Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 200, 18 August 1907 — Page 2
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J AGE TWO. THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 10O7.
SIPOIRTMJCG- MEWS
COLE'S DEBUT WAS A VICTORIOUS ONE CoiumDus, Ohio, Youngster Defeated Portland in Thirteen Innings.
GAME WAS HARD FOUGHT.
HICKS, THE NEW FIRST BASEMAN, BROKE UP THE SEANCE WITH A TIMELY HIT IN THE THIRTEENTH.
f. O. LEAGUE STANDINGS.' Won. Lost. Pet. Portland 12 7 .632 Richmond ...11 7 .611 Decatur . 9 9 .500 Kokomo 9 10 .474 Van Wert 8 11 .421 Bluffton 6 11 .353 Games Today. Portland at Richmond. , Bluffton at Kokomo. Van Wert at Decatur. (By Tort.) RICHMOND 6; PORTLANO 5. Arnet Cole, the Columbus, O., youngster, made his debut in professional base ball Saturday afternoon against the hard slugging Portland bunch, and he debuted some. All the cool-headed, blond-haired lad did was to spank the much touted Jays in a thirteen inning 6 to 5 game. It's no easy task for an amateur to pry into fast company when he has to use the lever on that Portland outfit but Cole did it, calmly and unconcernedly. Ten hits Cole yielded in the thirteen innings and in only one inning did he allow therh to bunch biffs on him. That inning was the fifth" when five hard singles were rapped out by the Jays for five runs. This Inning was the only o'ne where Cole's support wabbled. But for some slow second base play by Morris Portland would have been held down to two or
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THE COST 5c
three runs In thi3 Inning. Despite the
batting rally Cole never for a minute lost bis head or his confidence. Started With the Pistol. In the kickoff Richmond started with the pistol. Rlter drew a base. Wiltermood breezed then Weaver met one of Mr. Wagner's bender's on the pazoozle for a clean three base hit, which he was able to stretch into a home run by John Bambraugh's muff at third of his little brother's heave from right field. In the fourth our demons again lacerated Mr. Wag
ner's delivery. Jessup drew a ba.se on
Parker's error, then Hicks singled. Minzler cleared the bags with a
double, took third on Fisher's out at
first and counted under Cole s out at first. Ritter singled then Wiltermood
singled but the Rabbit died on a close decision at second, ending the Inning.
Bunched Therr Hits. Six innings the Jays strained and
lurched at Cole's offerings. In the seventh they rudely wiped out our respectable lead by bombarding Cole tnr ftv. hits, which tied the score.
After this mishap both teams went
five runless and breathless innings in th first of the thirteenth Portland
got a man on base and he was only
nrovontfid from scoring by a remarK-
able hair raising catch of Ritter'3 in
short left field. The littie fellow nicked it off his shoe tops. trlppe3
and rolled fully five yards, then came
up with the ball in his fins. In the
last half of the thirteenth Mr. Hicks
broke up the seance with his third hit of the game. Morris drew transportation to first. Jessup sacrificed him to Becond and big Mr. Hicks poled out a long single to left and Morris sprint
ed home with the winning run. Wildeyed bugs whooped and howled their joy as they filed out of the lot. It was a pretty finish to the most exciting and hard fought gajne seen here this season. The score:
SIX IIIHIIIGS PLAYED IN MOLDERS' CONTEST Rain Interfered With the Score Tied.
WORK OF PITCHERS FINE.
On account of the rain, perhaps one of the most exciting and fast games which the Hoosier Molders have been concerned in since their organization was called off in the sixth Inning by the umpire, with the score standing 1 to 1. The work of the two pitchers was of the finest and their support was excellent throughout the game. Bertrand, as usual, was In the best of form and his curves cut the plate with
a nicety which was almost equal to the work of a league pitcher. Hannon, the little Fairview pitcher, who was In the box for the Gaar Molders pitched a good game all the way through, and probably if the game had been continued, would have shown Bertrand and his following some new stunts.
SEMI-FINALS PLAYED IN GOLF CONTESTS i Well Played Matches at the Country Club.
FINALS NEXT WEDNESDAY.
