Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 240, 3 October 1907 — Page 2
THE RICHMOND PAIaLAlIU3I ASD SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1007. Would you wear the best shoes made? Would you be the most economical and yet shod with shoes that are famous the country over? Wear Feltman's. LAUD VICTORY FROM AH APPARENT DEFEAT AH EFFORT ON TO GET HALF HOLIDAY VICTIM OF A COCKTAIL. Quakers Got Together When The Score Was Against Them- and- Won. Petition Asking the Business Men to Close When the Reds Play Here. FALL
PAGE TWO.
LOCAL AND GENERAL SPORTS
SIT
HORN CHASED TO WOODS.
COLORED LADS LIKED HIS DELIVERY AND IT WAS NECESSARY TO SEND YINGLING AS RELIEF ".XPEDITION.
(By Tort.) Richmond, 8; A. B. C.'s, 7. Amid the settings of a high, clear Bky and an extremely dark background, Richmond Wednesday rasped the Indianapolis A. B. C.'s, colored champs, B-to 7. The game fairly reeked with base hits. In the middle of the third Inning after the Alphabets had fallen upon Mr. Horn for their seventh base hit, a three bagger, which drove in their sixth run, Mr. Horn was crated and shipped on the skidoo limited to the stable. Yells by their rooters, fairly frazzling the atmosphere, greeted this feat of the colored champs. Mr. Ylngllng, the popular and effective Dayton twirlist, was organized into a relief expedition and hustled Into the box, with the score 0 to 2 against him. the man who had rapped Horn for the three bagger, stood gnawing the bit at the third corner. Allen, the first man to face Ylngllng, tapped him for a single and the decided brunette on third romped home. About two hundred colored bugs rose on their bind legs ind again did things to the atmosphere. It was their last chanoe to holler, and they made the best of it. In the second the Quakers had pushed two men over the pan on a single and a brace of errors. In the local third the gallant Quakers unpacked their swat clubs and proceeded to maul .Mr. Griffin, rated as the best pitcher last season in the African, league. Plummer led off with a single. Parker Rnf3 Burns then singled, congesting the cushions. Johnson Bcored Plummer on aii out to left, then Parker counted by pulling off a clever double steal with Burns. Jessup hit to short and
Burns was retired at third. Fisher and Fkrnin? singled and Yingling brought .T"r.!ip and Fisher home on a hard d !vcu single. Bush made the third out. When the smoke settled, Mr. Griffin was found to be considerably dismantled, but still game. Won in the Fourth. in the fourth Richmond won the game by shoving over the pan two runners. Plummer led off with his third single and Parker scored him by cracking out his customary three bagger. Mr. Parker Is quite foolish about his three baggers. Burns skied to center, bringing Parker home. The side was then retired. By this time Yingling was sending over the pan with such speed that the ball smoked. There was nothing doing with his delivery and In only one Inning did the colored champs threaten to count. This was the eighth, when Allen led off with a three bagger. Yingling retired
the next man by getting in front of a
hot one. , The next batter was walk
ed. Merkla was breezed and Herron flew out to Plummer. After the
fourth Griffin settled and to the close of the game was quite effective. The
colored lads are ball players, splendid
batters clean fielders and run the bas
es like scared deers. The locals batted
hard, but fielded in a loose manner.
Score:
WEAVER IS A DESERTER.
WENT TO HIS HOME AT NEW CASTLE AN,D HAS NOT RETURNED FINK HAS BEEN SIGNED IN HIS PLACE.
Snapshot of Vice-President Fairbanks. He has repeatedly denied that he served a cocktail to President Roosevelt, but apparently his denial has not carried weight with the members of the Methodist church, for they refused to elect him a delegate to their conference which meets next May in Baltimore.
THE BASEBALL RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDING. Won. Lost Pet Chicago 104 42 .712
Pittsburg 88 59 .580, New York S3 67 .553
Philadelphia 78 65 Brooklyn 65 80 Cincinnati 63 84 Boston 56 89 St. Louis 49 99
An effort is being made to have the business men of the city declare a half holiday on the afternoon of Tuesday, October 8, so that their employes can have an opportunity of seeing the Cincinnati Reds play the Richmond team. Richmond is a hot bet of Cincinnati rooters and all the fans would appreciate an opportunity of seeing the famous Reds in Action at Athletic park.
