Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 189, 22 July 1915 — Page 6

I PAGE SIX.

THE RICHMOND PALLAIH UM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1915

Sport

KNIGHTS PLAY DARING GAME ON BASE LINE When it came to stealing bases last night the Knights of Columbus could not be stopped by the Banktrs, who were defeated 8 to 3. Gosslin was wild at times, cracking three men with the pill and passing four, but at that was good enough to keep the Bankers scoreless except in the last two innings. The financiers were guilty of making eight errors, despite their supposed accuracy. Score and summary: K. of C. AB. R. H. PO.. A. E. Sharkit, c 3 2 2 5 1 0 Kinsella, 3b ... 4 1 1 1 1 0 Klinger, ss ... 1 1 0 1 1 0 Hasemeier, lb. 2 0 1 12 0 1 Harrington, 2b. 4 1 0 0 1 2 Gosslin, p .... 3 2 1 J 5 0 Pardieck, If ... 1 1 1 0 0 0 Otten, cf 3 0 0 2 0 0 Pender, rf .... 3 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 8 6 21 9 3 Bankers. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Long, cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 Cutter, lb .... 3 0 1 7 0 1 Kessler, 2b ... 4 0 0 2 1 0 Allison, p-ss ... 3 1 0 1 4 1 Weichman, ss-p 1 0 0 0 5 2 Thomason, If.. 4 0 0 1 o 0 Crawford, rf... 2 1 0 ' ') 0 Thompson, 3b. . 0 0 0 1 3 Foster, c 2 0 0 -i 0 0 Way. 3b 2 1 01 0 1 Totals 23 3 1 17 11 S Pardieck out; running out of line. Score by innings K. of C 1 4 1 0 2 0 x 8 Bankers 0 0 0 0 0 2 13 Summary Stolen bases Welchman. Thomason. Hasemeier, Gosslin, Harrington, Cutter, Long, Sharkit 2. Kinsella. Struck out By Gosslin, 4; by Weichman, 2; by Allison, 2. Bases on balls Off Gosslin, 5. Hit by pitcher Gosslin. 3. Time of game 2:05. Umpires Taggart and Dennis. PnACTIGEFtrSUNDAY Practice for the big game on SunJay between the recently chosen AllStar team of the Saturday Afternoon league and Muncie will be held the last of the week. Last year when the two all-star teams of Richmond and Muncie met, defeat was handed to the Muncie team and victory is anticipated again this year by the locals. Complete arrangements for the game, which will be called at 2:30 o'clock at. Athlatic park Sunday afternoon, will be made at a meeting of the members of the S. A. L. Friday night at the Y. M. C. A. It is planned to give the Muncie boys an automobile tour of the city. REPAIR BOWLING ALLEYS AT "Y" Contracts were let by the Y. M. C. A. today for reflnishing the bowling alleys and for the installation of a Simplex pin seating apparatus for each alley. Secretary Learner announced today that the work would be completed in time to open the alleys to the shop men on September 1. JOIN LOCAL TEAM Members of the Richmond baseball team will motor to New Castle Sunday to play the team of that place. Several Cincinnati players will assist the locals and are expected to ride by rail from Cincinnati to Connersville and motor from that place to Ricl mond, where they will join the Rich-' mond team. OVERRULES CASE AGAINST TELEPHONE EATON. O., July 22. The supreme court has overruled a motion of the defendants in the case of A. V. McClure and others against the West Manchester Telephone company, following arguments to have the litigation heard in that court. Two years 8 go the company's lines were put out of commission by a sleet and snow storm, and patrons of the company refused to pay for the period during which service could not be given. The company objected and removed the telephones of those who refused payment. Mandamus proceedings were instituted by telephone subscribers and common pleas court restored the 'phones. When the case was carried to the court of appeals a decision favoring subscribers was rendered. Deaths in Preble GEORGE W. STRAW. EATON Funeral services for Geo. W. Straw, 66, who died suddenly Tues day at his home on North Barron i street, were held Thursday afternoon at Barron Street Church of Christ, conducted- by the pastor. Rev. T. A. Cooper, under direction of Eaton lodge, No. 30, I. O. O. F. Burial was in Mound Hill cemetery. The deceased is survived by his widow and four children, two sons and two daughters. CHURCH TO MEET. The Sugar Grove U. B. church of Economy, will hold a circuit meeting Sunday with services in the morning, afternoon and evening. Professor C. W. Bangs of Huntington, and Rev. Floyd of Dublin, will be the speaker.

