Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 279, 1 October 1913 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 1, 1913

PRINTERS HOLO BIG GOOD WILL BANQUET FOR LOGAL BOSSES f Continued from Page 1.)

effort that he restrained an outburst of feeling. His reply was broken with the emotions that swelled in his breast. . "For more than thirty years I have associated with criminals and the worst in the community. Seldom have I had the honor of being present at a banquet of the high class men who compose the local union of printers, and when I came here this evening, I little thought that words of kindness and appreciation would be spoken of me. "I respect you. May God bless you, and if ever I can be of assistance to you, I want you to know that Gormon Is your friend." A sustained applause, exceeding in warmth the manifestations accorded any other speaker, greeted the conclusion of his speech. Handley Toastmaster. Lawrence Handley, a printer by trade, now superintendent of the city delivery at the post office was the toastmaster of the eveining. He had been enveigled into the job, according to his announcement, when the committee on arrangements, Will Bloom and E. J. Fitzgibbons, were unable to obtain Demas Coe, whose well known timidity and fear of being called on for a speech prevented his appearance at the banquet. Mr. Handley lampooned Mr. Coe in a poem, while other verses told of the heroic trials which formerly accompanied the printing of a newspaper in Richmond. No printer's banquet could be held without the proverbial toasts of respect to the "devil." In this instance Cyril Fitzgibbons, official holder of that distinction in The Palladium office, was given the honor. "Ci's" Noble Effort. Called on for a speech, "Ci" said with gusto: "I don't know what to say, so I'll let you say it." This brought down the house. Gus Maag and Charles Kirk, of The Palladium with comic recitations and songs contributed immensely to the pleasure of the evening. William Dudley Foulke sent a communication expressing his regret at being unable to attend the love feast. The introduction of Frank Ringhoff, "as a budding young politician," so pertrubed that swift footed foreman that he hardly could respond. Speaker's List. Among other speakers were Raymond Nicholson, representing The Nicholson Press; Will Reller, state's attorney; Theodore Hunt, formerly a printer now an undertaker: C. W. Genn of the Coe plant; R. G. Leeds, editor of The Palladium; E. H. Harris, publisher of The Palladium; L. M. Feeger, news editor The, Palladium; Will Bloom, linotype operator The Palladium, Mayor Zimmerman and G. O. Ballinger. Ramsey Poundstone, associate editor of The Palladium, was among the Invited guests. John J. Steele, a former printer was a guest of honor. The K. of P. temple was beautified by J. F. Gasthoff, official decorator for the Fall Festival. Among the printers in attendance were S. L. Harrison, Harry Tubesing, C. W. Genn, Howard