1 Manager Jessup will circulate a paper among t;ie business men of this city which reads as follows: ! "The undersigned business men cf i Richmond, believing that the interest ! in the national game is such that a few
hours during one afternoon of the season may be given to our employees to
witness a contest, hereby agree to make Tuesday afternoon. Octber S. a holiday between the hours of .' and ' 5:: o'clock, in order that our em-j ployees may witness the contest be- j tween the Cincinnati National league team and the Richmond team." ' It is expected that a large number of business men will eign this agreement, j Manager Jessup has gathered together a splendid aggregation of ball players and the team deserves the support of; the business men of this city, nearly all ! of whom are staunch supporters of the j national game. The cost of bringing j the Reds here is considerable, and un- j le;:s the fnns support the team they j
will lose money on the game. Weaver a Deserter. The locals are playing the second
Wednesday's Results. Philadelphia, 4; Pittsburg, Chicago, 13; New York, 7.
AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won Lost Pet Detroit 90 56 .616; Philadelphia S4 56 .600: Chicago 86 62 .581 j Cleveland 81 65 .561 j New York 68 78 .466 j St. Louis 67 SI .453 Boston 5S 89 .394 Washington 48 98 .329
Wednesday's Results.
Detroit, 9; Washington, 5 (1st game).
Detroit, 10; Washington, 2
game).
Cleveland, 2; Philadelphia, 3. St. Louis, 4; Boston, 2. New York, 4; Chicago, 3.
CAMBRIDGE VS. EAST END
Football Season Will Open Richmond Saturday.
r t
i ne locals are
448 game with the famous Indianapolis A
429 jB. C. team, now colored champions of .3S6'thf stnte Th in tpnm 1c nnp of th
best that has been ly re this season. Stokes Weaver has deserted the Quakers. Last Saturday he left here on tne excuse that his father had been injured at his home near New Castle. Weaver played Sunday with the New Castle team at Connersville. and the members of the Richmond team believe that lie "faked" up the excuse
New Castle. Members of the Richmond team are sore over the manner in which Weaver double-crossed them. Outfielder Fink, of the Canton Central league team, arrived here this afternoon to take his place in the outfield. Fink probably will play center field in place of Weaver. Fink is a hard hitter and a clever base runner and fielder.
An amusing incident took place at
the game Wednesday. In the eighth the colored team had a man on third and no outs. One of the colored fans, who had evidently placed his money on the visitors, yelled out, "I want all you shines to rally 'round the blood stained banner of Africa." The pleading cf tb,e fan was all in vain the runner never got any further than third base.
(2nd
in
FT. Ft.
Cambridge City, Ind., Oct. 3. The
high school football team of this place bettered its standing in the State Golf
WAYNE DEFEATS MARION. Wayne, Ind., Oct. 3. Ft. Wayne
RICHMOND. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Bush, ss 5 O O 1 5 O Plummer, cf., . . 5 2 3 2 O O Parker, 2b 5 2 3 2 3 1 Burns. If., 5 O 2 0 O 0 Johnson, 3b., .,3 1 1 O 2 0 Jessup, c 5 1 0 7 1 1 Fisher, lb T 1 2 11 o 2 Fleming, rf., ... 4 1 1 4 O O Horn, p 1 O 0 O O O Yingling, p., ... 2 0 2 O 3 0 Totals 40 8 14 27 14 4 IND. A. B. C'S. AB. R. H. O. A. E Merida. 2b 4 1 O 1 1 1 Herron, cf 5 O 2 2 O O Shawler, lb., ..5 1 17 0 1 Prlmm, c, 5 O O 4 1 O Hutchinson, ss 5 1 2 2 3 O Young, If. 4 1 1 3 O O Allen, 3b., 4 2 3 1 1 0 Davis, rf., 4 1 1 3 O oj Qriffln, p 2 O O O 2 0 Totals . . ..39 7 10 23 8 2
Plummer out, hit by batted ball Richmond 0 2420000 x S A. B. C's 1 2400000 07
Earned runs Richmond 3. A. B. C.'s 4. Stolen bases Allen2. Davis, Grif-
fin, Plummer, Parker, Burns. Two base hits Herron, Shawler, Hutchin
son. Three base hits Parker, Young
Allen. Struckout By Horn 1, by Yingling 5. by Griffin 3. Bases on
balls Off Horn 2, off Yingling 1, off
Griffin 1. Hit by pitcher Johnson
2. Time 1:43. Umpire Lally. At tendance 300.
will meet the East End of Richmond
at that place Saturday afternoon. The home team has been practicing diligently this week and expects to win the game. The line up is as follows: Carl Mosbaugh, right end; Will Shipmen, right tackle; Herman Barnett, right guard; Wayne Williams, center; Don Wright, left guard; Harry Diffenderfer, left end; Claude Heath, quarter back; Charles Young, right half; Gresh Drischel, left half, Herbert Taylor, full back.
