Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 165, 29 May 1916 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAU. MONDAY, MAY 29, 1916

PAGE FIVE Lead in

Squad

A

I

Flak Race

STARR PLAYERS JUMP TO LED IN CLOSE GAME

8. A. I STANDING. W. Lb Pet Starr .... 3 0 1,000 J. Fry 2 1 .667 Natco .... 2 1 .667 Pennsy 2 1 .667 X y. C X 2 333 A. S M. 1 2 .333 Westcott 1. 2 .333 d Hill 0 3 .000 The Fourth Round. Natco vb J-Fry. Pennsy vs Ad HilL A. S. M. vi Westcott ' Starr vs. I. G. C. Close and speedy as well as onesided and erratic games featured the third round of S. A. L.: in which the Starr Pianos, by virtue of their Seeder achievement hold the honor of pace makers at the finish of the third lap. The Seeders-Starr clash. down at NatCo, was a lulu; the Westcott-Johnson .Fry affair was a hall game, but the remaining contests names of the participants not mentioned were Just exhibitions' in which a baseball diamond baseball bats and other paraphernal! figured promiscuously. The Starrs, who apparently are the real surprise of the S. A. U, played clever ball and though the opposition did figure in more or less hard luck, earned the right to the Circuit pedestal for the week at least It was the third consecutive for the Mayer clan. Stage Pitchers Duel. Out at Ratliff park the Westcott Motors and the Johnson-Fry teams staged a neat argument in which Ed Fry's hopefuls were obliged to take a negative side of the question. It was a pitchers battle with Elstron having the shade of Mag Barnard, heretofore conceded the "find" of the '16 circuit. The Pennsy-Glover and MntrrvAH Hill affairs deserve mention. As track aiaieies, me Natcos and Ponntv nar. tlcipants showed unusual powers . of endurance both In speed and time iriais. Anyway, it was too ho for cn baseball, and the rival factions of the aioremenuoned clubs were content to quit early and complete their arguments under the showers down in the subway of the "Y." CITY LEAGUE WILL USE NATCO GROUND As a result of a break with the Richmond club, directors of the City League have decided to stage their games at the Natco park and the work of erecting bleachers and conditioning the south side diamond will be started at once. The first game will be played either this or the following Sunday at the Natco park. Team managers, officers and directors of the C.-L. will meet Friday night of this week when a schedule will be drafted and other arrangements completed against the opening of the season. ' Club managers and directors will be notified as to the time and place of Friday night's meeting. WEATHER PREVENTS TEN COUNTY GAMES i The "kayo" administered to the baseball fraternity of Richmond and Wayne county yesterday afternoon, was complete and final In every sense of the word. Ten games were billed for Richmond and vicinity and ten were canceled. The heavy rains of Saturday night and Sunday morning placed diamonds in condition for aquatic sports, but baseball of course, was out of the question. A majority of the games booked for yesterday will be played off Tuesday afternoon, Memorial Day, that is, the weather man permitting. Yesterday's Scores In Major Leagues 1 At Cincinnati R. H.E. Chicago 010 000 0102 10 2 Cincinnati 100 000 002 3 7 0 Batteries Seaton and Fischer; Schultz, Mosely and Wingo. First Game. At St. Louis R. H. E. Pittsburg . 100 001 011 1 11 1 6t. Louis 100 000 000 0 4 3 Batteries F. Miller, Cooper and Wilson; Doak and Snyder. Second Game. At St. Louis R. H. E. Pittsburg '. 001 30 i 7 0 St. Louis 000 101 4 1 Batteries Mamaux and Gibson; Meadows, Steele and Snyder. AMERICAN. At Detroit R. H. E. St. Louis 010 100 0103 9 3 Detroit . .. . 212 000 01 6 10 0 Batteries Groom, Park and Hart ley; Dauss and Stan age. First Game. At Chicago R. H. E Cleveland 000 000 000 0 4 0 Chicago 101 000 00 2 6 0 Batteries Coumbe and O'Neil; Scott and Shalk. Second Game. At Chicago R. H. E. Cleveland ..... 000 000 0000 7 4 Chicago 000 100 10 2 6 1 Batteries Morton, Covelskie and O'Neil;; Faber and Schalk. EARLHAM MAY ENTER It is probable that a representative Earlham tennis team will participate in the state meet to be stageV under the auspices of Wabash college at Crawfordsvllle, next Saturday. Teams from practically every college and university in Indiana will be represented.

