Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 329, 4 October 1909 — Page 2

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1909.

PAGE TWO, CHILDREN TO SEE FESTIVAL EVENTS FLOOR SHOW CASES The business man 'today who is getting the best results from hi business is one who is giving bis goods proper display. GOOD FLOOR CASES gives those results. The business man who does not believe it will continue to lose sight of the main chance. We make the good kind. Write us. CLARK SHOW CASE CO., Columbus, O. Fail FesQfiwain At Intervals During the Three Days, Schools Are to Dismiss.

Baseball Results

AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Pittsburg 108 41 .725 Chicago 100 48 .676 New York 89 59 .601 Cincinnati 77 74 .510 Philadelphia 72 76 .486 St. Louis 53 95 .358 Brooklyn 52 95 .354 Boston 42 103 .286

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet Detroit 98 54 .645 Philadelphia 95 58 .621 Boston 88 63 .583 Chicago 78 74 .513 New York 74 77 .490 Cleveland 71 82 .464 St. Louis 61 89 .407 "Washington .. .. .. ..42 110 .276 RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Pittsburg 4 ; Chicago 1. Cincinnati 6 l;St. Louis 4 8. American League. Detroit 3; Chicago 1. St. Louis 61; Cleveland 43. Cincinnati, Oct 4. Cincinnati and St. Louis split even in a double header Sunday afternoon. In the first game a muff of a thrown ball at the plate by Bliss allowed the locals to score enough runs to win. Manager Griffith used none but new men in the second game and pitched himself. Timely hitting and errors gave St. Louis an easy victory in this game. Scores: R. H.E. Cincinnati 4 0001010 x 6 9 1 St. Louis 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 04 7 2 Fromme and Clark; Beebe, Melter and Bliss. Two-base hits Paskert, Evans. Three-base hits Bescher, Bliss. Sacrifice hits Hoblitzel, Egan. Stolen bases Egan, Lobert. Double play Bliss to Barbeau. Bases on balls Off Fromme 5; off Beebe 1. Struck out By Fromme 4; by Beebe 2; by Melter 2. Hits Off Beebe 7 in 5 innings; off Melter 2 in 3 innings. Time 2:05. .. Umpires Kane and Brennan. Second Game. R. H. E. Cincinnati ......0 0 0 0 1 01 6 5 St. Louis .......0 2 4 0 0 28 11 1 Griffith and Kennick; Higgins and BliSS." J .' V;-:v.j';v';--;'?7 Sacrifice hit Hu'switt. Stolen bases Barbeau, Ellis, Konetchy 2, Evans. Bases on Balls Off Griffith 2; off Higgins 1. Struck out By Griffith 3; by Higgins 1. Passed ' ball Bliss. Time 1:15. Umpires Brennan and Kane. - RECORD OTPLAYERS Batting Prowess of Contestants in the Championship Series. COBB LEADS HANS WAGNER The following table gives the ords to date of the players who perform In the world's series: Pittsburg. G. A.B. H. Wagner 137 392 160 Hyatt 45 53 17 Clarke 147 535 156 Miller 145 537 150 Wilson 14S 550 150 Abstein 131 482 130 Gibson 147 496 133 Leach 147 574 152 Maddox 29 62 14 Byrne 114 565 122 Leifleld .... 30 63 14 Abbaticchio 30 64 13 Leaver 17 20 3 Camnltz 41 88 12 Willis .. 41 S8 12 Phlllippe ; 23 42 3 Adams 24 38 2 Detroit. ' ' G. A.B. H. Cobb 155 571 212 Crawford 154 582 184 Bush 155 526 143 Moriarlty ...131 463 126 D. Jones 69 197 52 Stanage ... 76 251 66 T. Jones 139 479 120 Delehanty 132 441 105 Mclntyre 123 467 110 Mullin . 52 126 27 Schmidt 83 245 51 Donovan 22 50 9 Willett . 40 107 21 OLeary 74 250 48 Killian 27 66 11 Summers 35 94 10 recwill Pet. .341 .321 .292 .279 .273 .270 .268 .205 .226 .216 .206 .203 .150 .136 .146 .071 .053 Pet .371 .316 .27 .272 .264 .263 .251 .238 .236 .214 .208 .205 .196 .192 .166 .106 ATHLETIC CARNIVAL An easy way to pick up money is offered by the special committee of the Fall Festival association for the burlesque athletic meet, at South Tenth Street park, Friday afternoon. The prises offered are exceedingly liberal and already a large number of young men of the city have entered their names with Fred H. Lahrman, chairman of the committee, as contestants. Emtrles are to close in this event Thursday evening, October 7.

