Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 172, 31 May 1918 — Page 7

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By McManus

OLD RIVALS TO CLASH AT BALL PARK SATURDAY

Natco and Simplex and Jenkins and Malleable Teams Meet. Natco vs. Simplex. Jenkins-Vulvans versus Malleable Pennsy. Time Two o'clock Saturday aftercoon. Place Exhibition park. If the weather permits, the Natco and Simplex teams will stage a real game of baseball Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Exhibition park. The second game will be between the Jen-klns-Vulcans and the Malleable Pennsy. All the gate receipts will go to the Red Cross. The bargain matinee affords Richmond fans a chance to be patriotic and also see a real baseball game Old Rivalry Exists When the Natco and Simplex teams get in action, real old-time baseball will be handed out In bundles. The two headliners of the Saturday afternoon league have fought for the league championship for years each playing a good game, and this year's managers of both teams feel that they have a better team In the field than ever before. As far as dope is concerned the Simplex seems to nave the upper hand thus far this year over the winner of the S. A. L. flag last year the Natco. The Simplex defeated the JenkinsVulcan by a 5 to 0 score and the Malleable Pennsy by a 15 to 0 sccre,

while the Natco champions administered 8 to 1 tally against the MalleablePennsy and in a close shave defeated the Jenkins-Vulcans last Saturday by a 1 to 0 score. Manager Shaver of the Simplex team claims that Pete' Minner who is also being booked to pitch for the Richmond semi-pro team is groomed and ready for the fray. He believes that Pete won't be touched by the Natco batsmen. Manager Clapp of the Natco is equally as certain of the showing that the Natco aggregation will make and expects to land first place In the league standing as a result of Saturday's game. He has R. Hawekotte and "Foxy Schepman on his pitching staff. Hawekotte who has stacked up against Minner for the last few years will probably take the mound. When these two men get wound and going neither one will have any Intention of letting the other get one on them. George Fine of the Malleable-Pennsy will probably catch for the Natco owing to the Injury received by the regular catcher, Whitey Davis in last Saturday's game. The lineups of the main go will be as follows: Simplex. Position. Natco. Minner pitch Hawekotte Schepman Haas -. catch Fine Byrkett first base.... J. Holmes Clapp second base Fuller Reddlnghaus .short stop H. Logan Winters third base J. Logan Herry left field Cooney Kattler eenter field Lanning Millen right field Snyder

Yesterday's Games

MORNING GAMES. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Boston R. H. E. Washington ... 000 001 0001 9 4 Boston J . . . 015 020 10 9 12 0 Batteries Shaw, Hanson and Ainsmith; Leonard and Schang. At Cleveland R. H. E. Chicago 200 000 100 014 15 1 Cleveland ... 210 000 000 003 11 2 Batteries C. Williams, Shellenback and Schalk; Enzmann and O'Neil.

NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago R. H. E. Cincinnati 400 022 0109 15 1 Chicago 004 000 0206 10 0 Batteries Toney and Wingo; Tyler, Weaver, Barker, Carter and Killefer. At Pittsburgh R. H. E. St Louis 000 000 0000 4 1 Pittsburgh 001 050 11 8 10 0 Batteries Packard, Tuero and Gonzales; Miller and Schmidt. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Columbus R. H. E. Toledo 000 000 0000 4 2 Columbus 010 000 00 1 5 0 Batteries Brady and Kelley; Willis and Hartley.

AFTERNOON GAMES. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

At Cleveland R.'H. E. Chicago 000 000 0022 7 0 Cleveland 010 100 0013 9 2 Batteries Cicotte, Danforth. Faber, Benz and Schalk; Coveleskie and O'Neil.

Fulton and Dempsey Sign for 20 Rounds DENVER, Col., May 31 Jack Dempsey of Salt Lake City, Utah, and Fred Fulton of Rochester, Minn., today signed articles to meet in a twentyround contest to a decision at Danbury, Conn., on July 4. The principals have agreed to allow 10 percent of the gross receipts of the fight to go to war charities. Mulvihill announced arrangements had been made for motion pictures to be taken of the bout and these will be turned over in their entirety to war charity pursuits. "Honest John" Kelly of New York City was named official stakeholder.

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

New York 24 11 .6S6 Chicago 23 12 .657 Cincinnati 21 18 .538 Pittsburgh 16 17 .4S5 Boston 18 20 .474 Philadelphia 15 19 .411 St. Louis 13 22 .371 Brooklyn 13 24 .351

AMERICAN LEAGU

Clubs Won Boston 25 New York 22 Cleveland 21 St. Louis 17

Washington 16 Philadelphia 14 Detroit 11

E

Lost Pet. 14 .641

Liberty Nine Defeats Jenkins-Vulcan Team

LinERTY, Ind., May 31. The Jen klns-Vulcans team of Richmond met defeat at the hands of the Liberty crew, Thurbday afternoon by a score of 5 to 3. Sturm held the Liberty nine to one run against the J-V"s three runs until the sixth inning when he broke, and with poor fielding of the team, lost the game allowing four runs across in the last three innings.

