Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 185, 17 May 1919 — Page 8

'iHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1919. BRINGING UP FATHER By McManus swim at each school was greatly creased. '",. Ik. Schools with the number attending this year, follow: High school. 10, 8 learned; ; Garfield, i 76, 66 , learned; Starr, 32, IS learned: Warnei", 27. 15 , learned; Vaile, 14, 6 learned; Hibberd, 22, 12 learned; Finley. 10, 3 learned; Whitewater. 11, 10 learned; Baxter, 23, ' 11 learned; Joseph Moore, 2; Sevastopol, 17, and 10 learned. Medals For State Swimming meet To Be Ready Soon Medals for the winners of the state twimming meet held at the Y. M. C. A. recently are being engraved now according to K. W. Harding, physical director of the Richmond association. As soon as the medals are engraved and completed they will be sent out to the respective winners of the events. All the medals will be ready to be presented within a few days.

PAGE TEN 51

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500 TRACK MEN COMPETE TODAY IN SECTIONALS

League Stan dings

NATIONAL LEAGUE Clubs W. Li. New York ......12 4 Brooklyn .11 5 Cincinnati 13 6 Pittsburg ........ ....... 9 8 Chicago 9 10 Philadelphia 5 9 St. Louis... 5 13 Boston ... .. 2 11

AMERICAN Clubs Chicago . . New York ...... Cleveland ....... Boston .........

Washington .1 6

! St. Louis 6

Detroit ... 5 Philadelphia. 3

ASSOCIATION

W. ..14 .. 8 ..11 .. 8

L. 5 4 6 6 8 10 12 10

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Clubs ' W. Minneapolis 10 St. Paul 11

Louisville . . Indianapolis Kansas City Columbus .. Milwaukee . Toledo

.11 . 8 . 9 . 7 . 5 . 3

L. 5 6 7 6 9 8 14 9

by-Strong Tedm at District Meet at.Connersville. Seventy-nine High schools with over 600 track athletes entered the competition in the sixteenth annual sectional Tnppfa of n!no nnlnf. in Vi s otat

Saturday.. Richmond High school, Rushvllle, Connersville, Newcastle, Liberty, Martinsville, Shelbyville, Cambridge City and Greenwood were the schools to compete at Connersville. ., . The other, district centers are Anderson, Bloomington, CrawfordBville. Indianapolis, Danville, Kendallvillp, Logansport and South Bend. A total of 79 teams are entered at the various centers. Sectional meets must necessarily be slightly different from basketball tourneys as a larger number of boys compete and more schools enter in one event. Instead of having the school winning the district track meet with the largest number of points participate in the state meet which will be held at Reid field, Earlham College, the following Saturday, it is possible for every one of the seventy-nine schools to be represented at the stat? meet. Winners of firsts and seconds In the sectionals will be eligible to go to the final meet. This means that there should be eighteen men in each event at the state classic held here next Saturday and wi cause an elimination process to be adopted before the finals can be run oft. Former Records May. Stand Records made at district meets today will not take the place of any state record as none will be counted for that purpose until next Saturday. The records are now so good that they will be hard to beat. However, some man In high school has managed to beat a previous state track record for the last three years. In 1918, Trotter, of New Salem, broke the mile

record, establishing time for that dis-i !

tance of 4 minutes, 39 1-5 seconds, rn j ,.. r""7TrI 3917. four new records were made.! .. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Ivey of Earlham college then a stu-l At Brooklyn R. H. rfit of -ot ,Lr.A ; Cincinnati 000 010 0001 7

"""--W, N-.ditv IUV 1 CU . , , AAA AAA AAA A C

I iDiuutxiy u. ....... vvu vuv uuu v

Pet. .750 .688 .684 .529 .474 .357 .278 .154

Pet.

.737

.667 .647

.571

.429

.375 .294

.231

Pet.

.667 .647 .611 .571 .500 .467 .263 .250

MUGGSY McGRAW MAY BE SET TO PULL OFF BIG DX4L

GAMES TODAY National League Cincinnati at New York. St. Louis at Boston. Pittsburg at Boston. Chicago at Brooklyn. American League Philadelphia at Chicago. Boston at St. Louis. Washington at Detroit. New York at Cleveland. American Association Indianapolis at Columbus. , Louisville at Columbus. St Paul at Minneapolis. Milwaukee at Kansas City.

THREE-I STANDING

Clubs W. L. Pet. Peoria 8 3 .727 Moline 1 .... . 6 5 .545 Terra Haute 6 5 .545 Evansville 5 6 .455 Rockford 4 7 .364 Bloomington ..4 1 .364

Yesterday's Results

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Many School Boys Learned To Swim In Y. M. C. A. More boys learned how to swim during the free classes offered by the Y. M. C. A. last week than during all of last year although the number actually attending was slightly smaller. Out of the 244 boys swimming this year at the Y. M. C. A., the report compiled by K. W. Harding shows that 146 learned to swim and 40 were eliminated as already knowing how to swim.