HAVE YOU BOUGHT SEATS? Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 4. Does a winning ball club pay. Ask Robert McRoy, secretary of the American League, who is in this city, conducting the sale of tickets for the world's championship games which open here next Friday. Forbes Field can accommodate 30.000 people while the extra seats that will be built, will take care of 10,000 more. The mail order adopted by the commission has proved a great success. Half a hundred clerks were put at work Friday noon to start opening the letters, and at 3 p. m., Saturday, over 27,xn seats had been sold for each game, with thousands of letters still unopened. This morning the postmaster sent a wagon which hauled four large mail bags bulging cut with letters. It is safe to sa that $100,000 will have to be returned to fans to want to see the games. One large manufacturing firm ordered 1,000 tickets. The money had to be returned as there were no tickets left when the letter was reached. The receipts for the games in this city will break all world's championship records.

CELEBRATION OF ANNIVERSARY IS CLOSED INCIDENT (Continued From Page One.) we need to look into the eyes of Jesus, flashing with indignation and remember that mankind is worth more than any of its institutions. "Material success may be dangerous in that it may blind us to the defects of character. The accumulation of material things may conceal the soul of a man. What Is the Gain? "What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own sou! ? "We would never choose the service of the flesh at the expense of the soul. When we talk about the rising standard of life, do we mean the rising standard of spiritual life V Most of us do not. For most it means added luxuries as the necessities of life. A sad mistake is made when the body has usurped 'the things that should go to the soul when we are content to remain poor in mind, in spirit, in order that the body may have its comforts. Because our standard of physical life is high, Jesus needs to remind us that "the life is more than meat," and it is not by bread that the man is fed so much as the word of God. "The Mind." "The Mind: "If a man be content to live apart from human life, simply a spectator and not an actor; 1 scholarship means a man is to sit apart from the currents of life and never devote himself to the task of blessing mankind, then Jesus says it is better to be as an untaught child, with the fountain of life still open, than It is to be as learned as the chief of the rabbis. "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness." We know what the righteousness is. It is about the thing which Jesus talked and gave us many definitions to love God with all thy heart, and thy neighbor as thyself: to do unto others as we would have them do to us; take un the cross and follow Jesus Christ dally. These are some of the ways in which Jesus has defined this supreme end of life. Jesus a Perfect Man. "Jesus was a man of perfect health, an educated man. He cast down Institutions when they interfered with his work. He made use of his health to secure himself for the future anJ we understand these things are included within the consecration and righteousness of the kingdom of God. Whenever the choice presents itself man should be ready to endure poverty, endure pain and go in ignorance and sacrifice all for the sake of the kingdom of God." CANDIDATES NOW COMING FORTH TO LOOK OVER FIELD (Continued From Page One.) tician. It is said that one man at Vincennes and another at Terre Haute are thinking of coming out as candidates for the place. No candidate for state geologist has shown up except W. S. Blatchley. the present incumbent. W. A. Macbeth, of Terre Haute, who was a candidate for the nomination against him last year, has announced that he will not again be a candidate. DEFEAT GETTYSBURG The X. Y. 2. club of this city defeated the Gettysburg team by the score of 7 to 5 yesterday afternoon at Athletic park. .The pitching of Hawekotte of the locals was the feature of the game.

