Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 52, 11 January 1918 — Page 7
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JAN. 11, 1918.
PAGE SEVEN
BRINGING UP FATHER
By McManus
AREN'T XOU .OlW -n MO- I HA VLU-WHM m 0ltV nZV" f 1 (j Si RT! TOMHT? J HOME F0 C THE PARJ.OR? JH TONlHI T OP.'!
i .
EARLHAM HOPES TO WIN CLASH WITH WABASH
Quakers Believed to Have Chance This Year with "Wonder' Five. The Earlham basketball team wll play Its fifth game of the season when It clashes with the fast Wabash "Won der" five at Crawfordsvllle, Saturday night. This la the first thne that Earlham has met the Btrcmg Wabash five with
any hopes of winning for several seasons but this year the coaches at Earlham, Lewis and Mowe, feel they have turned out a winning team that can push the fastest teams In the I. C. A. L. All the basketball men are enthusiastic over the .bright. prospects of the Earlham team and have been practising with a will for two weeks in prep aratloc for the "Wonder" quintet. Develops Head Work Mowe has been drilling the basketball men steadily on passing andi shooting and has developed a team that should show real heart work that will make -It lively for the . Wabash aggregation. Head work which will net fast snappy team work on the pnrt of thj Earlham squad has been the chief feature of hrs practise work with the men thl3 week. No changes have been made in the personnel of the team as each man Is playing his position with more precision. . . Three Stalwart Guards Johnson, who has been . ineligible, will be able to play Saturday, thus materially strengthening the guard position. For with Pitts, Meeks, the reliable floor guard, and Johnson, Earl ham has no fears at this position At the forward positions are Pontius, captain and manager of the team, and Jessup who was definitely switched from guard to forward the early part of the season and Brown who has been out for some time and will probably not be played in the fore part oJ the Wabash game as he has missed many practises lately. Eight men probably will make the trip to Crawfordsvllle Saturday night They are Pontius, Brown and Jessup forwards, Edwards, center, and Meeks Johnson and Pitts, guards, with Pitts also as sub center. Hiatt will be taken for either guard or forward posi tions.
miSport gnapShctsim
Billy Miske, the light heavy, says that he is perfectly serious about wanting a chance at Jess Willard, and while he realizes that he will be somewhat outweighed there is no reason why he should not give the champ an argument. He points out that he defeated Carl Morris, which ought to
show that mere bulk doesn't count for much and he argues that Willard was beaten by more than one small man before he wont the belt. Before many more of the heavies figue out reasons why they should do battle with the champ It should be shown whether or not it Is possible to get Willard into the ring with anyone. A small man would likely have the best chance of crowding Into the same ring with Willard and as they have to cram a referee in with theirtoo perhaps the smaller Willard's adversary is the better.
GORDON ELECTED FOOTBALL CHIEF
The Earlham grid veterans will be under the leadership of Paul Gordon next season as a result of a meeting of the "E" men at which time Gordan was elected captain.
Gordon was one of the best bets Earlham had last season on the football field. He succeeds Donald Calvert, captain this year, who will graduate this spring. Calvert Is the only man that will leave but many are expecting to be inducted into the army service. Coach Lewis started in with a raw. green eleven last fall but was able to turn It into a team that won a reputation of being a strong flghtins eleven. Gordon, the star tackle, was out of the game the latter part of the season, thus weakening the team. The men who will be here to represent Earlham next season are: Gordon, tackle, Bookout and Howard Mills at theend positions. Hadley at tackle, Johnson, Harris and Harvey at guard. Osborne regular cente, and Nicholson sub, Snyde at quarterback, Brown at full back and Ralford, Hoerner, Tittsworth and Jessup at half. Sumner Mills will be unable to play football again as he will nurse a bad knee for some time. Two years ago a Chinese peasant round sticking in the bank of the Yellow river, in the province of Honan, China, a monster egg. This was declared by the natives to be an egg of the ho-ho bird or phoenix, a legendary fowl which Is often portrayed in oriental decorations. Scientists, tell us, however, that it was laid by a gigantic cstrlch.
