Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 25, 10 December 1919 — Page 17

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10, 1919.

PAGE SEVENTEEN

MIAMI MAV M AV

i.im...i uiii run

w' PRINCETON IN 1920

OXFORD, O, Dec. : 10. Physical Director Al Brodbeck, -who Is presi

dent ox the-Athletic Conference man

agers association, has. called a meet

ing of the organization ot be held In

the Chlttinden hotel, Colnmbus, Saturday. At this meeting the schedules for the 18 Ohio Conference football

teams for next fall will be made; also next spring's baseball and track meets

will be planned.

It is understood that Miami TJnhrercity will next year have the strongest

schedule the Institution has ever had

There is talk of games with Princeton.

Indiana and Notre Dame, but nothing

definite has as yet been decided.

Bowling Notes

Feltman's Tramps rolled the highest

five man score of the season Friday night when a total ot 986 pins were

counted In the third game. Incident

ally the Tramps took 3 straight games from Uchtenfels Haberdashers. The

K. of C's lost 2 games out of 3, the A. S. M. fire taking 2 out of 3 con-

testa. Todd," rolling with the Tramps, captured high score with 245 In the third contest and high average with a

total of 617 pins. Details are as follows:., ... Feltman's Tramps.

Sherer 159 159 181 Todd 174 1981 245 Meyers 181 192 166

UMPIRE BOB EMSLIE WAS CALLING BALLS AND STRIKES WHEN PRESENT DAY BALL PLAYERS WERE CALLING "DADDA"

Erk ...218 126 214 Huffman .169 214 180 Handicap ....120 120 120

499 617 639 658 663

166 203 179 186 188

: Totals ....1021 1009 1106 HBrnith 125 205 192 622 174 Pubbs . . . . i . .173 156 138 447 149 VGratterdlck ..145 144 154 443 148 XL Uchtenfels 175 169 125 461 154 Tomllnson ...184 176 181 641 ISO Handicap ....159 159 159

Totals 961 979 - High average Todd. Vodd. A laC Ma "Way ........ 148 183 Roach .......174 131 Oroan ....... 154 155 Sails ..127 167 Haner 148 163 Handicap ....185 185

949 High score.

152 438 146 178 488 163 166 474 158 158 452 150 144 461 154 185

Totals 936 950 982 K. of C. No. 1 Idlnger 144 167 133 444 148 Qulnllvan....l23 155 183 466 155 Mercurio ....152 142 233 627 176 R. IichffelS .141 136 166 443 148 Kelly 155 155 155 465 155 Handicap ....146 146 146 Totals .....866 901 1016 High average, Mercurio. High score, Mercurio.

LCA.L May Drop Baseball at Meeting Many Important athletic features will be discussed at a meeting of athlt.le directors of the Indiana College's

Athletic Association, at Indianapolis, Saturday. Coach Mowe will represent

Earlham. Plans for the annual spring track meets, next season's football schedule and the probability of dropping baseball are the 3 Important features ot the conference.

It Is expected by Mowe, that the same track rules that govern the Big Ten conference track meets will be

adopted by the i. u. a. u. mis wuuw mean that a relay and cross country race would be added to the annual spring I. C. A. 1. track meets. HALL WILL LEAD 1920 QUAKER 11 Orvall Hall was elected captain for ih. -iQn TTarihum football team, ac

cording to an announcement made at the close of chapel, Wednesday morning. The election was held by the let. ter men of this year's squad earllef i. .v.. muV hut wnn fcent secret until

J 1 " - ' w"Wednesday. Paul Gordon and Dewey

Bookout also received votes ior we captaincy. . Aithnup thin was the first time that

