Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 16, 24 November 1911 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PAL LADIU3I AXD SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1911.
IMPORTANT GAMES PLAYEOJATURDAY Army and Navy Eager to Meet at PhiladelphiaYale Plays Harvard.
ARMY ONE GAME AHEAD THE NAVY. 1890 Navy 24; Army 0. 1891 Army 32; Navy 16. 1892 Nary 12; Army 4. 1893 WaTy : Army 4. 1899 Army 17; Navy 5. 1900 Navy 11; Army 7. 1901 Army 11; Navy 5. 1902 Army 22; Navy 8. 1903 Army 40; Navy 5. 1904 Army 11; Navy 0. 1905 Tie game, 1903 Navy 10; Army 0 1907 Navy ; Army 0. 1908 Army ; Navy 4. 1909 No game. OF (National News Association) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.. Nov. 24. With the memberu of both teams in the beat possible condition and eager for the fray, the Army and Navy football elevens have arrived in Philadelphia, ready for their annual game tomorrow on Franklin Field. In previous years it has been customary to play the game on the Saturday following Thanksgiving, when the contest hag served to bring a brilliant close to the football season in the East. The advance of the date this year brings the Army and Navy game Into rivalry for public interest with that other stellar attraction of the gridiron the annual battle between Yale anJ Harvard. But to all outward Indications the Crimson and Blue contest at Cambridge tomorrow will not detract from the public interest in the Army and Navy game. More than 80,000 seats have been disposed of for the game on Franklin Field, and today hotel accommodations in Philadelphia are at a premium. Official society in Washington will have its Usual large representation and army and navy officers, active and retired, living within a thousand miles around Philadelphia will be here to root for their favorites. With the two teams probably as evenly matched as ever before and with both full of the fighting spirt that pervades the two great Institutions which the players represent, all that is believed necessary to Insure a hard and high-class game is suitable football weather. The official for the game will be: Referee.M. J. Thompson, Georgetown; umpire, A. I. Sharpe. Yale; field Judge, Carl B. Marshall, Harvard; linesman, Addy Smith, head couch at Pennsylvania. BLUE AND CRIMSON. i CAMBRIDGE, Masn., Nov. 24. In classic Cambridge today outward and visible signs were abundant that the great athletic event of the season, the annual football game that is to crown with glory either the Crimson or the Blue, is close at hand. The advance ' guard of visitors hurried hither and thither through Harvard square. The old college buildings grouped about the yard were resplendent with Harvard flags. Acroes the river, inside the gray walls of the Stadium, men Were at work rolling the turf and completing other preparations for tomorrow's annual gridiron battle between the Yale and Harvard elevens. A crowd of 40,000 spectators is expected to view the game. Despite the warm of Yale enthusiasts already in town, all Bangulne of victory, the undergraduates of Harvard are still sanguine that their team will win, notwithstanding Yale's undoubted Strength. Tomorrow's game will be the 33rd 9n the series between the two great universities. Except in five years the games have been continuous since J875. In the series Yale has won 22 times and Harvard 5, and there have been four tie games. In 1875 Harvard won the game and the following year JJfale was victorious. In 1877 there was Ho game. Yale won in 1878, and the game In 1879 was a draw. From 1880 to 1890 Yale won every game, but in 1886 the game was prohibited by the Harvard faculty. In 1888 Harvard forfeited the game. In 1890 the Crimson won, and then Yale followed with a String of victories that lasted until thletic relations were broken off in 1895 and 1896. The game in 1897, when relations were resumed, was a O to 0 tie. In 1898 Harvard won and In 1899 the teams again played a 0 to 0 game. Yale won in 1900, Harvard in 1901 and then followed another string of six victories for Yale. Harvard was Victor in 1908. Yale in 1909 and last Qrear came another 0 to 0 tie game. Knollenberg's Store are offering during their Special Sale of Dress Goods, twentyfive pieces dress weight Wool Goods at 38c per yard. This Is regular $1.25 material. "Drop in" and inspect it Very little escapes the eagle eye of the mischievous freshman. Down in the shopping district there was a sign on a restaurant window which ran very neatly and properly: "Shellfish our Specialty." The other morning the crowd landing from the ferry in passing this window noticed that three of the enamel letters had been pried off. The result was rather startling, for the ign now read: "Hell is Our Specialty." Boston Transcript. Swimming lessons at Y. M. C. A- Nov. 27 to Dec 2. Join! frlAsun It la to kaow i ior wHm waters or celhaittc Mv Hkii r Ublf . Ore Mm a pM MlMiM. taaatN taaio low Or. Odd TOvrvpain. wMokeOs at tpf MM ' imetafl nHi or H M 4n tor. It to tb. rrtft wdr tor two to havla tfce a to ekiUiea wfcea Ibw atea k.
