Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 183, 14 June 1917 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1917

PAGE FIVE

SPORTS

QUAKERS FORGED TO GO 11 FULL INNINGS TO WIN Fans Get Money's Worth at Ball Yard Yesterday Jake Wins His Game. CENTRAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. Grand Rapids .... 23 13 .639 Springfield 22 13 .629 Evansville 19 15 .559 f Muskegon ......19 16 .528 payton 16 19 .457 ?Fort Wayne 15 20 .429 South. Bend 15 21 .417 Richmond 10 . 21 .323 f 'Standing corrected according to announcement on protested game of 'June 2. Yesterday's Result. . Richmond, 4; Port Wayne, 3. Grand Rapids, 10; Springfield, 4. Evansville, 5; South Bend, 2. Dayton, 7; Muskegon, 4. Games Today and Tomerorw. Fort Wayne at Richmond (2). . Grand Rapids at Springfield. South Bend at Evansville. Muskegon at Dayton. Every person who witnessed yesterday's ball game at Exhibition park, between Richmond and Fort Wayne, the Quakers winning 4 to 3 in eleven innings, got full value for his money. Every brand of baseball known to the pastime was offeredfl ranging from the crudest kind of boneheaded plays to highly sensational exhibitions. The pitching was excellent, good, fair and rotton in turns, and the same goes for the fielding. Fickle fate, which has been frowning upon the Quakers of late, gave her favors to the tail-enders yesterday and well, the Richmond fans were wearing smiles again today. Fate Favored In Fifth. Fate's most gracious favor came to Richmond to the fifth. With two Quaker runners on second and third and two outs Hauser came to bat. With two strikes on him Hauser nibbled at one of Richardson's fast ones, sending a foul tip into Smith's big mit, supposedly for the third strike. "Ball three," roared Umpire Bush and the astonished fans yelled with joy. The next ball offered to Hauser suited his fancy and he slapped out a clean single, scoring Coveleskie and Crouch. Peterson started the game in the bos for the Chiefs with Young opposing him. Peterson was yanked because of his wildness shortly after the start of the third frame after he had issued his fifth pass. His place was taken by Richardson. Enter Jake! Young pitched brilliantly until the Seventh, being relieved by Fromholz In that round after he had yielded a hit and had passed two men. One run was scored by Fort Wayne after Big Jake went in, throught the medium ,of a sacrifice fly, but after that be breezed right along and received gilt-edged support. Incidcn tally it wag Jake who brought in the winning run in the eleventh. With one out in that round Jake singled, was sacrificed to second and scored when Shortstop Whltcraft mussed up Coveleskle's fast roller. One of the features of the game was Evers theft of home. At the opening of the fourth Evers walked and by fast sprinting went to third on Kelly's out to first after Rapp had popped out. While Richardson was taking a long windup Evers bolted for home and hooked safely over the plate in a cloud of dust. ' Errors permitted Fort Wayne to score two runs. In the Majors NATIONAL At Cincinnati R. H. E. Philadelphia ... 001 000 0203 6 0 Cincinnati 100 000 1002 8 5 Alexander and Killifer; Regan, Knetzer and Wingo. At Pittsburgh R. H. E.

At Pittsburgh .rktrf.. JKa.. " New York 310 100 1017 11 0 Pittsburgh 001 000 0203 13 3 Anderson and Rariden, Gibson; Grimes and Fischer. ..

AMERICAN At New York R. H. E. Chicago 002 000 10306 19 2 . New York .... 000 310 02017 14 2 Russel. Danforth, Wolfgang, Benz ' and Schalk, Jenkins; Cullop, Caldwell and Nunamaker. (First game.) At Washington R. H. E. Cleveland 120 002 0005 10 2 Washington ... 050 101 00 7 11 2 Coveleskie, Coumb, Gould, Klepfer and O'Neil, Billings; Gallia, Shaw and Henry. Second gme . R. H. E. Cleveland . . 000 100 000 001 8 1 Washington . 000 000 001 001 3 3 Lambeth and O'Neil; Shaw and Ain ' smith.

At Philadelphia R. H. E. j Detroit ..y 200 000 000-r2 8 4 Philadelphia . . . 002 000 ll 4 7 0 Dauss and Stanage; Noyes and Schang. (First game.) At Boston R. H. E. St. Louis 000 000 0000 . 3 2 Boston 010 000 01 2 3 1 Davenport, Hamilton and Severoid; Ruth and Thomas. Second game R. H. E. St. Louis 000 002 5007 11 0 .. Boston 200 000 0002 8 4 " Sothoron and Severoid; Mays, Bad- . er, Pennock and Thomas, Cady.