The fans in Pittsburgh are daily awaiting news of a big deal that will make the Pirates pennant contenders in the coming campaign. Dreyfuss and Bezdek promised them something of this nature some time ago and they are exceedingly optimistis. Leach Cross the retired lightweight, who Is now a physical culture expert in Los Angeles, was one of the greatest drawing cards the game ever had in New York. Although he never came near winning the title he had a great following in Gotham and could always be depended on to pack 'em at the jgate. Leach had a way of cuddling behind a barricade ox arms and elbows whenever the punches came too fast and plentiful and there he would stay till the storm blew over. This led many to regard him as being yellow, but it only brought the more to hoot him and his unpopularity in some quarters made him as great a drawing card as his popularity in others. He was also an exceptional fighter in this that he had the good sense to retire before he hit the slide. He was knocked out in the sixth round of a bout with Young Saylor in Cincinnati two years ago and retired immediately thereafter. But it Is an injustive to suppose that Leach was ever yellow as he was in truth one of the gamest fighters that ever tried on a glove. The Louisville Colonels are the first among the American Association teams to announce that they will not have a spring training trip this year. Mostly because the season has been curtailed and will not begin till three weeks later than the usual time. Under the National league's decision to hold clubs down to a training season of thirty days, one wonders how the Chicago Cubs plan to make the trip
to California and back and still have time to do any real training work. Ollie O'Mara, who was turned out by the Robins last season and finished the year in one of the southern leagues, will be called in again and given another chance to show by Brooklyn. Miller Huggins Yankees looked bad enough as it was, but with Uncle Sam taking his toll the problems of the little manager are more serious than ever. It is rumored in Philadelphia that Fred Luderus will be released, by the Phillies and that George Whitted will play first base for Moran's team in 1918, but this is hardly likely. Fred Mitchell reiterates the declaration that there isn't a chance of anybody getting Pete Kilduff away from the Cubs.
Mitchell will build his infield
around the little fellow. Jack Hendricks, the Cardinals' new manager, has been in Chicago for several days talking things over with Fred Mitchell and Charles Weeghman.
of her struggle on behalf of her own ! ond winning the love of the other, despite the fact that he "doesn't give a rap for any woman," especially Easterners. MURRETTE Photographically speaking, "The Price Mark," in which clever Dorothy Dalton is appearing at the Murrette Theatre on Sunday of this week, is one of the supreme achievements of photoplay history. Effects that have hitherto been Impossible of achievement in photography and scenes that rival In sheer beauty and grandeur of a master' painting, are seen in abundance throughout the film. The director, Roy Neill, who worked under the direct supervision of Thomas H. Ince, has spent several of his life In Egypt, and from his own experience as well as from numberless photographs and plans, the details of the picture were carried to a perfection seldom, if ever equalled.
No Sveethin speeded0
ft4 YX n ifui juu cut
WILL SKATE FOR WORLD'S TITLE
Robert McLean Robert McLean, the star of American skaters and American champion, will soon have a chance at the world's
title. McLean is to race Oscar Math-
iesen of Switzerland, the holder of the
world's skating title, within a few weeks and the American boy is confident that he will be able to lead Mathlesen in all of their competition. McLean holds several records for distance skating.
"Wasted materials belong to no one, but might belong to all." "If I could have what the Nation wastes in one day, I would be rich for life."
Hoosier Happenings
"HEAVYWEIGHT" COUNCIL TERRE HAUTE, Jan. 11. This city has a heavyweight council. Carey Anderson, president, weighs 285 pounds; Harry Wills tips , the scales for 260; William Terrell puffs along a close third with 240.