New Garfield Marks Set by Elmer Clapp

WHITES, 262; PURPLES, 195. Individual Points. ' Elmer Clapp (P) 28 Glenn Carver (W) 27 Kenneth Dollins (P) 21 Dale Harklns ( W) 21 Don Byrket (P) 19Harry Thomas (W) ............ 17 Records Broken. Senior 220 dash Carver, 27 2-5 sec. Junior 50 dash Clapp, 6 3-5 seconds. Copping firsts in a majority of events and placing consistently in every event listed, the White color faction defeated the Purples in the annual track and field meet of Garfield Junior high school Saturday afternoon. The meet waB . staged at the Playground and approximately 500 athletes and . student and patron rooters par ticipated. Individual stars of the meet were Elmer Clapp, Junior Purple, and Glenn Carver, Senior White. Clapp took initial honor in matter of individual points by tally. Dollins, Harkins, Byrkett and Thomas, were other con sistent point winners. In the events for girls the Purples easily won first place in the three events the rope dash, the hoop throw and playground ball contest The summaries: Senior Events. Throwing base ball Brykett I Smith, Sparks. Distance, 244 feet 4 inches. , 50 yard dash Carver, Hosack, Stevens. Time, 6 2-5 seconds. Standing broad jumpCarver, Byrkett, Hosack. Distance, 8 feet 2 In. 100 yard dash Carver, Hosack, Beverly. Time, 11 4-5 seconds. Running broad jump Hosack, Carver,Beverly. Distance, 14 feet 6 in. 220 yoard dash Carver, Byrkett. Stevens. Time, 27-25 seconds. Sack race Mott, Byrkett, Wessell. Time 19 2-5 seconds. 120 yard hurdles Dollins, Mott, Ferguson. Time, 21 seconds. Sot put Dollins, Stevens. Distance, 24 feet 5 Inches. Quarter mile Crowe, Benn, Ferguson. Time, 71 4-5 seconds. Running high jump Carver, Hosack, Voss, Beverly, McMahan. Height 4 feet 4 inches. Pole vault Wessell, Dollins, Mott, L. Smith. Height, 6 feet 3 inches. 3-8 mile run Benn, McMahan, Crowe. Time, 2 minutes 55 seconds. Half mile relay Whites, first; time, 2 minutes 3-5 seconds. Junior Events. Throwing base ball Runnels, Ashenfelter, Mutchner. Distance, 226 feet 5 inches. 50 yard dash Clapp, Harkins, Thomas. Time 6 3-5 seconds. PENNSY TEAM SETS GLOVERS BACK BY 22-6 Pennsy, 22; I. G. C, 6. It was bingllng just plain bingling of the single, double, triple and even four-ply variety that gave Omer Todd's Pennsyites the overwhelming decision over the Lawson Glovers in the S. A. L. number staged at the Beallview park. The Panhandlers treated Allstadt's slants in a most vehement manner, the grand total at the end of seven innings of hostility reading twenty-one safe ties good for about 30 bases. Lucas, Roop and even Oats Cracraft took a hand at serving for the Toddites. The clouting feature was the home run drive of Craycraft who shoved the ball out of the Beallview lot The score: Pennsy. v A.B. R. H. 3 2 4 3 3 0 2 2 2 P.O. 1 3 1 12 2 1 1 0 0 A. 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 Drischell, 2b . . 4 Smith, lb 4 . 3 2 4 3 3 1 3 2 1 Lucas, p 4 uraycrart, c Roop, ss .. . . Roser, If Werner, 3b . Lohse, cf ... Snavely, rf . Total .. 5 5 4 4 5 5 .40 22 I. G. C. A.B. R. 21 21 H. 2 2 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 1 P.O. A.. E. Iserman, ss Kenney, 3b . Crouch, 2b . , Niebuhr, lb , 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 8 1 7 0 20 1 0 0 1 0 0. 1 0 1 4 0 Evers, rf 3 Pitcher, c .... 4 Henson, cf ... 3 Pool. If 4 Allstadt, p 2 Hawekotte, 3b. 2 Total Pennsy .. I. G. C. . ...32 6 10 21 7 2 4 4 0 6 7 0 122 11031006 Summary. ' . Two base hits Lucas, 3; Roop, 2. Three base hits Roop, Iserman, J Smith, Craycraft. Home run Craycraft, Pitcher. Hitts Off Roop, 2 In 2 innings; Craycraft 0 in 1 inning. Struck out By Allstadt, 7; by Lucas, 5; Roop, 4; Craycraftl. Bases on balls By Allstadt, 5; by Lucas, 1. Stolen baseB Werner, 2; Lohse, 2, Lucas, Roser, Craycraft, Snavely, Pool. Time of game 2:00. Umpire Williams. Scorer Connerton. PLAY GAME TUESDAY The MillerKemper vs. Centerville game scheduled for Centerville yesterday was cancelled because of weather conditions but, will be played off Tuesday afternoon. Memorial Day. Charles FeaseL manager of the M.-K. club, requests that his players board the 12:10 interurban for Centerville. Kansas is said to have fewer millionaires and paupers than any other state In the Union.