Marmon Team Against
SAVANNAH, Ga., Nov. 24. (Sp -ial. Preliminary practice for the Grand Prize race to be run November 30, and the Vanderbilt Cup Race with th Tiedemann trophy and the Savarm h Challenge cup race to be run November 27, over the famous Grand P .ze course, has developed the fact t at the great yellow-bonneted Marmon squadron of racing cars is deptiiatu upon to uphold the honor of America against the foreigners the Benz and Fiat teams. Other American racing teams ar entered, but the Marmon yellow jaei ets have shown superior speed qualities and have proved that they are fit contenders for the cars of royal paientage to cope with. Piloting the Marmon mounts are Joe Dawson, winner fo the Savannah Challenge trophy last year, second finisher in the 1910 Vanderbilt. fifth in the 500-mile race at Indianapolis this year; and Cyrus Patschke, holder of the majority of the twenty-four-records made in this country, and relief driver for Ray Harroun, who won the great race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway last Decoration Day. The extra drivers on the Marmon squad who will be called upon in case the regulars are incapacitated are Joe Nikrent, the Pacific coast star pilot, and Bruce Keene, one of the winners at Santa Monica last October, when he set a new class record. Ray Harroun, who has been speedway champion for two years, Is manager of the team, but has retired from active driving. The entire Marmon crew is camped near Savannah on the course and is ready for the two great speed battles.
TOO MANY NURSES WAIOELEJELIEVES Councilman Also Says Railroads Don't Pay Hospital Enough. BY FRANK L. WAIDELE. (Councilman, Seventh Ward.) As there seems to be a misunderstanding concerning the hospital report to council last Monday, I wish to make the following statement as to how it came about: At the September budget meeting when the hospital appropriation of $5,000 was asked, I raised the question; What for? Answer, for more nurse rooms and a laundry. Right here let me state that I have for the last fifteen years, aside from my profession, studled public affairs, of which two years was spent at Indianapolis, and I know at once that Reid Hospital had comparatively more nurses than the hospitals at the capital. Why so? Go to Indianapolis and you will not find the nurses standing around, but will and them busy going from one room to another and in the public ward, from bed to bed, too busy to ask your wishes. Now compare them with nurses here. Go through the Reid hospital and see the nurses standing around, seemingly having nothing to do. Is there a business house in this city where you will find clerks standing around? If you do, you will come to the conclusion that there are either too many clerks or not enough business. Pessimistic views! Cranky ideals! No, simply a business proposition, and you absolutely must combine business management with any public institution, if not, it will be a failure. Another thing, why did one of the employes at the hospital inform me on Sunday, October the 2?d. that the new rooms above the laundry were for help around the hospital instead of for nurses? The Item states the price paid by the ward patients is $1 a day. That's true. But the average cost of caring for a ward patient is $1.98 a day. Railroads pay for their ward patients $1.50 per day. Who pays the difference? No one objects to the additional 98c from the general or from the endowment fund for charity, but the additional 48c for the railroad companies' patients, employes of corporations who are well able to pay, aro given the same consideration as the general run of ward patients, and right here is where the public, the tax paying public, objects to make up the difference, and rightly so. There Is no tax payer going to object as long as he knows it is for charity. There is another reason why I raised the question. So far as Dr Wampler is concerned, let me state right here It was myself who demanded to know the facts. I wanted facts, and I got them, and let me state again, there is no man in Richmond or elsewhere who can hitch me to his band wagon and make me pull. The people elected me to office to do my duty, and I am going to do It.