ARE TWO HALF HOLIDAYS

NO SCHOOL WILL BE HELD ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY AFTERNOONS WAYNE TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS ALSO TO CLOSE. City and district schools of the county will be closed at intervals during the Fell Festival Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. The school authorities are giving these vacations because there will be special educational features in connections with the exhibits, and also for the purpose cf giving the school children opportunity to participate in the affair. The Richmond public schools will close on Thursday and Friday afternoons, announcement having been made today by Superintendent T. A. Mott. School will be held in the mornings as usual. Township Schools. Owing to the nearness of the school3 of Wayne township to the city. Township Trustee James Howarth, has ordered that the schools close on Thursday and Friday, all day. The public schools in the other townships will also close one day of the festival, with but few exceptions. County Superintendent C. W. Jordan has left this to the discretion of th-? trustees. It is probable that the majority of the township schools will close on Thursday, because this is the big day of the festival. ENRAGED HUN YAKS RESENT ATTEMTS MADE ARREST THEM (Continued From Page One.) arrest the violators and break up the practice. They went, but they also returned empty handed. The big policeman appeared on the scene an l. just to show that there really was a violation, of course, bought twenty cents worth of beer. In order to be sure that it was the genuine article, and not "near beer," why of course they had to drink it, which they did. (Let it be understood that this action was taken merely in order to make a perfectly clear case.) Then the Row Starts. After it had been proven that there was an illegal sale being conducted, the cops showed their badges and made known their intentions. The proprietors of the "grog shop" were told to come along like good little fellows, and not to cause any disturbance. And then the excitement started in earnest. With a howl of rage, and amid an incessant clattering of foreign tongues, the entire bunch of Hunyaks, numbering fifteen or twenty, swept down on the two policemen and drove them from the place, with beer bottles, rocks, clubs and everything it was possible to lay their hands, on. The cops, realizing their peril and that their lives were endangered at the hands of the angry men, took to the "tall and uncut" in record breaking speed, Vogelsong the while deploring the fact that he was unarmed. Reinforcements Sent. The two policemen returned to this rity and told Chief of Police Staubach of the indignity to which they had been subjected, stating that if he wanted to arrest that bunch he had better muster a strong force. A squad was formed in the afternoon, consisting of Sheriff Meredith, Deputy Sheriff Mashmeyer. Prosecuting Attorney Ladd and the following patrolmen,' Chief Staubauch. Little. Vogelsong, Winters, Wierhake. Westenburg, Menke and Bundy, all armed to the teeth, and firmly resolved to make the arrests or die in the attempt. They chartered a special car and went over. The greatest tranquility presided in camp when the blue coats arrived, the two proprietors of the "tiger," whom the police wanted the worst, were no place to be seen. With tears in their eyes the few remaining foreigners saw two kegs of beer emptied on the ground. Nine quart bottles of beer and one quart of whiskey was also heartlessly destroyed by the cops, in plain view of the thirsty Hunyaks. The arrest of the two proprietors is expected within the course of the next few days. OPENS NEXT MONDAY The opening of the Middleboro school will be held Monday morning, October 11, providing the building U accepted by Township Trustee James Howarth and the Wayne township advisory board. The advisory board and Mr. Howarth visited the building today. TAKES THE SERIES Cambridge City, Oct 4. The Grays won the deciding game of the series from the Maxwell-Brisco team of New Castle yesterday afternoon, by the score of 13 to 4. Pitcher Maxwell for the locals, held the visitors safe at all times, while the locals hit three of the visiting pitchers hard, including Horn alne, a leaguer.

