Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 27, 13 March 1908 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE BICIIMOND PALLADIU3I AD SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, 3IARC1I 13, lOOS.
TEAM ASSURED FOR ANDERSON FANS
Organization to Place Team in The Field Has Been About Completed.
NATIONAL PROTECTION.
OHIO LEAGUE HAS LOST ALL CLAIM TO THE RICHMOND TERRITORY INDIANA-OHIO CIRCUIT IN D CLASS.
The Anderson baseball enthusiasts have about completed the organization of a $1,000 stock company for the purpose of placing a( team in the I.-O. league. Howard Witt, manager of the fckating rink, started the ball rolling by subscribing SlOO for stock. Will Norton, Charles Smith and Phil ONeil promptly took the trail blazed by Mr. Witt, each of them subscribing $100. liy this time it is expected that all the
stock has been placed. It was for the purpose of tihowing the Anderson promoters that the league was ready to take the field this season, that Dal Williams, who Is to be the manager of the Anderson team, asked President Gamble to have the next league meeting held in Anderson. Money in Treasury. The Anderson promoters figure that with $1,kk in the treasury when the league opens, there will be enough money on hand to meet incidental expenses. After the opening of the sea
son, these men figure that the gate re
ceipts will be enough, to clear expenses the remainder of the season. It Is also planned to sell about $1,000
worth of season tickets and there are
enough fans In Anderson to take up this Issue, all of them being willing to do everything Jn their power to assure a league team for their home city this season. Anderson has a splendid park and it is centrally located. National Protection. There is no longer any doubt but that the I.-O. league can secure national protection. The only city in the circuit now claimed by another league is Richmond. The Ohio State league had territorial rights for this city, but now that that league has been organized and a schedule for the season prepared without Richmond being included in the circuit the O. S. forfeits all claims to Richmond. The promoters of the I.-O. league propose to make it a class D organization. It is figured that the receipts from the sale of players and from those drafted by higher class league at the close of the approaching season, will net the companies controlling the various teams in the league handsome returns.
One of Disraeli's Epigrams.
Disraeli's epigrams were pointed and
double edged, and this one, given by
George Russell la his diary, Is about as sharp as Disraeli could make It Some one had asked Disraeli if he
had read the Greville memoirs. Now
there never had been much amity between him and the Grevills, and so he said: "I do not feel attracted to them. ' I knew the author, and be was
the most conceited person with whom
I have been brought in contact, al
though I have read Cicero and known
Bulwer Lyou.' .
MASONIC CALENDAR.
Friday Evening, March 13 King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M.,
stated convocation.
SHUNS? Do You Have Them Made? We Have 2000 Patterns to Select From and Guarantee SATISFACTION $2.00 to $5.00 Why Pay 10 Per Cent. More to Outsiders? Kibbey & Co. IN-THE-WESTCOTT.
$55 MACHINE
A nf -.Ll OLLI CJLg-j. .'TfViy B"!M
tl 11 . iW .
23
$1 per week.
lri Guaranteed for ten
in s JH-.X1
years.
Yours for business
The RflcGonaha Co.
413-415 Main.
11-13 S. 4th St.
WHERE THE BIG NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION WILL BE HELD THIS YEAR.
;gpg7 j
DENVER AUDITORIUM.
Buifding Will Seat More People Than the Famous Madison Square Garden in New York City.
Denver, Colo., March 13. Costing $350,000, seating 12,500 people, containing probably the most perfect heating and ventilating system' of any public building in the world, Denver's monster Auditorium will throw open its doors June 27, to welcome the long list of conventions to be held in Denver this summer. The building is 260x200 feet in dimensions, and is of the height of a five story building. Its seating capacity is larger than Madison Square Garden in New York, which holds 12,-
000 people, the great Coliseum in Chicago where the republican convention
is to be held in June, which hojds 11,-
011 people, or the Mormon Tabernacle, in Salt Lake, which seats lO.CNiO.
There are 24 exits including 240 linear feet of exit space and the building can
be emptied in two minutes. The Auditorium is constructed entirely of fireproof material and will
be the meeting place of scores of great national conventions every year. This
is the first time a national political convention has been held in Denver,
but the frequency with which this city is chosen by the large fraternal bodies such as the Elks, Eagles, Knights
Templar, the Grand Army of the Re
public and other similar organizations as their meeting place, required the construction of an immense assembly
hall for their entertainment.