Standing board Jump Clapp, Runnels, Todd. Distance, 7 feet 5 inches. 100 yard dash Clapp. Harkins, Thomas. Time, 12 1-5 second. Running broad jump Harkins, Thomas, Holcomb. Distance, 13 feet, 5 inches. 220 yard dash Clapp, Ingalls, Runnels. Time, 29 2-5 seconds. Sack race Number 24, Nusbaum, Voss. .Time 20 4-5 seconds. 120 yard hurdles Thomas Nusbaum, Holcomb.' Time, 21 1-5 seconds. Shot put Clapp, Mutchner, Farwig. Distance, 24 feet 4 inches. Quarter Mile Harkins, Vore, Shumaker. Time, 70 1-5 seconds. Running high jump Holcomb.

Thomas, Dietrich, Clapp. Height 4 feet, 3 inches. Pole vault Thomas, Tauer, Todd. Height 7 feet 4 Inches. 3-8 mile run Vore, Brehm, Thornburgh. Time, 2 minutes 2 seconds. Half mile relay Purples, first Time 2 minutes, 13 seconds. PUCKETT SQUAD PILES UP RUNS ON WEEK'S NINE NATCO, 24; AD HILL, 2. According to Manager Phil Meek there was something wrong with the system of the Advance crowd in its fiasco with the Hi Puckett troupe of toolmakers out at Athletic park Saturday. They couldn't hit they couldn't field, they couldn't run the bases, but they could err. ,. And seven errors of commission does not represent the total of misdeeds recorded. Ray Brunton, on the hillock for the Ad-Hill, was swiped generously in every chapter. Kinsella, Dunham and Schuerman, on the other hand were effective. J. Logan and J. Holmes with three apiece, were the hitting kids of the large day for the Natcos. The score: AD HILL

E. 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 E. 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Total 36 24 14 18 9 1 By Innings Ad Hill 0 020 0 0 24 Natco 4 12 2 4 2 x 24 Sacrifice Hits J. Holmes, W. Holmes. Struck Out by Brunton, 5; Dunham, 4; Kinsella. Bases on Balls, by Brunton 3; by Kinsella. Stolen bases, a. xogan, a; J. Logan, 2; J. Holmes, naae, E-roecKer,, JBrunton. game 2:10. Umpire, Allison Duning. Time of Scorer, PLAY WILLIAMSBURG ON RICHMOND FIELD First round of the county baseball championship will be run off next Sunday afternoon when the Quakers meet the Williamsburg club at Athletic park. The Dayton-Richmond game, scheduled for yesterday, of course received the Kayo at the hands of old J. P. The Sunday following the Williamsburg game, the A. B. Cs. of Indianapolis, an old favorite here, will be the attraction at Athletic park. WABASH WILL CLASH WITH QUAKER NINE Wabask college baseball team, one of the strongest collegiate ' nines in the state, is scheduled to meet Earlham on Reid field Wednesday after noon. The Wabash eame is the hie game of the Quaker schedule. Butler at Richmond Saturday, completes the Earlham card, inasmuch as the Miami game listed for June .7, has been cancelled.

