Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 261, 14 October 1915 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, OCT. 14, 1915
Sports and Athletics
HIGH TEAL! PLAY SURPRISES FANS IN FIRST TEST
. Tbe high school basketball team and Dutch Brunton's five lield a practice last erening In the x high school gym and although Brunton's team has had little practice it made a fair showing. - , v- ' -The game ended in a tie. At it was
a practice contest the score was nftU
played off. The high team showed up to aood advantage. The team worri
was a surprise. ' Brunton's team showed that nt needs practice and training as the team work was ragged. Scott, the former high school star, played a good game - at center as did Jones in one of tbe forward positions. V The teams line-up was as follows: , High School. Brunton's. " Porter. Miller . ........ .....R. Mayer Forward V Brown . . . . . . Jones ' Forward R. Parker. Dollins Scott " " : Center Pitts t Briinton J ', , "Guard;.";''. " ' Jessup, Meranda ... Roach Guard. :- ' . -
CAMBRIDGE LOADS FOR COMING GAME
Cambridge City is loading up for the game at Athletic park next Sunday with the hope of winning and they evidently have the assistance and cooperation of all the managers in the county. Richmond has not yet lost a game In the county championship series and a victory for the Cambridge City men would mean a lot to them for .they are now in second place. Hunt of Hagerstown and Conner from the same burg who played here two weeks ago, are mentioned in the line-up with Steel of the New Castle Maxwells. Kerlin is going to pitch for the visitors but there is still some doubt who will twirl for the Richmond bunch.
BOSTON TM GITO
CREDIT FOEi UB
1 '
BY H. H. DIDOLEBOCK. ' It. is estimated that between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars changed
"hands as a result of the World's series
when Boston won the final game yesterday in the World's series. A large majority of the Richmond fans had the right dope on the series and picked Boston to win. ' There was little local money carried out of town. , Philadelphia- had few backers around town and it waa-a hard proposition to get takers for the fewsbets that were placed on the Quakers, although they were playing good baseball and going strong. Boston Has Luck. The general opinion is that Boston got all the best of the breaks in every one of the five games and had Philadelphia had a little bit of the luck the series would not yet be completed. Never before in the history of the game has there ever been four home runs batted out in a big league game but when such a thing happens in a World's series it is little short of marvelous. Boston must be given dueredi( for the work performed for they proved conclusively that they were the better team and got away with the hits when they were needed. In this respect the luck of the game figures largely and it is only fair to say that Boston was lucky, or maybe to coincide with the opinions of the majority, it might be stated that Boston's hitting was more timely. During the entire series it appeared as though the Phillies' hits came at just the wrong time. Home Runs Count. Take the games and look up the box scores and there is but one instance, when the Phillies' hits came at opportune moments and that was in the first game. Home runs have never before fig
ured so largely in a World's series as they have this year and that they should all come In the final game when it looked as though another game at least, would be needed to decide the result is the greatest surprise of all. v There has been much talk of the sLort right field at Philadelphia but that short field is not nearly so short as most people think. The National league grounds are on a level with the street on three sides, along Fifteen street, Huntington street and Lehigh avenue, but on the Broad street side there is quite an elevation that sets the playing field in a hollow. Grounds Below Pavement. The grounds proper are at least fifteen feet below the pavement and above this there is a brick wall ten feet high surmounted by a wire screen of the same height. To make a home run a man has" to hit the ball almost, if not as far as on any grounds in the league, and that is what makes the hitting in yesterday's game so remarkable. Four home runs in a World's series is a record on itself and one that will not be equalled for many years. ' Had Manager Moran seen fit to use Alexander yesterday instead of putting Rixey in at such a crucial period there might have been a different story to tell, but the game must stand as played and any excuses that might be made as to what might have been done count for nothing. Boston won and Philadelphia lost and every same was played on its merits and to the victor belongs the spoils. . . Hats off to Boston, everybody, and bury your hammers. Lets hope we'll all be here next year to watch another World's series and may the best team win.
FEDERALS LOSE THREE The I., HY-Q. made a clean sweep last night at the Y. M. C..A. alleys of the games with the Federals taking all three by good safe margins. Stauber and Stoddard were tied for the high score while Ellis walked away with the high average. The summary: I. H. C. .Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Miller i6 151 147 424 141 Melhuish . . v.'l 142 172 455 151 3Uis 'til 173 156 490 163 Dlngley i40 171 165 476 158 Haner 149 152 183 484 161 Totals .... 757 789 823 2329 . . . Federals. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av.
F. Stauber . . 140 174 146 450 150 Stoddard ... 140 123 174 447 149 Lain 90 101 100 291 97 Homes 109 129 138 376 125 R. Stauber . . 132 125 135 392 130 .Totals 611 652 693 1956 ... OPEN FOR GAMES Richmond has a fast basket ball squad in the new Olympic team that was known last season as the Central Christians and they are anxious to book games with the strongest organizations in this section of the country. Oren D. Henderson, 105 North Seventeenth street is the manager and he would like to hear from some of the teams in nearby towns.
BASEBALL FANS LAUD ELECTRIC SCORE BOARD
COUNTY STANDING.