VanSant, George Russell, C. Kirk, S. Knott, E. Wissler, James O'Brien, J. R. Howell, E. Green, S. Tucker, C. Maibach, A. Maag, E. Menke, F. Ringhoff, Fred Meier, Frank Spekenhier, Roy VanSant, C. Veregge, Lon Grice, J. B. Maag, Mr. Ayres, Mr. Peelle, Erie Glidewell, Will Bloom, E. J. Fitzgibbons and Mrs. L. Tucker. A reporter on an afternoon newspaper represented it. Renk's orchestra added to the enjoyment of the affair by a varied musical program. The Pythian Sisters served the banquet. Greetings From Gordon. The communication of J. Bennett Gordon, bringing to memory men who for years have been connected with the printing of newspapers, was hailed with delight by the printers. Its full text follows: "To My Dear Friends and Old Associate of Richmond Typographical Union, No. 301: "I regret very much that I can not be with you tonight to enter personally into the spirit of your reunion and good fellowship, but I trust you will take the wish for the actual performance in this case. "There is no one set of men in the world for whom I hold a higher regard and for whom I have more pleasant memories than the printers of Richmond. Eleven years of daily contact with men gives one a correct measure of them, and this is doubly true in the sweat and haste and stress of putting out a brand new, finished product ' every day. I know you believe men when I say that I never have met a more loyal set of printers than I worked FOR, and WITH for so many years in Richmond. Tried Men's Souls. "It Is a far call from the days I began when Lon Grice and Will Nordyke operated that old Thorne typesetter in the Morning Telegram, with Albert Schnurr as foreman and Oscar Drifmeyer pressman, stationary engineer and all-around general mechanic. Those were the days that tried men's soul's and completely exhausted their vocabulary- all except Nordyke's. Well do I remember doing all the leg work, writing all the real news, and then taking a stick and setting up what little got in the paper, because none of the force came back to work after the midnight lunch. Ask me not why their absence! The wonder is they EVER came to work, considering the handicaps under which they labored. If ever any Christian citizen had ever seen the wonderful mechanism of a Thome typesetter, combined with a broken down flat-bed press, he would not ask why are printers atheists and drinkers of strong liquor. I am glad the invention of that contraption can not be charged against me on that great and final day. "Perhaps it was this, my introduction in the newspaper business, that Instilled in me a deep reverence for the patience of printers and a high regard for their ability to overcome all things and get out a paper under the most trying circumstances. "Then came the transition period when I sat around the local desk of the Item and listened, open-mouthed, to Demas Coe telling how he set type nil the way from Seattle and Tacoma to 0"ervi!le, from which latter flag-