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News

Baseball Standings

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. Lost. Pet. Philadelphia 44 34 .564 Brooklyn 43 38 .531 Chicago 43 39 -.524 Boston 39 40 .494 New York 38 39 .494 St. Louis 42 43 .494 Pittsburg , 40 41 .494 Cincinnati 33 44 .429

Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia, 1; Chicago, 0. Cincinnati, 2; Boston, 1. Pittsburg-Brooklyn (rain). St. Louis-New York (rain). Games Today. Pittsburg at New York. Cincinnati at Philadelphia. Chicago at Boston. St. Louis at Brooklyn. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. Boston 53 29 .646 Detroit 52 32 .619 Chicago 53 33 .616 New York 42 41 .506 Washington 42 42 .500 St. Louis 33 49 .402 Philadelphia ;.. 30 53 .361 Cleveland 29 54 .349

Yesterday's Results. Boston, 4; St. Louis, 2. Philadelphia, 4; Detroit, 3. No other games scheduled. Games Today. Washington at Detroit. Philadelphia at Cleveland. New York at Chicago. New York at Chicago. Boston at St. Louis. FEDERAL LEAGUE.

Won. Lost. Pet. Kansas City : 48 34 .585 Chicago 49 37 .570 St. Louis 46 37 .554 Pittsburg 43 38 .531 Newark 42 40 .512 Brooklyn 39 48 .448 Buffalo 38 51 .427 Baltimore 31 52 .373

Yesterday's Results. Baltimore, 7; St. Louis, 0. Brooklyn, 4-9; Chicago, 0-8. No other games scheduled. Games Today. Baltimore at Chicago. Newark at Pittsburg. Brooklyn at St. Louis. Buffalo at Kansas City. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

Won. Lost. Pet. St. Paul 53 36 .596 Indianapolis 49 40 .551 Kansas City 47 43 .522 Minneapolis 46 43 .517 Louisville 42 45 .483 Cleveland 40 44 .476 Milwaukee 41 46 .471 Columbus 34 55 .382

Yesterday's Results. Kansas City, 12; Indianapolis, 11. (First game; 11 innings). Kansas City, 10; Indianapolis, 6. (Second game). Minneapolis, 5; Cleveland, 4. St. Paul, 3-4; Columbus, 0-2. Louisville, 6; Milwaukee, 3. Games Today. Columbus at Louisville. Minneapolis at. Milwaukee. Only two games scheduled. ASKS $150 DAMAGES Demanding $150 damages as a result of a street car striking a merchants' delivery auto truck at South Eighth and "G" streets on April 13, 1915, John D. Lane has filed suit in the circuit court against the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Interurban company. Lane was driving the truck, he says, at a rate of six miles an hour east on G street intending to cross at the intersection at Eighth when he saw the car approaching thirty feet distant. No other move was open to him, he claims, except to speed up in an effort to cross ahead of the car. He alleges the car was going twenty miles an hour and struck the rear of his machine before he could swerve aside. No gong was sounded by the motorman according to his complaint. The machine was damaged to the extent of ?125 the plaintiff says. WANT GAME. The Tipperary Specials want a game for next Sunday. The line-up follows: Caskey, catcher; Jacobs, pitcher; Quialo, second base; Mason, first base; Miller, short stop; Newman, third base; Fox, center field; Marson, left field; Sams, right field.

