Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 218, 13 June 1910 — Page 2
THE RICHMOND PALI ADIUJI AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1910. EATOII FAI1S VERY TRUANT OFFICER MAKES A REPORT CURED OF LOCKJAW HE HEEDS PETTING A vellino, Italy, Ruined By Recent Quake - GREATLY Magnesium Sulphate Injections Into Spine Stopped the Disease. Says Fourth Wife of Tobacco King Duke to the Inquisitive Reporters. Threat to Stop Sunday Baser bail Makes Team's Sup- , porters "Wrathy" During Past School Year He Compelled 67 Children to Go to School. TREATMENT WAS NEW ONE SHE LOVES HER HUSBAND
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AROUSED
POINT TO "BOOTLEGGING"
INFORM REFORMERS THAT THEY HAD BETTER CLEAN UP REAL EVILS AND LET HARMLESS : AMUSEMENTS ALONE. (Palladium Special) ' Eaton, O., June 13. Notwithstanding the plans taid to have been made for the arrest of members of the Eaton ball team Sunday afternoon, for vio lation of the Sunday baseball law, a . game was played with the Easy Task Jeam. of Dayton, and was devoid of interference by a committee appointed .by -the Preble county Sunday Hchool neabclatlon. The reason for the privllege is said to have been because the i . . 4 management of the local team had not lVen-.sufficiently warned and because .Arrangements had all been made and expenses of the game already incurred. tiext Sunday, however, arrest of the Violators is promised. Local fans have considered the pro.'posed action In a serious light. To slngle out Sunday baseball and class it Among the more serious law violations teems a fanatical step to the fans. If -ft "clean-up" in town is to be made local ball enthusiasts believe the initial step of the reformers should be taken in cases where there exists evil tf more serious and detrimental nature. As a more serious law violation .baseball promoters point out the genii, eral practice of "bootlegging" in this 'dry" town of Eaton, where the citizens two years ago decided against saloons very emphatically, giving the temperance forces about 1.7( majority. The game Sunday afternoon waa won by the locals by a score of 4 to :i. The contest was the most interesting of the season. Pugh twirled the game for the Eaton team and showed up in a creditable manner for a recruit. The only disappointing feature of the game was the umpiring of Robert Myers of West Alexandria, who was inconsistent to degree in his decisions. DIAMOND CHIPS ' It waa Walsh who stopped the Highlanders' nine game winning streak, Mullln. who held the Athletics to thirteen straight, Johnson. who floored the Detrolts at eleven straight and Caspar ho checked the Giants at nine straight. .. . The Boston Red Sox will have to brace up. if they hope, to figure in the Ta.ce. Patsy , Donovan's club does not look nearly as strong as a year ago. Boston needs . pitchers very badly. It was announced in Cincinnati that Inflelder Thomas McMillan has been purchased from the-lirooklyn club by the Cincinuatl Nationals for $1,500. Fred Clark has. shaken up the bat ting order of the world's champions, liana .Wagner , now hits third and Byrue fourth. Clarke himself following Leach or Campbell. The combination worked well in yesterday's game at Boston. Tula Quartet got eight of the Buccaneers' dozen hits. Capt. Kelle), second baseman of the Notre Dame, university team, arranged yesterday to join the Chicago Am t rlcana at the close of the school year, He will' get $2,700 for playing the bal ance of the season. Harry Lumley, the outfielder who managed the Brooklyn team during the- season of 1909, has been purchas ed by the Phillies and will be asked to report r.t once. Lumley was given his reluase by Brooklyn when his wife died recently, and ho said he desired to take a rest for awhile. With Titus on the Injured list, Lumley will come in handy, and wbtn in condition he ought to strengthen the Phillies. Pitcher Pat Flaherty will probably be re leased to 'a minor league club today.Philadelphia Record. The union labor boycott on Ameri can league baseball parks, where Cle veland plays waa lifted Tuesday night by an agreement entered into between Ban Johnson, president of the Ameri can Baseball lengue and officials rep resenting the American Federation of Labor and the local unions of Cleve land. The terms of the agreement ar that, in all American league parks no cigars shall be sold without the union label, and that all printing ordered by the league clubs shall be given to union shops. It la also provided that any stands erected or other structural work taken in hand by the 'clubs shall 'be intrusted solely to union labor. . Johnny Everss reform has taken wings. When the season opened John ny announced that he would be the real, original human clam. Never he open his mouth to dispute a decision with an umpire; never would be cast a mean glance at the tenth or eleventh ' man on the . field; never would he step on an umpire's toes or think a cross think.' f E era's - friends said the news was too good to be true. It lasted a few weeks., and last Wednesday Johnny received a A message from President Tom Lynch that he would not be allowed, to play for three days for baying an argument with Um pire Rftler.
