Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 290, 17 November 1915 — Page 6

PAGE SU

iHE RICHMOND. PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, -WEDNESDAY NOV. 17, 1915

Eacsball Pagflism Bowling POLO LEAGUE PLAN DROPPED OFFICIAL SAYS There will be polo and plenty of it at the Coliseum this winter, but there will be no city lea cue. This , has been definitely decided, although there has not been a meeting of the directors. ' They will get together this week probably Friday afternoon and will make this announcement. That is definite. Richmond will . be represented In polo this year by the fastest team it is possible to secure, and already a game has been arranged for Thanksgiving day to be played at Muncle. After that there wilt be games here with the best teams that can be secured. The team that .will represent Richmond in the opening ' game will be Lou Quigley and Fry rushes; Box Quigley, center; Evans halfback and O'Mets, goal. Harry Williams will be utility man. M uncle will put ' Fahrner and Fletcher at rush; Earl Edgerton at center; Houston, halfback and Pence, goal. The decision to have only one team in the field this year is a disappointment to many of the players, who had expected to play, and there Is talk of forming an independent organisation to play out of town, but no action in this line has been taken MODELS WORK HARD BUT LEADERS WIN nolling the best games of the season, the Vogues won two out of three lrnn the Models last night at the City alley. It was a hard struggle, tor the Models were shooting the ball down the alley with terrific speed and accuracy. The Vogues, however, were in fine , form and played at their best, making many difficult splits. Dennis made high average, 174, and Weyman high score, 199. Summary: Vogues. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Thompson .. 164 142 152 468 163 F. MUler ... 154 143 133 430 143 Fosler 11B 139 141 398 13a Weyman .... 199 18 148 615 172 Dye 164 141 189 494 165 Handicap ... 141 141 141. Totals .... 940 874 904 2295 ... Models. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Erk 187 168 171 616 172 Dennis 185 171 167 523 174 Cooney 153 163 153 459 163 Helmick .... 167 161 190 608 169 Hadley 152 159 192 503 168 Handicap ... 61 61 61 Totals 895 863 934 2509 . . . KING BOWLING 185 LEADS CITY LEAGUE CITY LEAGUE 8TANDING. Won Lost Pet. Pins Vogue .... 13 11 .642 22055 Lich. Hab.. 12 12 .500 22287 Keystones . 12 12 .500 22043 Models ... 11 13 .458 22198 Individual Averages. Games Pins Ave. King 24 442S 185 Helmich 11 19S6 181 Erk 24 4329 180 Martin 15 2703 180 Youngflesh 24 4178 174 Miller 24 4161 173 Boyer 23 3921 170 Llchtenfels 24 4070 170 Hadley 24 4051 169 Custls 21 3558 169 Weyman 6 1006 168 Green 24 39S5 166 Meyer 24 3967 165 Cooney 17 2741 161 Dennis 24 3823 159 Schneider 24 3795 158 F. Miller 3 470 157 Fosler 24 3727 155 Dye 24 3647 152 Thompson 24 - 3253 136 TREASURER FORGETS PAST. ELWOOD. Ind., Nov. 17 City Treasurer Harding is suffering from a mental lapse following a severe attack of typhoid fever. Past incidents are a blank in his memory at times, and occasionally he fails to recognize relatives, although specialists have expressed the hope that his mind will be restored to its normal condition upon his complete physical recovery. NOTICE TO HUNTERS ! Hunting is strictly forbidden on the farm of R. G. Leeds in Boston township. 12 lw R. G. LEEDS. Applying This Paste Actually Removes Hairs (Beauty Notes.) Merely applying: an - Inexpensive paste to a hairy . surface, say beauty specialists , wtll p dissolve the hairs. This paste is mad by mixing a little water with some powdered delatone: after about 5 minutes It is rubbed off and the skin washed This simple method not only removes every trace If hair, but leaves the skin free from ilemish. To Insure success with this Treatment, be careful to get real delaone. Adv.

Star of

I mik J ' l) I 1 M J? v IT a. mz&z .

Cornell may have her Barrett, Harvard her Mahan and Michigan her Maulbetsch, but Chicago believes she has in Pete Russell, the veteran quarterback, the best backfield man in the country. Russell is being boosted for All-American honors, and the chances are he will get them.