Representative rby's high heel ' bill which has been favorably reported by the license and miscellany commit- ' tee In the Illinois house of representatives would limit the height of heels to one and three-quarter inches.

EVANSVILLE MOGUL IS NEW PRESIDENT OF CENTRAL LEAGUE

Harry W. Stahlhefer of Evansville, has been elevated from the vice presidency to the presidency of the Central League. The action was taken yesterday at a special meeting in Indianapolis, called by former President F. E. W. Dickerson, who tendered his resignation so that he might become president of the Western League, succeeding F. C. Zehrung. In addition to becoming president of the Central League, Mr. Stahlhefer also will serve as secretary and treasurer. . J. Elmer Redelle of Springfield, O., has been made vice president of the league to fill the vacancy caused by Mr. Stablhefer's elevation. Mr. Stahlhefer actually will take over his new duties on June 19,. the day Mr. Dickerson leaves for ' Kansas City to assume control' of the Western League. In addition to accepting Mr. Dickerson's resignation with regret and electing the new officers, the club owners did nothing, other than to award to Fort Wayne the Fort Wayne-Muskegon game of June 3, protested by the Indiana team. Those who - attended the meeting were E. W. Dickerson, Harry W. Stahlhefer of Evansville, Ed Smith of South Bend, W. E. Essicvk of Grand Rapids, J. A. Smith of Muskegon, Clarence Jessup of Richmond, J. Elmer Redelle of Springteld and Samuel Karpf of Dayton. Harry Geisel of Indianapolis, Harry Dayton of Grand Rapids and Rufus Gilbert of Terre Haute, comprised the lobbyists during the brief session. LEAGUE STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Philadelphia 28 15 New York 28 16 Chicago 29 22 St. Louis 25 22 Cincinnati ....23 30 Brooklyn 17 23 Boston I6 - 23 Pittsburgh .-16 31 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Chicago . S3 "17 Boston SO 16 New York 26 20 Cleveland 26 26 Detroit 21 2 St. Louis 19 28 Washington 18 29 Philadelphia 16 28 American League. , . W. ... L. Indianapolis .i"37 : 19 - Columbus -31 ' 24 St Paul . .27 23 Pet. .651 .636 .569 .532 .434 .425 .410 .340 Pet. .660 .652 .565 .500 .457 .404 .383 .364 Pet. .661 .564 .540 .526 .451 .426 .415 .392 Louisville 30 Minneapolis 23 Kansas City 20 Toledo 22 Milwaukee 20 27 28 27 31 31 GAMES TODAY National League. Philadelphia at Cincinnati. Boston at Chicago. New York at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at St. Louis. American League. Cleveland at Washington. Detroit at Philadelphia. Chicago at New York. St. Louis at Boston. American Association. Louisville at Columbus. Indianapolis at Toledo. Minneapolis at Milwaukee. St. Paul at Kansas City. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League. Philadelphia, 3; Cincinnati, 2. New York, 7; Pittsburgh, 3. Boston-Chicago (rain.) Brooklyn-St Loufs (rain.) American League. Philadelphia, 4; Detroit, 2. New York, 7; Chicago, 6 (10 inning) Boston, 2; St. Louis, 0 (first game). St. Louis, 7; Boston, 2; (2nd. game.) Washington, 7! Cleveland, 5. (First game.) . Washington, 1; Cleveland, 1. (Second game, darkness.) American Association. Columbus, 6; Louisville, 4. Minneapolis, 5; Milwaukee, 1. Indianapolis, 6; Toledo, 0. SL Paul, 9; Kansas City, 5. FRENCH OBJECT TO SPAIN GIVING HAVEN TO DISABLED SUBMARINE PARIS, June 13. A naval attache of the German embassy arrived at Cadiz today and made an examination of the submarine U-52 which is tied up at the arsenal dock, says Havre dispatch from Cadiz. The vessel will remain in port a month for repairs. The French press protests against Spain permitting the U-52 asylum for repairs. The Temps points out that her sister submarine,' the U-53, visited an American port last October and after a short stay proceeded seaward and sunk six ships, the route of which she had learned while in port. This, says the Temps, shows the danger of granting asylum to submarines. A startling discovery has been made by a British Egyptologist who has unearthed a Nile schooner near the Nile. Mud guards were not used on boats by Egyptians 2,000 or 2,001 years ago. "In Bnanea For T 35 South 11th Street

