Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 79, 4 May 1908 — Page 2
TliE 1UCI1MUMJ 1'AIjLADI L3I AM) SL NTELLGIM M, 3IOXDA Y, MAY 1. IPOS.
l'AGE TWO. HITLESS WONDERS ARE OF THE PAST CONNERSVILLEWINS if lflM 1 OVER CAMBRIDGE Richmond Ball Team Shows Fans It Can Hit and Hit Hard. For First Time in Twenty-five Years Team Scores A Victory, rm DAYTON SHILOHS WHIPPED. LEAGUER TOUCHED UP. BUIC LOCAL INDIANA-OHIO LEAGUE AGGREGATION WON IN A PRETTY GAME MANAGER JESSUP PLAYS HIS FIRST. WEST COUNTY LADS TAKE KINDLY TO CURVES OF SULLIVANTWO HUNDRED CAMBRIDGE FANS ACCOMPANY TEAM. 5AUT 99
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Much has hern said of the tiugging material ManaKcr Jessun has gathered
about him. Owing to the hitless won dors of last year, the fans--, when the,; heard rumors to the effect that, the local uniforms were now inhabited by manufacturers of base hits. crossed their fingers and looked like residents of Missouri. Yesterday they went to Athletic park to verify the rumors referred to. There was great, rejoicing and much mouth noise, when it was Keen that the glad tidings were but too true. Our demon athletes mangled le Dayton Shilohs in a hail storm of singles, two baggers, iriples and home runs, loping under the wire an easy 0 to 5 winner. The game was a beauty to watch, the hitting being good and some sensational fielding stunts were pulled off by both teams. Jim Cameron was robbed of a sure three bagger by a marvelous catch of Morganthaler in right center. C. Fieldhaus robbed Hamhrauph of a single by picking a liner off his shoe strings. For the locals. Cap Parker brought, the fans up yelling hy the clever capture of a line drive, while Johnny Bambraugh pulled off eome fancy plays. Talking about ltanibraugh. that midget came pretty nearly being the whole show. In the fpoond inning he drove in the first local run with a two bagger and in the eighth he hit down the left field foul line for a home run, the ball going nearly to the club house. Johnny was nearly home when the hall stopped rolling. Raumann led the. locals in ttlck work, making three hits, one a triple, out of four times tip. Cap Parker found his batting eye and lammed out a single and a smoky double out of four times up. Manager Jessup caught his first game of the season and showed that he is still the clever backstop as of yore. His work on the bases was a feature. Conner started In to pitch for the locals. He had good speed and curves, hut lacked control. In the fourth, after the first two men up had singled. .Tesstip yanked him and substituted i Fleming. With two out Fleming issued his only pass of t lie game and was then touched up for a single and a double, four men counting. After this misfortune. Nat settled down and in the remaining five innings not a run and only one measly hit did he yield. The locals' hits came when runs were needed and there was never any doubt as to the outcome mary : of the iumo. SumiJiichmond rShinn, If., AB. R. H. O. A. E. o 1 1 t Cameron, rf., . t 1 o I 1 1 o T'arker, Ub., ... I 1 Hurst, of : 1 lllaumann, ss.. i 1 lHambraugh, oh., I 2 'iturns, lb., . . . :i 1 o 1 o iJessup. c 4 Conner, p., . . . I'lemlug, p : 1 o o 1 o o Totals .. . 0 11 Shilohs. AB. It. H. Fieldhaus, cf. .1 Smith, lb 2 iBarrlngton, ss., 5 1 IHueklns, 2b., .1 o M'thaJer. rf., ..2 C. Fieldhaus, rf 2 Ftines, 3b., ... 4 1 'fchafor, c 4 1 Heffner, p., ... 4 n 11. o o 1 1 o o 1 (). ! 4 A. 1 o 1 2 1 2 1 o 2 Totals f. 21 12 JUehmond o 2 1 O 1 1 1 3 x-1 ! Shilohs o o 1 I O o o o o r Left on bases Uichmond '. Shilohs ; 1. Earned runs Shilohs I, Richmond V.. Sacrifice hits Ilurst, Smith, C. ; Feldhaus. Two base hits-Bam-1 Vraugh. Parker. Cameron, Huekins. j 'I'hree base hit Baumann. Home run ' iiambraugh. Stolen bases Shinn, 1 Ihirns, Jessup 2, Stones. Heffner. : Btruck out-Fleming t, Connor 1, Hefflier 2. Bases on balls Heffner I,! Conner 4, Fleming 1. Hit by pitcher ! - Burns. Parker. Umpire Cunning-I ham. Attendance 1 .OOo. LITTLE GIANTS MEET THEIR FIRST DEFEAT Connersville Juniors Annex Victory at Cambridge. Cambridge City, May I. The Little Ciants met their first defeat of the season at the hands of the Connersville Juniors at The L. K. & W. park Sunday morning. The score was T-t. The game was hotly contested throughout and was witnessed by over 300 people. Scott was in the box for fhe locals and would have won his frame had he been given the proper support. Th collection of palms In Row Gardens. Ixmdon. Is much larger than anyother in the world, nearly 500 species linr reDrasented.