Well played matches marked the semi-finals of the club championship golf series played on the Country club links Saturday afternoon. The courses were in excellent condition and the participants played with a zest. In the club championship rounds. Dr. C. S. Bond defeated his son, George Bond 3 up and 2 to play, while Will Dill defeated J. F. Thompson 7 up and 6 to play. In the consolation rounds Geo. Seldel defeated F. L. Torrence 5 up and 4 to play. The finals will be played in both series next Wednesday afternoon. Bond meeting Dill and Seidel meeting Poundstone.
BASEBALL GOSSIP. (By Tort.;
THE BASEBALL RESULTS
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RICHMOND. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Ritter. If 4 1 1 5 0 0 Wiltermood, rf 5 0 1 3 0 0 Weaver, cf . . ..6 1 1 4 0 0 Morris, ss 5 1 1 6 1 1 Jessup, c 5 1 0 8 2 0 Hicks, lb 6 1 3 9 0 0 Minzler, 2b .. .2 1 1 2 4 0 Fisher, 3b.. ..5 C 1 2 1 0 Cole, p 5 0 0 0 3 1 Totals .. ..43 6 9 39 11 2 PORTLAND. AB. R. ir7"o A?" E. Parker. 2b.. ..6 1 2 6 2 1 J. B'braugh, 3b 6 0 0 2 2 1 Grey, If 5 0 2 4 0 0 Stewart, 8S.. ..5 0 0 3 4 1 Durham, cf. ..4 1 0 2 0 0 Jo. B'baugh' rf f 1 1.1 1 0 Carmony, lb ..6 1 2 12 0 1 Hardin, c 6 0 1 6 0 0 Wagner, p. ...5 1 2 0 5 0 Totals .. ..49 5 10 36 14 4
Wiltermood out, bunting at third strike. One out when winning run was made. R. H. E. R'mond 200300000000 16 P'land ..0 00000500000 0 5 Earned runs Portland 3, Richmond 1. Left on bases Richmond 8, Portland 8. Two base hits Minzler, Parker. Three base hits Weaver, Grey. Sacrifice hits Wiltermood, Jessup 2, Minzler 2, Fisher, Stewart. Stolen bases Jo. Brambaugh, Carmony, Jessup. Struckout Cole 7, Wagner 6. Bases on balls Cole 3, Wagner 4. Time 2 hours. Umpires Quiesser and Thompson. Attendance 550.. -
which advantage she held until the end of the game. Coriden, Kokomo's new short stop, put up a phenomenal game. Boyd, center fielder for the visitors, made a sensational catch, connecting with an almost impossible ball while on the dead run. Score: Kokomo.. 01000000 01 4 3 Bluffton.. 10000010 02 8 4 Batteries Prater and Raines; Carmichael and Spicer. Umpire Turner. Attendance 300.
Van Wert 4; Decatur 1. Decatur, Ind., Aug. 17 In a hard fought eleven-Inning contest, Decatur dropped a game to Van Wer,t this afternoon. Both teams scored early in the contest and in the eleventh the Buckeyes took the contest by hammering In three runs. PITCHER HUNT MAKES A REMARKABLE RECORD Allows Only Two Hits in Twenty-Eight Innings.
EIGHT HITS IN SIX GAMES.
FATAL SEVENTH AGAIN. Kokomo Lost to Bluffton by a Score Of 2 to 1. Kokomo, Ind., Rug. 17 At Athletic park this afternoon Bluffton won from Kokomo by a score of 2 to 1. The fatal seventh inning played havoc with Kokomo once again. Shinn, fielder, missed a fly and a wild throw to Raines, catcher, gave Bluffton a run
CLIP THE BALLOT. Clip the ballot below, fill it in properly and send it to the Palladium and Sun-Telegram office. The contest will run until September 14, 1907.
This Ballot Not Good After 5 P. M., August 26 PALLADIUM and SUN-TELEGRAM Pony and Cart Voting Contest (ONE VOTE COUPON)
This Ballot ts cast lor.