Bobby Hart is Now Umps in Association Bobby Hart steppe'd into the Washington park field at Indianapolis Thursday to umpire associations games. Hart was the famous rush of the Muncie, Ind., team of the western roller polo league when the organization flourished In 1902, 1903 and 1904. Hart played at Richmond a number of times. Though who recognized Hart greet- ' ed him and, while talking about old times, Hart told them George "Dog" Bone, a famous rush on the Richmond, (Ind.) team, died Sunday at New Haven, Conn. Bone in 1902 was known as the greatest rush in the western league. He was a huge fellow and had a wonderful knack at shooting goals.

REFUSES TO TAKE OATH

(By Associated Press) DUBLIN, May 31. A. M. O'Mara. mayor of Limerick, has been ordered by the Court of King's bench to take the oath of allegiance before exercising his majestical functions. The mayor had refused to take the oath.

At Detroit R. H E. St. Louis 000 001 0001 6 0 Detroit 010 000 01 2 11 0 Batteries Gallia and Nunamaker; Dauss and Yelle. At New York R. H. E. Philadelphia 000 100 0001 5 4 New York 000 001 01 2 6 1 Batteries Gregg and McAvoy; Caldwell and Miller, Walters. At Boston R. H. E. Washington 011 002 0004 11 1 Boston 000 000 0000 6 2 Batteries Ayers and Picinith; McCabe, Molyneaux and Agnew. NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago R.H.E. Cincinnati 100 000 0001 f 0 Chicago 000 100 10 2 9 1 Batteries Schneider, Eller and Smith; Vaughn and Killefer and Far-rell.

15 IS 16 16 23 21 19

.595 .538 .515 .500 .410 .400 .367

At Pittsburgh R. H. E. St. Louis 300 001 O00 4 7 0 Pittsburgh 000 000 0000 6 3 Batteries Doak and Goazales; Harmon and Blackwell.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. Louisville 17 8 .689 Milwaukee 17 8 .689 Columbus 15 8 .652 Kansas City 15 10 .600 Indianapolis 11 11 .500 St. Paul 9 16 .360 Minneapolis 9 16 .360 Toledo 5 20 .200

GAMES TODAY National League. Boston at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. New York at Philadelphia. American League. Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit. Washington at Boston. American Association. Toledo at Columbus. Louisville at Indianapolis. Minneapolis at St. Paul.

At Philadelphia R.H.E.

New York 330 000 0006 10 0!

Philadelphia 100 002 0003 9 2 Batteries Demaree and McCarty; Oeschger, Watsou and Dilhoefer.

At Brooklyn (First Game) R. H. E. Boston 100 000 0102 6 1 Brooklyn 001 000 0001 7 1 Batteries Nefh and Henry; Grimes, Marquard and Miller. Second game R. H. E. Boston 100 000 2104 7 1 Brookly 000 000 1023 8 4 Batteries Hearns and Henry; Griner, Marquard and Krueger.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Indianapolis (1st Game) R.H.E. Louisville 100 000 000 1 7 0 Indianapolis 000 000 0000 6 1 Batteries Humphries and Kocher; Roggem Dale and Gossett. Second Game R. H. E. Louisville 201 000 1015 9 1 Indianapolis 000 100 0001 7 3 Batteries Shackelford and Meyers; Falkenberg and f chang. At Columbus R. H. E. Toledo 000 200 0024 11 4 Columbus 200 200 000 15 8 0 Batteries George, Park and Hartley, Wagoner, McCoIl, Sanders and Kelly. At Kansas City, 1st game R. H. E. Milwaukee 010 001 0002 8 0 Kansas City 100 000 0001 3 Batteries Howard and Huhn; Winters, Wheatley and Blackburne. Second Game R. H. E. Milwaukee 107 000 0008 9 3 Kansas City 010 050 000 6 16 2 Batteries Williams, Kerr and Murphy; Smith, Wheatley, Hoff and Onslow. At St. Paul R. H. E. Minneapolis 610 001 0008 12 3 St. Paul 010 010 0013 7 1 Batteries Hughes and Ownes; Keating Rook, Jaspar and Glenn.

Captains of Earlham Teams are Selected At a meeting of the baseball and track men of Earlham college, Templeton was, elected Captain of next year's baseball team and Tomlinson was elected captain ot the 1919 track team.