A.B. R. H. P.O. A. Shepman, If . . 3 0 0 00 Stevens, rf . . . 3 0 0 0 0 Brunton, p. ..3 0 11 3 Jones, w 2 0 1 2 0 Meeks, 3b 3 0 1 10 Hoover, lb ... 2 0 0 6 1 Spillman, cf . . 2 0 0 1 1 Miller, ss ..... 2 1 12 2 Winters, c 2 11 2 1 Total .. ..22 2 5 15 8 NATCO. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. H. Logan, ss . . 4 3 2 0 2 Haas, c 5 3 2 6 1 J. Logan, 3b .. 5 5 3 1 1 J. Holmes, If . . 4 3 3 0 0 Clapp, 2b 5 2 1 3 0 W. Holmes, cf 4 1 1 0 0 Erbecker, lb . . 4 2 1 8 0 Conner, rf 4 2 0 0 0 Kinsella, p . . o 3 0 o 2 Dunham, p .. 1 o 1 o 1 Shuerman, p . . 0 0 0 0 2

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NATIONAL LEAGUE.

ClubR. : - Won. Lost Pet Brooklyn ,19 . 11 s .633 New York 18 - 13 .581 Philadelphia .......... 19 14 .567 Boston 15 16 .484 Cincinnati ........... 18 21 .462 Chicago .............. 17 21 447 Pittsburg ; 16 20 .444 St Louis 16 22 .421

Yesterday's Results. Cincinnati, 3; Chicago, 2. . Pittsburg. 4; St Louis, 0. (First game) . Pittsburg, 4; St Louis, 1. (Second game.) Games Today. Cincinnati at Pittsburg. St Louis at Chicago. New York at Boston. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Clubs. Won. Lost Pet Washington 24 12 .667 Cleveland '. . . 23 14 .622 New York 19 13 .594 Boston 17 18 .46 Chicago 16 19 .457 Detroit 15 20 .429 Philadelphia ... ... 13 21 .382 St Louis 12 22 .353

Yesterday's Results. Chicago, 2; Cleveland, 0. (First game.) Chicago, 2; Cleveland, 0. (Second game.) Detroit 6; St Louis, 3. Games Today. St. Louis at Detroit. Philadelphia at Washington. Boston at New York. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs. Won. Lost Pet. Louisville 22 13 .629 Minneapolis is 12 .600 Indianapolis 18 12 .600 Columbus is 12 .571 Kansas City 16 17 .485 Toledo 14 i5 Ag3 St Paul li is .379 Milwaukee 10 26 .278 Yesterday's Results. Columbus, 4; Louisville, 1. Indianapolis, 4; Toledo, 2. St Paul, 4; Milwaukee, 2. Kansas City, 3; Minneapolis, 1. Games Today. Toledo at Columbus. Louisville at Indianapolis. Minneapolis at St Paul. GOLFERS HOLD MEET AT COUNTRY COURSE "Fore." Richmond golfers, semi-pro, amateur and novice, are invited to participate in the team matches to be staged on the Country club green Tuesday afternoon, Memorial Day, at 2 o'clock. Teams captained by Charles McGuire and J. Y. Poundstone will contest for supremacy. The teams will be chosen from the squad of prospectives present at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. PLAN TENNIS TOURNEY A city championship tennis tournament will be held at the playground courts some time after the close of the public schools. It was announced today. Representatives from every school, club or independent organization will be invited to participate. Entries from the Richmond Tennis association, the Lutheran Tennis asso ciation, Garfield and the high school j are already assured. The exact dates for the elimination matches will be set immediately after the close of school, June 2. RAISE PAINTING FUND Special collection will be taken at the Sunday school of the First Baptist church next Sunday for the purpose of creating a fund for the redecorating of the Sunday school rooms. It was decided at the Sunday school session yesterday to postpone chil dren's day until June 18. PURDUE WINS MEET. Earlham's track team was not entered in the Purdue state meet at Lafayette Saturday which Purdue exponents of the track and cinders copped honors from Notre Dame, 43 to 40. De Pauw, Wabash, Indiana and Franklin finished in the order named. Four state records were lowered, two of them by Meyers, the crack De Pauw distance runner. In the far north of the Russian empire lives a rare of people who do not know who the Russians are and who do not know there is a war. and Neuralgia in a few minutes. Thousands use it successfully every day for Cold in Chest Sore throat, Tonsilitis, Stiff Neck, Pleurisy, Bronchitis and deep seated Coughs. Over night .they all disappear. For Sprains,- Bruises, Sore Muscles, Lameness, Neuritis, and to reduce Swollen Joints- it's the quickest result-producing remedy o nearth, while for Sore, Burning, Aching Feet Bunions, Corns and Callouses it is the best sure, speedy remedy. Ask for BEGY'S MUSTARINE, in a big yellow box. for 25c. Get a box todayIt is worth its weight in gold kills pain and there Is blessed relief in every rub A&r.