REES WINS HONORS IN A. S. M. GAME The A. S. M. league was busy last night on the "Y" alleys, and the Hoosiers annexed two games from the Buckeyes, losing the last game by eight pins. Reese made high average, 146, and high score of 177. Better scores would be rolled by all the men if they were not interfered with after they lift the ball. Nobody objects to cheers or kidding, but direct interference with players is spoiling the game to a large extent, and should be stopped. There are a lot of capable players in the league, and they are making complaints to Tim about the horseplay on the alleys, and want it stopped. Summary: Hooslers. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Rees 177 151 111 439 146 Roach 168 130 128 426 142 Williams ... 120 126 128 374 124 Sbissler 170 158 134 462 154 Lane 123 116 144 383 124 Totals .... 756 681 645 2084 ... Buckeyes. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Bennett 170 105 162 437 145 Porter 147 144 128 419 139 Sheffer 107 104 128 339 113 Merrill 159 130 112 401 133 Groans 144 128 123 359 131 Totals 727 611 653 1991 ... SIXTH MAN ENTERS GROSS TOWN RUN J. R. Darnell has entered for the V. M. C. A. cross-country run to be held Thanksgiving morning, making the sixth entry. For some reason the boys are slow in entering and this is a disappointment to Physical Director Roach, who thought there would be at least twenty entries. AH who anticipate taking- part JU; the event are urged to get their names on the list at once and not wait until the last minute. By registering now everybody will have the opportunity of " getting valuable instructions from Mr. Roach on how to train for the event. FORM TWO TEAMS Two bowling teams are being formed by the men at the plant of the Westcott Motor Car company, and they will bowl on the "Y" alleys twice a week.

BUSINESS MEN'S LEAGUE. " Won Lost ; Pet. Pheggs . . . .... T. ; . 17 ' "7 .708 Colonials ......... 14 7 .667 Bankers 14 10 .683 I- M C, 10 8 .556 Natcos 6 12 .333 Federals .......... 2 19 .095

Polo " Earlham Y31.C.A.

Maroons

J 11 Mn -M. C FOOTBALL ELEVEN DRILLS FOR GAME An enthusiastic meeting of the members of the Richmond football team was held last night at Sam Vigran's, ; and the cry is "Down with Hagerstown." Despite their defeat last Sunday the boys think they can beat the team that defeated them two weeks ago, and are entering into the spirit of the game in a most surprising manner. Logan has agreed to coach the team Thursday night at the Garfield gym, and he will play with the team Sunday at Athletic park. All the boys have promised to be on hand at 7:30 O'clock ready for a hard workout, and new signals will be given and a number of new plays worked out.

Penn's New Quarter

m O e, ' I' Si ' 3& IS I

With the all-round athlete Howard Berry of the University of Pennsylvania squad, his place at quarterback has been taken by Bell, who will probably run the Penn team in the two remaining games of the season.

WHEELER EATS POISON TO END LIFE'S TROUBLES

WEST MANCHESTER, O., Nov. 17. William Wheeler of Castine, made a successful attempt at suicide at his home Thursday by swallowing parts green. He lingered until Friday morning, when bis death occurred about 6 o'clock. This is the second suicide by the parts green route in Castine within a few weeks, both be ing aged men. Sparks, ignite Barn. A fire originating with sparks from a west bound passenger train on the Pennsylvania lines caused a little excitement here Thursday about noon. Some shoks of dry fodder in a field belonging to J. M. Studebaker became ignited, burned fiercely following their trail to the barn also owned by Studebaker. By timely efforts of bucket brigade the fire was soon under control. Miss Leas Entertains. Miss Jeanette Leas entertained her class at a birthday party last Friday afternoon from 2:00 until 5:00. Those present were as follows: Misses Mary Leas, Alene Gladdell. Lucile Morris, Quilla Locke, Fern and Flossie Woolf. Dorothy Davis of Dayton, Valeta Weaver and Thelma Wright. Endeavor Meets. The regular monthly business meeting of the Christian Endeavor society of the Christian church will meet Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Poe. Gives Poverty Social. The "poverty" social to be given by the C. E. society of Christian church will be held Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Howell. Everybody Invited. CARLOS, IND. Leroy, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Carey has been very sick but is some better at this writing Clyde Catey is having his house remodeled.... John Beard, George Carey and Earl Brown loaded out hogs for Indianapolis.... Mr. and Mrs. Earl Morrison and Mr. and Mrs. Link . Morrison motored to Jay county Sunday . Lilbum Martin sent some cattle to Iowa for Henry Catey last week Frank Catey and wife of Spartansburg and John Catey and wife motored to Indianapolis the last of the week to see Mr. Catey's brother Jonah, who is dangerously ill. P. W. Hutchins-is home from Richmond on account of ill health Earl Beard is improving Mrs. McCallister is staying-with her daughter, Mrs. Carey this week. WILLIAMSBURG i Mrs. -Ethel Thurston and Miss Ella Hinshaw spent Saturday and Sunday with their sister in Richmond .... Mrs. Dora jHutchens of Richmond spent Sunday here. Pervis Campbell and family of Richmond called on his ! brother E. O. Campbell here Sunday A. Franklin and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Franklin spent Sunday with John Campbell west of town.... Herschel Duke of Liberty spent Sunday here with tils parents Mr. and Mrs. William Duke" Mrs. Bess Miller and two children left for Muncie Tuesday to spend the week with friends and relatives. .. .Miss Mary Duke spent Monday in Richmond. . . .Miss Lillie Reynolds left Tuesday for a visit with friends in Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Asher Pearce spent Saturday in Richmond visiting sick friends Mr. and Mrs. Grant Watkins motored to Richmond Tuesday afternoon Joe Colvin was in Richmond Tuesday. MAY PAVE STREET. EATON, O., Nov. 17. Planning to pave Barron and Maple, two of the city's principal streets, merdbers of council have directed the solicitor and engineer to arrange necessary preliminary details. In the events voters favor the improvement Barron street will be paved from the north to the south corporation line, and Maple street will be improved from the south line north to Lexington road.