Cambridge City. Fnd., May 4. Do
spite the threatening weather a crowd of more than two hundred loyal fans; and rooters accompanied Manager! Moore and his athletes to Connors-;, ville Sunday afternoon, where in a good base ball game i lie Grays came: out the losers. Score 8-6. This de- ' feat is the initial one of this seasons: work and also the first time in history that a Connersville, aggregation has ever been able to "slip one over" on a local line up, and teams from the two towns have crossed bats many times in the last twenty-five years. Cambridge entered the game; full of lit"? and played to win ami would have no doubt been successful j in carrying off the honors of the day, had it not been for three errors. 'Hilly" limit and Itoyce Rankin the team's two salaried rooters aided materially in the Gray's rally in the first of the eighth, when with two men down, Kelly started off with a single to right, stole second and was followed bv Wise with a safe one. then in quick succession Gilbert landed for aj two bagger, follow ed by Knapp. Ridge I and Weaver with singles, out, of these j six hits 5 runs were pulled over the. plate, Sniit'i putting an end to the session by breezing. Sullivan an exChicago National league twitier. who journeys from the windy city each Sunday in the interest of the K. 1. O. league's mound at Connersville, allowed but one hit in the first five sessions, but after that, he was picked for eight Score by innings: Grays 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 ft fi Connersville . . . 1 1 0 I) 1 :; 2 0 x S Batteries Boyd and Wise; Sullivan and Morgan. Time - hours. 1'mpires Goar and Quinn. Attendance 1,1 00. WHO WILL WIN? NATIONAL LEAGUE. Wort Lost Chicago 11 Pet. .7X0 .fif.7 Pittsburg Philadelphia New York Boston Brooklyn Cincinnati St. Louis .iKto .now .i:;7 .417 .187 AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Won Lost Pet. Cleveland H tl .COO New Yo-k ! t .finu Philadelnhia in 7 .r.sx St. liOuis :i 7 .fit;:: Chicago s S ,noo Boston , 7 '. .i:;7 Washington t 10 .",7," Detroit I U .::0S
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. Indianapolis 11 Toledo in Columbus II Louisville lo Milwaukee lo Kansas City ti St. Paul 1 Minneapolis 2 1 .1)4 .r.ss : .r.ss ' 10 -' 13 .K SUNDAY'S GAMES. National League. Pittsburg 1: Cincinnati 0. Chicago 4; St. Louis 2 First Chicago ?,; St. Iouis 2 Second American League. Chicago 3: Cleveland 0. St. Louis-Detroit Rain. American Association. Kansas City ;': Toledo 1. Milwaukee 6: Columbus 4. Indianapolis 4; St. Paul ;:. Louisville 2; Minneapolis 1. game, game. GAMES TODAY. National League. Pittsburg at Cincinnati. St. Louis at Chicago. Philadelphia at New York. Bi(okln at Boston. American League. Detroit at St. Louis. New York at Washington. Boston at Philadelphia. American Association. Columbus at Milwaukee. Toledo at Kansas City. I Indianapolis at St. Paul. Louisville at Minneapolis. It was Washington's birthday, aird j the minister was making a patriotic ; speech to the children of the secondary j grade. 1 "Now, children." he said, "when 1 i arose tr.is morning the f.ags were waving anl the houses were draped w;tb bunting. What was that doue for?-' "Washington's birthday," answered a youngster. "Vps," said the minister, "but last month I. too. had a birthd.iv. but nc flacs were Hying that day, and you did; not even know 1 had a birthday. Why! was that?" "Peeause, ton never Letir" said an urchin. "Washingtold a lie." Philadelphia " A rprv sin.ro. r..,,Tr s . . . - . - - - j . . .... . . vv, line .1 naii .o ouiue u several times every day with a strong solution of bicarbonate rf .! a cr soda.