m
B Panoramic view of Avellino where Nearly every house in that city and and according to the meager reports BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE. i Clubs. Won. Lost. Pet Chicago 28 15 .631 New York 28 17 .622 Cincinnati 22 19 .537 Pittsburg 21 20 .512 St. Louis 21 24 .467 Brooklyn 20 25 .444 Philadelphia 17 24 .413 Boston 1G 29 .356
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Clubs. Won. Lost. Pet. .683 .667 .633 .512 .459 .447 .366 .214 New York 2S Philadelphia 23 Detroit il 13 14 18 21 20 26 26 33 Boston 22 Cleveland.. ..17 Washington 21 Chicago 15 St. Louis 9 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
Clubs Won. Lost- Pet St. Paul 35 19 .648 Minneapolis 35 19 .648 Toledo 33 21 .611 Indianapolis 24 30 .444 Columbus .23 29 .442 Kansas City. 20 28 . .417 Milwaukee" 20 80 .400 Louisville 20- 34 .370
RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. No games scheduled. American League. St. Louis 6; Philadelphia 1. Washington 2; Chicago 0. Detroit S: New York 3. American Association. Indianapolis 4: Kansas City 2. Minneapolis 3; Columbus 1. Louisville 2: St. Paul 1. Toledo 5; Milwaukee i. (11 inn.) GAMES TODAY. National League. Cincinnati at Boston. Pittsburg at Philadelphia, Chicago at New York. St. Louis at Brooklyn. American League. Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. New York at Detroit. Boston at Cleveland. American Association. Minneapolis at Columbus. Milwaukee 'at Toledo. Kansas City at Indianapolis St. Paul at Louisville. STARRS WIN LONG GAME. Twelve innings were required yesterday to settle the baseball dispute between the Starrs of this city and the fast Dan Smokehouse team of New Castle, the final score being S to 7. The visitors were ahead until the ninth, when the Starrs tied the score. Again in the eleventh frame, each time scored a run. It remained for Martin, the second baseman, to win the game with a long hit in the twelfth. GIANTS DEFEAJ 0HI0ANS. The Richmond Giants had little trouble with the New Madison, Ohio, team yesterday afternoon at Athletic Park and sacked the visitors in a nineinning contest by a score of 9 to 4. The Giants were strong in the first three innings, making four tallies in the first alone. Again in the eighth two men crossed the plate, further clinching the victory. The batteries Giants: Mitchell. Saines and Benson; New Madison : Kelleyand Harter. SCARED BY AN AUTO Frightened by the breaking of a "hold-back" strap and the sudden appearance of an automobile, the horse driven by Earl and Jay Stanley, of Liberty. Lester Cope, of Danville, and Karl Mosbaugh of Cambridge City, ran way yesterday afternoon while the young men were on the Liberty pike about eight miles south of here. The animal plunged Into a fence, throwing the occupants to the ground and completely demolishing the conveyance. Although painfully bruised, none of the youns men experienced serious in-Jurjr.