DR. E. P. WEIST ELECTRICITY X-Ray, Static, High Frequency, Gaivanic and Faradic Treatments. Especial Attention to Chronic Diseases. 119 SOUTH 13TH ST. RICHMOND, IND.

MODERN v.iLa -

ONE MILE RECORD SMASHED BY TABER

Norman Taber, the former Brown collegian and Rhodes scholar at Oxford, England, has run faster than any other human being for a distance of one mile. In the Harvard Stadium he shattered the world's record for this distance by covering it in the remark able time of 4 minutes 12 3-5 seconds. The best professional record up to this time was made by W. G. George, at Lilliebridg, England, time 4 minutes 12 3-4 seconds. John Paul Jones, the Cornell runner made the amateur record of 4 min eightutes 14 2-5 seconds at Cambridge, Mass in 1913. Taber was born in Providence, R. I September 3, 1891. He is five feet eight and a half inches tall and weighs slightly under 150 pounds when in condition. He graduated from Brown in 1913 and for the last two years has been a Rhodes scholar at Oxford. On account of the war he returned to this country early in June, MENTION IRWIN FOR EATON POSTMASTER DAYTON, O., Juy 22. Earl Irwin, chairman of the Democratic County committee of Preble county and editor of the Eaton "Democrat," is being widely mentioned as the probable next appointee to the postmastership at Eaton. Irwin is at present income tax collector for this district with offices at the local federal building. Irwin declined to discuss the postmaster prospect Wednesday, other than to assert that he knew absolutely nothing about the matter at this time. It was widely rumored in local political circles, however, that Irwin bad been assured very influential en dorsement. Eaton's postmastership will pay $2,500 per year. RECEIVES PERMIT FOR GAS TANKS . Erman Smith appeared before the board of public works today and asked that Leroy E. Little, West Fifth and Lincoln streets, be permitted to in stall a gasoline dispenser between the sidewalk and the curb at his place of business. Permission was granted. Horace A. Grim was also given a permit to install a dispenser and to operate the "Auto Place and Richmond Garage" on North Seventh street. VARICOSE VEINS ARE QUICKLY REDUCED TCo sensible person will continue to suffer from dangerous swollen veins or bunches 'when the new powerful, yet harmless, germicide called Emerald Oil can readily be obtained at any well stocked drug store. Ask for a two-ounce original bottle of "Vloone's Emerald Oil (full strength) and refuse substitutes. Use as directed and Jn a few days improvement will be noticed, then continue until the swollen veins are reduced to normal. It is guaranteed and Js so powerful that it also reduces enlarged glands, varicocele, goiters and wens. Generous sample by mail for 10 cents fror Moone Chemical Co., Rochester, Is. T, Get it at A IF YOUR GUMS ARE SORE, goft or spongy or your teeth loose an5 sensitive get a srnali original bottle of Ginginol at any good drug store. It is a eafe and sure treatment for Pyorrhoea and Riggs diseae and will last for weeks,

DENTISTRY

Good Teeth are an absolute necessity and we make their possession possible. All our work is practically painless. Highest Grade Plates $5.00 to $8.00 Best Gold Crowns.. $3.00 to $4.00 Best Bridge Work.. $3.00 to $4.00 Best Gold Fillings $1.00 up Best Silver Fillings... 50 cents up We Extract Teeth Painlessly New York Dental Parlor. Over Union National Bank, 8th and Main streets. Elevator entrance on South 8th street. Stair entrance on Main street.