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TWO GREAT Chance is one men. In the panel
of the heroes of" the base hall world, below is a picture of Napoleon l.a.joie
Affairs of the (By Tort.) The locals leave tomorrow morning at s o'clock for Van Wen. where they open the league season that afternoon. Manager .lesstip will place his strongest lineup against, the Buckeyes and he confidently expects that, his Quakers will annex at least two out of the three1 games which will be played at Van Wert. Brown will probably be called upon to twirl the opener. The big fellow is in grand form and Hutu's outfit will have to step some 10 beat him. When .limmy Cameron stepped to the plate yesterday for the first time, the fans gave him a rousing reception. Jim got one corking double and was robbed of a hit which looked good for three bases. He did not have a chance in the field, but there is not the slightest doubt that he will be able to take I care of that territory. j i Nat Fleming showed himself to still be the reliable t wirier that he was last year. He entered the box cold, and j as a result was touched up at the jump ; off kind of lively. However, there '. was nothing doing with his delivery! after he warmed up to his work. Cincinnati appears to have a find in j Campbell. lie lost, a hard luck jramej ; yesterday, allowing Fi'tsburg omy ; four hits. The Muncie Star avers that the polo j , game Saturday night, which Richmond; won T to 4. was fixer!, the Star says: The manipulations of to enable Richmond to ,i ill n,-.,K. ),! i- 1. ill -itiv . Here is what Friday ninht. w in at polo. hame which might tend u rejuvenate the game in j Muncie and elsewhere in the state. j Richmond finally won a game in the j series of three which ended last night ' between the former Muncie and Qua-j ker teams of the league, but it wa old Western Polo j easily seen that j Richmond was to take the big end of ; the score. The players, when they ; ' landed in Muncie, gave the explanation ' I that the three games would be pulled j j off on the square, but to have witness-! i od t he game etther Friday or last night n-,.n".i Hiet-.ttoiT th tVinn?!1! ; " ( Karnev Dohertv, Mansfield. Bone . i i- " v 1 laaJ ouns CA;an-iuive rtauiaea froiai
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BASEBALL LEADERS CENTER Chance is nn till the great leader Sporting World Muncie and all of them will probably reniaiu here a few das. The local fans are of the opinion that President Camble should make it a rule that all the league umpires rule on balls and strikes from behind the catcher when there are no runners on the liases. Ijocal bugs are delighted with the local base ball team as it now stands. All the regulars field their positions nicely and every man on the team is a good sticker. The fans fail to see where the alleged Van Wert sluggers .have any thing on the Quakers. Our pitching staff has- it on any other club iii t lie league. Misfit weather p!aed havoc with the American league yesterday, only one game being played, that at Chicago. The Ring Fin re-. To the q'.iostion often ake.i why t!if mat-risst? ring should l.e place. 1 ty.i the left hand many answers are given Some sav because the left hand i much Ies used Thau The right. :::i-l ! Therefore the ring is less li! !e to get ; broken. In th.' British Apollo of 17v j it is stated that for the same reaso: the fourth finger was chosen, which i-' J not onlv less used than either of the; rest, but is more capable of preserv mg a rir.g from bruises. having this one quality peculiar to itself that it cannot le extended but in companv with some other linger, whereas the rest may be singiy stretched out tc their full length and sirnightness. Voltaire's Church. Voltaire at no lime ciaimetl to be an atheist In the generally accepted sense of that tor ii. So far as can b learned from his own utterances and these of his on trc pore.ri es lie was a deist. 9 believer in God. hut cot in "retelatk'n, save as the revelniioia comes through God's visible creation. Voltaire built a church In Forney. Switzerland, above ie door of which he had inscribed the words, "Erected to God by Voltaire." New York American. . If vou ar Trouble with sfrk fceadacbi. con-s,.pioa7indisr-;t!00 off.asive breath or aay disease arising from stomach trouble, get 5c or fl bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrop Pepsin. It ispvguateedtocur yoa.
