Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 277, 15 November 1907 — Page 2
'AGE TWO.
THE RICIOIOD PAIAADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRAJI. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1007. SALE OF TICKETS IS VERY ENCOURAGING NEW IS 'S TEAM FOR GAME The Qeanesf, Snappiest and Most Much Interest Shown in Thanksgiving Game. the Substituted for Greenville at The Last Moment.
MADISON
Up-to-date Line of Boys and Children's CLOTHING In the city.
In Blouse, Russian Blouse or Norfolks, with plain or knickerbocker trousers, $3.00 to $7.50. LOEHR &. KLUTE.
Kibllnger Motor Boggy, $250 And Upwards Air cooled 9-10 H. P. The Automobile for winter. No water to freeze, tfo punctured tires. Simple, safe and reliable. Built for country roads. W. H. KIBLINGER CO., Bex No. 320. Auburn Ind. The Best Brands Of Cigars To be found are to be obtained here and they are frept just right. You won't find them dry and brittle, with the wrappers peeling off. When you want a good smoke come In and Inspect our choice line of cigars. M. J. Qolgley, 4th and Main At Pilgrim Brothers Store, a roofing that can be laid over old shingles. The finders are pleased. SWEET CIDER (Just in) BACHMEYER KRAUT CREAM TO WHIP. HADLEY BROS. Phones 2292, New; 292, Old. Hoarding Money Is repellent to tho man of ordinary thrift. The thoughtful person provides for the future by regularly saving a portion of his income, and placing the money where it will be safe and where it will bring him a continuous return. This Institution pays three per cent, on savings, and the capital and surplus of 1275,000 is a guarantee of safety Richmond Trust Company
Saturday Grocsry Met
I V
CHICKENS TO FRY, Good Size 30 and 35c YOUNG CHICKENS TO ROAST 40, 45 and 50c EXTRA LARGE HENS TO STEW 60 and 65c FINE YOUNG DUCKS DRESSED TURKEYS, Any Size Home grown and Southern Vegetables. Green Mangoes, String Ileans, Head Lettuce, Ripe Tomatoes, Cauliflower. Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc. FANCY SWEET FLORIDA ORANGES. (Special 30, 35 and 40 cts. dozen.) Grape Fruit and Jonothan Apples. Paw Paws and Pino Apples. Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc.
PHONE YOUR ORDERS JOHN .M. EGGEEV1EYER 4th AND MAIN STREETS.
3t BORTONS ADVANCE IN THE BOWLING LEAGUE Took Two Out of Three Games From Rottermans. THE HIGH SCORE WAS 828. LEAGUE STANDING. Won Lost Pet
.77S .556 .500 .445 .445 .277 Thursday Night's Games. BORTONS IeG. 2dG. Mercurio lfiS 168 King 174 154 Commons 154 114 Fox 120 133 Borton 142 159 3rG. 149 1S7 157 166 ! 1C3 j Totals 758 728 822 t ROTTERMANS lsG. Denny 162 Fosler 156 Mercurio no Nu s ha u m 129 llites 189 2dG. 139 154 127 157 143 CrO. 159 140 87 144 144 Totals. '76 720 674 NOTICE TO HUNTERS. Positively no hunting allowed on my farms. PETER HEELER. X ..-ot Leaving Rtcfcmond 11:15 p. m. vu C, C. & L. tends you la Chicago at 7:00 a. m. Through, sleepers and coaches You will like it. aprfi-tf Wallie, bring home some Pop Corn Crisp from Stranahrm's. 14-3t A t. to.ii d t h cb i 1 0 d a yVr e( 1 u c t i o n sale on every bat in thn store at Mrs. C. A. Brehm's, 35 North Sth street. : LiZi rrh in hh ji , Hit i &&-?j)Jii , Look at Yoor Coal Bin! Before winter sets in. Now is the time, before you start your furnace for the season, and get your coal in before the snow flies We will fill your bin with bright, clean and satisfactory coal for furnace, range, stove or grate that will insure your comfort during the shivering season. O. D. BULLERDICK 529 S. Sth St. Phone 1235.