Hall played the gridiron game, he received honorable mention for his work at tackle from state critics. He was

placed on the all-state second team. Jtfnnv Rmthpfhnll Game

In Preble Thii Week

EATON, O., Dec. 10. Eaton Phi Delta Kappas and Farmersville Phi Deltas will stage a basketball game here Friday night at the armory. Eaton high school goes to Dayton Friday night to play Stivers high school. Three basketball games will be btaged Friday evening at the Lanier township high school building. The first team of Lanier high school will play the Dayton Elite team. 'Lanier Oirls will play Israel Girls. Lanier Seconds will play Israel township's first team of the high school. MCCARTHY SIGNED TO MANAGE LOUISVILLE COLONELS IN 1920 ! LOUISVILLE. Dec. 10. Joe McCarthy, veteran second baseman of the Louisville American Association Baseball Club, has been signed to manage the Colonels next year, according to a telegram from business manager William Neale, who is in New York. McCarthy is ranked as one of the best players in the assciation and has been with Louisville 5 years.

(y&ar A&e t--., voo gwin'

HE PLAYED PPOFESSOJAL QftSE&U. MOD THREATEteo

f-osMesn til

rIpV " 7N f fticj15 t soo cAvrr ooesTiouHis"

- ME HTS BASaBALk CARECA. IN 1HC

Days wwh pvayeb "ViMCC 8KAQS&.

UM ALL HIS TvevJtY-uuaE

fEQS OP SERVICE.. HE HA NEVER BEE CHOSEM TO OFFICIATE IKi a. va0i5'S

' BOS " "-5 PIFTY-SEVEU YEARS OUD UJfcRS A iiG AKJD GETS AWAY

uMTW i"T Oi THE fICiP

By N. E. BROWN. If you're lookln' for a fella with large gobs of nerve and grit. Who can swallow trouble wholesale and then ask for more of It, Who can snicker as the rabble seeks to tear him limb from limb, Who can gamble with death daily and keep up hla pep and vim; if you're lookln' for the fella who will leave bis Deaceful bis

For a Quarter of a cent ry at the

toughest Job there Is. GET BOB EMSLIE. He's the, bird all riant. He has

been a National league umpire twentynine years, and expects to umpire next year. i

That's enough to recommend him

for any plain or fancy tough job In

tne world, bar none.

When ball players and fans started

crying for Emslie's blood the present

day fans were crying for their bottles

milk, not pop. And he went into

the job with his eyes open, too, for he had played professional baseball and had threatened umpires himself for eight years before he tired of life and signed up as an arbitrator.-

"Old Bob. as most fans and play-

era in their sane moods call him.

can't be given the title of a star umpire. In all his twenty-nine years of service with the National circuit he never has been chosen to officiate in a world's series, the only time ot the year at which the box scores call the umpires "Mr. So-and-so." As a

result of this Bob has missed the

pleasure of, being called "robber," "thief," "blind" and a few other

names by a combined chorus of both

leagues.

But the veteran cent has been call

ing balls and strikes and decisions at

the plate with an eye keen enough to please the president ot the league and the board ot directors. Was Born In Canada Just what drew Emslie into baseball and umpiring isn't known. He was born in Guelph, Canada, June 21, 1861. Early in life, as they say In the biographies, he moved to St Thomas, Ontario, which "later gave Jack Graney and several other stars to baseball. Emslie got the bug to become-a pitcher and by the time 1878 rolled around he had gained a name on the

stubble fields of Canada. Harriston, Ont., players that year signed Bob! to pitch for them and got him a job in the town as an added inducement. ;

Emslie got a dollar or two for pitching. He went back to his birthplace to pitch for a team there in 18S0. Two years later he came into the States to pitch for the Merritt club ot Camden, N. J., In the Interstate league. And that change marked Emslie's real introduction to professional baseball. In the middle ot the season of 1883 the Baltimore club of the Ameri

can Association grabbed him off and 1

be started out on bis major league career like a meteor. He won seventeen of his first twenty-one games. He copped fifty-one games that year and lost only eighteen. He held the opposition to a few scattered hits in

practically every contest. Critics

predicted a wonderful career for Bob,

but two seasons later his arm weak

ened under the strain of curving the

Daii ana he Quit the big show as

player with the Philadelphia club in

1885.