Hampton's Big Clout Wins Fame in Muhcie

"The Quaker City Find,- or "How C Hampton Came to Lead the Muncie S. A. L." in three parts, are titles suggested for the part-Clarence "Jawn Hampton, all-around Richmond athlete, now located at Muncie, holds in league circles of the Muncie Saturday Afternoon League Hampton, it is to be remembered, caught for the 1915 Richmond city club, and is rated as one of the best back stop men In the state. A few weeks ago, while making a business trip out through McCullough park, Muncie, Hampton stumbled across an old Richmond friend, H. H. Pettijohn, former boys secretary of the Richmond "Y" and now holding a similar position with the Muncie association. "Petty was just about to lead his Y. M. C. A. club against another S. A. L. proposition. "Petty" Needed Catcher. But "Petty" lacked a catcher. The regular backstop had failed to show up and the Muncie "Y" team was in dire straits. It was about this time that Hampton put in appearance. "Hamp, I need a catcher," says Petty. "Can play for a couple of innings," says Hampton. Hampton played a couple of innings three to be exact and in that time the former Quaker had but one try at the opposing pitcher. A glance at the clouting averages of the Muncie S. A. L. shows Hamp leading with one hit and that hit a three base clout garnered on the first one served by the Muncie flinger. The regular "Y" catcher arrived as "Hamp" pulled up on third. ERRORS SPELL SEEDERS DOOM IN STARR DUEL Starr Piano, 8; A. S. Nl., 6. "Inopportune erring" paved the way for the Seeders downfall in the affair with the Starr Pianos at the Natco lot Four runs scored by the piano makers in the last two frames were the net result " of bingles, bones and boots. Up until those fatal sessions the Seeders apparently had the edge in the best game of the Saturday series of S. A. L. games. Johnny Taggart of the Seeders, usually so consistent was swiped rather heftily for a change, the Mayer hickory wielders getting by with eleven safe blows. Goslin, of the S-P craft, was backed by near perfect support. The score: STARR PIANO. A.B. R. H P.O. A. 2 0 2 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 E. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Knott, ss. ..... 5 2 2 1 Kaiser, cf 5 0 0 1 Reddinghaus, 3b 5 2 2 0 Miller, lb 5 0 0 12 W'tte, c 5 1 3 8 Meyer, 2b 5 0 0 2 Rohe, If 4 1 2 1 Lichtenf els, rf 2 0 0 0 Goslin, p 4 1 1 0 Stein, rf 2 1 1 l Total 42 8 11 26 A. S. M. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Hengstler, 2b.. 5 0 1 2 1 0 Bosworth, rf . . . 4 1 1 1 0 2 Knight, lb 4 2 1 15 3 0 L. Qiugley, 3b... 4 0 1 1 4 2 Klinger, cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 Shoemaker, c... 4 0 0 4 6 '1 Taggart, p..... 4 0 0 0 3 1 Total 35 6 10 27 18 7 By Innings Starr Piano 100 020 122 8 A. S. M 203 000 0106 Two base hits Diggs, 2. Sacrifice hits Miller, Bosworth, L. Quigley, Klinger. Struc!: out By Boslin. 9; by Taggart, 7. Stolen bases Witte 2, Goslin, Diggs, Klinger. Umpire Bisknell. Scorer McMinn. Shoemaker out, hit by batted ball. Erwin Baker, the American motorcyclist has covered 930 miles in twenty four hours in Melbourne. This is said to be a world's record. I r WET YOUR '.'WHISTI p today, tomorrow and every day, with "WHISTLE" A STRONG, WELL MADE Suit Case Traveling Bag is the kind you want when going traveling:. Don't take chances on cheaply made articles of Leather Goods. At Miner's you'll find just the sort of Leather goods that is made good and strong, and the kind that will give lasting service and at a small cost considering quality. 'BOLEEB'S 827 Main St. Phone 1811