Last Night Fountain Pen either at Post office or west side ol 9 St, test A and Main, return to WHELAN
Will Defend A merican Title A Foreign Automobile Invasion
TSTOP Evangelist Kennedy Large Audience. Tells "Pray, and don't quit," was the advice given by Rev. H. D. Kennedy at the First M. E. church last evening, in addressing an audience at a revival meeting. Rev. Kennedy chose for his text the story of the woman and the unjust judge, found in the eighteenth chapter of Luke. From this he concluded that "when Christians stop praying during a revival, they take the work out of God's hands, and remove all chance for its successful completion. He showed the benefits coming from constant, conscientious prayer, and exhorted the audience not to stop their efforts as soon as the first effects of the revival had passed. Incidentally, the evangelist told the audience to study the tactics of the common enemy, wickedness. He repeated the success Abraham Lincoln had attained from following this principle. "How to be Happy," a talk especially for young people, will be delivered by Rev. Kennedy this evening at the First M. E. church. This address will be one of the features of the week, and is expected to draw a large crowd to the church. A service for Bible reading is being observed this afternoon in connection with the revival. On Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Kennedy, wife of the evangelist, will talk to girls of the city. Suitings worth $2.25 per yard, to go at $1.38 per yard during our Special Sale. The Geo. H. Knollenberg Co. TO SPEND THANKSGIVING. Mrs. Emma Eva and mother, Mrs. Sarah Dobbs, of North Nineteenth street, will go to Knightstown today to spend over Thanksgiving the guest of friends and relatives. Why not attend lecture by Prof. Russell at Y. M. C. A. Tonight? " Y. M. B. C. IS TOLD OF BOARD'S ACTION Mayor Zimmerman reported to the committee of the Young Men's Business Club yesterday afternoon the decision of the board of public works in icgard to the impossibility of installing the cluster lights on Main street this year. At a special session of the board of works this morning Supt. Johnson, of the city light plant declared that there would be a big "howl" from all sections of the city if the board would put in the cluster lights on Main street where there is plenty of light now, and RICHMOND SYMPHONY At the Coliseum, Dec. 6, TICKETS FOR BOTH CONCERTS,
DON
PRAYING
Sale of Seats in Charge of Ladies' Auxiliary Y. M. C. A. Plat Open at Coliseum, 8 a. m., Friday, Dec 1st.
Numiber One PKMfflE
neglect other parts of the city. Supt. Johnson said that the new magnitized lamp had been installed at Seventh and Main street. He says that the lamp will give a great deal more light than the present arc lamps. He says that the carbon in the new lamp burns from both ends while the carbons in the present lamps burned downward.
CAFE 12 Oysters, any style, fried oyster sandwiches, blue points on half shell, fried oyster lunch Saturday afternoon and evening free. CAFE 12, 512 Main street. thur&fri-tf DON'T HESITATE! HALL'S $10 & $15 Clothing Satisfies the most particular. Why not save the extra cost you would be paying other stores when you get the same quality here. sio Suits and Overcoats HALL 912 Main Street ORCHESTRA CONCERTS 1911 and Feb. 28, 1912 $1.00, INCLUDING RESERVED SEATS HIAY
TO DISAGREE AS TO GUILT JAR TRN Lincoln Center Jury Has Been Out 20 Hours Doubt Girl's Story.
(National News Association) LINCOLN" CENTER. Kas., Nov. 24. "The tar girl jury will disagree," was the prediction voiced by nearly everyone in Judge Grover s court room today, as the twelve good men and true continued to wrangle over the evidence for the twentieth hour, Judge Grover did an unprecedented thing when he remained in the court room all night, dosing occasionally in a chair, to be on hand in case a verdict should be returned. " That goes to show how the town is "bet up" over the tar case." As the hours rolled by and no verdict was reached the opinion that a hung jury would result grew stronger. Once the jury asked to examine the exhibits in the case a handkerchief with which Mary Chamberlain rubbed some of the tar from her body and later dropped in the road near where she was attacked; a man's handkerchief also duubed with the mixture, all found at the scene of the crime, and a can of paint. The handkerchiefs were passed among the jurors and each one scrutinized the article carefully. None of the court attaches nor the attorneys were able to determine upon just what point the jury had under discussion, but it was believed that there existed a possibility that the twelve men doubted if the tar mixture was really used on the young school IM BLACK
We want to tell you about JEWEL COAL It ignites quickly, holds fire over night, burns up clean to a light ash and leaves no clinkers.
NOW IS THE BEST TIME T3 TRY A TON HACKK1AN, KLEHFOTH &.
PHONES
COOPER'S
1027 Main
Dressed
...SPECIALS
Cucumbers, Green Beans, Cauliflower, Spinach, Head Lettuce, Breakfast Radishes, Leaf Lettuce, Celery, Jersey Potatoes, Carrots, Turnips, Parsnips, Parsley, Mangoes, Italian Chestnuts, Brussel Sprouts. Sweet Oranges, Tokay Grapes, Catawba Grapes, Bananas, Extra Fancy Large Cranberries. PLENTY TURKEYS, DUCKS, CHICKENS and all the trimmings for Thanksgiving. Order early and get the best.