BRITISHER DESCRIBES nwzzitie of imson

Democratic Freedom of American Press in Interviewing

- President Appeals to Foreign Journalist Praises Informal Manner of Conferring with Nation's Executive

LONDON, July 22. Frederic Wil. liam Wile compares British and Amer ican methods of getting information out of the government in the following description of "Question Time at the White House," which is published here in the Daily Mail: When that persistent old party known as the British public requires information about the parish pump or minor topics like the seven wars it Is now carrying on in various parts of the hemisphere, an M. P. gets up In parliament and asks a question. When the American people desired to know what he United States is going to do about the Lusitania massacre, eighty or ninety human machine guns, with a muzzle velocity of five questions a minute, opened fire on the president, and after a fusillade lasting forty minutes or an hour Pres ident Wilson told the country what he thought it good for it to know. I was recently "eye-witness" of such an engagement at the white house the weekly audience which the chief magistrate accords to the brilliant corps of Washington newspaper correspondents. How the Quiz Takes Place. Though it serves the precise purpose of question time at Westminster, the presidential probe at the white i house is devoid of all the red-taDe for- i malities of England's effete system of extorting the facts from the government. No notice, written or otherwise, is given of questions at Washington. When the correspondents have taken up their position in a semicircle spreading round the president's reception room, question asking begins. The president is surrounded by his vigilant secretarial staff. At his left stands "Joe" Tumulty, his chief secretary, the mightiest Irishman in the world next to Mr. John Redmond. On right side sits a shorthand expert, one to note the exact tenor of the questions, the other to register verbatim the president's replies. There is never any mistake," as far as the white house records are concerned, about what happens at these weekly cross-examinations. For if an

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over-zealous correspondent ever leaves with a distorted version of the proceedings, the president wants to be prepared to overhaul him with a dementi which will not only nip Inaccuracy in the bud but will probably prove of grave professional consequence for the offender.- Lapses of this kind seldom, if ever, occur. High Code of Eethics. The Washington correspondents are the "honor men" of American journalism. The keynote of their self-framed code is that any man who breaks faith, quoting the president directly or misquoting him indirectly, are the cardinal sins breaks his professional neck at the same time. Mr. Franklin K. Lane, the American "home secretary," whom many Americans look upon as the "biggest man" in the present administration, told me that if he had a state secret which he wanted to keep secret, he would send for the Washington correspondents and let them into it

FORMER STUDENTS TO ENJOY PICNIC EATON, O., July 22. Extensive plans are being made for a homecom ing or present and former pupils and patrons of the school in District No. t:, Harrison township, and Friday, August 20. has been selected as the date of the event. V. O. Reeksteel, Ruth Roberts and Clarence Hapner are & committee looking after the details of the repunion. An interesting program and a big picnic dinner will be features of the meeting. BRIEFS 1 Turtle soup, Geo. Muey's, Friday and Saturday. thur tf Turtle oup, Geo. Muey's, Prirfav nnrl Sntiirflnv- thur-tf wUW UU.. COUPON CLIP THIS Main Sts.

ARRANGE FOR FEAST

To secure funds for the widows and orphans of German and Austrian sold; lers, the German-American Relief committee will hold a feast at BeaUview park on Sunday, August 1. Admission is free.'- All foodstuffs left over will be donated to the orphans of this city. Special invitation has been given to the following organizations in the city to have representatives present on this occasion: Richmond Maennerchor, Militaire Verein; South Side Improvement association. St. Paul's Lutheran church, St. Andrew's church and St. John's church. Members of the Wernle Orphans' Home will be guests. BENEFIT ASSESSED Benefits of 60 were assessed against A. Harsh, North Second street, for tapping a sanitary storm sewer. The board authorized, the opening of a sewer flush tank in the first alley south of Main street on Twelfth street' for the installation of a meter. The manhole which was covered up by contractors laying the concrete in the alley will be exposed and re-located in a more convenient place. YOUR PICTURE Enlarged Free Bring this coupon with photo; it will entitle you to a fine life Firmo Portrait FREE Enlarged from any good bust photo, post card or snap 6hot. G. H. KNOLLENBERG CO. We guarantee to return your photo. See Artist's Work at Store You Do Not Have to Buy a Frame. AMUSEMENTS. SPECIAL OFFERING LAST TIME TONIGHT BOSWORTH Presents ELSIE JANIS in "The Caprices of Kitty" A thousand nights of vaudeville in one. Note Every Tuesday and Wednesday the Paramount Travelogue Pictures are shown. 5c ADM. 10c V D I a THEATRE Ls. I H I W Main and 9th TONIGHT 2 Reels with Marie Walcamp "THE TOLL OF THE SEA" One Reel "Dear Little Old Time Girl." AR C A D FT PHOTO-PLAYS TONIGHT Broadway Feature "THE PATH TO THE RAINBOW." A Modern Drama, Featuring Ormi Hawley, Earl Metcalfe, Florence Hackett MURR TONIGHT 2 Reel Majestic Drama "THE MOUNTAIN GIRL" Komic "BENNO, THE BARBER." jj PALACE TODAY World Film Corp. Presents Robert Warwick And All-Star Cast in the Thrilling 5 Reel Photo-Play, "THE FACE IN THE MOONLIGHT A. Picture That .None .C,an Surpass.