station he notified his folks that he had a hat and shirt, and if they would kindly send him a pair of pants and some shoes he would forego the fatted calf and hasten home. I wondered then if ever I would grow up to be a big man like Coe. Reflections on Past. "Then Ezra Roe and Nettie Young and Fannie Elstro and Gus Maag and Henry Nobbe and gas engines and Ike Kline's old Hoe three-revolution press and Rosa Forkner began to obscure my horizon, ond things about a printing office began to lose some of their glamour and take on the aspects of an Inferno. I thought in those days that the sole purpose of printers and printing maciiinery was to prevent the brilliant articles written by such celebreties as I had no doubt it was, from ever appearing in the paper; or, if they ever did get in type, there was some devilish scheme hatched up out in the press room to prevent the papers from ever being printed. "Did I say press room? Why press room any more than composing room, mailing room, circulation room, dining room, storage room, reporters' room and an all around hang out for Strick Gillilan to tell rotten jokes, for which he now gets real money and his name on Chautauqua programs?

"If once in a while I did manage to j smuggle myseii mio uie suiiiiik t;uufines of that inferno in order to ascertain first hand just who it was that kept my articles from getting set up or the papers from getting printed until long after all decent citizens had gone to bed, and those who had not couldn't distinguish type, Ezra Roe would pounce on me and kick me out set me to tearing papers out of the patent folder. "Remember that folder, Green? Green was the first human being I ever met in a printing plant, because he would occasionally climb down from a soap box from which he fed the stringtied, lathe-buttressed press and confide in me that the plant was going to the devil and nobody appreciated real merit, else why should he be feeding a press when he might be cleaning streets or driving an ice wagon. "Then came the first linotype, and the second. Soon thereafter the Item moved and got a new gas engine, which was worse than the old one. The old one simply refused to wotfk at all any time. The new one was fickle. It worked overtime sometimes, so strenuously that Dr. Wampler and other neighbors complained to the police about its noise, and then, apparently regretful, it wouldn't emit a wheeze until after we had paid Dan Kiser three times what the engine originally cost to 'fix' it. Dan 'fixed' it all right, for he had to be called sometimes four times during the printing of an edition. "It was a great epoch when the Item put in a perfecting press and stereotyping plant, and divided the press room from the composing room, put in another machine and installed Billy Bloom and Ed Arthur. Soon after Ed, came 'Ike,' and then the printing business in Richmond settled down to something really worth while. "Bugs Bowers made his last call, being encouraged in that determination by Jimmy O'Brien and Shorty Fitzgibbons putting him to sleep under a gas meter. "Today I venture the assertion that there isn't a city in the United States of any ways near the size of Richbond that has the standard of newspapers and newspaper work that Richmond has. If so, I don't know where they are. "And it is due to the printers of Richmond. I am confining my brief j review to my own experience, but 1 1 know that other publishers in Richmond hold the same view, and they can tell of it on the ground. "However, the printer is the man behind the gun. He is the man who makes the paper. He adds quality to it. He gives it a distinction. He crei ates its style. He is reflected in every page when you pick up and look at its make-up and its ads. He never has so much to do that he is not willing to ! try to do a little more or, at least, that was my experience. He was ' never asked to speed up In order to get an "extra" out ahead of the other fellow that he didn't respond, even after it appeared he was keyed to the breaking point. Once a Carrier. "I look back to the days when I began as a paper carrier and cub re porter and compare then and now, and i I am sure there is not another busi- j ness in the world that can show the ! progress, the absolute revolution the j newspaper business does. Yet it has I all been done by the printer, and men! are in the ranks today doing perfect work at high speed that were in it j before any of the modern inventions j and lightning systems were dreamed jof. Show me another profession that has kept step with progress that rapidly. "Show me another profession that is called up to work with accuracy, intelligence and at the same time with the stop-watch schedule and the speed that the printer has to work! "I know of none. And to my mind Jthe Union has been the cause of it. It has weeded out the drunken printer, i the traveling hobo, the careless, the 'soldier" and given to the world a profession that approaches experts, even among the most ordinary of its members. Proud of Printers. "I am proud of my friends among the printers wherever I have been. I never have worked anywhere that I have not handled the make-up and come in contact with the printer, and I nave never yet failed to find him loyal to a fault, willing to strain a point, and as anxious to make a better paper than the opposition as though he owned the whole shop. Nowhere have I found men more loyal than in Richmond. There are great fields of information about the newspaper game I have yet to learn, but I have at the same time learned a great many things about the game and ninety per cent of my knowledge came from the printer working over the forms or at the machine or at the case, rather than from the owner, the fellow in tlie front office, or the "journalist' at the club. "J. M. Coe has a motto: "Printer One who prints.' That's the answer. If you want to know how to print, ask the man who does it. That's his business. "May all the boys In No. 301 prosper, and my wish is that they may hold me in as high regard as I hold them. Sincerely yours. "J. B. GORDON." Captain Larry Doyle, of the Giants, who was hurt in an automobile accident last week, was a spectator at the Red Sox-Yanks' game at the Polo grounds. New York. Monday, and appeared to bei n first class shape. President Lynch of the National league, predicts the Giants will wiin the world's, championship.