Carrier boys are net permitted to receive ballots from the patrons. Fill In the ballot, mall or bring It to the Palladium and Sun-Telegram office, before the expiration ot the bove date, otherwise it cannot be considered. A new ballot will appear- dally.
Portland, Ind., Aug. 17 Lewis Hunt, manager and pitcher of the Portland team of the Indiana-Ohio League, has established a record which is not equaled in the new league, and probably not anywhere in the country. With the Bluffton game on Thursday, which he pitched . with but two hits, he has twirled twenty-eight straight innings with but that number of hits off his delivery. - Previous to Thursday he had a record of nineteen straight innings without a hit. In a total of fiftyfour straight Innings he has allowed but eight hits. Hunt Is in phenomenal form, and his delivery is the fear of nearly every batter in the IndianaOhio League. The Portland team, as a whole, has been making a great record during the week. Winning three straight games from Bluffton on her own grounds, following two of the series of three here, .the team has charged to it but two errors. But one run was made off the Portland pitchers in the twentyseven innings, two of the games being shutouts. While Portland was thus discouraging the Bluffton men, they placed six runs to their own credit.
NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDI Won. Lost Chicago 79 29 Pittsburg 62 41 New York 61 42 Philadelphia 66 46 Brooklyn 50 59 Cincinnati 47 61 Boston . ..38 67 St. Louis 32 80
NO. Pet .731 .602 .592 . .549 .459 ' .435 .362 .286
AT NEW YORK. Chioago 3 8 3 New York 2 7 1 Brown and Kling; Matthewson and Bresnahan. AT BOSTON. Pittsburg 5 8 1 Boston 1 7 4 Liefield and Phelps; Dorner and Brown. AT PHILADELPHIA. First game. St. Louis 0 10 1 Philadelphia 5 12 0 Second game. St. Louis 1 5 6 Philadelphia 6 10 0 Fromm and Marshall; Sparks and Jacklitsch. AT BROOKLYN. First game. " Cincinnati 3 4 0 Brooklyn ...... ..4 11 4 Weimer and McLean; Mclntyre and Berger. Second game. Cincinnati 1 B 6 Brooklyn 3 7 1 Coakley and McLean; Rucker and Ritter. AMERICAN ASSN. STANDING.
Poor Bull Durham certainly pried open a crate of grape fruit when he landed In this burg. The past two games he has been at bat nine times and has been whiffed six times. Cole breezed him thrice Saturday and the sun gods howled in their glee. Bull has yet to make his first hit in the present series. He made a nice onehanded catch Saturday.
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Chautauqua Campers CHAUTAUQUA CAMPERS ARE URGED TO MAKE THEIR SELECTIONS OF SITES. THE TENTS ARE ALL HERE, AND PERSONS CONTEMPLATING A STAY IN GLEN MILLER PARK SHOULD MAKE THEIR SELECTIONS MONDAY OR TUESDAY WITHOUT FAIL. SEE W. S. HISER, SECRETARY, MASONIC TEMPLE. PHONE 2000.
Won Lost Pet Toledo 70 47 .598 Columbus 66 49 .574 Minneapolis 64 56 .533 Louisville ".2 o .523 Kansas City 56 r.l .479 Milwaukee 53 64 .453 Indianapolis... .. ..56 66 .459 St. Paul.. 43 73 .381
AT MILWAUKEE. Indianapolis 2; Milwaukee 1, (15 innings.) AT ST. PAUL. Columbus ..10 18 4 St. Paul 7 S 1 AT MINNEAPOLIS.
Toledo.. 3 11 3 Minneapolis 4 9 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDING. Won Lost Pet Philadelphia 62 41 .602 Chicago 64 45 .587 Detroit ..59 42 .584 Cleveland.. .. . ..61 46 .570 New York 50 54 .480 St Louis 45 57 .441 Boston 44 60 .423 Washington 30 69 .303
AT CHICAGO. Washington 2 11 0 Chicago 0 4 1 Smith and Black; Patterson and Hart. AT DETROIT. New York 511 0 Detroit 3 9 3 Chesbro and Thomas; Killen and Schmidt AT CLEVELAND. Philadelphia 0 5 0 Cleveland 6 9 2 Plank and Powers; Rhodes and Clark. AT ST. LOUIS. Boston ..1 6 2 St Louis 3 3 0 Pruitt and Shaw; Powell and Spencer.