Trio GillHy. By the laws if England and of France legal documents are required to be written in ink made from gall such ink having proved to be practi cally indelible. The mixture Is of bruis ed galls with sulphate of Iron and gum arable. This legal ink. at once the best and oldest in existence, entirely de pends on a disease to which the oak tree is subject and which is caused by a fly known as the gallfly. The gallfly belongs to the same order ar the bees and wasps, and when it If ready to lay its egg it cuts away the outer bark of an oak tree twig and de posits Its egg3 in the hole. From some unknown cause the tree Immediately begins to enlarge about the egg. and gall, or oak apple, as It is usually call ed. Is formed. It is tbls gall which contains the tannic acid from which the ink Is made.
league Wednesday by defeating the Marion club by a score of 13 to 9.
FOOTBALL SCORES. Harvard, 5; Bowdoin, 0. Yale, 25; Wesleyan, 0.
The Jaws of the wasp are so pow
erful that the insect can cut its way
through shells.
By winning two games from Wash
ington Wednesday while the Athletics
were losing to Cleveland, the Tigers
practically clinched the American
League pennant and the right to meet
th Piihs fnr the world's series Phil.
adelphia still has five games to play and Detroit four. The Athletics will have to win all of their remaining games, while Detroit is losing two, to get the flag.
Protoplasm.
Protoplasm Is a living, transparent, viscid substance of proteid character.
containing 70 per cent of water. It
coagulates with heat nt 130 degrees
and dies when the body is raised to
this temperature. As only dead proto
plasm can be subjected to chemical
analysis It is difficult to determine its chemical nature. Its nearest allies are
to be found in the albuminoids, of which the white of an egg Is a good
example. Of the real nature of proto
plasm there is. of course, absolutely nothing known. New York American.
Only One "BROMO QUININE," that Is - Laxative jjromo Quinine
on every
25c
HONORS GOING TO DETROIT
Tigers Will Meet the Cubs for
World's Championship.
I 1 'i I & w I to 1
TO MORROW:
and Saturday being shop days, will be a most excellent time for Ladies, Men and Children to make their selection of Fall Shoes. The new autumn styles will surely find much favor among the fastidious dressers. We would have you know that our line embraces just the shape most suited to throw off your foot to best advantage. Remember a pretty foot without a pretty shoe is an utter impossibility. We have the shoe to fit your, foot. Come buy tomorrow.
Men's Slices FELTMAN'S TRAMP LAST, strictly the shoe for Men, are priced from.. $2.50 tO $4.00 "FELTMAN'S SPECIAL" Shoes for Men, over 1,200 pairs sold the last 6 months, price C 50 CRAWFORD SHOES for Men, all styles, sizes and leath-
$4.00
ers
THE JIM DUMPS Shoe, the nobbiest out, per paii"--$5 00 WORK SHOES that wear, for all classes of work $2.00 to $3.50
Ladies' Shoes THE BOLTON SHOE for Ladies Hand Turn and Hand Welt so,es $3.00 to $3.50 THE CROSS SHOES, the strictly Ladies' Boot, all leathers and latest Fall styles for $3.50 to $4.00 HONEST VALUE SHOES for women, pat. tips, extension sole.
for only
I ' Villi'
ft .
CHA
$2.00
THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES
Mo IFEILTrMLAM
824 TVIAIN STREET
THE LC2Y A I LA NT IS.
SEMI-ANNUAL MEETING. The members of the German Mutual
Fire Insurance Association are hereby
requested to meet at their hall on Main and 5th streets, Saturday evening, October 5th, 1907, at 7:30, to pay their yearly dues.
C. A. BARTEL, Pres. HENRY GREIVE, Sec'y.
A DELIGHTFUL DINNER PARTY.
Centerville. Ind., Oct. 3. A delightful
dinner party was given on Tuesday by Mr. and Mrs. John Lashley. The guests
included Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Boyd of
Carthage, Mo., Miss Martha Lomax
Morton, Miss Emma Bradbury of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Boyd, Miss Bessie Boyd. Miss Inez
Martin, Ralph Brown of Richmond.
Miss Martha Peelle of Centerville.