Bob tried to come back with the

Toronto International league club and then with; a southern team, but failed. A couple of seasons later found him

umpiring in the International league. He worked in the A. A. the next year and in 1891 started officiating in the Western league. He did such good work the old National league grabbed him and there be has stuck ever since.

He wears a wig and gets away

with it on the field. Which met alone

shows that the ball players can't get his nanny.

Cant Kid His Age He's fifty-seven years old and looks

it But the players can't kid him about going to the old man's home.

Hell .send & lot more stars to the

bench before he's sent to the bench himself.

He has lived through the umpiring days when such gentle little characters as the raw meat eater, John McGraw, Pat Tebeau and others of their type were ready to lay down their gloves and fight at less than a miscalled strike. This gives you the dope on his courage.

He hasn't had a distinctive "Strike

Tuh." like the late Silk O'Laughlin's

to help draw attention. He never has

done a hundred yards around the sacks with Ty Cobb, as does ' OUie

ChiO. He has figured very little in the news columns, excepting at the bottom ot - the National league box scores. And there youll find his name for twenty-nine seasons- dsy in and day out and sometimes twice a day. hnaml79i wit

A boy's hair grows at half the rate of a girl's

Fcr Liver and Bowcb

Dr. Carter'. K. & B. Tea

A ' Mild, Gentle Vegetable Laxative

and Healthful Drink

Ton can " keep the whole family In

good health if you will brew a cup of

vegetable tea every night and have them drink it Just before going to bed. For very little money you can get a package of Dr. Carter's K. B. Tea, and after you and the dear ones have

used It, for a week you'll say it's the finest, . gentlest and most complete

tonic laxative you ever ran across.

For stomach, liver and bowels and to purify the blood, nothing is more reliable. . Give it to the little ones

when they get feverish and can't eat

They like it and It does them lots of

good. Adv.

BURNS SCALDS Bathe with Brazilian Balm or half Balm and half wanr water. Keep this up for 20 minutes or so, till the smarting is relieved. It will thee heal quickly. Worth its weight in gold for this.

DOES YOUR BACK ACHE?

. It's usually a sign of sick kidneys, especially it the kidney action is tlisordered. passages scanty or too, frequent. Don't, wait for more serious troubles. Begin using Doan's Kidney

Pills. Read this Richmond testimony.

i

Henry Brokamp, machinist, 0 Eherman street, says: "I have been using Doan's Kidney Pills off and on for several years Just as I would seed them and they have done me more good than all the other remedies put together. I used to be troubled a lot with my kidneys, but now it is only seldom that they bother me. Sometimes my back would get so weak and ache through the small of It that It put my kidneys out of order and the secretions would pass too frequently. Each time I have been troubled this way, I have bought a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at Luken & Co.'s Drug Store, and they have never failed to relieve me. I most gladly recommend Doan'e to others." Price 60c, at all dealers. - Don't cimply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Brokamp had. Foster-Milburn Co.,

FOR THE BLOOD

At All Drug Stores

EXPERT RADIATOR REPAIRING Get your radiator ready for winter. We repair or rebuild any'radiator.

Richmond Battery & Radiator Co.

Cor. Twelfth and Main

Phone 1365

All Ton Need to Pay for Dry Cleaning and Pressing Men's Suits

We, the French Benzole Cteanins; Co., have done more than any other Dry Qeanen to keep the prices down in Richmond. This price is the lowest, quality of work considered, in the city. You should not pay more, and it is false economy to pay less, considering this, the largest plant in Eastern Indiana. FRENCH BENZOLE CLEANING COMPANY Phone 2501. Our Auto Will Call. Office 1030 Main St. Work 1114 S.F St.

. mi m.

Ssssssssims

14 HENS LAY 13 EGGS A DAY. EASILY DONE

Mr. Mora's Hens Lay When Eggs are Scarce. Here's the Plan.