The Van Wert Bulletin hands out the following hot one concerning the players on that team: The Van Wert baseball team, upon which local business men and patrons of the game have so far Jhis season expended upwards of four thousand dollars in ready cash and much valuable time, demonstrated yesterday afternoon, that its members, at least a part of them, do not possess as great capacity for brainy playing as they have for tickling the palate with the fluid that is sold where the lights are red. The play of the team in the first game of .the series with Kokomo was, as the result of dissipation, the most
weird contest ever witnessed on the local diamond, so rank in fact that it made "the robbed by the umpire" pale into insignificance. The management of the team has taken decisive action in the matter and will not only release the chief offenders against the club rules, but also another player whose work has not been up to the standard established by him before becoming a member of the team. To that end, Smith, of Leipsic, an infielder and pitcher, and McAllister, of Mt. Stening, an outfielder, have been signed and lines are out for a player who can be used behind the bat. All who have so liberally patronized the game can rest assured that the present reorganization of t:ie team means that hone but good baseball, the kind of a game that results from sincere endeavor will be hereafter tolerated at the Washington street diamond. In other words the officers and management proposes to give the public a run for its money. The new players will arrive here in time for the game tomorrow afternoon. Harry Hay was released by Manager France of Van Wert, but later reinstated after he had signified his willingness to abide by the club rules and, also, some special rules adopted especially for his benefit. Hay is a magnificent pitcher when he confines his efforts strictly to pitching and there is no reason why he shouldn't make good here. Portland goes up against the loeak again this afternoon. Both teams have won a game In the present series and the rubber promises to be a bitterly fought one. The biggest crowd of tinseason will probably be on hand tc see the two leaders fight it out. Hunt said to be the best pitcher in the league, will probably work for Portland. Manager Jessup will pick from Horn, Hunter and Conner to do the slinging for the locals. May heaven spare us from another brace of umpires like Thompson and Quiesser. We thought Thompson had reached the limit of putridness Friday but in justice to him we must state that he excelled himself Saturday. Quiesser handed us some hot ones on base decisions but he Is a Hank O'Day in comparison to Thompson. It looked like Manager Jessup was to have the can attached to him at one stage of the game. He became peeved at limps Thompson and to express his feelings yanVed the mask
off the judge of play. All Tommy did was to chide Jessup for his rudeness, then call the next strike pitched a ball. Rabbit Ritter distinguished himself
on Pike's Peak. In the tenth Durham smashed out a low liner which looked good for a double. Ritter protruded his anatomy under the sphere, dipped the dip and came up with what he went after. In the thirteenth he pulled off another tumbling exhibition by catching a Texas leaguer just back of the Infield. He had to dive for the pill but he nailed It Fisher and Morris were not to be outdone in the spectacular features of the game. Morris by a hard sprint scooped in a line drive which brought the bugs to their feet and Fisher got in front of a grounder which nearly took him off his pins. At the bat big Hicks again had the limelight, smashing out three clean singles out of six times up. Another one of those apoplexy games, such as Vere pulled off Friday and Saturday and it is us poor bugs to the bolt and nut works. You never can tell when you have that Portland outfit down and out They are in the game all the time. From the top of the old town pump it looks like Portland and Richmond to fight it out for the flag. Kokomo looks good for third with Decatur a close fourth. Bluffton and Van Wert, unless they strengthen considerably, must mix it up for the cellar championship. Speaking of the game Fleming twirled at Decatur last Thursday the Decatur Democrat says: The game as pitched by Fleming was the best exhibition that has been seen on the grounds this season, and although he belongs to the enemy, we are bound, is clean sportsmen, to take off our hats and give him the credit deserved. The Quakers again put up an errorless game, which was the second of the series, and with such clean ball are a hard aggregation to beat
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creeching Eagle Days
August 19 to 24 (inclusive) Don't forget Thursday. Aug. 22. Why? That's EAGLE'S GALA DAY. Brass Bands will meet all trains.
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