An Ideal Lar.d Where Man Had Reached Social Perfection. According to Plato, who was the first to put the story on record, having heard it from t lie Egyptian priests, Atlantis was an i.kiiil in the Atlantic ocean "over against the pillars of Hercules." It waj larger than Asia and Africa taken together and 9,000 years Dfi'ore his time was densely peopled by a race rich, great and powerful. The dominion extended over the greater part of Africa and Europe, and their conquering progress was finally checked only by the united resistance of the Athenians and other Greeks. In the course of time this great people, this powerful nation, forgot its greatness and its power and turned to wickedness and sin. Then there came an earthquake, which lasted a day and a night and was followed by
an inundation of the sea. After that nothing but slime and shoals remained to mark th? spot where Atlantis had
flourished.
This is the romantic story as told
y Plato. As we have said, he got it from the Egyptian priests. Where did
the priests get it? Was it purely imaginary, or was it founded, as some of the stories of mythology are, upon
a thin foundation of fact?
On this point both the ancient and
the modern writers have different
views. Some suppose that the exist
ence of the island was really believed
in because the Phoenicians may have
visited the Canary islands or the Azores; that the story of Atlantis grew out ot their possible discovery. Others think that it is the expression of a vague belief by the ancients in the existence of the western hemisphere. So far as the origin of the story goes, we shall never perhaps know more than we do now, but we have for all time the beauty of the story itself as showing what the poets of antiquity conceived to be the ideal condition of the human race. According to these ancient writers, Atlantis was one of the most productive countries in the world. Its natural resources were unbounded. Ev
erything that could add to the pleasure and comfort of men was there in profusion grain, wine, delicious fruit, metals of various kinds, great forests, fertile plains, pleasure grounds, springs and rivers. The island was divided into ten kingdoms, each wholly independent of
the other, but bound by the common ties of noble purposes and mutual good will. Commerce flourished as it did nowhere else in the world, its harbors receiving the products of every other known country. There were large and populous cities rich in architectural effect and embellished with the most beautiful works of art. Its villages were also rich and thriving, and its fields were under the most skillful and profitable cultivation. This was Atlantis as the old poets pictured it. the ideal land where men had reached the ultimate development of social and general government. Chicago News.
wucei ui j.-: press train, near, is
generated iu exchange for motion, and
the trail of sparks from the checked
wheel is represented in the checked meteorite by a luminous trail. We
commonly call it a shooting star, and
if its mass be small it is possibly altogether dissipated in heat and gas or it may ultimately find its way to our earth as dust. Such "meteoric dust" has been found on the eternal snow of mountains where dust of the ordinary type would be impossible. If, ou the other hand, the mass of matter be large, its surface only will be affected by the sudden heat generated, and it may fall to the ground entire or possibly explode and be scattered in fragments over a wide area. Chambers' Journal.
MARSHALL NOW MARSHAL.
He Has Succeeded Mack Lamb in Of
fice at Centerville. Centerville, Ind., Oct. 3. J. E
Marshall has recently been appointed
town marshal in place of Mack Lamb, who has resigned.
A Wise Answer. It takes but an ordinary man to return an angry answer to an insult. The extraordinary man is he who, under such circumstances, holds himself so well under control that he controls his adversary also. Persia once possessed such a man and was clear sighted enough to make him a judge. He was the chief judge of Bagdad In the reign of Caliph Hadee, and his name was Aboo Yusuph. He was a very wise man, for he knew his own deficiencies and was actually sometimes In doubt as to whether he possessed sufficient M-isdom to give a just decision in cases peculiarly shrouded in mystery. It is related of him that on one occasion, after patient investiga
tion of facts, he decided that he had
not sufficient knowledge to pronounce on the case lefore him. There was in his presence a pert courtier, one of those men who take long to learn that wisdom and impudence are not closely related. "Pray, do you expect that the caliph is to pay you for ignorance?" he asked, hoping to place the judge at a disadvantage. "I do not," was the mild reply. "The caliph pays me, and pays me well, for what I do know. Were he to attempt to pay me for what I do not know the treasures of his empire would not suffice."
PROVED A GOOD RUNNER
Ball Player Shows Hold Up
Men His Heels.
Hagerstown, Ind., Oct. 3. A bold at
tempt was made to hold up Charles
Swoveland, a well known young farmer and baseball player. Mr. Swove
land lives half a mile west of town, and when he reached the race bridge on
his way home was stopped by two men. who demanded his money or his life.
The young man dashed his fist in the face of one of the men and started for
home as fast as he could run. His as
sailants pursued, but failed to catch him, all the way cursmg and imprecating and threatening to kill. Mr. Swoveland confesses to being badly frightened, but he escaped injury.
