Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 196, 25 June 1913 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1913
L DENVER LANGUAGE At Least For Next Few Days City Guest of a Host of Teutons Now. ( Advertisement) DENVER, June 25. The official language in Denver for the remainder of this week will be German. For several days past hordes of Teutons have been descending upon the city for the thirty-first Bundes-Turnfest, which will be formally opened this evening when the Mayor of Denver presents the golden key of the city to the president of the Turnverein's Festival Board. It Is estimated that fully ten thousand Germans have assembled here for the turnfest. The affair will close on Sunday .night with a summer night's festival and a fire-works display at Lakeside. Held Every Four Years. The turnfeets are held once every four years. They are gatherings of the turners from every country where : there are turned societies. Not merely ;the Germans belong, but many other ! nationalities. These turnverins are organizations that promote the physical and mental welfare o f their members, men, women and children. The big festivals each four years ate the nearest approach America has to the world-famous Olympic games in Europe. There will be athletic contests for international prizes, in which fully COOO people will participate at one :time. On other occasions the young 'girls of the turner societies will have their contests, with about 2,000 girls on the field. A huge stadium, seating about 10,000 people, has been erected on the .festival grounds, and in this the athiletic events will be held. The city's magnificent million-dollar auditorium will be used to house huge athletic events, in which will appear some of the foremost German athletes of the day. There will also be singing contests, featuring all the great German male choruses in the United States. J HOT LINERS OFF THE BAT ! The plan of Frank Chance, manager of the Yankees to send inflelder Claude Derrick to the Rochester, N. Y. team has been balked by Connie Mack of the Athletics, who refused to waive on Derrick. John McGraw of the Giants and Joe Tinker of the Reds are out with emphatic denials of the report that Burns, outfielder and Herzog, inflelder of the Giants, were to be traded to the Reds for Bob Bescher, the speedy outfielder. Boehling, the Saint Pitching recruit of the Senators, shut out the yankees with five widely scattered hits yesterday, making his fifth straight victory, several of which have been shut-outs. The thoughts of John McGraw have been oozing onto the printing presses in a New York newspaper shop about three times a week lately and through this medium "Jawn" assures the public that the world's series of games will be between the Giants and the Athletics. In the American League, take it from "Jawn." the Athletics have the pennant already won and nothing now remains but for Connie Mack to make his selection of his batteries for the first world's series game. The fact that the Phillies are leading the Giants in the National by a large number of points, that their batters are hitting like fiends and their pitchers working in fine style, worries "Jawn" not at all. "Jawn" sees in the near future a terrific slump for the Phillies that will send them skidding cellar-ward with the speed of a shoot-the-shoots at a pleasure resort. The Naps and the Tigers grappled in a double header yesterday that furnished a multitude of thrills and which finally was divided on the "fiftyfifth" basis. With the score 4 to 2 against them when they came to bat in the ninth Inning of the first game, the Naps clouted out enough hits to even up the score and then banged out two more runs in the twelfth which gave them the game. In the second game the score was 5 to 1 in favor of the Naps when the Tigers went to bat. Mitchell, the Nap pitcher, at once proceeded to execute a few aerial stunts with the result that he was yanked from the box after four Tigers had crossed the plate and the bases were loaded. Then Gregg went in, issued a base on balls and forced in the winning run. The Phillies made it four straight from the Braves yesterday, annexing an easy victory aided and abetted by eleven healthy swats. One of the strangest games on record was played In St. Louis yesterday when the Cardinals scored but one run on eleven hits, 3 bases on balls and two errors, and the Cubs went runless despite their eleven hits and one base on balls. Eleven Cardinals and seven Cubs were left on bases. The Browns trimmed the White Sox yesterday to the tune of 8 to 0, whaling the joint offerings of Lang and White for two doubles, two triplets and nine singles. Jeff Tesreau, the mastodon exponent of the vapory slants, hurled his team to victory over the Dodgers yesterday which makes the third game in eight that the New Yorkers have won this season from their rivals on the other side of the East river.