Cross is Re-elected Captain at Franklin FRANKLIN, Ind.. May 31 Charles Cross of Lebanon was re-elected captain of the Franklin College track team at a meeting of the Blue and Gold squad Thursday. Cross captured the thinly clads this spring through the most successful season that Franklin track team has ever enjoyed. During the entire season he has not been beaten in the two -mile event, which is his specialty, and, with two exceptions, he was victorious in the mile run. Cross is a junior and a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity.

WAYNE RAISES 69 PERCENT OF QUOTA

Wayne township outside the City of Richmond raised only 69 per cent, of the Red Cross allotment, according to statistics completed Friday. Of its allotment of $4813, only $3110 was subscribed leaving a deficit of $1603. It is to be noted, however, that this hold true only of the districts outside of Richmond. The city overscribed its quota in a substantial manner.

YARN IS RECEIVED

GRADUATES TO HEAR SERMON SUNDAY

Baccalaureate services Sunday will open the activities of high school commencement week. The services will be held Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the First Methodist church. The Rev. R. L. Semans will deliver the sermon. The pupils will make their first appearance in caps and gowns Sunday. The caps and gowns are also to be worn at the commencement exercises. Commencement exercises will .be held at the Coliseum Thursday evening, June 6, at 8 o'clock. Dr. George K. Mcintosh, president of Wabash college, will be the speaker. The following program has been arranged for commencement night: 7:30 to 8:30, prelude concert. High School Orchestra Class March Mary Luhring Invocation Rev. L. E. Murray Piano Solo Mary Carman Address Dr. George L. Mcintosh Violin Solo Miriam Hadley Presentation of Class of 1918, Principal J. H.Bentley Awarding of Diplomas . Superintendent J. T. Giles Benediction Rev. L. E. Murray.

City Statistics

Deaths and Funerals. MARSHALL Funeral services for Mrs. Clara Marshall, who died Thursday, will be held at the home of her mother, Mrs. Naomi Marshall, 313 Chestnut street. Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Friends may call at any time. Burial will be in Earlham cemetery. RILE Gladys, 5 years old, died Thursday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Rile, 719 North Seventeenth street. The parents and a twin sister survive. The funeral will be at the home at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon. Friends may call Friday afternoon after 3 o'clock. PHOEBE Funeral services for Phoebe Utter, who died Wednesday will be held at the home, 306 North Fifteenth street, Saturday morning at 9 o'clock and will be private. Friends may call at any time. Burial will be near Connersville.

Lane, minister's daughter, walks with the blindness of love into the cesspool of ecandal prepared for her by the unscrupulous Ed Jones, and experiences the misery and sorrow' of womanhood that trusts and is betrayed. Mary Lane is played by beautiful Mary WTarren, heroine of Tringle's former exquisite productions, "The Sea Panther" and "An Honest Man." "Please Help Emily" at the Lyric tonight. Emily is almost incorrigible and when her father is called to Egypt, he places her in care of Judge and Mrs. Lethbridge. Two admirers of opposite types pursue Emily Trotter, who has proven his sincerity; Threadgold, whose persistent proposals have disgusted her. On the night of a musicale, Threadgold expects his final answer. Emily, in desperation, flees to escape the pest. She loses her latch-key and remembering Trotter's ability to square things, she seeks him at his apartment. He is spending the night at the club and Emily makes the best of it she goes to bed. baKflMb kcrEGfiro isl(Rsb :nA Threadgold puts the police on the trail. Emily determines to detain Trotter at a hotel where they have stopped for lunch. She loses her dog. She flirts with a stranger, goes for a swim and arrives simultaneously with the police, Threadgold, Trotter and all the rest. Auntie has the mumps and is detained in the fumigating ward. Thread, gold is given his "transportation" and Emily discovers that Trotter is her one best bet. Tomorrow, Wm. Russell ia "Snap Judgement." WASHINGTON. As Kate Tarleton in "The Knife," adapted from Eugene Walter's dramatic success of the same name by Charles Maigne and directed by Robert G. Vignola, Alice Brady appears in

her third Select Star Series production. This picture, which follows her brilliant achievements in "Her Silent Sacrifice" and "Woman and Wife," will be the attraction at the Washington theater today and Saturday. Kate is a Southern girl on a visit to New York, where her interest in fortune tellers leads her into a trap disguised as a clairvoyant's establishment, where she is drugged and. imprisoned. Her lover and guardian. Dr. Robert Manning, famed for his surgical researches, finally finds her there; and wreaks his vengeance on the villainous pair who are responsible for his fiance's predicament by

using them as subjects for his experimentation. Later, Kate is restored to health, and although at first she recalls nothing of her life before she was drugged ,it all comes back to her soon after, and she feels herself unworthy of Manning's love. He reassures her, however, and they decide to pass their lives together In the placid surroundings of her Southern home. A gripping photoplay with real heart-interest, superbly cast and splendidly produced in Southern and metropolitan setings a worthy successor to Alice Brady's other Select triumphs.