LATE MARKET NEWS

NEW YORK STOCK QUOTATIONS Furnished by Correll and Tnoopsou. I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phono 1446. Am. Can 331,1 33 j Ami. Copper "54 Am. Smelters . 65"a 664 U. S. Steel 59 V, 59 Atchison 94 Va 94 M St. Paul 10 105U Gt. No. Pfd 127 1271 Lehigh Valley 156 155 1 New York Cen So1! 95 Northern Pacific 111 112 Pennsylvania 112 112 Reading 1S6 167 Southern Pacific 90 90 Union Pacific 157 15S Rumely 48 ..... CHICAGO GRAIN WHEAT. Open Close Dec 88 87 May 92 92 CORN. Dec "O14 69 May 71 711,4 OATS. Dec 42 42 May 46J4 45 PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK PITTSBURG, Oct. 1. Cattle, supply 200; market steady; veal calves 12.000 down. Sheep and lambs, supply 1,000, market steady; prime sheep $4.80; lambs $7 15 down. Hogs, receipts 1,500: market steady; prime heavies $9.25 to $9.55; pigs $8.00. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 1. Hogs, receipts $7,500; market steady to 10c lower; tops $9.05 to $9 10; bulk of sales $8 85 to $9 00. Cattle, receipts, 2,000; choice steers $8.35 to $9.00; other grades $6.25 to $7 75. Sheep and lambs, receipts $9.00; market strong; prime sheep $3.50 to $4.00, lambs $7.00 down. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 1. Wheat, cash No. 2 red 93i2c; Corn, cash No. 3 white 72Vc; Oats, cash No. 2 white 43c. TOLEDO GRAIN TOLEDO, Oct. 1 Cash Grain: Wheat 95c; Corn 73c; Oats, 4314c; Cloverseed, cash $7.60. RICHMOND MARKET WAGON MARKET (Corrected daily by Omer Whelan, phone 1679). Oats, per bushel 37c Corn, per bu 75c Timothy hay, per ton $15.00 Clover hay $12.00 Rye straw $5.00 Oats or wheat straw 5.00 Bran, per ton $25.00 Middlings, per ton $28.00 LIVE STOCK (Corrected daily by Anton Stolle, phone 1316). Choice veal calves, per lb.... 9 to 10c HOGS. Primes (average 200 lbs) per 100 lbs $S.75 Heavy mixed, per 100 lbs. $7.75 Rough, per 100 lbs $6 00 to $7.00 CATTLE. Choice steers, per lb 7c Butcher steers, per lb 7c Cows, per lb 2 to 5c Bulls, per lb 5c to 6c GRAIN MARKET (Corrected dauy by Richmond Roller Mills, phone 2019). Wheat, per bu 90c Oafs, per bu 37c Ocra, per bu 75c Rye, per bu .' 60c Sraa, per ton $25.00 Middlings, per ton $28.00 PRODUCE (Corrected daily by Ed. Cooper, phone 2577.) Old hens, per lb 12c Old hens (dressed) per lb IE to 18c Young chickens, per lb 15c Young chickens (dressed), per lb 2,'!c Eggs, per dozen 25c Country butter, per lb 23c to 25c

REPRESENTATIVE INDIANAPOLIS SALES HOGS. Av. Dk. Pr. 1 72 .. $3.50 9 -103 .. 5.10 16 9S .. 6 50 46 105 .. 6.50 11 Ill .. 6.50 10 131 .. 6.50 46 126 .. 7.50 15 313 .. 8.15 57 136 .. 8.50 92 145 .. S75 57 297 40 8.9 74 166 .. 4.90 74 232 80 9.00 59 244 40 9.00 45 205 440 9.05 90 216 1000 9.05 4S 164 .. 9.10 149 178 240 9.10 63 1SS 40 9.10 37 219 .. 9.10 79 189 .. 9.17 Cattle. Av, Pr. 4 st-ers 737 $6.00 2 steers 725 6.25 4 steers 855 7.00 27 steers 1.236 7.60 5 steers 972 8.00 9 steers 1,172 8.25 25 yearlings 785 8.40 36 steers 1,179 8.85 2 steers 1,150 9.00 17 heifers 6S7 6.00 4 heifers 700 6.25 5 heifers 820 6.50 15 heifers 706 7.00 4 heifers 1,060 7.50 2 cows 775 4.00 2 cows 845 4.25 3 cows 716 4.75 3 cows 546 5.00 4 cows 942 5.75 4 cows 1.027 6.00 2 cows 1.155 6.50 2 cows 1.240 6.75 1 cow 1,340 7.00 1 bull 950 5.25 1 bull 910 5.50 1 bull 1.230 5.75 2 bulls 1.235 6.00 1 bull 1.060 6.25 2 bulls 1,205 6.50 1 bull 1.590 6.75