GOULDING ACCUSED OF PROFESSIONALISM

h i v"Vw m i ll

$3.

GrEORGE GOISLVAPG George Goulding. the world's champion walker, who hails from Toronto. Canada, is the latest Simon pure ania-j teur to be attacked on grounds of pro-1 fessionallsm. Bill Parry, the old-time j walker, Is the man who claims to have I proofs of Goulding's professional performances, and has offered to produce i them before the registration committee of the A. A. U. THREATEN TABERNACLE. ELWOOD, Ind., Nov. 17. Anony-, mous letters threatening to burn the , frame tabernacle that serves as a ; meeting place for temperance gather-! lngs have been received by Mayor i Harbit. j NICHOLSON SAYS i Continued From Page One. tained while my father and my brothers lived. I am thus left to testify. "Ten years later, sixty-four years ago. in my twenty-second year, I was principal of a Friends' academy with a boabrding apartment near our house. Within half a mile there were two places at which liquor was sold. One of these was a tavern. The owner was my wife's cousin, and his wife was my cousin. They were once members of the Friends church. The man's uncle, a Friends minister, pleaded with him to withdraw the application he had made to sell Intoxicants 'by the drink, and failing in this, he appeared before the commissioners and solemnly but successfully remonstrated against the granting of the license. "Soon after coming to Richmond in 1861, I joined in the conflict with the liquor saloon. In endorsed and assisted as I could the Woman's Crusade. I attended their prayer meeting in front of saloons. When the sidewalks were wet by rain or snow, I spread a carpet upon which to kneel Dr. Hibberd, the mayor, was In sympathy with the women, but upon complaint of many citizens that the obstruction of the sidewalks was illegal, he met the women in one of the churches and requested them to give up these meetings. "I was present and I said to the mayor there was also a law against interrupting religious meetings, and that we would advertise these meetings as religious meetings, specifying the places, which would always be in the street and on part of the sidewalk opposite a saloon. To this the mayor consented, and when a saloon keeper pushed a woman, while praying, from the sidewalk into the gutter, I had him arrested and fined for bis own good, as in a subsequent religioustemperance revival he signed the pledge, quit the saloon, was happily converted, joined the church, in which he was active until his death. "I actively supported in every way I could all efforts to secure temperanc legislation, notably the Baxter, the Nicholson, the Moore and other laws. LOOKING FOR YOIUC JEvverywhere men complain abcxr work; even boys and girls in school oi business find .work tedious and irk some, bat it isn't the work half so much i as their own lack of physical strength ' that makes it hard. . ; Rich blood, strong lungs and health- j ful digestion make work pleasurable ; m business, m school or even house- -work, and if those who are easily tired --who are not sick, but weak andner- j vous would just take 'Scott's Emul-' ska for one month and let its. pure t concentrated- iood create richer blood ' to pulsate through every artery and i vein let it ouua a structure ot healthy tissue and give you -vigorous strength you would find work easy and would look for more. Insist on Scott's. Scott at Bowse. Bloom fiti. N.J. I9-3S

Many of us are. humiliated by the disgraceful fact that the beautiful city of Richmond is still wet with over fifty saloons, all In the oldest four wards. The other four wards, embracing about half the area and population, are dry by action of the city council, and the township, , outside the city. Is dry by an election. - The fight will continue until the wet wards shall be redeemed from the curse of king alcohol."