In 1918, 815 attended the classes and only 107 learned to swim. Whitewater made the best showing of any school. Out of eleven attending, ten learned to swim. All the scbols did

not have as many enrolled as last year, but the number learning to

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Lined up in the rear are Larry Doyle, Art Fletcher, Heinie Zimmerman and Hal Chase, the men McGraw is de

pending on for a star infield. Below at left is the little Napoleon.

the slugger is George Burns and the gent at the tight is Lew McCarthy.

The southpaw is Ferdie Schupp

The fact that Jawn McGraw has six outfielders four star and two first-class birds, now listed on his roster leads to the belief that Jawn is planning a bis deL In

volving one or more of these gardeners. The three-cornered trade among the Giants, Cardinals and Washington may be near completion. Dave Robertson is booked to

be New York's big card in this deal. The six outfielders McGraw has are Robertson, Kauff, Young. Lee King, rookie star. Thorpe ana Jean Dubuc.

In the high jump at 5 feet 11 inches.

Szold, of Emerson, Gray, broke the 440 yard dash record, making it in 52 2-5 seconds. Brown of Frankfort, made a new record in the half mile, time 2 minutes, 5 2-5 seconds. The shot put record now established was made by Williams of Sheridan who hurled the shot 47 feet, 6 inches.

Allison of Richmond High school.

1 0

Batteries Luque and Haridan; Mar-

quard. Cadore and Krueger. At New York R. H. E. Chicago ....000 000 0000 3 2 New York 000 001 20x 3 4 X Batteries Tyler and Killifer, O'Farrell; Barnes and McCarty. At Philadelphia R. H. E. Pittsburg 200 100 2218 13 0

RICHMOND GETS BERTH IN NEW N. C. CIRCUIT

established two records in the state i Philadelphia ....000 000 111 3 41 meet in 1909 which have held for ten I rt Batteries Cooper and Schmidt;

vpars Then rt- nn r fiv state r-: " ''"

cords older than those of Allison. He

won the 120 yard hurdles in 16 1-5 peconds and the 220 yard hurdles in 26 4-5 seconds. Predicting the winners of the district meets is almost impossible. Richmond stands a fair show with Emslie, Doiyns, Eversman, Lohman, Shaffer, Hunt, Van Allen, Price, Motley and McMahan entered. Speculation on the

state meet will be strong next week after the sectional meets are over and some comparative doping can be done. State Officials Named High schools will contend in the various centers as follows: At Anderson 7; at Bloomington 7 at Cnr.vfordsville 11; at Connersville 9: at Danville 9; at Indianapolis 5; at Kendallville 14; at Logansport 5; at South Bend 12. The list of officials for the state high school track meet will be as follows: Referee and Starter Glen F. Thistlethwaite, Richmond. Judges of the Finish Paul Brown. . Dr. Alexander Purdy, O. Brunson, Pro?. Benj. W. Kelly, L. Lyboult and Charles 'Woodman. Field Judges Dr. B. B. Wroth, Chas.

Ivey, Leslie H. Meeks, Herbert Carey and Raymond Johnson. Field Assistants John Lemmon and Josiah Russel (on jumps); Winston Huff and Edwin Teale (shots and discus). Timers Dr. Allen D. Hole, Prof. N. C. Heironimus, Russel Titsworth and Prof Arthur M. Charles. Scorers Dr. Joseph H. Coffin, Cyril Pitts, J. Roberts and Eugene Raiford. Head Field Judge Coach Ray B. Mowe. Clerk of Course Prof. Edwin P. Trueblood; assistants, Jerold K. Hoerner and Richard Hoerner, track men: Xlay Thompson and Paul Edwards, track and field event callers; hurdlers, F. Lawler, Orval Hall, N. Elder, Clark, Larsh and Charles Blackburn. Announcer Milton Hadley. Inspectors Frank Hill, Lewis Taylor, John Kennedy, Howard Mills, Prof. Milliard Markle and Cebren Joyner. Ticket Sellers Dr. Lindley R. Dean and Walter P. Yarnall. Gatekeepers Front gate entrance, Joseph Blackburn and R. Glass; inside gates, Kenyon and H. Hall; auto gates Webb and Green. Field Marshals Douglas, Osborn A. Stanley. Templeton, P. Smith: grand stand, Philip Furnas, W. R. Cox and Robinson. '

At Boston R. H. E.