Hunts 14 4 Bortons j0 8 Idlemans 9 D Rottermans S 10 Entre Nous 8 10 Lukers 5 12
WW fell
mwm
KIBBEYS AT HARD PRACTICE
If the sale of tickets indicates Itichmond'a interest in the Thanksgiving football game to be played between the Kibbeys and the Greenfield Tigers, it is great. Already members of the rejuvenated team have sold several hundred tickets and there is still a big demand for them. Next Sunday morning the team will : go through a stiff practice at Athletic park. Many new signals and plays have been devised, which will aid materially in strengthening the team. Trick plays of all character have been planned, for the local team will be lighter than the Greenfield aggregation and such methods of play will have to be resorted to if the locals hope to win by a good majority. Although the manager of the Greenfield team has given assurance to the Kibbeys that , his team is light, a bunch of "huskies'' j Is expected to walk on the field ! Thanksgiving afternoon. ! Sporting Notes. Sheriff Grice of Allen county, received his instructions from Governor Manly to stop prize fights and boxing bouts bordering on the prize-fight order and says ho will enforce the law. The Summit City Athletic club declared its Thanksgiving card off ;uid may arrange a big wrestling match later. j President L. D. Smith of the Terre Haute Central League Ball club a nounced that First Baseman Don Cam-; eron, who finished the sea.son with the I local team as playing manager, had been sold to Indianapolis. The largest crowd that ever witnessed a boxing match in Peoria, 111., saw Billy Papke of Spring Valley, knock out Tony Caponi in the second round . " ..... of a scheduled ten-round Dout nerore the Peoria Athletic club Thursday night. A dispatch sent out from Richmond rays: Van Wert will be included :n (he new Indiana-Ohio base ball league. The officers of the local baseball association have not yet been advised of the new order of things for the coming season, but it is a foregone conclusion that the association will enter the agreement. Van Wert finished its first year of professional base ball with only a blight financial deficit, after the heavy expenses of grand stand and other necessaries of the establishment of the pari?. --Van Wert, 0.. Bulletin. "Dad" McKcan, the veteran of Cleveland, manager of Ft. Wayne, and -Jack" Hendricks of Chicago, manager of Grand KapHts. mat s tne way tne Central league cards will read next season, according to information that. :innpnr; reliable The Grand Rapids club, so the etory goes, has been pur - chased by Messrs. Varnell and Irwin, owners of the Springfield, or rather the -n- i ., i , ,v , Ft. Wavne franchise, and some of the best players of last, year's pennant winners will be sent to strengthen up the Furniture Makers. Catcher Clark and First Baseman Guy Dickey, it is said, will go to Grand Rapids with Hendricks. Lajeune goes to Ft. sVayne if he doesn't make good with Cl icago. Of the two towns Grand Rapids Is the best payer and the owners naturally would seek to put up a stronger team in the Michigan city, That's why Hendricks there. is to be sent Willie Alnti Discover. A teacher in charge of the second primary grade at a Denver school was telling the children about Columbus one day not long ago. She told them all about the home life of the discoverer of America and all about his people. "Ills relatives," she said, "were wool combers." The mit day Columbus was discussed again. "F.y tb way, children," said the teacher, " do you remember what his relatives were?" There was a moment of profound stillness. Then a little fellow in the rear of the room raised his hand. "Yon may tell us, Willie," said the teacher. "They wus barbers," said the boy.Denver Post Oranges. This is the West Indian way of preparing oranges for the table: Peel the oranges, taking off as much white skin as possible; then slice them off all round as you would an apple, regardless of the sections. This leaves the kamI tcinirh atrlncv eenrml nnrt nnrt most of the inner skin together and is a much less tedious process than re moving the skin by sections. Use Tery sharp knife, so as to make clean cuts and not crush the fruit. Cold Calculation. "Ton should do something to claim the gratitude of posterity." ""What for?" asked Senator Sorghum. "I don't know that posterity will have auything I especially desire, and if it should have there Is no way for it to deliver the goods." Washington Star. Makra Mint White "Jimmy's got a great scheme to get out o' school on nice days. "How does be work It? "He goes out an washes hla face, an the teachm thinks he's ill an seadn him home. '-Philadelphia Inquirer. The Happy Family Circle. Father and mother, cuttn and brotners. loots get to know one another's intimate affairs, and (he little bowel and Hver disturbances soon become household oosameat. It is well to remem ber that in constipation and indigestion, and ether troubles of the stomach, liver and boweh? qnlck core can be bad br the naa of Dr. Cald woil's Syrnp Pepafaa, Take it toaitfit and roc win feel perfectly we B is tba morning. Price