GERMAN
OfFICIA
! LEAGUE STANDING f NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 37 17 .685 New York 34 22 .607 Brooklyn 30 25 .545 Chicago 32 28 .533 Pittsburg 27 32 .458 Boston 24 32 .429 St. Louis 25 35 .417 Cincinnati 21 39 .350
Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia, 8; Boston, 5. New York, 4; Brooklyn, 0. Pittsburgh-Cincinnati (rain). St. Louis, 1; Chicago, 0. Games Today. Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Pittsburgh at St. Louis. Chicago at Cincinnati. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 43 15 .741 Cleveland 40 24 .625 Washington 34 28 .548 Boston 31 27 .534 Chicago 34 31 .523 Detroit 26 40 .394 St. Louis 25 43 .368 New York 17 42 .288 Yesterday's Results. Cleveland, 6-5; Detroit, 4-6. St. Louis, 8; Chicago, 0. Washington, 3; New York, 0 (called in eighth). Boston-Philadelphia (rain). Games Today. St. Louis at Chicago. Cleveland at Detroit. Philadelphia at Washington. New York at Boston. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won. Lost. Pet. Columbus 38 26 .594 Milwaukee 41 30 .577 Louisville 34 32 .515 St. Paul 32 31 .508 Minneapolis 33 33 .500 Kansas City 35 35 .500 Toledo 28 39 .418 Indianapolis 24 39 .381 Yesterday's Results. Toledo, 3; Indianapolis, 0. Louisville, 13; Columbus, 4. Kansas City, 4; Milwaukee, 3. Games Today. Indianapolis at Toledo. Louisville at Columbus. Kansas City at St. Paul. Milwaukee at Minneapolis. FEDfHAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Indianapolis 27 17 .614 Chicago 24 18 .571 Cleveland 22 18 .550 Covington 20 19 .513 St. Louis 18 22 .450 Pittsburgh 14 31 .311 Yesterday's Results. Chicago-Indianapolis (wet grounds). St. Louis, 6; Pittsburgh, 3. Covington-Cleveland (rain). Games Today. Chicago at Indianapolis. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. Covington at Cleveland. CENTRAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Grand Rapids 36 25 .590 Springfield 34 -25 .576 Fort Wayne 33 26 .559 Dayton 28 32 .467 Terre Haute 28 32 .459 Evansville 20 38 .345 Yesterday's Results. Terre Haute, 5; Evansville, 0. Dayton, 8-6; Grand Rapids, 7-5. Fort Wayne-Springfield (rain). Games Today. Grand Rapids at Springfield. Terre Haute at Fort Wayne. Evansville at Dayton. HIS MOVING HABIT FINALLY CURED CHICAGO, June 25 David T. Mehan. manager of a correspondence school today realized that Illinois had passed an equal suffrage bill. Mrs. David T. Mehan construed the bill to mean that she had an equal right to know where their home was to be located. She displayed her parity of power by locking her husband in the house, swearing out a writ preventing him from moving their household goods and attached the salary that was due him today. For thirteen years, Mrs. Mehan explained to the court, her husband has moved their household goods where he would without consulting her and she 'let him get away with it.' But when a moving van pulled up in front of their house last evening and men started carrying articles of furniture out. Mrs. Mehan asserted her right to a voice in the local convention of their home, drove the movers away, took the legal steps to prevent the moving. Then she sat down and cried. WANT Y. M. C. A. ROOF AS SLEEPING PLACE Twenty-three members of the Dormitory club of the Y. M. C. A. met last evening and discussed plans of sleeping out of doors, the roof of the institution being the proposed site. The fresh air fiends believe a sleeping porch should be maintained. The young men do not propose to have a covering over this porch and will expose their noses to frosts or dew.