Jamestown Exposition Now Complete. Ideal weather conditions In September and October. 1 Pullman sleeper, Richmond to Norfolk without change via Columbus and THE NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY. Leave Richmond (Peuuyl rants Lines) 4:55 p. m., daily; arrive at Norfolk next day at 7:30 p. m. For tickets apply any agentcf Pennsylvania Lines.
A yankee girl had traveled far. She went to gay Paree, She rivaled all the beauties there. She used Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co.
V ! ! ! ! ' 1
Round Trip to Cincinna.it
Sunday, Oct. 6 1
Via C C L. R. R. Base Ball
Consicerats Bridegroom. A girl and n young inaa, both of whom had steady jobs, were marrted the other day. The day after they were married the grirl stld to her fond husband, "Oh, George, now that we are married there is oaly one thing I regTet, and that Is that I hare to git up my fine position." The fond youn? husband stroked the silken tresses of he young wife's hair and soothingly replied: "Now, darling, don't worry You needn't give up your position. I'll give up nalne." Kansas City Star.
TUESDAY CLUB'S MEETING. Club Season Was Inaugurated at New Paris, Tuesday. New Paris, O., Oct. 3. The Tuesday club met with Mrs. Garwood Iredell, one mile west of town. Tuesday evening. There were fourteen members present and one guest, Mrs. Ollie Newbern. The program, which consisted of an inaugural address by Miss McNeill and the "Map Study" of Mexico by Miss Carrie Reid was very interesting and entertaining. Afterwards the club and guest were treated to an elegant two-course luncheon.
The club will meet in two weeks witn
Mrs. McKeon.
thf
Visitor From Space. Whatever be their origin. It would seem that these solid bodies (meteorites) are hurling through space at velocities which may be anything between ten and forty miles a second. If they come near enough to this earth to be attracted by it, their course Is changed and presently they enter our atmosphere. The result is a 6udden check to their speed, owing to the intense resistance and friction engen
dered by contact with the air parti-1 cles. What happens may be likenedj is. iK A A n 1 A - il V 1
Old time seogrrp!;ers had a sinp way of describing countries they knew nothing about. They ju3t wrote the word "desert" across them on the map. For a long time the interior cf Australia bore thi3 uncomplimentary epithet, but explorers have demonstrated Its rn fn
t-i. j t- l. . j T iti i3 Vara
uuua-resiu nun pi. uu"" mr
deepest wells in the w
Lett Time. "Time Is Drecious." remarked
minister. "It is Indeed," replied the man o'. business, "and I've vrasted lota of If "By Indulging In foolish pleasures, 1 suppose," said the good man. "No," replied the other. "I lost I' by being punctual in keeping my ap pointments with others."
Sounded Ominous. "Tour father ald something abonmy staying so late last night, didn'i he?" esked the young man. "Yes." replied the dear girl, "be di? say something, but I don't know jug what he meant. He said If you didn't go home earlier hereafter there'd tie kick coming from him." Philadelphln Press.
It Was Soaked.
"Yes. I was out in ail that storm.
My raincoat was soaked, and"
"But you can't soak a raincoat, yon know." "I can't, hey? Here's the check for It." Kansas City Independent.
Last Game of Season "Reds" vs. Pittsburg. Train leaves 5:15 a. m. For particulars, call C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A,
Home Tel 41. Richmond.
1 l 'I ! ! 'I' 1' 4
DR. PARK DENTIST 8 N. 1 0th St., Richmond, Ind
...PI RE IMPORTED... FRENCH OLIVE OIL Tasteless and Odorless 35c Per Half Pint 60c Per Pint Quigley's Drug Store 4th and Main
Saw Her Twice. Tom It was a case of love at first sight with me. Jack Then why didn't you marry her? Tom Oh, I saw. Jtigr
again on several occa5?. News. w-
Clucago
The worre the passage the more wel
come the port French Proverb.
It is impossible, simply impossible, for any one to enjoy the best of health if the bowels xe constipated. Undigested material, waste products, poisonous substances, must be nniATnl from the hadv or there will
A your doctor if he knows a Idler troubie and 0ften serious trouble, too. pill for ailuggah liver Ihan-Ayer s . . pn,. ,id n,n,re that is all.?- AfL 55?
Tlm fnlln. kirn iiV. rtjw - ' fgwwii.
Liver Pills
4
CHICAGO 2
EXCURSION
Round Trip
FHgHt, Oct. 5 1 Via C. C. egt Lr. t
Railroad
m. For 5
C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A., X t Home Tel. 44. Richmond. J i' I 1 1 1' I 'l' I ' i 'l I
Train leaves 11:20 p
particulars, call
4
4
X brae block- to the. rapidlyjjg