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OF ATTRACTION round player and is n horn of the Cleveland te;im. loader of T OP SETTING FIRE TO A HOUSE New Castle Girl Is in Serious Trouble. New Ca.-tlo. Ind., May 1. Miss Hazel McMillan has been arrested, charged with setting tire to the home of Henry Powell, her t.;eptath-r. Police weif called to the Powell home at the time of the fire, and, atter an investigation, arretted the girl. She now is in the County .1 a i 1 here. Atrr. vat u . - . A large crow d ha i ; ad around the two fasliiots:. and oblivi.ms young jrir.s. time it seemed n"ee: sary them. "What c;;ti it ine:nV" sa ---Is;:.:!y formed b,y dressed and at one to separaie d the stranper who had just eome up. "It took mo." said tie man addressed, "some time to learn; but. as I understand i now. or.e girl has leeu six months iu Kurope. :-,nd while she was gone the oilier one ha learned to piay goi:". and they are 'r.ving to tell each other alKjut it." Life. Flattered. Editor cto Miss uidgirl. age about forty Your w ork shows promise, but do you know, madam. g'l literary work is seldom done by a woman until she i? thirty or thirty-rive? Several years huce you rill ho able to write acceptable articles. Miss Oldgir! I'as she leaves) Thr.t was the most delightful man I ever met. A Comparison. "Ever seen coegrcss j $osion "No." repoed Farmer Cobras, "but I know aiiout I'.o it lo"ks. 1 hev a hired man w h - kin pit as busy rtoin" nu'hln as anything you ever saw."'- Louisville Courier-Journal. Cnly Undeveloped. ITe It has Ieen said that a" woman can make a fool of any man. Do you believe it? She Of course not, Th best she can do is to develop him. i Chicago News. PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PA Y
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WHEN THE EARTH DIES And When Our Other Planets and Our Sun Are Also Dead. STILL THE HEAVENS BLAZE. The Infinite Space Shall Always B Filled With Suns and Worlds and Souls, For In Eternity There Can De Neither Beginning Nor End. The earth was dead. The other planets had died, oue after the other. The sun was extinct, but the Mara were Mill twinkling. There shall always be stars and worlds. In the immeasurable eternity time. which is essentially relative, is deter- j mined bv The movement of each of I j these worlds, ;uid in each world it is ! feit Beeording to the personal sonsa- ; ; ti"iis of their inhabitants. Lach globe measures its proper period of time. The years of the earth are lot those ' of Neptune. Neptune's year espials 14 j of ours and i ; no longer in the absoj lute. There exists no proper common measure ol time ami ouTunj. lu the empty space time does not exist. There are no years, no centuries, but there is a way of measuring time upon a revolving globe. Without iU'iodieal movements one can have no conception of tim whatsoever. The earth existed no longer; neither did its celestial neighbor. Mars, nor beautiful Venus, nor the gigantic Jupiter, nor the strange univeie of Saturn, its rings gone, nor the slow p'anrts Uranus and Neptune, nor even the sublime sun, whose rays had for centuries made fertile the celestial roantries suspended in Its light. The sun was a black globe, the planets were other blaet globes, and this invisible sjstem continued to course In the starred immensity sit the bosom of the eold darkness of space. From the viewpoint of Lfe all these worlds were dead, existed no longer. They survived their autiiue history as do the ruins of the dead cities of Assyria, which The archaeologist discovers In the desert and revolved dark in The Invisible and unknown. Lverything was covered with ice, '-'73 decrees below zero. No genius, so sage, could have brought back the dajs of old when parth sailed through space bathed iu light, its beautiful green meadows awakening with the rays of the morning sun. its rivers flowing like serpents through the green fields, its woods reverberating with the son 53 of the birds, its forests etiveh :ed in majestic mystery. Thou ail this happiness seemed eternal. What has become of the morning and evenings, the flowers and the lovers, th" harmoi.ies and joys, the beauties ai.tl the dieaus? Ail have disain red The earth is dead, ail The planets are dead, the sua 1 e.t'I.iet. The so'ar system gone. Tin:r itself even tnuhihi ted. Time flows into eternity, but cer:.iy , remains, and time revives. I Itefore the earth existed, during a i whole eternity, there were suns and j worlds, humanities rilled with life and 1 activity as are w e today. For millions end millions of years our earth