St. Louis ..201 010 0004 6

Boston .....001 000 1002 9 1 Batteries Tuero, Sherdel and Snyder; Fillingim and Wilson. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Chicago R. H. E. Boston . . . . .300 001 0004 3 0 Chicago 040 010 20x 7 10 1

Batteries Caldwell and Schang; Faber and Schalk. All other games postponed.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At St. Paul R. II. E.

Minneapolis ....220 000 100 5 10

St. Paul 010 020 0003 7 4

Batteries Williams and Owens; Hall, Griner and Hargrave. At Kansas City R. H. E. Milwaukee 100 020 0104 11 1 Kansas City ....701 200 OOx 10 13 3 Batteries Howard, Kotzelnick, Wolfgang and Huhn; Johnson and LaLong. No other games scheduled.

Richmond secured a berth in the Northern Central Baseball league as a result of the meeting at Kokomo, Friday night. Elmer Eggemeyer, Clarence Jessup and George Brehm were the representatives from Richmond attending the meeting. Charles C. Carr of Indianapolis, was retained as head-of the revamDed

1 i league. Owing to the fact that it was

impossible to eliminate the weaker teams in the league, it was thought advisable to divide the league into two circuits, an eastern and western section, with Carr as president of both. Muncie, Newcastle, Richmond and Anderson, with Indianapolis and Elwood as traveling clubs, will represent the eastern circuit, while Peru, Kokomo, Marion, Logansport, Huntington

and Frankfort will constitute the west

ern division. A vice-president was elected for each division as well as a secretary and treasurer. At a meetine

1 i cf managers and promoters of the

clubs in the eastern section at Mun

cie next Monday, a schedule will be drawn up. The two sections will start their regular playing about June 1, if Richmond can get its team together by that time. Under the new plan of smaller circuits, reduced traveling expenses and better clubs, the league should become a permanent organization. With two traveling clubs in the eastern circuir, Richmond will have baseball almost every Sunday. Plans are being made to make the schedule include both Saturday and Sunday. At the close of the season it is the plan of the managers to have a series of games between the leading clubs of the two circuits, played on the order of the world's series in the major leagues. Next week, Elmer Eggemeyer, Clarence Jessup and George Brehm will collect players. All members of the team will be employed by local industries and play Saturday and Sunday ball.

first two colleges named led the honors and were scrapping for first place in the meet. Both Wabash and Franklin had some invincible men. The Quakers are showing up well.

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I.C. A. L. MEET STARTS ON FRANKLIN FIELD

The I. C. A. L. meet at Franklin Saturday started at 1:30 o'clock. The winner changed places on numerous occasions as the meet progressed. All the colleges entering, Earlham, Franklin, Wabash, Butler, State Normal, Hanover and Rose Poly, have a number of strong men entered. The

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JUNIOR HIGH TEAMS STAGE TRACK MEET

The young thinly clads of Garfield Junior High school participated in their annual school classic, a track and field meet, Saturday afternoon. There was a large number of track boys out and the competition between the two colors in which the school was divided was strong. The two sides were evenly matched and the meet was well attended. Every one of the youngsters entering worked

hard to win for his side. Since Lyman ! Lyboult has taken charge of athletic !

contests at Garfield the school in such contests has been divided into four

divisions in order to give all a fair j show. The larger boys compete with I each other wiiile the smaller boys j

meet smaller boys, thus eliminating any chance for a one-sided contest.

S. A. L. SAMES CALLED OFF BY WET WOUNDS

On account of wet grounds the Sat-, urday Afternoon, league games were railed off Saturday at noon by Sam S. Vigran. president of the league. Thi3 makes the second time the games have been called off. All the teams were ready to meet for the second battles but the diamonds were not .

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Sale

of Used Automobiles Chenoweth Auto Go.

1107 Main Street

M

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Richmond, Indiana

1919

At 1:30 o'clock

20 GOOD USED CARS Consisting of Buick Sixes, Chevrolets, Maxwells, Saxon, Overlands, Davis, Paige, Westcotts, Hudson, Pilot, 2 Ford Trucks, 2 Republic Trucks. Best offering of good used cars ever offered in this part of the state. These cars have been rebuilt and refinished and will go out and give good service at a low cost. Anyone wishing a good used car for commercial purposes can't afford to msis this sale. Cars will be ready for inspection at our sales department on the morning of the sale and will be demonstrated to your satisfaction. ACCESSORIES In order to reduce our surplus stock we are going to sell Oils, Greases, Tires, Tubes and Bumpers and everything offered for sale will be sold regardless of price. NO JUNK These cars are excptional value in Used Cars NO JUNK and will positively sell at your price. If you are in the car market you cannot afford to miss this sale. TERMS: Cash or note with approved security bearing 6 percent interest for six months. No cars removed until settlement is made. Liberty Bonds accepted at market value. Chenoweth Auto Company Thot. Conniff, Aoct Frank Taylor, Clerk.

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