1 I u i m
ALL IS ! BRYAN S HEETIKG u in: it a . i nu Will HI i IvU ell LdlctyuilU UI1 ! Sunday and Deliver Two Addresses. T A r r a n -t- o norr rnnnpiinr IHUUttni UMUOCO OUnrnlOE: CALLS NATIONAL COMMITTEE TOGETHER FOUR DAYS LATER, WHEN IT MIGHT JUST AS WELL HAVE BEEN AT LAFAYETTE. o Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 13. Final arrangements for the big Bryan meeting, which will be held here Monday ulght are !l)ractically completed. Mr. Bryaa, m his last letter to James K. Risk, who is chairman of the Jack'son club celebration, having announced his plans for tho time ho would j g d ,Q Lafuvette. Ho reach here j -n i Sunday and during the day will adJ j dress tw o big meetings at the coliseum. In the afternoon the- meeting j will be held especially for women and at night a big men's meeting will be . held. The announcement from Indianapolis that Thomas Taejgart had gone east at this time created considerable comment among the local democracy, i He has accepted an invitation to be i present at the Bryan banquet, but the fact that he has called the national committee to meet at French Lick Springs four days after the big meeting here, when ho could as well have called the members together on this occasion, has created considerable comment. Mr. Bryan will be the guest of Mr. Risk during the time he is in the city and elaborate plans have been made for his entertainment by the local democrats. assisted by a majority of the business men of the city. The Retail Merchants' association has unanimously adopted a resolution that every business man should consider the J If
1
g
Keep a package on a low shelf. Let the children kelp themselves.
needa
B
iscuat
are the most nutritious fcod made from flour. Always fresh, crisp, clean.
In moisture and dust proof packages.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
affair in a nonpartisan spirit and decorate every building in the business section Of the city. j In his letter Mr. Bryan requested Mr. Risk to send an invitation to Congressman A. J. SabaMi at Chicago to attend the speaking and the banquet. Mr. Bryan has sent a request to Tom -ur. ivi-. u. i i..u Cleveland mayor. The local commit tee save that the attendance win no .... 'much larger than was anticipated at ! . j :i i ....j . . mo ueinninK ana ii is f.i)ecvt;u over 10,000 people from out of the city will be present. There will be JGr.'i banquet table chairs, which have ions since been sold and nearly all of the 1.406 reserved seats have been exhausted. The democratic editors of the state will hold a conference with Mr. Bryan ou the afternoon of the lsih, at whicb time he will ive them instructions as to the best methods of conducting tho democratic campaign next year. NY EAST INDIANS. I hp Native Born of Ensrllah Parents Are m Sorry L,ot. 'The queerest sight you see in India Is the native born," said the sailor. 'Tlx Tin tl v horn U the thinnest, soft est, laziest, sa Merest thing iu the way of a white man that wan ever invented. "And he is the proof that England won't or colonize India. For the En.?'.;. in't live in India, you see. The m;;.s; heat of that there land, with Its n!ghis of 110 degrees and its noons 0f jo or worse, takes the strength aud backbone oiit of an Englishman, gives him liver trouble and makes a compieto wreck of bliu. "if he goes back home, be may recover his health. If he stays in India, he don't never recover it. If he has children born In India, those children are callea native born, ana for poor, i"ie. raj. spiritless critters they re the limit "If them native born English have children in their turn well, that third generation of native born has none, at least. It Is a generation of Idiots, paralytics, cataieptics, cripples. If you was . . . A . A : V. m 4 . tWrd generatloaf voa;d tLmk you had e ramg 9Uret ..Let England get out of India. She does tbe Indians only harm, and what ene does for herself Is to turn tall. strong, bloamin' young colonists Into them skinny, .yel'er, whimperin' specters what jiu call native born," St Louis Globe-Democrat.