Won Richmond 4 Cambride City 2 Greenssfcrk 1 Hagerstown 1 Williamsburg 0 New Paris . 0
Lost Pet. 0 1,000
.400 .333 .333 .000 .000
"Let's go down to the ball game." "Whatdeye mean, the ball game?" "Why, down to Tbe Pall office; they have a score board that shows every play just as it occurs on the field, and you see the entire play. "Lead me to it." "Get away with . that stuff. The game today is being played in Philadelphia, and how could they get it here?" "There's a guy sits up in a chicken coop with a telephone thing on his bean and a talking machine in front of him and as each play is made, the gink at the other end of the line gives him the wise word and he touches a button and the gang on the street is wise. Do you get me?" "Aw, you're trying to string me, but I'll go down and take a chance, any way." ( Many See Board Work. The above was one conversation overheard in relation to the electric score board that The Palladium erected in front of its building on North Ninth street in order that its patrons might have the opportunity of watching the game as played on the field, and to say that the board was appreciated would hardly tell the story, for there was not a day that there
were not hundreds of fans watching the work of the Boston and Philadelphia teams on the fields in the two cities. Every play was closely followed by the fans and they never hesitated to tell the operator when he happened to make a slow play or neglected to have the man at bat. The fans followed the ball closely, and the different plays were . flashed so rapidly that it would appear to have been difficult to follow them, but it was easy for Richmond followers of the game. Men interested in baseball in all walks of life were noticed in tbe crowds that lined the street and sidewalk opposite The Palladium office, and they forgot the difference in their stations of life as the game went on, and greeted and cheered as brothers. Staid business men, bankers, mechanics and laborers were as one as the baseball enthusiasm, aroused by the results shown on the electric score board, and they slapped each other on the back and cheered in unison for both teams when some spectacular play was made. There was plenty of opportunity for cheers yesterday, for the home runs
that figured so largely la the result of the series made a spectacular display on the board as the light at each base was lighted. Men frpm practically every town in Wayne county made tripe to Richmond to watch the board work and to keep in touch with the results of the game, and The Palladium has been congratulated oh all aides for Its enterprise in bringing the world's series to Richmond.
SINGLE G. 17INS KENTUCKY RAGE SETTING RECORD
LEXINGTON, Ky Oct 14. Single G., owned by W. B. Barefoot of Cam
bridge City, Ind., one of the star pacers of the year, won the Cumberland Stake, the chief event of the Grand Circuit races here yesterday in straight heats and took a record in the first, going the mile in 2:02. The pace for the first heat was extremely fast, the quarter being reached - in :30, half In 1:00 and three-quarters in 1:30. In this heat Beth Clark was the leader, with Single G. well up at the three-quarter pole, but Gosnell brought tbe Anderson Wilkes-Little Gyp horse under the wire a winner by a length. Fay Richmond being second.
Queen Abbess landed second place in
each of the next two heats, taking second money in the event.
SANTA MARIAS WIN
Santa Marias took three straight from the Rose Buds last night at tbe City alleys, winning two of them by close scores. Quinlivan was the shining star of the' engagement with a high run of 203 while Broderick made the best average: The summary: . Santa Marias. Player 1st. 2d. - 3d. Total. Av. Ringhoff ... 164 137 180 481 160 Shofer 90 105 145 340 113 L. Pfeiffer .. 154 138 147 439 146 Zeyen ; 175 167 172 614 171 P. Mercurio. 177 130 131 438 146 Totals 760 677 775 2212 . . . Rose Buds. Player 1st. 2d. 3d. Total. Av. Broderick ... 171 174 154 499 166 Boyce 107 139 129 375 125 Quigleyv 112 110 122 344 114 Quinlivan ... 139 136 203 487 . 159 Blind 151 104 140 395 132 ...... , Totals .... 680 663 748 2091 ...
How They Stand
.BUSINESS MEN'S LEAGUE.
i
Pheggs . Colonials I. H. C. . Natcos .. Bankers Federals
Won .7' . 4 .. 6 .. 3 .. 3 r. 1
Lost Pet. 2 .778 2 .667 3 .667
3 .500
6 -.333 8 .111
MARRIED BY FOX
The marriage ceremony of Nathan Larrowe of Moore! and and Anna Lamar . of Hagerstown. was performed this morning by Judge Henry C. Fox in the library of the county clerk. Both the bride and the groom are , well known in Hagerstown. '
0 CgMpM
CITY LEAGUE.
Won Lost- Pet.
Vogue .u. ...... 7
Keystone 7 Lichtenfels .-. . . 4 Models. ,3
5 5 6:
.585 .585 .444 .333
FRUITS OP AUTUMN DECORATE CHURCH Autumnal decorations will feature the services of the First English Lutheran church on next Sunday. Members living in the rural communities will bring in fruits and flowers of tbe season and the church will be plentifully decorated. Rev. E. G. Howard, pastor, will deliver a Thanksgiving sermon, taking as his subject, "Some Conditions for Seed Sowing .for a . Productive Harvest. A special song service will be rendered in connection.
A seven-mile tunnel, has been bored through mountains near Honolulu to convey water to sugar-plantations.
7 0
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