Watch Out Fishes! Hagerstown Anglers Are Having Contest HAGERSTOWN. Ind., June 14. Local anglers for the finny tribe have met with remarkable success within the past week. .' :V : -' Earl Cordell was the first to break the record, landing an eight pound and a five pound speciment in one day. Cordell's catch developed a spirit of rivalry and Mart Knapp made a vow that he would land a prize that would pull down the scales by many more pounds avordupois. He was successful Saturday afternoon last when he landed on terra firma a fine large carp that tilted the scales at twelve pounds and two ounces. Not to be bested in this fashion by Knapp, Cordell set about to beat the high record established by him, and Sunday hauled from the waters a trophy that capped the climax weighing twelve and three-quarter pounds. The race for supremacy be-

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Crew of Lieut. Thomas J. Prind of fthe Atlantic coast. tween Cordell and Knapp may develop still larger catches. All the fish caught were carp and were landed with hook and line from the deep hole in West River under the Pennsylvania railroad bridge one-half mile east of town. FAMOUSS BOER LEADER MAY ENTER CABINET LONDON, June 14. The newspapers say that General Smuts, the celebrated Boer leader has been invited to join the war cabinet. It is known that the government is anxious to retain the South African's services here, having the highest opinion of his political and military ability. General Smuts has been acting as an unofficial adviser of the state and war offices since his arrival in England and the papers express the hope that he will accept the cabinet office. It is understood that he is quite willing to do so provided the South African government consents. HOUSE WAR TAX BILL IS CUT BY $9,000,000 WASHINGTON, June 14 The house war tax bill was decreased about 9 million dollars more today by the Senate finance committee, in deciding to reduce the manufacturers' tax on athletic goods, patent medicine, perfumeries and cosmetics, from 5 to 2 percent. " AT LAST! Fort Wayne. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Seigfrid, 3b ... 4 1 1 2 2 0 Roberts, If 5 0 1 2 0 0 Gleich, cf 3 0 15 0 0 M. Kelly, lb ... 5 1 012 0 0 Smith, c 4 0 2 5 3 0 Powers, rf 5 0 2 3 0 0 Brown, 2b 4 0 0 1 3 0 Whitcraft, ss . . '3 1 2 2 3 1 Peterson, p . . . 1 , 0 0 0 0 0 Richardson, p. . 3 0 0 0 1 0' Totals 37 3 9 32 12 1 Richmond. A.B. R. H. P.O. A. E. Breaux, cf 110-4 2 0 Coveleskie, If . . 4 0 0 4 1 1 Gygli, lb '4 0 0 9 2 0 Crouch, rf 4 1 0 0 0 0 Hauser, c 4 0 1 8 2 0 Evers, 2b .31 1 3 3 2 Rapp, 3b 5 0 1 2 0 1 Kelly, SS......5 0 1 2 4 1 Young, p 3 0-0 1 3 0 Fromholz, p . . . 2 1 1 0 1 0 Totals 35 - 4 5 33 18 5 Two out when winning run was scored. Tort Wayne 001 100 100 003 Richmond .... 000 120 000 014 Earned runs Fort Wayne, 1 ; Richmond, 2. Two-base hits Kelly. Sacrifice hits Gleich, Brown, Richardson, Breaux. Stolen bases Smith, Breaux, Crouch, Evers. First base on errors Fort Wayne, 1; Richmond, 1. First base on. balls Peterson, 6; Richardson, 5; Young, 4. Hit by pitcher By Richardson, (Crouch); by Young (Gleich). Struck out Peterson, 1; Richarddson, 2 ; Young, 5 ; Fromholz. 1. Hits Off Peterson, no hits no runs, two innings; Richardson, 5 hits 4 runs, 9 innings; Young, 4 hits 2 runs, 6 1-3 innings; Fromholz, 5 hits one run, 4 2-3 innings. Time 2:30. Umpire Bush. Your Health" Phone 1603

Off to Hunt U-Boats

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Mile's yacht Susanne, which sailed THOUGHTS TO THINK ABOUT Success: Not knowing any failures. The highest " is attained by starting from the lowest. Malice rebounds back to the sender as the echo of the voice. The joy comes from the doing; leave the done alone, harping hurts. All claffified advertising going into the Palladium must measure up to the high standard required to build confidence in the minds of its reading circulation. Read the Want Ads in today's Palladium. ARMY OF 200 Continued From Page One. being to create enthusiasm for the work. - General Dill and Admiral Harris already have selected the ten colonels of the Red Cross army who have direct charge of the army and many of the rank and file already have been enlisted. Response to the enlistment call has been splendid, and the organization is promising to work smoothly. Each House to Get Card. Under the canvassing plan outlined for the city, the entire canvass is to BIG BARGAINS In High Grade Walk-Over Shoes All This Week at the Big Sale. WOLVERINE FURNACES Terms to Suit Prices will advance. Order now. Bert D.Welch 21 South 17th St. Phone 2764