RHEUMATIC OR BACKACHY? GET TREX NOW

Twenty-Five Cents Worth Is Plenty; Try It! Take Harmless.wSooth. ing Trex for Jutt 3 Days. Then no more stinging rheumatic pains; good-bye chronic, miserable constipation; no more sore kidneys nor aching back, Trex is wonderful! Acts right off. Trex induces natural drainage ot the entire system; promptly opens your clogged-up kidneys, liver and bowels; cleans the stomach of fermenting, gassy foods and waste; . dissolves out irritating, rheumatic poisons; relieves feverishness, headaches, dizziness and constipation misery. Don't stay ."knocked out" any longer. Get this quick relief . today. 25c from H. B. Denton & Co., (Not Inc.) Mt. Carmel, 111., or at A. Q. liuken's. Adv.

"I had been getting 2 or 3 eggs a day from 15 hens. Then I commenced putting Don Sung in the feed, and am t getting 11 to 13 eggs a day, with one ,

hen setting. m)oa Sung is the best-

thing I ever found for making hens lay." E. L. Moore, 818 Clayborn St., Danville, Va. Mr. Moore used 50 cents worth of

Don Sung in January. Figure his profit J

with eggs selling at around 70 cents a dozen. And this is no better than Don Sung is doing for thousands of others. Accept our offer Just as Mr. Moore did: Give your hens Don Sung and watch results for one month. If you don't find that it pays for itself and pays you a food profit besides, simply tell us ana your money will be promptly refunded. Don Sung (Chinese for egg-laying) works directly on the egg-laying organs, and is also a splendid tonic. It is easily given in the feed, improves

the hen's health, makes her stronger

and more active in any weather, and starts her laying. Try Don Sung for 30 days and if it

doesn't get you the eggs, no matter how cold or wet the weather, your

money will be refunded by return mail

Get Don Sung from your druggist or

poultry remedy dealer or send 50 cents

for a package by mail prepaid. BurrellDugger Co., 168 Columbia Bldg., In

dianapolis, Ind.

We Recommend

MM SUNG

For Making .

Hens Lay Fully Guaranteed OmerG-Whelan The Feed Man 81-33 So. 6th 8t Phone 1679 Rlchmond Ind.

Give "Him" Tie Just the sprt of Ties that men would pick for themselves. A wide range ot patterns and colors. , See our Black Knit Ties. These make excellent gifts. Priced $2.00 to $5.00 Other Ties in a' wide range ot colors at $1.00 to $4.00

Linen Handkerchiefs

Pure Linen Handkerchiefs. These are very scarce and our stock is limited. Priced each 50c to $1.50. Initial Handkerchiefs in Gift Boxes, at all prices. See our Xmas display of Silk Handkerchiefs.

Ghre "Him" Gloves. You may make your selection now, and If they do not fit we will exchange them after Christmas. Buy him "Dent's" Gloves. They are just what he wants, in Mocha and Cape; priced at

S2.50 to $6.00

Give "Him" Hose Men's Hose in Cotton, Lisle, Fibre Silk and All Silk. Hose for dress and every day wear, priced, the pair .........60c to $1.50 Some fancy Hose at .$1.25 and $1.50

The Most Complete Display of Men 9s High Class Silk, Shirts Ever Offered to Xmas Shoppers Mothes, wives, sisters Just ask him what he would really like to receive this Xmas Just mention Silk Shirts and he will surely say one of those wonderful shirts Lichtenfels now has on display. Truly we have a wonderful line of Silk Shirts they ? are unequalled by any of the big city store displays and our prices are much less too. Our Silk Shirts range in price from

$7.50 to $16.50 Other Shirts in Percale and Madras $100 to $54)0

J V V

Jfig lit Shirts and Pajamas Good, roomy Garments for night wear make a man sleep welL We offer for your approval the Famous Fruitless Brand Flannel ette Night Shirts and Pajamas, priced at $1.50 to $5.00

VftV

. 1.

V Give "Hini" a Cap

Our line of Caps Is now at Its- best and ha will surely appreciate a Cap as a Xmas Gift. We have "his" style and size at $1j0O to fSjQO

In the Westcott Hotel

Itichsesd's Fcrcssst Farcr:!:tTt