Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 159, 13 May 1913 — Page 6
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1913
BALANCE OF POWER HELD BY AMERICA Korean Leader in Washington Outlines Far Eastern Situation Today.
(National News Association) WASHINGTON, May 13. With a taste of republicanism, the oriental people, particularly the Japanese, are beginning to grow restless and are exhibiting an inclination to throw off the old oligarchic rule, according to Zek Hun Klmm, president of the Korean Patriotic Association, in a statement published today. The establishment of the Chinese republic has inspired the stirring of a new life, he says, and indicates that the situation in the far east is delicate. Under the present order, the statement says, Japan wants complete control of Manchuria, Russia of Mongolia, Japan deires to preserve her alliance with England, Russia wants to keep England quiet, and therefore, the latter two understand each other as regards Persia acd Thibet. Russia is aggressive and England stubborn; the result may be the dismemberment of China. With the present success of China, India and Russia are becoming disturbed, says Zek Hun Kimm. The commercial interests of Germany and the United States, he says, demand the interests of these countries in the game. Germany is Japan's bitterest enemy, according to the statement, and this country's ownership of the Philippines puts her in a hostile position. Summing up the entire eastern situation, Zek Hun Kimm says it is a series of international triangles, but the United States holds the balance of power, because England and this country gra natural nllifH In thfl far pant
EMOTION WAS SHOWN
By Pretty Hartford City Girl At Her Trial.
(National News Association') MUNCIE, Ind., May 13. Miss Doris Underwood, the pretty Hartford City school teacher charged with shooting with intent to kill Otis Fisher, a Muncie drug clerk, displayed the first signs of emotion today when the prosecution closed its case with an exhibit of Fisher's blood stained necktie with a bullet hole throught it. The girl became suddenly pale and bit her lips nervously. Earlier in the day she had manifested a flash of anger when Prosecutor Mann referred to her occupation
and shooting down Muncie citizens." Ada Underwood, 18 years old, sister of Doris, over whose alleged betrayal the school teacher shot Fisher, was sworn as a witness today. She will tell her life story to the jury in an effort to save her older sister. Miss Underwood's trial has attracted large crowds of handsomely gowned women to each session. At recess large numbers of them gathered about the accused young woman and wished her success In her defense.
T
HOT LINERS
I OFF THE BAT
Mike Donlin, the slugging outfielder, who has just completed a vaudeville
engagement, wafted into New York and announced that he would like to play with the Giants again. He is on the reserve list of the Phillies. Maranville, the Braves' shortstop, was the hero of yesterday's game. It was his fielding an pinch hitting that enabled his team to win from the Cardinals. The Brooklyn ball club's receipts to date for the twenty-three regular and lour exhibition games, are estimated at slightly over $100,000. Last year the receipts up to this time were about $25,000. Two doubles, a triple and a homer were the .contributing factors in the Giants' B-to-1 victory over the Cubs. Smokey Joe Wood, who led the 'American league pitchers last year, went in against the Tigers yesterday In the closing rounds and the Detroiters promptly proceeded to bat the Wadding out of him. Lefty Russell of the White Sox, held the Athletics to three hits yesterday, but failed to win.
IF YOU DRINK BOTTLE BEER lied Heart brands are the best. Jung's Pilsner style of bottle beer is steriliztd. Bottled under Pure Food Law. Serial No. 19060. Phone 2185.
RICHMOND MARKET
PRODUCE. (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper, phone 2577.) Old Hens, per lb 15c Old Roosters,, per lb 8c Young Chickens, per lb. ...18c to 20c Eggs, per dozen 16c Country butter, per lb. .. .. ..25c GRAIN MARKET. (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019.) Wheat, per bu $1.05 Oats, per bu. 30c Corn, per bu. 58c Rye. per bu 60c Bran, per ton $24.00 Middlings, per ton :... $26.00 WAGONMARKET. (Corrected daily by Omer Wfcelan, phone 1679.) Corn, per bu. .................... 65c Oats, per bu 30c Timothy hay, per ton $14.00 Clover hay $10.00 Rye straw ..... $6.00 jDat or wheat straw $5.00
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LEAGUE STANDING J
NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia ..........13 6 .684 Brooklyn ......15 8 .652 Chicago 15 '11 .577 St. Louis .13 11 .542 New York .11 11 .500 Boston ,9 12 .429 Pittsburg 10 15 .400 Cincinnati ...... 7 18 .280
Yesterday's Results. New York 5, Chicago 1. Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 3. Boston 6, St. Louis 4. Philadelphia 6, Pittsburg 5 (11 In.)