did not ' osis. l.u: the univerwm no less will be as t brilliant. After our time 1 I before. Our epoch is of i tauee. no imporI Tbe dead and co!1 enrth carried in : itself, however, an energy not lost, its ; movement U round the sun. which euergy transformed into heat would suf1 fice to rr.eit the whole globe, to reduce it to v apor and to r-egia a new history for ir, which, it ii true, would not last : long, for if this movement around the 1 sun should suddenly cease the earth j would fall Into the sun and cease to exist. It would rush toward it with ever increasing speed and would reach : it iu sixty-five days. When the earth is dead, other worlds t VUI come. There will be otiser hama.11-
Street
ltfes. otner r.anylouians, other ineoelaus. other Athenians, other Rome;-, other I 'a rises, other palaces, ether temples, other glories, other loves, other lights. And these new universes will disappear in their turn, to followed by still others. At a certain time far uway in the future eternity all the stars of the Milky Way shall rush toward one center of gravity mid form an immense formidable sun. renter of a system, whose enormous worlds shall become populated by livings living in a temperature w hit h would Heein red hot t us. The iniluite space shall nlwnrs h filled with worlds and stars, souls and suns, and eternity shall hist forever, for there can ! neither tegi!i!iiii liur end. amiUe Flammarion. WALL STREET Origln c the Western Hemisphere' Mj't Famous Thoroughfare. On th ' morning of March ."1. 104 I. a man of clerLly ;:ppcaru:oe might hao been ?een siaud.ii :.t the entrance t t!i dil.mid'lted fortress of New Amsterdam Witil a fdlenf of ottiei.l! paper iu his band It was not an mvitimj prospect which confronted the observer that raw spring morning, for lh roughly built Wooden houses scattered about the fort look--d sadly weather lK-ateii. atid the straggling, ill made roads and paths w Inch served as streets were l'tored with refuse find rubbish of e cry sort ntil nnkieileep in mud. The man at the f .it did 11 t. however, waste much time in gazing t these discouraging surroundings. They were familiar to him In every dreary detail, for v.nie!is Van Tienhoven had l-en secretary of the council at New Amsterdam for many jears, and if bo bad ever tVen disturl-d by the prevailing wretchedness of the twn It bad long since censed to afford liiui the slightest cotnern. Slowly turning his buck to the view, he tacked one of his official documents to the wall of the fort and then, swinging about and picking lils way neross the miry ground to a convenient tree, at!ixed another paper. Vnn Tienhoven's handwriting was easily read. Indeed, god jnninnship was the only iin!if,.'i.tion he had ever displayed for his otiiee. ,-ind that virtu had wholly failed to en lea r him to the populace, who ha toil the very sight of his clerical Mst. TLe particular notice he had trauscriled that morning, howover, was singularly free from ofTens". It merely recited n resolution of the director r.i d council of New Netherland that a barrier be ereeted at the north of the settlement suftoiently strong to prevent ihr straying of cattle and tprotect them from the Indians ml "warneii" all Interetei persons to appear on "nest Monday, the 4th of April, at 7 o'clock." for the prosecution of this work. It wa not I -Miff, therefore, tiefore the colonists were hard at work at the projected er.rtle guard, aad wiThln a few 1I.1;, it st'Ml completed. There is iio aiith'-rltative i-iform.tion a to how i was constructed, but there is erldence tiict it or,nisted raalnlj of unttimme l trees felled at the edge of tbe adjoining forest and plied together to form a sort of barricade and that its northern line, running certainly frora the present William street. New York city, to what is now Broadway and pofcsiblr from shore to shore, markM the farthest limits of New Amsterdam, as it then existed, and practically determ ined the location of Wall street. Such was the origin of the best j known thoroughfare cf the western hemisphere. r rederlefc Trevor Hid m Harrier's Mairaziae. Yhe nab Of Tke Body. Tie orean around which an the otter orfaci '.volve. and opon vfakh they re larrely ! l-Dl-tt for their welfare, is the stomach. . hea tne functions of tbe atomacb become impaired, tbe bowels and liTer also become der ctreL To cure a disease of the stomach. lfer cr bowels yet a 50 cent or il bottie of Dr. CaJd?re2's Srrcp Fepein at year droe?isf. It is :he promptest reief for coostipauoa aod dyspepsia ever c Timo&V.. Le lioil Medal Flour for yeir paltry. GcBoiritsa,