FIRST BATTLE OF SERIES IN NEW YORK ON OCT. 7

in New York City, beginning next The first battle for the baseball championship of the world will be staged Tuesday. The second game will be played in Philadelphia, after which the games will alternate between the two cities. This will be the third consecutive year that the first game of the world's series has been played in New York. By guessing correctly on the flip of a coin the managers of the New York Club won the decision ass tr the timo and place for opening the series. ine rules of the series will be the same as in former vears. eveent that in case of a tie the teams will not re main m the city to play it off, but will adhere to the rules envprnin? th al ternating of cities for each successive game. nen a game is postponed the teams will remain in the eitv where the game is postponed, until it is piayea on. IZE SIX TEAMS 'Y" Bowling Committee Unable to Get 8 Teams. Slow progress has marked the en-J aeavors to organize a Y. M. C. A. bowling league for the coming winter. A committee was appointed a couple of weeks ago to line up players for an eight-team league. Although they have devoted considerable time to the work, it was reported at the meeting last night that it will be impossible to organize the league on better than a six team basis. The committee will drop the work until after the Fall Festil, when another meeting will be called to classify the teams according to professions and trades and to arrange a playing schedule. t LEAGUE STANDING NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs W. L. Pet. New York 97 49 .664 Philadelphia 86 59 .593 Chicago 86 65 570 Pittsburg 78 69 .531 Boston 67 82 .450 Brooklyn 65 82 .442 Cincinnati 64 87 .424 St. Louis 49 99 .331 Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia 10, Brooklyn 9. (First game.) Brooklyn 3, Philadelphia 1. (Second game.) Boston 8, New York 0. Games Today. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Clubs. W. L. Pet. Philadelphia . ., 95 54 .638 Washington 87 63 .580 Cleveland 83 65 .561 Boston 78 69 .531 Chicago 77 72 .517 Detroit 64 85 .4?St. Louis 56 94 .373 New York 55 93 .372 Yesterday's Results. Boston 3, New York 0. Boston 3, New York 2. (First game.) (Second game.') Washington 3, Philadelphia 0. Games Today. Boston at New York. Philadelphia at Washington. Cleveland at Detroit. FIELD GOALS Coach Williams of Minnesota, is drilling his men in perfecting their faults in Saturday's game. There was much fumbling, and the veteran leader today declared this play must be corrected. Hard drills and scrimmage was on today. Coach Zuppke's Illinois team was given a real test yesterday against : the heavy freshmen team in a regu lar battle. Ted Coy, who has been coaching Rutgers, has joined the Yale staff of coaches. On Friday there will be sig nal arm. torn snevjin, the old-time star, is coaching the ends. There is very little doing at Annapolis in the way of football practice. In consequence it is feared that the Middies will go down to defeat when they meet the University of Pennsylvania eleven on Saturday. The policy of making no elaborate preparations for any game save with the Army is being r.gidly observed. Glen Warner, coach of the Carlisle Indians, is giving his attention to the designing of new plays. He believes that the Indians will show up better this year than they have for a long time. TURNER RETURNS CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 30. Wabash football prospects were materially brightened yesterday by the return of Hi Turner, the 195-pound lineman of last year's eleven. This addition to the team now fills up the line, and Coach Thurber will now turn his attention to the back field. The second team last Saturday held the varsity to a 19-to-7 score after a full sixty minutes of hard play. The Kind Fine Suits and

ORGAN

$15 to $30

The National Commission will not have charge of the sale of tickets, their distribution being left to the two clubs participating in the series. The official umpires will be Klem and Rigler for the National League and Connolly and Egan for the American League. The players eligible to participate in the series are: New York Burns. Cooper, Crandall, Doyle, Demaree, Fletcher, Fromme, Grant. Herzog, Hartley, Marquard. Wiltse, Mathewson, Murray. Meyers. McLean. Merkle. Robinson. McCormick, Shaffer, Snodgrass, Thorp, Tesreau, Wilsan, Schupp. Philadelphia Schang. Lapp. Thomas, Bender, Plank, Coombs. Houck, Brown, Shawkey, Pennock. Bush, Wyckoff. Mclnnis, Collins. Barry. Baker, Orr, Davis, Lavan. Oldring. Strunk, E. Murphy, D. Murphy, Walsh, Daley.