There Is No Better Time to start buying presents than right now and there is no better place than right in our store, as we have the right goods at right prices, for instance: Brooches from 50c to $65.00 Hat Pins from 40c up Stick Pins 25c to $17.00 Tie Clasps 35c to $5.00 Bar Pins 50c to $12.00 Belt Pins, from 50c up Cuff Pins 25c to $13.00 Cuff Buttons 50c to $20.00 Bracelets $1.25 to $18.50 Signet Rings, all sizes $1.00 to $20.00 Chains $1.00 to $12.00 FOBS, all styles and prices, and other new goods in proportion. You must see our line to appreciate it.
Cflnas. E. Hanmer The Jeweler 810 Main Street
TON
teacher. The mixture was not pore tar. It was a roof paint, but thick and contained a large amount of tar. The seven men who confessed thai they had a hand in the tarring of Miss Chamberlain were to be sentenced today. Judge Grover planned to make their sentence correspond to the penalty which the jury decided was proper for the three men who stood trial.
Hot chocolate, chicken and tomato bouillon at Prices'. 24-lt The capital invested in manufacturing enterprises in Greater New York as reported in 1909. was $1,364,353,000. as against $1,042,916,000 in 1904, an increase of $321,407,000, or 31 per cent. Don't forget Prof. Russell's Lecture tonight, 7:30 P. M. " SUIT OH PROPERTY Involving the Abattoir Has Been Filed. Property in the south part of the city, including the Richmond Abbattoir, which has had a rather stormy existence in the past few years, figures in a suit of Edward P. Reynolds of Indianapolis against Joseph Ogden of Morocco, Ind., and Andres E. Anderson and wife of this city, to foreclose mortgage to secure judgment on a note, demand $8,600 which has been filed in the Wayne circuit court. Reynolds with two other Indianapolis men purchased the packing plant at the sale of receiver P. J. Freeman, and Reynolds then proceeded to acquire the interests of his two associates. Upon doing so he sold the plant to Joseph Ogden, then supposedly of AMD WHITE 2015 and 2016 CMcJkeims
El
OMEEft G. WIHDELAKI CARLOAD SHIPPER 33 SoniMhi SisSh Stoeeff PHONE 1G79
Illinois, but Bow. It ta understood. tting in Morocco, lad. The transfer was made on March 3. 1910, It being a part i of the agreement of sale that Ogden should give a mortgage to secure a $6,500 loan bearing six per cent Interest for one year, and 8 per cent per annum after the maturity of the promissory note. It was also agreed by Ogden, according to Reynolds that Ogden should pay the taxes on the property and keep It in a good state of repair and also keep the insurance premiums paid. All of this has been neglected, Reynolds avers. He says at the spring and
fall tax assessments, he paid $295.31 each time to prevent the tax from going delinquent and then again paid $211.90 insurance on the properties. Select Oysters in pint and quart cans at Prices. lA-li Palladium Want Ads Pay. WANTED YOUR MACHINI AND REPAIR WORK BALLINGER A GIBBS MACHINISTS REAR 220 LINCOLN STREET Phone 3040 or 315S SPECIALS ! Today and Saturday CIGARS 3 for 10c; 8 for 25c $1.50 a Box of 50 Private Stock, Havana Filler. This cigar was made for Nichols Candy Co. to be sold 5c straight. Almeria Mfg. by Deisel & Co., Lima, Ohio. Wahnetah Perfectos. Cherokee Maid Panetelas Goranes (Brevas Imperials. Made in Porto Rico. STOGIES Gallaghers' Stogies $1.50 a 100 Max Bros. Willing Stogies $1.25 a 100 Max Bros. Madison Stogies $1.25 a 100 Quigley's Special Stogies $1.25 a 100 Watch for Our Holiday Special in Cigars Stationery Special 1 lb. Linen, Lawn and French Chiffon Writing Paper and 50 Envelopes to match, 25 cents. Candy Special New England Peanut Taffy, 15c lb. Kline's Chocolate Home Spun, 25c lb. Place your order now for a nice box of Lowney's or Morse's Chocolates for Christmas. QnnnsBjfley Brag