Ms sclhi's Snnitts For Men are popular because they are RIGHT in quality, style and Fit. Once you buy a HIRSCH'S Suit you always will. I

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$10 to $25 Hirseh's CredttStore,I5-17N.9t2i

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from Chicago recently for patrol duty 3 be made in one day. The head of every house that subscribes is to be given a placard announcing the subscription, to be placed in a window. The money raised by the canvass is to be sent direct to Washington, and will be used under the directioa of Secretary McAdoo. Wayne county's apportionment is $25,000 and not $50,000 as originally announced. The state committee set $50,000 as the quota, but investigation showed that Wayne county is to raise only $25,000. .This explanation is offered by the local committee to offset any misunderstanding that may arise from the discrepancy. FIFTY LOSE LIVES IN ENGLISH BLAST LONDON, June 14. Fifty persons were killed and many injured, by an explosion at Ashton-Under-Lyne, Andrew Bonar Law, Chancellor of the Exchequer, announced in the House of Commons today Ashton-Under-Lyne is a manufacturing town near Manchester. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSIONS CHANGE OF DATES A change of the dates previously advertised is made necessary, due to anticipated heavy traffic. Excursion dates will be as follows: Tuesday, July 10 Tuesday, July 24 Tuesday, July 31 Tuesday, August 14 Ask Agents for Complete Information. THE OHIO ELECTRIC RAILWAY CO. DO YOU WANT AN AUTOMOBILE? I have a good second-hand car with electric lights and starter, in good shape; will sell at your own price. .Address C 729, care Palladium Pa $1.00 Weekly WHY PAY CASHf

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LIBERTY LOAN

Continued From Page One. was largely due to the work in the smaller towns of the county. .. . Hicks Is Champion. One of the hardest workers in the campaign was R. A. Hicks, cashier of the Wayne National bank at Cambridge City. The allotment of the Cambridge City bank was $40,000, but Mr. Hicks yesterday reported that the bank had sold $85,000 in bonds and expected to sell $100,000 before the campaign was finished. Members of the bankers' committee today expressed their pleasure at the way the people of the county came c

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We are closing

SPALDING SPORTING GOODS and are offering unusual bargains in the following: Gloves, Bats, Masks, Dumb Bel.'s, Indian Clubs, Punching Bags, Tennis Nets and Marking Tapes, Vrict Straps, etc.. . These goods are new and will go at cost 43 N. 8th St.

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Yonmr Pfliuimtoninif Estimates Cheerfully Given. All Work Guaranteed. STEAM- VAPOR AND HOT WATER SYSTEMS Agents for the mwari rawcYaE Also a FnB Line of Up-to-date at Lowest Prices.

Complete Stock cf Tim and Ae Repair Work a Specialty

forward with their money In support of the government's , cause .and declared that Wayne county will rank among the banner counties of the state In the sale of the bonds. " Work to Continue. "We are not going to stop our work now, however," said a member of the committee today, "but we are going to keep on pushing until the last minute of the time given for the sale of the bonds. Some of the districts in the county may not be able to subscribe for their quota and it will be up to the rest of the county to make up the difference." ' The report of the success of the county was made 'to the district headquarters at Chicago today and this will be supplemented with a complete report after the campaign Is finished Saturday.

in Krone M Richmond's Big Store Where V FIND JUST WHAT THEY WANT Whatever a man wants in the way of wearing apparel he can find it here. Our big line of , SOCIETY BRAND KUPPENHEIMER and FRAT CLOTHES are unequalled for style, quality and value at $12 to $25 STYLEPLUS Clothes guaranteed all wool at .. ....$17.00 STRAWHATS The season's best styles $1.00 to $6.00 SUITS FOR BOYS Just the kind your boy wants at $3.50 to $12.00 We can furnish your vacation apparel and supply you with Summer Hose, Shirts, Ties, Underwear, etc., at prices that will suit you; . lirone Kennedy 803 MAIN ST. ID out our stock of PHONE 2006 Figure on

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