Lessons of 1912 Have No Results Lessons learned last year, regarding what can be done with the additional down seems not to have been learned in vain, judging by what the stronger teams in the 'games this year have done to their opponents. This year there seems to have been a stronger spirit of decision exhibited by the different teams and a manifestation of a clearer idea of what to do and how to do it in order to realize the greatest benefit out of the additional down allowed for the first time last year. Any number of ten yard gains have been made in this year's games in a clean cut manner and if the condition holds good, permitting commensurate teturns when equally matched teams come together, the season will be one of more clearly defined attainment than last. Thus far there has been lots of action in the games of this year and most of the plays have been well opened out, yet, at the same time there has been an extensive amount of pretty team rushing. ! HOT LINERS I OFF THE BAT Opinion over the merits and demerits of the Giants and Athletics is pretty evenly divided. Even among the experts each club has its defenders. George Stallings, manager of the Boston National and a keen Judge, picks the Giants, while Napoleon Lajoie of the Cleveland Naps, one of the old masters of the game, picks the Athletics. Joe Jackson, of the Cleveland Naps, believes that poor pitching will cost the Athletics the world's series and predicts that New York will take four straight games. Manager Connie Mack, of the Athletics, has come out against the ruling of the National Commission that players eligible to compete in the world's series may not write baseball articles about the post-season games. Manager McGraw has turned over to Mike Finn, manager of the Memphis ' team, two of his surplus pitchers. One ! of them is Theodore Gouliat, who was ! with Indianapolis and finished the i season with the Giants. This, spring ; Goulait was sent to Toronto. The I other is Howard Merritt, a pitcher who i came to New York a few days ago by draft from Memphis. Manger McGraw, of the Giants, said he would pay no attention to the rilling of the National Commission prohibiting baseball players eligible to compete in the world's series from writing articles about the games. In consequence a number of Giants will wield the pen during the big series. BLANKS CHAMPIONS BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 1. Yesterday was "Tyler Day" at the local National league park, and George Tyler observed the event by shutting out the New York Giants by 8 to 0. The champions presented a team composed of many substitutes and their hitting was weak. Score: New York..0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 2 Boston 21301001 8 15 0 Batteries Schuppe, Frame and Hartley; Tyler and Rariden.

HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WAR Including the BRADY WAR PICTURES Clip this coupon and two others (which will be found on this page each day for the next thirty days) and bring to this office accompanied with 98 cents. This book is the most valuable history ever published. It contains over 1,500 actual reproduced photographs of the Civil War. This collection of Brady's pictures was purchased from the United States government. Don't fail to clip this coupon and two others. OCTOBER 1

Good

Dressers Wear,

Corner Nam and Ninth. Streets

LADY ARTHUR PAGET

I f7 -v i

The many American friends of Lady Arthur Paget, who was Miss Mary Stevens of New York, will rejoice to know that she has practically recovered from her long illness. For two or three years Lady Paget has been practically an invalid, the result of a slight accident which happened to her in her London home. Despite her indisposition Lady Paget did much entertaining until the present season when her doctor commanded absolute rest. By obeying the physicians' orders Lady Paget is now almost well. She will remain quietly at the Royal Hospital here until next month, when she returns to London. CATHOLIC ELEVEN IN DAILY WORKOUT SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Oct. 1. While other teams over the state were compelled to suspend practice or else work in a drizzling rain the Notre Dama eleven was given its regular daily workout on the dirt floor of the big gymnasium yesterday. Six teams work-; ed for three hours without intermis-! sion. Pipe Smoking Increasing Rapidly in America "Have you noticed that many more men smoke pipes nowadays than five or ten years ago," asked F. W. Baker, an experienced tobacco man who is at the Arlington Hotel for a few days. "It is no exaggeration to say," continued Mr. F. W. Baker, "that two million more men are smoking pipes now than were ten years ago. This tremendous increase is due to the discovery of a process of treating Burley tobacco to remove the bite from it." "For many years tobacco men have known that Kentucky Burley is the sweetest and mildest of tobacco, but it remained for a Richmond doctor to discover the famous 'Tuxedo Process which removes every trace of bite or sting, and preserves the original sweetness and freshness of the Burley. (Adv-ertlsemenO CLAIM CITY TITLE The Owls claim the amateur baseball championship of the city, basing their claim on a record of 16 victories out of IS games which the team has played this season. Yesterday the team defeated the Liberty Specials at Liberty by a score of 6 to 5. The batteries were: Owls R. Hawekotte and Sharkett; Liberty Wright and Loper. EX-CHAMPS TO FIGHT MILWAUKEE. Oct. 1 Ad Wolgast of Cadillac. Mich., and Battling Nelson of Hageswlch, 111., two former light-weight . champions, came to an agreement yesterday and signed articles for a ten-round go. no decision boxing contest, to be held here on October 13. The men will weigh in at 133 pounds at 3 o'clock. WE ARE CELEBRATING But still have time to do the best dry cleaning, pressing, dyeing and repairing in the city. Just telephone and we will show you how it is done by the French Benzole Dry Cleaning Process THE CHAUNCEY CLEANING COMPANY Phone 2501. Auto Delivery. 1030 Main.