TS
the earthquake of June 7th is reported to have done much damage.
vicinity was thrown down by the shock. from the scenes of the disturbance. TEXAS WOMEN BALK Refused to Accept Plan of Riding Past Roosevelt in Grand Review. ARE NOT ROMAN SLAVES (American News Service) San Antonio, Tex., June 13. Though Colonel Roosevelt be great and at present the cynosure of all eyes, royal and others, in Europe, he is not great enough to have 500 Texas women file past him in review. Be this understood. To the man who guides the destinies of the Texas Prosperity club, it occurred that rrfM) Texas lassies and matrons clothed in conventional cowgirl costume and mounted on the real thing in cow ponies and filing past Teddy's reviewing stand in New York, would mean a tremendous advertisement for the state and its resources. But to the Women it occurred that it would do nothing of the kind and that the grand, old Lone Star state, would thereby merely proclaim itself the home of the melodrama. Now the game is off, and an idea that really had some originality if applied to a hippodrome or three-ring circus has been spurned with all the wrath a collectivity of women is capable of expressing. "Why," said one of the most prominent women in this city, "that man must think that the world, since Mr. Roosevelt left this country, has been moving backwards. Texas women ride in a triumphal procession of a plain American or any other man for that matter? Never. To have some of us dance before the hero's chariot, and others strew his path with flowers, must have been overlooked by the originator of this silly plan, for only then would the homecoming of the feted Colonel resemble the return to Rome of Caesar. There isn't a man big enough in all this world to make Texas women honor him in such a fashion. It's a wonder that somebody hasn't thought of Hero Hobson's kissing bee. So there." MAKE NEW CONTRACT Improvement at Seeding Machine Factory Cuts Deep Into City's Revenue. WILL STILL BUY POWER James A. Carr, general manager of the Richmond branch of the American Seeding Machine company, appeared before the board of works this morn ing to discuss the contract which is to supplant the present agreement between the city and the factory when the electric power plant is installed by the concern. Mr. Carr and NV H. Johnson, superintendent of the munici pal plant, had been unable to agree upon terms, but after hearing both sides this morning, the board directed Superintendent Johnson and City Attorney Gardner to. confer with Mr. Carr and draw up a contract to be presented later. By losing the custom of the Seeding Machine company, the revenue from the light plant will be cut $600 to $1,000 a month. The factory is now installing a four hundred kilowat generator, but it is possible that from time to time additional power will be needed and it is planned to buy this from the city. Superintendent Johnson, before consenting to leave at the factory equipment belonging to the city and valued ait about $2,500, desires a guarantee of a minimum of $50 a, month, while the Seeding Machine company would place the minimum at $600 per annum. Rwe too traoble of mar kind art sine from a disordered stomach? Go to roar drassist aad ret a 50c or $1 bottle of Dr. CaJdwea'a Srrnp Ppin. which to poaiHWy r"rnsttHl to w TOttastfjBMtt-fTM wan.
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At least fifty persons were killed JOHNSON TOTES GUN Black Champion Has Bad Case of "Nerves" as Result of Troubles. HIS CAMP QUITE UNEASY (American News Service San Francisco. June 13. Jack John son's troubles with managers and oth ers. together with, his training, has given him such a bad case of "nerves that he goes around carrying an ugly looking revolver and while he sleeps two men each armed, guard the two entrances to his room. Johnson does not say anything con cerning the carrying or tne weapon and all about his camp are conjured to silence. Johnson was walking around in his room when the butt end of the weap on was seen protruding from his pocket. Someone advised that he cover it up and he drew his sweater low enough to conceal it, without uttering a sound. , There seems to be an air of uneasiness about the camp but it is not known that any threats of personal violence have been mads against the colored fighter. Little, since his dismissal as boss of the colored camp, has been mingling freely with the fighting element here and has made many "sour grape" threats. It ma be that some of these , have been carried to Johnson who fears his former manager is sincere. It is also assumed by some that these reports have been magnified by those who believe themselves humorous, not knowing the nervous condition