Today's Games. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Chicago at-New York. St. Louis at Boston. Pittsburg at Philadelphia.
AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia . 17 5 .773 Cleveland ...17 8 .680 Washington 14 ' 7 .667 Chicago 16 12 .571 St. Louis 11 16 .407 Boston 9 15 .375 Detroit 8 18 .308 New York 6 17 .261
Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 0. Washington 2, St. Louis 0. New York 4, Cleveland 3. Detroit 7, Boston 7.
Games Today. Washington at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Chicago. New York at Cleveland. Boston at Detroit.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Pet.
Columbus 15 10 .600 Louisville 15 13 .536 Indianapolis ..13 12 .520
Milwaukee 14 13 .519
Kansas City 14 14 .500
Minneapolis 14 14 .500
St. Paul 12 15 .444 Toledo 10 16 .385
Yesterday's Results. Toledo 2, Columbus 1. St. Paul 4, Milwaukee 3. . Minneapolis 5, Kansas City 3.
Games Today. No games scheduled.
CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Fort Wayne 12 7 .632 Grand Rapids ,11 7 .611 Springfield 11 7 .611 Dayton 9 9 .500 Evansville 7 11 .389 Terre Haute 5 13 .278
Yesjerday's Results. Fort Wayne 3, .Grand Rapids 2. Springfield 11, Evansville 3. Dayton 5, Terre Haute 2.
Games Today. Grand Rapids at Dayton. Fort Wayne at Springfield. Evansville at Terre Haute.
THE DODGERS MAKE IT TWO STRAIGHT FROM CINCINNATI
BROOKLYN, N. Y., May 13. The Brooklyns made it two straight from Cincinnati yesterday, winning 4 to 2. Brooklyn took a lead of three runs off Johnson by hard hitting in the second and fourth innings. Rucker had a bad inning in the fifth and before he could settle down, the Reds had the score tied. With one out, Marsans walked and Grant was safe on an .error by Daubert. Singles by Clarke, Johnson
and Bates followed rapidly. Three runs resulted. Rusker then pulled himself together and two forceouts checked the enemy. Brooklyn came right back with the winning run in its half of the fifth on hits by Miller and Rucker, Berghamer's wild throw and a wild pitch. Score: Cincinnati. AB. H. PO. A. E. Bates rf . . , 4 1 10 0 Becker If 2 1 1 0 0 Kling c 1 0 2 0 0 Tinker ss .. 4 0 2 6 0 Hoblitzel lb ...4 2 14 1 0 Marsans cf 4 0 2 0 0 Berghamer 2b 3 0 0 5 1 Grant 3b . .t. . 4 0 1 1 0 Clarke c 3 2 1 1 0 Packard 0 0 0 0 0 Sevroid If . 1 0 0 0 0 Johnson p ... 2 1 0 1 0 tAlmedia .. 0 0 0 0 . 0 Brown p 0 0 0 0 0 JBlackburn 1 0 0 0 0
Totals
33 7 24 15 1
Brooklyn. AB. H. PO. A. E. Moran rf 3 1 1 0 0 Cutshaw 2b . 4 0 4 3 0 Stengel cf 4 1 3 0 0 Wheat If ...2 1 0 0 0 Daubert lb 3 1 10 0 1 Smith 3b 3 0 3 3 0 Fisher ss 3 1 2 7 0 Miller c 3 1 4 1 0 Rucker p 3 2 0 1 0
Totals 28 8 27 15 1 Ran for Clark n seventh. tBatted for Johnson in seventh. JBatted for Brown in ninth.