SPORTING NOTES
(National News Association) CALGARY, Alberta, June 25. The charge of manslaughter against Tommy Burns will not be dropped as a result of yesterday's verdict in the I'elky case. The finding of the jury that the bout was a prize fight will give the prosecution a powerful lever against the promotor and the Canadian law makes the promoter guilty of manslaughter in a fatal prize fight. PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 25. Outfielder Everett Booe has been released to the Springfield, Ills, club of the Three I League in part payment for outfielder Fred Kommers, who is to report immediately. Manager Clarke has signed outfielders Joe Kelly and George Watson of the St. Joseph, Mo., team. COVINGTON, Ky., June 25. After a consultation with directors of the Covington Federal league team here, President Powers of the league, decided not to transfer the franchise of the Covington club to Toledo, as has been asked by the latter city. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 25. Jack Coombs, pitcher for the Athletics in the two world championship series, left today with his wife for their farm in West Kennebunk, Maine. Coombs declares that once back on the farm he will rapidly recover from his recent illness and will be ready to rejoin the team when it returns from its swing over the western circuit in five weeks. CHICAGO, June 25. President Johnson of the American league announced yesterday the indefinite suspension of Joe Jackson, the Cleveland batting hero, for his conduct in the double-header with Detroit at Cleve land last Sunday, and declared he ( would write Manager Birmingham severely censuring him for the affair. "Cleveland is a peculiar city," said Mr. Johnson. "The trouble provoked by Jackson might have started a riot, and anything approaching that would result in the abolition of Sunday baseball in Cleveland. It is only recently that we have been able to play Sunday games there. The failure of Birmingham to realize this and to handle his players so as to prevent danger of disturbances on the field on big days convinces me he is not competent to manager an American league team. "I have not fixed the length of Jackson's suspension, but his punishment should be severe under the circumstances." PILOT CAR READY FOR LENGTHY TRIP Finishing Touches Put on Local Company's Entry in Western Tour. The Pilot Motor Car company of this city has entered a car in the Indiana tour to the Pacific coast which will start from Indianapolis, July 1 at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. There are twenty-two official cars of the Indiana Automobile Manufacturers' association of Indiana which will make the trip that will take the entire month of July, returning to this state from Los Angeles August 6th. The Pilot car will be driven by Russell Gaar, who will be accompanied by the com pany's official representative, G. Fred Smith. The official representatives will be entertained at a noon luncheon at Indianapolis before leaving. They will be accompanied for a short distance by Governor Ralston and Mayor Shank of Indianapolis. An escort of fifty ears from all over this part of the country will accompany the procession, many of them to make the entire trip. The Longest Day's Run. The longest day-s run will be 203 miles from Green River, Utah, to Salt Lake City. The first stop after Indianapolis will be Terre Haute where the cars will stay during the night. The average day's run will be between 90 and 100 miles, the total length of the trip being 2.453 miles. The governors of Nevada, Colorado, Utah and California will make the" trip across their respective states with the party. At San Francisco, there will be a large automobile show in progress and the Indiana official cars will be given the center of the parking space for display. A special train will lfc run to San Francisco with the wives of the men making the trip in the cars. Many of the tourists will return in the special train. The Pilot machine which will make the trip has been sold and, will be turned over to the purchaser on arrival at San Francisco. Take Direct Route. The route is the most direct possible to take. The tourists will pass through St. Louis, Kansas City, Denver. Salt Lake City, Reno, San Francisco and Los Angeles. At Sulphur Springs. Kearney's Ranch, Austin and Lake Tahoe, Cal., tents will be pitched and the party will camp for the night. In several of the larger cities enroute, a day will be spent in sightseeing. Only stock cars will be used, the Pilot having constructed a regular 1914 model, six cylinder, six passenger touring car. The only extra
TQRCYCLE SPEED KINGS TO BATTLE Interesting Events For July Fourth Arranged At Elgin, Illinois. ELGIN, 111., June 25. "Can a rider who has made a world-wide reputation on motorcycle board tracks perform equally as well on the road?" This is a question which all the motorcycle riders in the country are just now asking each other as board track dirt track and endurance riders will for the first time in the history of motorcycling clash in a contest that is apt to upset all calculations. The event which will bring together a galaxy of foremost riders in the world in a battle for gold and honors, will be the First Annual National Motorcycle Road Race to be held at Elgin, 111., July 4th, under auspices of the Chicago Motorcycle Club. The distance of the race will be 250 miles and a number of cash prizes are offered to the first finishers, the grand prize being $500.00 in gold coin. Already more than 50 of the foremost riders in the world have entered and motorcyclists generally are looking for some historic traditions to be upset in this grand whirligig of motion. From a competitive standpoint motorcycle riders may be divided into three classes board track riders, dirt track performers and the road pluggers who have weltered through long distance endurance contests. The board track riders have been used to hurling around a steeply banked wooden bowl at speeds as high as 90 miles an hour. The tracks are banked to such a degree that there is practically no skidding, the main requisite for success being a particularly steady nerve and a fast machine. The dirt track riders on the other hand must be veritable daredevils to accomplish success, and must learn how to skid just enough to slide around a curve without spilling. Dirt track riders as a rule take chances that a board track rider does not, yet the speed attained on dirt ovals is not nearly so great as takes place on the motordromes. The endurance riders do not have to take as dangerous chances as either board or dirt track riders, yet they must have the stamina to plug through any kind of road conditions for several days at a stretch. equipment on the machine is an auxiliary gasoline and oil tank. Gasoline stations every fifty miles along the route of the trip have been arranged for. The expense of the trip will be $3,100. The car is being sent by C. E. Hayes. ADMITTED TO BAR Paul Fisher was admitted to the Wayne county bar Tuesday morning after successfully passing a preliminary examination. Mr. Fisher graduated from Indiana University Law School this month and is an alumnus of the Richmond high school.