WHERE CAN I FIND RELIEF FROM ITCHING, TERRIFYING ECZEMA?

MUNCIE BANK SUES.

Suit was filed Friday in the circuit court by the Muncie Banking company against Wayne F. Koontz, for the foreclosure of a mortgage on a promissory note that is slleged to have been made in favor of the plaintiff by the defendant for $99. The sum of $145 is asked by the Muncie bank to cover interest and court costs.

On The Screen

Bill Hartwell was "Old Hartwell's Cub," the picture showing at the Murray theatre Friday and Saturday. Clean of heart, clear of eye, a man who earned his living by the honest sweat of his brow, he defied the prejudice and brutality of tho community. For Old Hartwell, his father, was the Village drunkard, the sport of children and the mockery of men. The brawny blacksmith is played by William Desmond, whose inimitable characterizations have endeared him to millions. There is a minister's daughter in the story that Desmond loves. She places her faith in the man whom young Hartwell despises, a bible salesman who carries or. a vicious secret traffic in liquor. Mary

SEE OUR SHIRTS Our stock includes Shirts of superior quality. They are carefully chosen for good taste in design and color. In tub or out of tub they will be found true to color. Percales, Madras, etc. 75c, $1, $1.25, $1.50. Silk and Silk Fibre $2.50, $3, $4, $5. THOMPSON andBORTON 625 Main St.

THIS QUESTION IS EVER ON THE LIPS OF THE AFFLICTED. Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, and other terrifying conditions of the skin, are deep-seated blood diseases, and applications of salves, lotions and washes can only afford temparary relief, without reaching the real seat of the trouble. But just because local treatment has done you no good, there is no reason to despair. You simply have not sought the proper treatment, that is within your reach. You have the experience of others who have suffered as you have to guide you to a prompt riddance of blood and skin diseases. No matter how terrifying, the irritation, no matter how unbearable the itching and

burning of the skin, S. S. S. wi:i promptly reach the seat of the trouble and forever rout from the blood every trace of the disease, just as it has for others who have suffered as you have. This grand blood remedy has been used for more than fifty years, and you have only to give it a fair trial to be restored to perfect health. Our chief medical adviser is an authority on blood and skin disorders, and he will take pleasure in giving you such sdvice as your individual case may need, absolutely without cost. Write today, describing your case to medical department. Swift Specific Co., 434 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Adv.

, Today and Saturday William Desmond "OLD HEARTWELLS CLUB" Also Screen Telegram TODAY AND SATURDAY KEITH VAUDEVILLE ADOLFO Rector, Weber & Talbert The Wizard of the Accordion. The Boys from Harmony Land PRICES AS USUAL

Yarn has been received at the Red Cross headquarters and will be distributed -Saturday.

Ecuador has a tree producing berries which can be used as soap.

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Robinson Brothers Playing the Pictures. SELECT PICTURES CORP. Present Mee Iraiy A great star in her greatest hit Eugene Walters' wonderful play

Alice Brady has made many fine pictures, but "The Knife" is her supreme achievement on the screen. It is a picture to be banked on and one to be remembered. ' Added Features A HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY, Chuck Full of Laughs and the Popular PATHE NEWS .

Today and Saturday TYRONE POWERS with FRANCES BURNHAM All Star Cast 250 Bathing Chorus Girls

IN

ii

A Modern Lorelei"

A Picture Beautiful full of Romance, Punch and Splendor. See The Hunting Ground for Seals.-: The Great Pelican Birds in Their Native Haunts. The Millions of Sea Gulls on Gull Island. Don't Miss This Masterly Production. ALSO ONE OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMEDIANS "Fatty" Arbuckle in "Bright Lights" A Laugh Every Minute Adults, 15c Children 5c

Only First

Class Pictures

Hear the Pipe Organ

LYRIC THEATRE PHOTO PLAYS BEST MADE

10c Always

TONIGHT The Inimitable and Clever Charles Frohman Stage Star MISS ANN MURDOCH Supported by the Original Cast, in a Picturization of Her Latest Broadway Success, the Happy and Laughable Stage Comedy

PLEASE HELP EMILY

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From the Play by H. M. Harwood.

Also a good comedy.

Tomorrow Wm. Russell in "SNAP JUDGEMENT'

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