Cincinnati 00003000 0 3
Brooklyn 02011000
Runs Berghamer, .Grant, Clarke, Stengel, Wheat, Daubert, Miller. Left on base Cincinnati, 6; Brooklyn 2. Three-base hits Clarke, Stengel. Home-run Daubert. Sacrifice fly Wheat. Sacrifice hit Moran. First base or errors Cincinnati 1. Stolen base Almeida. Double plays Johnson to Tinker to Hoblitzell; Cutshaw to Fisher to Daubert. Struck out By Johnson 1, by Brown 2. by Rucker 4. Bases on balls Off Rucker 3. Balk Rucker. Wild pitch Johnson. Hits Off Johnson 7 in 6 innings; off Brown 1 in 2 innings. Time 1:32. Umpire Rigler and Byron.
TYPEWRITERS FOR SALE OR RENT Ribbons and Carbon IVper Repairing a Specialty SCHWENKE Residence Phone 1010
UTE MARKET HEWS
Furnished by Correli and Thompson, L O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1446.
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Open Close Am. Can 32 4 33 Ami. Copper 74 756 Am. Smelters 66 67 U. S. Steel 59 60 Atchison 99 99 St. Paul 106 107 Gt. No. Pfd. . 126 126 Lehigh Valley 153 154 N. Y. Cen ....114 114 Penn 110 111 Reading 159 160 So. Pac 95 96 Union Pac 148 149 M. Rumely 28 28 M. Rumely Pfd 55 55
CHICAGO GRAIN
WHEAT. Open Close May 89 89 July 89 88 Sept 89 88 CORN. May ........... 56 55 July 56 55 Sept 56 56 OATS. May 37 37 July .? 36 35 Sept 36 35 INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN
INDIANAPOLIS, May 13. Wheat, cash No. 2 red, $1.04; Corn, cash No. 3 white 6; Oats, cash No. 2 white 28.
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, May 13. Hogs, receipts 12.000, market strong, top price 18.55. bulk of sales $8.40 to $8.50. Cattle, receipts 2,500, market strong, beeves $7,10 to $9.00, calves $7.00 to $9.00, Sheep receipts 14,000, natives and westerns $4.75 to $6.50, lambs $5.75 to $8.50.
PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, May 13. Cattle, supply 1,000, market steady, choice beeves $9.50, tidy butchers unchanged, veal calves unchanged. Sheep and lambs, supply 1,000, market steady, , prime sheep $5.75, lambs $8.00. Hogs, receipts 1,800, market higher, prime heavies $8.80, pigs $8.90.
CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK
CINCINNATI, May 13. Cattle, receipts 130, market quiet, choice steers $8.00, calves $9.25. Hogs, receipts slow, top prices $8.50. Sheep, receipts 250, prime $5.35, lambs $8.00 to $9.50.
INDIANAPOLIS STOCK
LIVE
INDIANAPOLIS. May 13 Hogs, receipts 6,500, market strong, tops $8.55, bulk of sales $8.50. Cattle, receipts 1,400, choice steers $7.60 to $8.00, other grades $7.25 to $7.50. Sheep and lambs, receipts 250, market steady, prime sheep 5.95, lambs $7.25 to $9.00.
TOLEDO GRAIN
TOLEDO, May 13. Cash grain: Wheat $1.06; Corn, 57; Oats, 39; Cloverseed, cash $13.85.
REBELS M ACTIVE Only One Line to Mexico City Not Tied Up. (National News Association) MEXICO CITY, May 13. Letters from President Poincaire of France and King George of England, conveying official recognition of the Mexican government were presented to President Huerta at the national palace today. Rebels have tied up practically
the entire system of the Mexican Central railroad except the line between this city ami Vera Crux.
FIGHTS TONIGHT j
Mike Gibbons vs. Gus Christie, twelve rounds, at Boston. Mass. Young Briscoll vs. Delivery Hirsch. ten rounds, at Brooklyn, N. Leach Cross vs. Johnny Dohan, ten rounds, at New York city.
Investigation of the great resources of northeastern Minnesota is to be made this summer by the United States bureau of mines.
M. J. Carr, of St. Paul, has spent thirty years studying the bird life of Minnesota.
WESTERN UNION
TELES
RAM
THEO. N. VAIL, PRESIDENT
M i-
Judex.."