COACH TELLS TEAM OF ITS MISTAKE

GREENCASTLE. Ind.. Oct, 1. Leetures over the mistakes made in the Indiana game were continued yesterday by Coach Bogle. The coach yesterday changed the whole lineup of the Methodist team, placing new men at six places in the eleven. Four freshmen were given temporary berths and are expected to make pood. AYERS SHUTS OUT WIRY ATHLETICS WASHINGTON. Oct. 1. Ay era. a new recruit from Richmond. Va , pitched his first full game of major league ball yesterday and shut out the Athletics 3 to 0. He struck out eleven men and did not allow a stn&ta base on balls. The champions played second string men. only cne of the regulars getting Into the game. Score : Philadelphia 00000000 00 4 3 Washington 00011100 0..S 72 Bateries Bcrdman and Geibel; Ayers and Henry. EVEN IF YOU HAD A NECK AS LOMQ A THIS FELLOW AMD HAD SORE THROAT TONSiLINE WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVK IT. A quick, safr, soothing, haaltnc, anttraicJIt for Sori Throat, bnn o1b tMLM. A tmaka bottle at TouUM lt loafr thmm wU raw of t tlM TWI. r4Ha atoa Mouth and Hni a4 prwmts Qnawy. ?V ..a Sac Haaaital Slat II. t. All tfrautjta. WANTED Boy With a Bicycle. Steady work for right boy. At Cooper's Grocery, LIVERY AND FEED REASONABLE PRICES See me for your livery and feed. Honest Dealings. Taube's Barn, North Sixth St. W. A. RICH, Fall Festival Visitors Come in and LET US TIGHTEN YOUR GLASSES or be of assistance to you In any small way. Sometimes a minute's work saves your glasses from faUing and breaking. No charges for readjusting. Miss C. M. Swielzer Optometrist Phone 1099. 927'2 Main St. AUTOMOBILE OWNERS If your top leak 3, hare It recovered with "Nererleek" goods. New tops made for your cars. Curtains of all kinds. Celluloids replaced I build the Hissem storm top on old buggies. WM. A. PARKE, Rear of PostofSee. LEGAL RATE LOANS 2 Per Cent Per Month We loan 5 to 1100 and from cne to twelre months time. We hare not changed our plan of Long Time and Easy Payments, which has become so popular with the Borrowing Public. On the other hand, we hare lowered our rates to conform to the new law, under which we will operate, and are licensed and bonded to the state of Indiana. We loan on Household Goods. Pianos, Horses, Wagons, Fixtures, etc.. without removal. Also on Diamonds and Jewelry. Loans made in all parts of the city, and towns reached by late rur ban roads. Mail or phone applications receive prompt attention. PHONE 1545. Richmond Loan Co. Colonial Building, Room 8. Richmond. Ind.

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