ONSLAUGHT COULD HOT BE STOPPED
Richmond Polo Team Tramped Over Poor New Castle Lads Last Night.
THE FANS DID NOT GLOAT.
RINK WAS CROWDED WITH SPECTATORS WHO WISHED TO SEE FLOWER CITY LADS 4 AGAIN TRIM LOCAL AGGREGATION.
The Richmond polo team had sweet revenge over the New Castle team last evening. The New Castle rink wa3 packed to capacity -with Flower City fans who wanted to g&te at the men who actually defeated twice in succession the dreaded Quakers. They also wanted to gloat over these victories to the- discomfiture of the locals but nary a gloat did they. get. In frank, brutal English it is necessary to state that the Quakers trounced the prides of New Castle to the tune of 12 to C. The Quakers simply rode all over their opponents and battered so many hot ones into their opponents' cage that the draperies were torn loose from their fastenings. Parry and Williams put up a spectacular defense for Richmond, while Louie Quigley and Barker swept everything before them.
BIG HORSE SALE CLOSED TODAY
Sale Has Been One of the Most Successful in the History of Event.
GOOD PRICES WERE PAID.
NO TROUBLE IN DISPOSING OF GOOD ANIMALS -THE HIGHEST PRICE PAID TODAY FOR ANY ANIMAL WAS $600, FOR PORTER.
Week Emdl
Banrgjaininis Fresh country gathered eggs, per dor 18 Nice freah sweet butterine, per lb , 20 18 lbs. granulated, 19 lbs. A, 20 lbs. C Sugar $1.00 3 packages Mrs. Austin's Buckwheat flour 25 3 packages Mrs. Austin's Pancake flour 25 7 cakes Santa Claus soap for ..25 3 lb can whole tomatoes (Fancy 15 6 lbs. fresh ground buckwheat flour and 30 stamps 30 6 cakes Fairy Toilet soap 25 Best square crackers, per pound C5 A No. 1 good ginger snap, per pound 05 Golden Wafer, per pound 10 1 pound Our Special Biend Coffee and 23 stamps 25 1 pound fancy Imperial Tea and 60 stamps go
TWO GAMES TONIGHT High School to Go to Center-
ville to Clash With High School Teams.
ARE PLAYING A FAST GAME.
The Richmond high school first and
second basket ball teams, will play the two Centerville high school basket
ball teams at Centerville tonight. The Centervillians have been playing a fast game for the past few weeks and expect to get revenge on the Quakers for their defeat earlier in the season. The
Richmondites will play tne Centerville team with practically no practice, but they expect to put up a game fight. The lineup of the first team will be
Thornburg and Martin, forwards; Marlatt. center; Tallant and Fisher guards; and Thomas, referee. The second team is in much better condition to meet their opponents and expect to take'theni into camp. The Centerville second team is reported to
be playing a faster game than the varsity, and if this Is the case, it is probable that the Seconds will have to get a hustle. The lineup will be as follows: Trueblood and Ackerman. forwards; HilL center; Ferling and Furnace, guards.
Model Department Store,
11 S. 7th St. Inter-urban Station. Colonial Bldg. New Phone 1 838. Bell Phone 47R
Smith & Goodrich, Props.
Ns.pol.on as a Reader. Xapoleon was a reeder persistent, omnivorous, indefatigable. By the camp fire and in his traveling carriage, in his temporary staff office or his own bedroom his favorite volumes were ever kept within easy reach. Reader Magazine. Now ard Than. She You love me, then? He I love you now. She Ah. we'!: I suppose if a woman can get a man to Iotb her now and then she should b contented? Fair Journal.
Men's Spring . Style Showing
Our Spring Suits t-how new developments in the tailoring of ready-to-wear garments, and especially is this true in the inner making the uumerous little details that are hidden between the cloth and lining have btrn s-o skillfully attended to that the highest possible attainment in the art of clothes-making is characteristic of these new Spring Suits for 1!0. Spring Suits, the new ones, two and three button sack designs, all at from
$10 $30
EATS
Can't get away from the fact that Rosenbloom-Buntiu Hat Styles have an "individual air" that is a mark 6f dignitied refinement. The illustration gives a good idea of the new Spring Shapes.