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Delicious Waffles and Griddle Cakes, light, tenderand always I 'ust right the finest reakfast imaginable. You can make them with Rumford Bakinpr
Powder. It never varies it's alwavs the same in aualitv
and result and can be depended on to produce perfect food. LA. THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER
For the sake of that dear friend of yours, your stomach, who stays with you from morning till night, and puts up with your various abuses, do not inflict on it anything more than necessary, but treat it to three feasts each day of either Better Ikml, Mothers OR Golem Cream Bread
Eat it for your stomach's sake if nothing more.
Rfetaoedl Balding Co. Every Loaf Wrapped
DEVON
3RROW COULAR CLUETT TEABODTfirCQTOCYlCC
I lladley's Grocery t Try Our Coffee
t Roasted Today J J It Will Please You J
DR. E. J. DYKEMAN DENTIST Hours: 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. EvenIns hy Appointment. New Phone 2053. 10th & Main Sta OTer Starr Piano Store.
TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sale at
Cooper's Grocery
PECK-WILLIAMSON UNDERFEED and FAVORITE Furnaces Durable, economical, 70 degrees Fahrenheit guaranteed in coldest winter weather. Workmanship and material guaranteed the best. t Let Us Figure With You PILGRIM FURNACE COMPANY 529 Main St. 714 to 720 So 9th Phone 1390 Phone 165
PHYSICIAN PAYS HIGH TRIBUTE
To the Remarkable Skill and Success of the United Doctors' New Treatment.
LETTER BY LOCAL PHYSICIAN
Written to Milwaukee Doctors Brings Forth Warm En
dorsement.
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V!
ARK .REACHED
Wtoenn mi May ltt We distributed to the credit of our thousands o! Savings Depositors the large sum of
Representing the largest single distribution of interest to our depositors in the history of our bank Tttnis Simniply Meais That the people of this community recognize the Dickinson Trust Co. as the SAFE and CONSERVATIVE bank for savings. We appreciate this expression of confidence and most cordially invite you to open an account with us $1.00 or more will start an account 3 interest will keep it growing , KeG)Tuiir(ee Over SOffiMQffiodDffl
ST -COMPANY
"The Safe Bank For Savings"
As a rule the ethical practioners of medicine lose no opportunity to condemn any advertising doctors as unreliable and a fake. In the case of the United Doctors, however, physicians who are at all acquainted with the methods of these master specialists pay high tribute to their exceptional tkill and ability In curing obscure chronic diseases. As evidence of this fact the following occurrence will be of Interest. A certain ethical doctor, whose name Is withheld for obvious reasons, wrote to his friend. Dr. F. T. Riley, who is one of the most prominent physicians In Wisconsin, and whose office is on the third floor of the AJlismbra Theater Building, Milwaukee, in rezard to the United Doctors and
their new methods of treatment. In this letter to Dr. Riley the physician stated that he had a case which was beyond his power to handle, but that he had heard of a similar case which had been successfully treated by the United Doctors, and desired to know if it would be policy to call Dr. Stephenson of the United Doctors, in consultation. The following is the letter which this doctor received from Dr. Riley: "Dear Doctors: In answer to yours of recent date I have seen considerable work done by Dr. Stephenson and other members of the United Doctors' staff, and have called Dr. Stephenson in consultation on difficult cases. Especially have I reason to thank him for his direction of the treatment of a case of liver trouble with an Involvement of the kidneys and stomach. It was a desperate case which had been brought to me by an up state doctor for treatment. Not feeling that I cared to assume the responsibility of
son in consultation, and am able to state that the patient was cured under my treatment as directed by Dr. Stephenson. Another time I called Dr. Stephenson to advise rae in a case of a patient who had weak nerves and a bad blood disorder, and his treatment of that case was equally successful. I consider the United Doctors among our best specialists in chronic and nervous diseases. You will find them honest and reliable. Fraternally yours. F. T. Riley. If. D." The expert knowledge of the United Doctors is not only recognised by physicians, but by leading financiers, business men. newspaper men, and clergymen, and. above all. by the thousands of those who were sick and suffering and who have been made well and happy by these world famous medical specialists. The United Doctors, who have their Richmond Institute located on the second floor of the Hittle Block, corner 9th and Main streets, are In receipt of hundreds of letters daftX praising them for the wonderful cocq they are doing. If you are sick an suffering, and want to be made weQ and happy, call on these noted specialists, as they solicit difficult cases which other doctors have failed te cure. CATsrtlstaa0 '