"CUSS" WORDS COST NICKEL SHELBYVILLE. Jan. 11. "Cuss" words cost employes of a Shelbyville electrical machine factory five cents each. A Red Cross contribution box has been installed in the factory and the money Is deposited in the box. $6 FOR INDIANA COAL NEWCASTLE, Jan. 11. Newcastle coal dealers are charging $3 for a halfton of Indiana coal. Most consumers are getting what coal they need. ATTACKED DAUGHTER VTNCENNES, Jan. 11. John Walker, 50 years old, was sentenced to serve from two to twenty-one years in
On The Boards
WASHINGTON "So Long Letty," Oliver Morosco comedy with music which has been playing to crowded houses from coast to coast for more than two years, will be shown at the Washington on Mon day night, Jan. 14. This merry play was written by Mr. Morosco and Elmer Harris and Earl Carroll provided the lyrics and music. It's a . play of California, with a California beauty chorus and a typical Morosco cast, which means the very best obtainable. There is a considerable plot for a musical play; in fact the story is based on a successful farce, "Your Neighbor's Wife."
8
Aflmmsi (Gtoclk COBISElUIVI Friday Night, Jan. 18th Assisted by Salvatore de Stefano, Harpist
prison when he pleaded guilty to attacking his daughter, Eva Walker. FARM HAND TAKES LIFE SHELBYVILLE, Jan. 11. Charles Brown, 31 years old, farm band, committed suicide on a highway in Johnson county by taking poison. He had been ill and two weeks ago returned from an Indianapolis hospital. TO OPEN STUDIO
Frank A. Tillmann, pianist at Washington theater will open studio of piano in the Colonial building, Monday January 14. KILLED INSTANTLY RUSHVTLLE, Jan. llJohn Gordon
was billed Instantly by a Pennsylvania, railway freight train, which struck and demolished the buggy In which he was riding. He had taken his son, Cylde. and two other children to school and was re turning home. COAL CUTS PROFITS ANDERSON. Jan. 11. The annual report of the municipal light plant shows that the receipts for 1917 were $26,000 greater than in 1916 but that the profits were $10,000 less. The cut in the profits Is beliered to have been due by the increased cost of production and especially coaL MAYOR STOPS CARDS ELWOOD, Jan. 1L Card games in cigar stores were stopped by the new administration Thursday. Mayor Lewis announced that this program will be observed throughout the four years he Is la office.
CATARRH IS UNTOUCHED BY ATOMIZERS AND INHALERS
Pnces" 75c, $1, $1.50, $2
On sale next Monday at Fulghum's
MURRAY Darrell Foss, cast as Roy Hanford, the weakling, who might have been a real man but for the stuming of his moral development, by the lack of sympathy and humanity in the bigoted old deacon, hos father, broke all records for crying in "Without Honor," at the Murray today and Saturday. In the scene where Roy confesses to his wife and the mother of his baby that he is a bigamist and that unless she helps him and denies their marriage he will be sent to prison, Foss cried twenty-six times, a new long distance record for a Triangle player. The worst part of it is, 6ays Foss, the tears wouldn't register. Margery Wilson is featured in the role of the wife. The vaudeville numbers for the last half of the week consist of Pollard and His Little Bull, a juggling comedian, and Howard and Ray. a colored team - who put on a comedy singing and talking number that is especially good.
ST
On The Screen
.IW.in"!""'"
WASHINGTON In "Shirley Kaye," Clara Kimball Yonug, who will appear at the Washington Theatre Friday and Saturday, plays the title role of a young society girl, queen of the Long Island set, who is suddenly plunged into the whirlpool of high finance by the threatening danger of her father's overthrow from the presidency of the Union Central R. R., which her forefather "Pirate" Kaye, bad founded. His two adversaries, T. J. Magen, a brusque Western financier, and hi3 young associate John Rowson, she fights with different weapons gaining the admiration of the first by the eaniestness
WARTIME RECEIPE FOR GRAY HAIR
Actress Gives Simple Inexpensive Receipe for Streaked or Faded Gray Hair.