NOSE CLOGGED FR0U A COLD OR CATARRH Apply Cream ia Open Up Air Nostrils Te Ah I What relief! Tour clogged nostrils open right up, the air passages of your head are clear and you can breathe freely. - No . more ' hawking, snuffling, mucous discharge, headache, dryness mo struggling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone. Don't stay stuffed up! Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Ely's Cream Balm is Just what every cold and catarrh sufferer has been leering. Ifs just "'endid. Where You Get Most of the Best for Less. ARLINGTON RESTAURANT FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES Two first class automobiles for sale cheap. In good condition. Rare bargains. Call and see them. QUAKER CITY GARAGE 1518 East Main Street. Mrs.'C. A. Brehm just returned from Indianapolis with a complete line of millinery bought at a price and will be sold at a great sacrifice. Remember we have the latest. Mrs. C. A. Brehm 35 North 8th Street. i SAYS HOT WATER WASHES POISONS FROM THE LIVER Everyone should drink hot water with phosphate In It, before breakfast. To feel as fine as the proverbial fiddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every morning, to prevent its sponge-like pores from clogging with indigestible material, sour bile and poisonous toxins, says a noted physician. If you get headaches, it's your liver. If you catch cold easily, it's your liver. If you wake up with a bad taste, furred tongue, nasty breath or stomach hecomes rancid, it's your liver. Sallow skin, muddy complexion, watery eyes all denote liver uncleanliness. Your liver is the most important, also the most abused and neglected organ of the body. Few know its function or how to release the dammed-up body waste, bile and toxins. Most folks resort to violent calomel, which Is a dangerous, salivating chemical which can only be used occasionally because it accumulates in the tissues, also attacks the bones. Every man and woman, sick or well, ibould drink each morning before breakfast, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In it. to wash from the liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible material, the poisons, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Limestone phosphate does not restrict the diet like calomel, because it can not salivate, for It is harmless and you can eat anything afterwards. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, and any pharmacist will sell you a quarter pound, which is sufficient for a demonstration of how hot water and limestone phosphate cleans, stimulates and freshens the liver, keeping you feeling fit day in and day out. Adv. . Get Your i HUNTING LICENSE And Shells of Sam Vigran - 512 MAIN STREET.' - .

reEtrfjr Tka Hsirbg Upsa Arms? at Fhce cf Bcsaiii Crowds 02 and Woffiza Med to Cfear The Way : At the Gixactk PcbHc Sal ct the RAILROAD STORE Opened at 8:30 O'clock. More than 300 people representing the largest crowd which has been present lit any Sale! opening for many years in this -section of the country were on1 time and ready to buy as soon as the doors of the Railroad' Store at 8th and Nqrth E streets were opened this morning. . . As soon as the signal was given that the sale was on, every clerk in the store from basement to the Rug Department was busy selling the wonderful bargains in fall and winter merchandise that you have all read about in the big 4 page circular and newspaper advertisement. Come From Meade From every part of Eastern Indiana and Western Ohio within a radius of 60 miles great crowds arrived in automobiles. auto hacks, carriages, trains and traction cars. One of our salesmen told us he sold a large amount of goods to five women from Muncie, Indiana. They told him that one of their neighbors had attended our great recent Bankrupt sale and that she was so well pleased with the bargains she bought that she insisted that they attend our mighty "Public Sale", and they were all satisfied. They even went so far as to say: "Such bargains as we obtained at your sale this morning are absolutely impossible to find in any of our stores at home." And so goes the story, we could fill a newspaper and then ' some telling you of the comments we received this first day of the greatest and most looked for sale in all the history of the state. Between the Devil and the Deep Bine Sea In this particular case the Devil stands out alone a ghastly sight to gaze upon, with nothing good or worth while to offer on the other hand, the Deep Blue Sea is in this case the Railroad Store. Ifs filled to over-i flowing with $60,000 worth of j the grandest array of Winter and Holiday Merchandise ever! offered to a buying public. You i are to give the answer: Is it to be the Devil or the Deep Blue1 Sea? Eager, Wise and Economical Men and Women will choose the "Deep Blue Sea" because they know that when they are told that the "Railroad Store is giving value plus they are being told the truth. We do not believe in telling stories to our patrons, old or new. We want and try to tell the truth at all times because that is absolutely the only way anyone, can ever make a great success, and we want this Public Sale to be the most successful sale ever held in all this state. We even go so -far as tobuyv back anything that you are not satisfied with. Now', what more . can we dof Yon Can't lSs Us i The entire exterior of our blj Btore is covered with bright red signs telling you in brief what' you can expect on the inside, -and if you will but ask one person that attended this sale todav she will tell you that she was sne was seejong oy roe tiea Signs .that stand out so plainly, throughout the interior of our' i . , . .. tuns, oub unr ku mr -roe -11 L -M 4.1 1 J M Buiau psux ox uus DiyjBuiry. VruT merchandise tells the rest and the prices are so low that it would pay any of your friends to come even if they had to travelone hundred miles.