of Johnson. EAST HAS T Armed Posse in Massachusetts Searching for Murderous Desperado. FUGITIVE KILLS SHERIFF Monroe Bridge, Mass., June 13. More than one hundred armed men, sworn as special deputies and under orders to "shoot to kill," at daybreak resumed the hunt for Silas S. Phelps, the "bad man of Franklin county," who shot and killed Emmett F. Raskins, sheriff of Charlmont, when the latter attempted to arrest him yesterday because he had probably fatally stabbed Superintendent Penman of the Rammago Paper works. Phelps, hidden in the forest of Monroe mountain, is known to carry 100 rounds of ammunition. He is desperate. He has declared that he will never be taken alive. ' He has sworn vengeance on at least two of the men in the pursuing posse. ,
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THERE WERE 346 PAUPER CASES WHERE BOOKS, CLOTHING, ETC. HAD TO BE PURCHASED BY THE TOWNSHIPS. Much time and money were spent during the past school year in compelling and assisting children to attend schools in this county according to the yearly report of Truant Officer George Bishop which has been forwarded to the secretary of the state board of truancy. The total number who have been compelled to attend school was t7, while the total amount spent fn the fifteen townships and in the city for books, clothing, etc., for poor children was $.'97.84. During the year, the report shows that sixty-seven children were brought into the schools, sixty-five of whom were compelled to attend the public schools and the other two parochial schools. In securing information about these children and in investigating other rumors of children under sixteen years not attending school, the truant officer made 121XJ visits to homes, stores and shops. Poverty Prevented. Often it was found that the children could not attend school owing to the poverty of their parents or guardians. In these cases such assistance as the purchase of books, clothing, shoes and other necessities was given by the township trustee of the township in which the children resided. There were 346 pauper cases. Officer Bishop spent 174 days in investigating cases and was allowed $3 IS for his services. He made two prose cutions, but unsuccessfully, against pa rents for violations of the compulsory education laws. The following shows the amount spent by the township trustees and the city of Richmond for books, cloth ing and the like for the benefit of im poverished pupils: Abington township, nothing; Boston township, 1 pupil, $38; Center township, 3 pupils, $11.00; Clay township, 2 pupils, $17.75; Dalton township. 1 Pupil, $1.15; Franklin township, 2 pupils, $2.55; Greene town ship, 3 pupils, $8; Harrison town ship, nothing; Jackson township, 3 pupils $11.81; Jefferson township, 6 pupils. $22.50: New Garden township, 3 pupils, $3.27; Perry township, 1 pupil, $1; Washington township, 2 pupils, $5; Wayne township, 14 pupils, $34.16; Webster township, 2 pupils, $1.15; City of Richmond, 302 pupils, $240.41 City Statistics Deaths and Funerals. VOGELMAN Mary E. Vogelman, aged 54 years, died Sunday afternoon at the home of her husband, Joseph Vogelman, 717 South E street. Mrs, Vogelman was a prominent member of St. Andrew's church and belonged to the St. Ann's ladies' society. She had a large circle of friends, having lived in this city for many years. She is survived by her husband, one son, Leo, of California, two daughters, Ina and Nellie, two brothers, Louis and John Smithmeyer, and four sisters, Mrs. Frank Englebert, Mrs. U. R. Stanton, Mrs. Herman H. Pardieck and Mrs. Bernard Schroeder. The funeral will be held on Thursday morning at 9 o'clock at St. Andrew's church, with interment in St. Andrew's cemetery. Friends may call at any time after Tuesday noon. Marriage License. Frederick Evans Beale, Richmond, 27, carpet salesman, and Miss Linah Elizabeth Hafner, Richmond, 23, milliner. MEET AT The Epworth League of the Richmond district of the North Indiana M. E. conference will hold its convention at Dunkirk on June 14-16 and will be attended by a large number from this county. The league's work is under the general supervision of the Rev. T. M. Guild, presiding elder of the Richmond district. The Rev. Zerbe of Williamsburg and W. H. Jenkins of Hagerstown are on the program. KINOS-
DUNKIRK
Philadelphia. June 13, Cured of lockjaw by a new- treatment used for