Mrs. Mackie, the well known New York actress, now a grandmother, and whose hair is still dark, recently made the following statement: "Gray streaked or faded hair can be immediately turned black, brown or light brown, whichever shade you desire, by the use of the following simple remedy that you can make at home: "Merely get a small box of Orlex powder at any drug store. It costs only 25 cents and no extras to buy. Dissolve it in one ounce of water and comb it through the hair. Full directions for use come in each box. "You need not hesitate to use Orlex, as a $100.00 gold bond comes in each box guaranteeing the user that Orlex powder does not contain silver, lead, zinc, sulphur, mercury, aniline, coaltar products or their derivatives. "It does not rub off. is not sticky or greasy, and leave the hair fluffy. It will make a gray haired persons look many years younger." Adv.
Tonight Vaudeville
POLLARD And Hiss Little Bull
HOWARD & RAY Singing and Musical Act
MARJORY WILSON
-in-
Witttioiitl Honor
In which Jeanie McGregor, In order to save her weak husband, denies her marriage. RUNGE ORCHESTRA Clarence Runge, director MATINEE 2:00 and 3:15: Adults, 15c; Children. 10c. EVENING 7:00 and 8:45: Lower Floor, 20c; Balcony, 15c; Children, 10c
1M1UIRIRETTE TONIGHT AND SATURDAY SHIRLEY MASON in ((TIia Atr.rolrininT Dnfh"
Hit; ttwwaiiciiuiy ui iiuui
ADULTS 10c.
Bray Pictograph
CHILDREN 5c
DISEASE CANNOT BE REACHED BY LOCAL TREATMENT What a pity that so many people follow blindly the old bell-weather method of treating Catarrh, and thus postpone from day to day the time when they will be free from this annoying and disgusting complaint. The choked-up air passages are unstopped for the time being by medi cated sprays and atomizers, but do they remain open? Isn't the relief only temporary? Over and over again, these accumulations gather, because the disease which causes them is being untouched by the treatment. Cleanse the blood thoroughly of all
Catarrh germs, and your Catarrh will promptly disappear. For this purpose, there Is no remedy that can equal S. S. S., the reliable, purely vegetable blood remedy, that has been on the market for more than fifty ysars. It is sold by drug stores in all parts of
the land, and If you obtain a bottle I and begin treatment today, you will
immediately see that you are on the right road. S. S. S. thoroughly cleanses the blood and removes from it every trace of Catarrh germs. If your case after beginning the S. S. S. treatment, requires special instructions, write tq our medical director for complete advice. Address Swift Specific Co., C101, Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga Adv.
Washington!
Theatre
One Jolly Night
14
MONDAY JANUARY
DIRECT FROM ITS SECOND NEW YORK TRIU. ?H With the Same Magnificent Cast and Production
OC.0VGR
Z3U3 U U
BOOK. BV OLIVER. MOROCO
ELMER. HARJU1
LYRICS Sc BY ARL CARROO.
The Cross-Continent Musical Gem
AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA COMPANY OF 50 PEOPLE
18 BIG SONG 18 HITS A CALIFORNIA BEAUTY CHORUS
Dont Be Among the Disappointed Ones Ak Those Who Know
PRICES 25, 50, 75, $1.00 and $1.50. Seat Sale Saturday, 10 A. M.j
iHinrcGxoi
TODAY AND SATURDAY SELECT PICTURES PRESENT
Clara naill Yad
IN-
1
99
fflMILE Y KAYE
Remember "all the world loves a lover" and also a good fighter. The Shirley Kaye whom Miss Young portrays will win the world's love doubly; for she makes a great fight against her own ignorance of finance to save her father, and in an even harder battle she overcomes Western prejudice against the effete East. PATHE NEWS Shows Continuous, 1:45 to 11:00 P. M. MATINEE 10c NIGHT, 15c