I

TOMORROW Selig Special "In the Days of the Thundering Herd" A 5 Reel Western.

The case of Nona B. Meyers against James B. Meyers. In which the plains tiff claims an indebtedness ot $S4 du her for lodging boarding and narainf of a minor child, Boyd Meyers, hai been venued fro mthe justice of th peace court to the circuit court and filed. A verdict for the defendant wai returned when the case was heard Is the justice's court. .

You Can Kick Up Your Heels in Glee the minuts Nab-It strikes that hard, agonizing, torturing corn or callous. It acts like magic. Pain goes, eorenese gone, corn ion too. It'a foolish to Buffer when relief is SO EASY. Any druggist has NtMt. Don't accept anything elae because NOTHING is just as good." ZSeeata, For sale at Thistlethwaite's and all drug stores. Dr. A. Patter Pray Co, Oiicag 1 BE SURE AND REDEEM YOUR COUPONS FOR KIRK'S SOAP AT YOUR GROCER. AGED FATHER OF LOCAL MAN GIVES PRAISETOTANLAC "No Trace of Catarrh Now'1 Says T. J. BrendeL "Although I am 76 years old." said T. J. BrendeL father of Harry Brendel, well-known associate of the Bee Hive grocery, in an interview with the Tanlac Man, ' I feel many years younger, and I feel that I owe much of my health to your Master Medicine. "Last winter," he continued, "I suffered severely from catarrh. I tried numerous home remedies without success and had just about decided I'd have to put up with it, when a friend of mine told me of Tanlac. which was then being introduced through, the Taylor-Isaacs company's drug stores in Louisville. "I took five bottles of Tanlac. and am happy to say I have no trace of catarrh in my system. All the old coughing, hocking and spitting has disappeared. I no longer have choking spells and can sleep fine. My appetite has improved and Tanlac seems to have given me new strength. "I am glad to know that Tanlac is going to be sold in Richmond, and am sure no one with any form of catarrh can do better than use your wonderful medicine. Am happy to recommend Tanlac, and will answer any inquiries regarding it which may be sent to my home, Jeffersonville, Ind." Tanlac is sold exclusively in Richmond at Thistlethwaite'a drug store. Sixth and Main streets, where the Tanlac Man is meeting the public and explaining the "Master Medicine." Adv. Our Regular $5.00 PANAMAS AND LEGHORNS This Season's Best Style Hats at i Price Lichteniels In The Westcott. I! Say, Fellows Can you beat only costs you this? It per day to get a swim In the "Y" Pool. The cleanest and coolest place in town. Join the Y. M. C. A. Now L

LYNN, FOUNTAIN CITY, and RICHMOND AUTO LINE Headquarters KnoUanberg's Annex. Owned and Operated by J. H. Denison Two Regular Trips Are Mad Dally - - Between the Above Points. Leave Richmond at 10:30 and 4: SO p.m. v Leave Fountain City at 11:30 and 6:00 p. m. Arrlve Lynn at 12 noon and 6:00 p. m. Leave Lynn at 7 a. m. and 1 p. m. Leave Fountain City at 7:30 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. Arrive Richmond at 8:30 a, m. and 2:30 p. m.