the first time in this citv. twelve-year-old John Smith, of 433 North Felt on street, was discharged freni the West Philadelphia Homeopathic hospital yesterday. He was in the hospital eight weeks, and when first admitted it was thought he could not live more than a few hours. The treatment used in effecting the cure was first advocated by a German physician several months ago. It has been successfully used in cases in New York and Baltimore. It consists of injections of magnesium sulphate in conjunction with the anti-toxin treatment. These injections are made Into the spinal column, where the fluid reach es the nerve center, relieving the vio lent spasms which usually cause death. In the case of the Smith boy, forty drops of magnesium sulphate were injected at a time. Case Attracts Attention. Doctors all over the state have watched the progress of the case with interest. It is probable that the treat ment will now be adopted in lockjaw cases by all the hospitals in city and state. While playing about & stable nine weeks ago the Smith boy stepped on a rusty nail. He was at first treated for rheumatism, but when his right leg became stiff he was taken to the West Philadelphia Homeopathic hospital. fter his admittance his jaws became rigid. For two days the anti-toxin treat ment was used, but this did not have the desired effect, and when it ap peared as though the disease would prove fatal, it was decided to try the new treatment. Drs. Charles Fox and William C. Pierce took charge of the case and administered the magnesium sulphate. Doses Gradually Decreased, As they employed the magnesium injection they gradually decreased the doses of anti-toxin, until the fifth day, when they discontinued it altogether. On this day the boy's jaws relaxed, and his system was comparatively strong. Injections of chloral hydrate and sodium bromide were th'en given the patient. Every four hours, during a period-of four days, he was given eight grains of chloral hydrate, . and forty grains of sodium bromide. On the ninth day medicine was discontinued altogether. Until yesterday the boy was closely watched by the physicians for the return of pain or symptoms. None appearing, they con cluded that a permanent , cure had been effected. . A Diagnosis. Myer I wonder what causes concussion of the brain. Ryder A collision between two trains of thought.
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Washington, June 13. Mrs. Brodie L. Duke, who became the fourth wtf of the veteran tobacco magnate Saturday, after an exciting flight to Canton, is taking no chances. "I was very interested in my studies with Mrs. Horstley," said the bride, "and particularly with my dressmaking course because I thought that if by any chance I should be the fourth divorced Mrs. Duke 1 would be independent and have a way to earn my own living. "There is no chance of this, however I am sure, for I love my husband and know that he loves me devotedly." The Duke newly weds spent Sunday quietly receiving the congratulations , of their friends at the Abbott house. It was the earnest desire of the bride groom io entertain his wife at a wedding feed at the New Willard, but a battery of snap shot t ers camped butside the Abbott house all day and
Duke absolutely refused to put his wife in the line of fire. Once he was lured outside the hotel just long enough to enable the battery to snap him. He laughingly fled when he discovered the deception that had been played on him. The future movements of the Dukes are very uncertain. Apparently they fear yet some action may be taken on the part of the Duke family to mar their newly acquired happiness. "Mr. Duke's money had no weight in my decision to marry him, said the bride. "I love him. I think he is a very fascinating man. If he were to lose all his money tomorrow I would still be fond of him and watch over him and take care of him when ill. He is not at all strong and needs a ' good deal of petting. ' "I do not know whether we shall go back to Durham to live on Mr. Duke's estate, as Mr. Duke's people do not approve of our marriage in which case It would be better for us to live elsewhere. I think that Washington is a beautiful city and I prefer the social life. We take a large house here and entertain next winter quite - a little. Mr. Duke knows several senators and congressmen. "I think, that the furore made -by the newspapers over our marriage is very silly. Other people get married every day. I wish to say that I was papers stated. I never went near Mr, McLeod's church, but waa quietly talking with my fiancee In the parlor of my temporary home with my teacher, Mrs. Horstley. Dr. McLeod sent us word that he could not marry us because .Mr. Duke is a divorced man. Neither did we drive around tn a taxIcab until 2 o'clock that night" Then It ao tMdidM so safe aad at die saa tint so plMMBt to tkm mm Dr. CaMwaU's Syrav Pepaio. tit po.itiv cor for oil dlMaoM ansioc from atoraach trooblo. Tbo price Is vory km onabl-'30c and tX. TAairru: Gold Medal Flour loads thorn alt citmm.