Mallory Soft $2.50 to $3.50 Mallory Stitf $2.50 to $3.50 Absolutely Waterproof They Are Cravenetted
Rosenbloom, Bunlin & Co., 824 Main Street.
Vsry Considerate.
He Did you tell your father, darling? She I told him I was engaged, dear, bat not to whom. He is not well, and I thought I would break it to bim gradually. Life.
In the Ion run the best wty to Bake money barking horses is to drift a cart on a dump.
Cambridge City, Ind., March 13. The Lackey sale practically had closed at 1 o'clock, only a few animals remaining to be sold after that hour. It has been quite successful, horses that were worth the money, bringing good prices. The best sales of today were as follows: Joseph J, trotter, owned by Charles Li. Lackey, sold to J. R. Taylor, Muncie, $200. Tho Duke, trotter, owned by II. C. Knode, Indianapolis, sold to William
McGinty, New York, $-'25. Thomas, trotter, owned by Charles Li. Lackey, sold to C. Wise, Logansport, ?215. Andy, trotter, owned by Charles L. Lackey, sold to Thayer Bros"., Martinsville, $325. George, trotter, owned by II. C. Knode, Indianapolis, sold to D. Lamb, Robinson, 111., ?2X. The Prince, trotter, owned by II. C. Knode, Indianapolis, sold to Fred Harris, Indianapolis, $230. Bird, combination mare, owned by J. S. Wymond, Aurora, Ind., sold to Don Thomas, Cleveland, $3oO.
Pete L, pacer, owned by Charles L. Lackey, sold to D. Lamb, $330. Cock of the Walk, combined gelding, owned by H. C. Knode, sold to Blair & Baker, Indianapolis, $423. Miss Ader, trotter, owned by Charles L. Lackey, sold to James Duke, Cincinnati, ?2oO. Henry Clay and Johnson, owned by H. C. Knode, sold to Don Thomas, Cleveland, $500. Porter, trotter, owned by Charles L. Lackey, sold to P. R, Lackey, New York, $tiO0. Sales made late Thursday afternoon were as follows: Maizy B, pacer, owned by G. F.
Black Muncie, Ind., sold to Henry Ja
cobs, Chicago. $450.
Rexes B., 2:24r), trotter, owned by J. W. Black, Yorktown, Ind., sold to
Alonzo Allen, Yorktown, Pa., $310. Charley Atwood, 2:15, trotter, owned by William P. Bresnahan, Columbus, O., sold to F. B. Murphy, Columbus, O., $300. Kay wood, 2:2U, owned by J. L. Black, Yorkton, Ind., sold to O. F. Carpenter, Gaston, Ind., $t50O.
The Red Light, 2:12, pacer, owned by Charles Hetrick, College Corner, O., Eold to W. E. Pixley, Albany, Ind.,
$325.
Knightstown Belle, 2:1DU, pacer,
j owned by Frank A. Lackey, Richmond,
sold to Dr. W. W. Zimmerman, Rich
mond, $3SO.
Lucretia Russell, trotter, owned by
a W. Phellis, Huntington, W. Va., sold to R. J. Fuller, Evansville, $210. Be on Time, pacer, owned by C. W. Phillis. Huntington, W. Va., sold to J. Martin. Indianapolis, $700. May Ross. :2-ti;, owned by John S. Lackey, sold to James Duke. Cincinnati, $375. Mattie H, 2:14. pacer, owned by W. K. Smith, Tiffin, O., sold to Edward Shute, Greensfork, $200. Dandelion, 2:lfrli, owned by John S. Lackey, Cambridge City, sold to W. B. Austin, Wilmington, Del., $1,000. Beatrice, 2:17, pacer, owned by W. K. Smith. Tiffin, O... sold to John Jones, Middletown, O.. S7KX Allurian. trotter, owned by W. K. Smith. Tiffin, O., sold to P. J. Mitchell. Findlay, O., $70o. Riddle, 2:16 i, trotter, owned'' by
Fred Cline, Indianapolis, sold to C. H. Billings, Cincinnati, $4tt). Grace D, pacer, owned by II. C. Knode, Indianapolis, sold to J. Lamb, Robinson, 111., $450. Ben Hut, saddler, owned by Charles N. Widner, Indianapolis sold to J. Lamb, $255. Molly Gould, pacer, owned by Wayne Spring Stock Farm, Eaton, O., sold to J. Lamb, $200. Pocket Money, trotter, owned by G. W. Talbott, Buchannan, W. Va,, sold to
Abraham & Company, Montgomery, Ala., $200.