Bread
ONES HARDWARE
Jj aaae
a
THE ART OF TALKING. . . Thins. Tliat Are Eaantlal to m Good Converaatlostaliat. I must lie spontaneous, buoyant, natural, sympathetic, and must have a spirit of good will. You must feel a spirit of helpfulness and must enter heart and soul into things whicb interest others. You must get the attention of people l I . . l - t. 1 I a 41. l. "oiu ji uy imtresuuB wviu. uu you can only interest tbem by a warm ormnfithr n roil frinill ivmnithT. j...t.-".j - j - If you are cold, distant and unsympathetlc you cannot get their attention, lo be a gooa conversationalist you must oe uiwu, loicrani. a. narrow, stingy soul never talks well. A man who is always violating your sense or taste, of justice and of fairness never interests you. You lock tight all the approaebe to your Inner self, every avenue is closed to him. and when they are closed your magnetism and your helpfulness are cut off. and th con
versation U perfunctory, mechanical derson, Ind., will preach at the V. B. ami without life or feeling. ; church next Sunday' morning and You must bring your listeners close evening. Ih Wilmore has been for to you. must open your heart wide and several years a presiding Elder In thin exhibit a broad, free nature aud an conference. A good attendance is deopen mind. You must bo responsive. KireL so that a listener will throw wide open , mmlJ
cverv avenue or nis narure anu givo , you free access to his heart of hearts. Success Magazine. l odlxoTcrrd Crime. "Can you point out a man who at the age of thirty has not committed at one time in his life a crime that would have sent him to the penitentiary V" remarked a trusty at the penl tentiary the other day. "I do not believe that there Is a man living, excluding, for the looks of the thing, the clergy, who has not done something to bring him here had he received his just deserts. It is not always a great crime that sends a man to the penitentiary. There are men In here for stealing chickens or clover seed or nothing at all. It is easy to get behind the wails. There are many men on the outside who should be In here. Iam personally acquainted with a few myself. But the difference between these people and myself Is that I have been caught and they have not Columbus Dispatch. , Have ou noticed the improved ierttee to Chicagi via the C, C. & L? Through sleeper leaves Richmond at .1:15 P. M. dally, arrives Id CWcagbf 7 no A M Try It aprS-rf Candy, PeanutsPop Corn, all the han. 14-3t
Making Exh
All this week Mrs. Hennessy will continue her interesting and instructive demonstration of the "Universal Bread Maker." She will mix and bake about 150 of her dainty little loaves every day, every one of which will be given to her lady callers. Do not fail to come and see how easily the "Universal" turns and how easilv it cleans up afterward. Mrs. Hennessy is using Carpenter's Haxall and Fancy Flour at the demonstration and makes all her bread the Indiana way of course.
ae
RESULT OF BASKET BALL.
After considerable trouble. Manager Clements was unsuccessful in his endeavor to get the Greenville. O., team to play here Saturday. In plave of Greenville, he has succeeded in obtaining a game with the New Madisou high school team. There is little doubt felt as to tho result of the game as the New Madison team was defeated by the Greenville players with a score of CO to 0. Tho line-up of thn local team will include I-amb. Ferlln;, Hobson, Brown. Harsh. Hiatt, Allison. Tallant. Karns. Wann, Cox, Smith auJ Spangler. High School Victorious. In a fast and well played game t-f basket ball Thursday night the Mgh school team defeated the T. A. P.'j by a score of 32 to 19. The game wri well played throughout and demon strated the superiority of the students over their opponents. Net Tuesday the high school will play the All Star team la the Garfield gymnasium and Capt. Allison is very confident 'of a victory. The lineups Thursday n.ght were as follows: R. II. S. T. A. P. Decker Wilson Meyers Genn Cora pt on Mendcnhall Thornburg Allison Harrington Marlatt Crowe Carroll Forward Center Guards DEPAUW VERY CONFIDENT Coach Brown Says Team Is in Good Condition. Greencastle, Ind.. Nov. 13. Coach rjrown remarked Thursday that hi .... - . team is in the best of condition and In spjte of the long season and the heavy v i . gcauies inn uae ueeuoa me iscaeauie tne Methodists are expected to put up j tne best exhibition of foot ball on McKen Fiejd Saturday against Earlham. that has been geeu Gq the loca, ground, year REV. WILMORE TO PREACH. An Anderson Clergyman at the U. B. Church. . Rev. A. C. Wilmore. D. D.. of AntoUHOEflS OF ELECTRICITY! APPENDICITIS Now cured without an operation. Abo urinary and sexual maladies of men ami women cured in the privacy of their own homes by this new direct current system. Far superior to any electric bolt Filling the Lungs by the continuous direct current aires any curable case of thrrtat and lung trouble. Call on. or write j. Charles, 24 S. 13th St, Richmond, Ind., for free book giving full particular!. COMPA
0
1 I
till s
I ? 1 M L
i
n
4
"ft-r mr
V ww mwm v v I
