million persons a year.
Grant, who time and again stood untouched amid a hall of bullets, finally died of cancer. William the Silent survived numerous conflicts and campaigns, only to be assassinated after he was victorious. Napoleon, apparently bullet proof and believed by his followers to bear a charmed life, died almost alono of a cancer. Cortes, the conqueror of Mexico, after half a lifetime of desperate flchtlng. died in Spatu of typhoid fever, neglected and despised by those whom he had benefited. Washington survived the perils of the wilderness, the dangers of Indian warfare, nil the bullets and balls of a score of Revolutionary battles and the hardships of a seven years campaign to bo bled to death by his doctors. Lord Clive. the EafllaU conqueror of India, a bold, active wart?ior, exposed to death lu scotea of desperate battles and by several plots, telj a victim after his return ta England to the opium habit and committed suicide.
Japanese newspapers state that th incorporation of the Japanese match manufacturers is sure, aided by Eng lish capital. The capital will be be. tween $2,r.00,000 and $r.ooo,000, equal ly subscribed by Japanese manufacture ers and English investors, including the small factories. Efforts- will b made to open markets for Japanese matches in Europe and Australia.
BATH POWDER. I RICE POWDER A Perfumed Luxury for the Bath. I Best Toilet powder. Anti&epticalfy Softens Hard Water. Bctte I pure. Relieves sunburn and
than Perfume. 25 baths, chafing. Best for
25 2 5 cents. -AT ALL STORES-- baby,
t v
A CAN
OR MAILED BY US.
YOUR NERVES.
The Most Untiring of All Are Those of
the Heart.
The most easily tired nerves in the
body are the n3rves of smell. They
can detect the faintest whill of per
fume. As you pass a rose In the garden the quantity of perfume that gets
into your nostril must be many millions of billions of times smaller than
the tiniest grain of sand. But rub the strongest perfume on your upper Hp and in a few seconds you fall to no
tice it, the nerve of smell Is so quickly fatigued.
'lhe neat nerves and cold nerves.
which are quite distinct from the
nerves of ordinary sensation, also give
over working very quickly. A bath that seems quite hot when you step into it very soon ceases to cause tiny particular feeling of heat Nerves of hearing and sight can go through an enormous amount of work. For sixteen hours a day they work hard and are still willing to do more. The nerves of the heart are the most untiring of all. From the first dawn of life until the last gap they work without stopping for one instant. And even after death If some salted water is pumped into the heart it commences to beat again, showing that the nerves are still willing. Tearson's Weekly. HE REVISED IT.
Young Author Was Anxious to Comply With the Editor's Request. "Tour story possesses merit," wrote the kindly magazine editor La returning a manuscript to a struggling young author of Washington, "but you have embellished it with too much description, atmosphere and other irrelevant matter. What we want is a story setting out the simple facts facts, just plain facts. If you will revise your story according to our ideas, we will be glad to pay yon $23 for 1L" A few days later the editor got the following from the struggling young author of Washington: "Herewith revised story. Please send check by return maiL as I need the money." And this was the story as rewritten: "Jonas loved Eliza, but he was poor, and wealthy papa kicked. Jonas went into Wall street and made a million; Incidentally bankrupting papa. Then Eliza went fishing, fell off a-log into the mill pond, and, Jonas fished her out. I'apa relented and borrowed a hun
dred thousand frtyn; Jonas. - Marriage."
We Propose To Increase Oir CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
E33K32
The Palladium and Sun-Telegram is the recognized Classified Advertisement medium in Richmond and Eastern Indiana, as is proven by the fact that we carry daily a GREAT MANY MORE such advertisements than any other paper published in this city or this part of the country. But we want more people to take advantage of the results that can be obtained from a Classified Advertisement in this paper, and to encourage them we arc OFFERING AS A PREMIUM for every Classified Advertisement .brpusrhl into our office (costing not less than 25c)
THE BEAUTIFUL HISTORICAL PICTURE, IN COLORS, Christopher Columbus at the Royal Court of Spain.
This beautiful picture is after the famous painting by Brozifr; and shows the intrepid Columbus explaining to Queen Isabella his great plan of sailing due west 'around" the globe until he came to Asia. Before the Queen on a table are her Jewels of fabulous worth, which she later sold to buy the lit tie fleet with which Columbus set out on his remarkable voyage of discovery. The scene which the picture portrays is shown as taking place in a beautifully decorated room of the Queen's palace, and the two principals, Columbus and Queen Isabella, are surrounded by a group of richly dressed Spanish grandees. Remember, this beautiful picture is given ABSOLUTELY FREE to anyone bringing to the Palladium office a Classified Advertisement costing not less than 25c. Thus you are doubly benefitted. You receive this beautiful picture free and get the results our largj circulation brings to all Classified Advertisements.