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$309 Worth Royal Cut Glass Just Received From tlie Factory Absolutely New Designs and Latest Novelties Factory Prices for a Short Time To Introduce
FULL SIZE TUMBLERS 11c Each ICE TEA AND LEMONADE TUMBLERS, 33c Each FULL SIZE GOBLETS 39c Each HANDLED CUSTARDS 39c Each SHERBETS ON STEM 39c Each
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LATE MARKET HEWS
NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Con-ell and Thompson. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phono 1446. Am. Can 27 Ami. Copper 64 ls Am. Smelters 62S U. S. Steel 53 Atchison 96 St. Paul 103 Gt. No. Pfd 122i Lehigh Valley 15178 N. Y. Cen 98 No. Pac 1074 Penn Ill Reading 158V So. Pac 95" Union Pac 145 Rumely 20 Kumely Pfd 42 27 64 4 63H 534 96 4 1024 122S 151 3 98 107-3 111 1574 145 19v 42 CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT. Open Clos 90 904 90i 91 93i 93 59 4 60 Vs 60 i 61 U 574 58 4 40 40 40 414 41 427s July Sept. Dec. CORN. July Sept. Dec. OATS. July . Sept. Dec. , CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO. June 25. Hogs, receipts 32000, market lower, top price $8.80, bulk of sales $8.65 to $8.75. Cattle, receipts 12000, market 10 and 15c higher, beeves $8.65 to $8.75. Sheep, receipts 10,000, natives and westerns $3.50 to $6.00, lambs $5.00 to $8.50. PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG. June 25. Veal calves $10.50. Sheep and lambs, supply 1500, market steady, prime sheep $5.00, lambs $7.00. Hogs, receipts 300, market slow, prime heavies $8.85, pigs, $9.10. INCINNATI LIVESTOCK CINCINNATI, June 25. Cattle, receipts 514, market steady, choice steers $8.35. calves $5.00 to $9.75. Hogs receipts 4,222, market steady, top prices $8.55 to $8.75. Sheep, receipts 2980, prime $2.75 to $4.35, lambs $5.00 to $7.80. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK INDIANAPOLIS, June 25. Hogs, receipts 700, market steady, tops $8.80, bulk of sales $8.70 to $8.75. Cattle, receipts 1700, choice steers $8.35 to $8.75, other grades $7.00 to $8.00. Sheep and lambs, receipts 500, market steady, prime sheep $3.75 to $4.25, lambs $4.50 to $7.25. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, June 25. Wheat, cash No. 2 red 97c; Corn, cash No. 3 white 62c; Oats, cash No. 2 white 42c. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO. O., June 25. Cash Grain: Wheat $1.03; Corn 62c; Oats 42c; Cloverseed, cash $12.50. Yon nedn luffei- win; stek Tadach, isxllzestion, constipation or any otbvr trouble arising from a disordered stomach. Dr. Caldwell's yrup Pepsin will cere yon an1 keep yo well. Trv heeo " hand the year aroaoa. 1 Cil
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RICHMOND MARKET
PRODUCE. (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper, phone 2577.) Old Hens, per lb ISc Old Roosters, per lb. 8c Young Chickens, per lb. ...ISc to 20c Eggs, per dozen ISc Country butter, per lb 20c to 25c New potatoes 40c GRAIN MARKET. (Corrected daily by Richmond Roller Milis. phone 2019.) Wheat, per bu f 1.00 Oats, per hu 30c Corn, per bu 60c Rye, per bu 60c Bran, per ton 124.00 Middlings, per ton $26 00 WAGON MARKET. (Corrected daily by Omer Whelan. phone 1679.) Corn, per bu 60c Oats, per bu . - SoC Timothy hay, per ton $12.00 Clover hay $8.00 Rye straw $6.00 Oats or wheat straw $.1 Uran ?24.00 Middlings $26.0 CONSIDER CONTRACT Allegheny Co. Representatives Return