J

Hampton has not joined the. "Y" team for lack of time, but Manager Shad Cunningham, of the Muncie city club, heard of his mighty deed and is out after a former Richmond backstop. ELSTRON WINS FROM BARNARD IN NEAT GAME

Mag Barnard, the J. F. dependable, met a Tartar, in Christy Elstron and his Westcott Motors in the Ratliff park section of the S. A. L. bill. Barnard, with a record of two out of two, was touched up for eleven bingles, good for the first game won by the Martin crowd -and eood for th first one ' lost for Ed Fry's hopes. Both Barnard and Elstron pitched good ball, but the support wasn't of the 18-karat variety. The Johnson-Frv bunch, especially, were wont to throw me Dan away at critical stages. The score: Westcotts. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E.

Junker, ss 4 3 3 4 2 1 Gordon, 2b ... 4 1 11 1 1 Hineline, rf . . . 5 2 2 0 0 0 Hawekotte, c. 4 2 2 15 0 1 Elstron, p 4 1 1 0 4 0 Fisher, cf 3 0 1 1 0 0 Colbert, 3b ... 3 0 0 1 0 1 Lamb, If 4 1 1 0 0 2 Abrams, lb .. 4 0 0 5 0 2 Totals 36 10 11 27 7 6 Johnson-Fry. Hawk, c ...... 5 - 0 2 4 6 0 Henneger, ss.. 4 0 0 2 0 0 Ruby, 3b 4 0 0 3 0 0 Barnard, p ... 4 1 1 0 0 0 Trakowski, cf. 4 0 0 0 0 2 Piatt rf 3 1 1 0 0 0 Coulter, lb ... 4 0 1 2 1 1 Hufford, If ... 4 4 0 0 1 0 0 Stein, 2b ..... 4 0 1 4 1 0 Totals 36 2 6 26 10 3

Gordon out, bunted third strike. Score by innings: Westcotts 401 030 020 10 Johnson-Fry 000 011 000 2 Two-Base Hits Junker, 2; Barnard. Three-Base Hitt Elstron, Coulter. Struck Out By Elstron, 15; By Barnard, 14. Bases on Balls By Barnard, 4. Stolen Bases Gordon, 2; Henneger, 3; Hawekotte, 2; Hawk, 2; Hineline, Fisher, Lamb. Time of Game 2:00. Umpires Meyers and Shaw. Scorer Harold Brown. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY

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MER HURLS AGAINST HUBS

HAGERSTOWN. Ind., May 29. A a special Memorial Day attraction here Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock a representative Richmond club, with Pete Minier, regular Quaker flinger In the box. will meet the Hagerstown Hubs at the Hagerstown lot With Geisler opposed to Minier the big game of the season Is anticipated. The Hagerstown-Williamsburg game scheduled for the latter place yesterday was cancelled because of wet grounds. The teams will meet later In the season. DUNING'S SPORTOSCOPE On to Indianapolis. Stars of the S. A. L. are the Starrs. (Old, but good.) Between the Speedway classic, the S. A. L, the Weather Man and the City League program, we'll just about have to pass up the Reds today. Your Right, Ally. "Game called for different reasons was the sixth inning decision of K. Allison in the Ad Hill-Natco 24-2 affair out at Athletic. Life's Little Liars. "G'wan I just wanted to give 'im a chance to steal second." And Clarence Hampton now leads the stickers of the Muncie S. A. L. Local Sports. Watching , the Indianapolis-bound Speedway parade. Indoor Sports. Consulting the weather chart for tomorrow. Alibis. The Seeders: "If 'e only hadn't, foozled that ball." Hats Off:. Warren. Three doubles and a single out of four, the recond of Pennsyite J. Warren Lucas in the Glover romp Saturday. At the same time Craycraft was sliding back with only a circuit hit, a double and a single, to his .credit in the same affair. The Odds. At 7:30 this a. m., the odds were on J. P. at about 4 to 1. And but few takers at that Optometrist Phone 2765. Tuesday. Wmrm Pocahontas Anthracite you money. BROS CO. National Bank