THE CITY IN BRIEF
Fresh fruit strawberry Ice cream at
Price's. It
Th Wnmanls Relief Corns met yes
terday afternoon in the G. A. R. hall.
The very best ice cream at Price's. It Mrs. John J. Hoerner is visiting In
Cambridge City this week. She ia the
guest of Mrs. Ellis Filby.
Fresh oysters received each day at
Price's. It
Miss Martha Porter of the Wayne
Flats, who has been spending several months at New Orleans and Dallas, Texas, has returned home.
Meiner's chocolates at Price's. - It Snecial Sale. Saturday only; choco
late chips, 25c lb.; Buttercups, 18c lb.; Chocolate and Cream Bonbons, mixed.
15c lb. All first class quality guaran
teed. The Greek Candy Store.
Nice malaga grapes at Price's. It Fresh fruit strawberry ice cream at
Price's. It
"My girl's father Is an undertaker, lie has Invented an automobile hearse. Folks are just dying to ride In it." Exchange.
The share of land that would' fall to each Inhabitant of the globe in the event of a partition would be about twenty-three and a half acres.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY
The Bab Of The. Bdy. The organ around which nil thm other errant revolve, and upon which they are larrely riependent ior their welfare, ( the stomach, when the functions ot tba stomach htcom impaired, the bowels and liver also become deranged. To cor a disease of the stomach, liver or bowels set a fO cent or SI bottle ot Dr. Ca'idweU's Syrup Pepsin at your drarcist's. It is tho promptest relief for constipation and dyspepsia ever compounded.
JrntTn: Millions use Gold Medal Flour. LCCBtTIA.
COLISEUM
Skating every Tuesday Thursday and Saturday morning, afternoon, evening. POLO City League Gaines Friday Evening, March 13. Kibbeys vs. Empires at 7:30 Krones vs. Greeks at 8:30 Admission to all parts of the house 10 cents. No reserved seats.
NOTICE. 1 Come to the South A St. Market Saturday afternoon and evening for your meats spare-ribs, back-bones, tenderloins, back-straps and other
meats. 13-20.
R. GREULICII.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
At The Club At Home, and on the Street, an "AMERICAN KID" will prove its quality. See Window Display. ED. A. FELTMAN, Manufacturer of and Dealer In High Grade Cigars. 609 Main Street.
BY YOUR OWN FIRESIDE while enjoying your evening cigar and preparing for your sweet and peaceful slumber, a bottle of Richmond .Export beer Is a comforter, a soother and a pleasure. It is a beverage for tho most refined palate, for It is pure and delicious In flavor, besides being wholesome and invigorating. Minck Brewing Co.
COBBLERS' OUTFITS. "Always Ready" Complete set In box as follows: Iron stand for lasts, 1 each men's, boys and women's lasts:
shoe hammer, shoe knife, pes awl, sewing awl. stabbing awl, pkg. heel nails, pkg. clinch nails, directions 50c . set. " TLTFTS STORE, rhone :i:3. 6th & Main St
FaldDiriKSy to &rD3Uni Any Amount Anywhere Any Time. Almost Any Kind of Security Mo Red Tape Mo Delay Mo Publicity With us, you deal direct with the lender, for we represent no foreign capital. Loaning our own money, nominal expenses and the great volume of business we do enables ua to not only give you easier payments and more satisfactory dealings, but also to guarantee you FAR BETTER RATES than can be had of any concern in this section of country, none excepted. Loans taken up from other loan companies, we giving you, in addition, any reasonable amount you may want. Call on or 'phone us. The difference we can save yon will be (surprising.
Automatic Phones From 8 a.m. to S p.m. 1341. Alter 5 p.m. 363! or 4156 tafeia Loan Co. Established 1901 Rooms 40-41 Colonial Bldg. 3d floor. Richmond, led.
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