Home. K. C. Krick and Gus Condo the representatives of the Allegheny Gas company who were in the city yesterday to confer with City Attorney Will Bond, left last night for Pittsburg to confer with the other officers of the company regarding the city's proposed contract. There were a number of points in the draft of the contract which Mr. Krick thought would have to be changed, but he promised to report to the city attorney the latter part of this week just what changes the company would want to make in the contract. Mr. Wharton manager of the L. H. & V. Company stated today that he had received no information as to what the officers of his company were doing in New York regarding the negotiations for natural gas. DIES OF TETANUS (National News Association) SPRINGFIELD. 111.. June 25. Heury Worth, 28, a farmer near Williams-1 vil!e, was dead today of tetanus. Five weeks ago he dissected a colt that died on his farm of lockjaw. Sporting Goods at Cost. Duning's, 43 N. 8 St.
THE PEOPLE'S MODERATE PRICE DENTAL OFFICE ftVt - Co,d Crowns $3.00
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4-INCH BERRY NAPPIES . . . .... . . . . .49c Each 6-INCH BERRY NAPPIES 79c Each 8-inch Berry Nappies $1.29 Each 3-PINT PITCHERS 79c Each NIGHT BOTTLE AND GLASS 89c Each
FAVORS PAROLE OP V YOUNG DESPERADO' Judgeg Gray of Fayette Co Active in Behalf of Guy Gunsalia, Milton.
Judge Gray of the Fayette Circuit court has petitioned Judge Henry C. Fox to recommend the pardon of Gujr Gunsulia. the Washington township i desperado who terroriied that neigh i borhood several yara ago. Guneulia was convicted on a charge of burglarf here in the spring of 1511. His case was one of the most sensational ever heard in the Wayne circuit court. He worked in th neighborhood of Milton and had the farmtTs so ttrrorixed that many of them would not report depredations committed by him. Had Big Following. He had a strong following of the rowdy element of Washington and Center townships and his capture and eonvii-tion did much to Improve conditions in Wayne county. So great was the loyalty of his friends and;" comrades to him that during his trial former Sheriff Steen and Deputy Mote were ordered to remain in the court room during the trial for fear of an attempt to free him. Threats to shoot up the court room, were made though not carried out. The witnesses who testified in the case against Gunsulia had to be brought into court by the sheriff, threats of death having been made against them if they testified. Judge Fox refused to recommend the par. don. Should a movement be started to parole Gunsulia, it will probably be remonstrated against by residents 01 Wayne county. Tha Natural Thing. He Those women voters scratched the ticket. She The cats! Baltimore American. TURTLE SOUP at fhc Bergholf THURSDAY ALL DAY AND EVENING MONEY TO LOAN on Diamonds, Watches. Guns, Clothing. Musical Instruments, etc., at 2 Per Cent. Per Month Also complete line of Trunks, Suit Cases. Clothing, Fire Anns, Sporting Goods, etc. Bargains in Unredeemed Pledges at All Times. SAM S. VI GRAN 6 NORTH 6TII ST. Richmond's Reliable Pawnbroker. nm ................. Fu Set 5 Gold Fllinas 11.00 us Silver Fillinaa RAa i- " V '-.'I" Examination Free. All Work Guarsntesd. b,e proof of the 8reate,t and mort P fet method now used for the palnlsss extraction or iccin. New York Dental Parlors 004a Main St. RICHMOND, IND. Open Evenings. m Sells PJJ