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IE Bo Phone 2039. ROOSEVELT GIVEN BLAME BY MORSE Says Ex-president Used Him As "Scapegoat" for the 1907 Panic. HAS PAID INDEBTEDNESS CONVICTED MAN IS QUOTED AS SAYING THAT IT IS NOT YET TIME TO STATE WHERE AND HOW HE MADE MONEY. (American tfews Service) New York, Oct. 4. According to a story published by an afternoon newspaper, Charles W. Morse has made 500,000 since he was released from tha Tombs on June 17, cancelling all his indebtednesa except 1300.000, which he expects to clear away, in a short time. He is quoted as crediting his indictment to Theodore Roosevelt's desire to find a suitable "scapegoat" for tha panic of 1907, and its after effects, in which Morse's fortune of $20,000,000 was swept away. To Extend His Bond. The three supreme court judges who ; granted the application for bail, it was stated, are expected to consent to a ) two days extension of his $125,000 bond. "It is too early to tell how I have made the money and where during the present summer. Mr. Mors is quoted as saying. "In fact it is too early to go into any detail at alL The

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Wholesale score is not wiped out yet. When it is, then I can talk. Naturally, I am optimistic about my appeal. "I have been made the victim, not in any bid for sympathy, but that exact justice be done, of a system under which national banks of the entire country operate. I did nothing wrong." "To what interest or interests do you attribute your troubles?" he was asked. "Were personal or financial enemies involved?" "No," he said, crisply. "The time was ripe for the government to make an example of some one and I was chosen, I feel sure, at the personal direction of Mr. Roosevelt." GIANTS ARE CHAMPS Win the City Honor by Defeating Starr Piano Team Yesterday. The colored population of the city won lots of liver y?eterday as a result of the game between the Giants and the Starr Pianos. The Giants took the third and final game of the series by the score of 10 to 5 and can as a result of this victory, claim the city ' championship, j The Giants found the Starrs very I easy money, hitting Marine, the Starr pitcher, frequently and timely. How- ' ever, errors by the Starr infield threw jthe game away. The Giants ran In 'several ringers who proved their value. Of these Harris, the pitcher, was the star. The losing team did not find him until the last of the ninth Inning when they made five runs. The runs of the colored team came early In the game.

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and Retain STENCH IS AWFUL: DEMANDS DAMAGES William H. Pickett Wants $5,000 from the W. S. Clendenin Company. FERTILIZER PLANT CAUSE PLAINTIFF AVERS IN COMPLAINT THAT ONE CANNOT LIVE NEAR THE PLACE OUTCOME IS BEING WATCHED. Charging that the operation of the fertilizing plant of W. S. Clendenin. north of the city, is a nuisance, William H. Pickett, through his attorneys, Robbins and Robbing, has entered suit in the circuit court for $3X damages. Pickett is a farmer, whose place adjoins the W. S. Clendenin farm and he avers in his complaint that the ! stench is so great that it is almost impossible to live nearby. The plaintiff and defendant have not been on friendly terms for some time. Recently, employes of Clendenin are said to have induced Carl Pickett, a young son of the plaintiff, to accompany them to the Clendenin factory on promise of a position. After arriving there, the lad was placed under arrest and charged with being an incendiary. He was released and the charges withdrawn afterwards. A barn on the Clendenin farm was burned a few days before the lad's arrest. Pickett, It is said, is not the only

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one in that community who make serious objections to living within a short distance of the fertilizing establishment. The success of this suit will be watched by these others and should judgment be given the plaintiff it is entirely probable that other suits will be filed against the defendant In the complaint, Pickett avers that his residence is within twenty-five rods of the fertilizing establishment. H says that odor arising from the boiling, cooking, steaming, rendering and decomposing of the dead animals is such that he and his family are Injured and the sale of bis property is damaged. The stench has made his homunfit for residence purposes, he aver. He claims that his home has been damaged to the extent of $3J0O. and he and his family to the extent of $2,0)0, making the total damage demanded, $5jOOO. The case will be tried in the Octobe term of court in all probability. AIIS WILL COME Chief American Horse and his son. White Bear, the former of whom took part in the massacre of General Custer and his band of calvarymen in the battle of the Little Big Horn, will deliver a lecture on the battle Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, at the Palace theater. In connection with the other numbers of the programA war dane will be given by the Indians, and moving pi 0 ores, showing western life, will be offer"Johnny, leave nte alone and don't ask ine another quest ion r Jast one more, an then 111 keep mtUW -Well, what Is itr "What relation Is a cousin Genua to a Dutch ancle?

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