Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 201, 5 June 1919 — Page 17
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919.
PAGE SEVENTEEN
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MERMAN TO MANAGE LOCAL BASEBALL GLUB Former Manager of Dayton Wright Team Secured to DirecrRichmond Nine: Harry WIterman of Cincinnati, former Welfare' secretary of the Dayton Wright company, will manage the Richmond state club for the next few games, according to an agreement be made Wednesday with Elmer Eggemcyer. Winterman had charge of the Dayton Wright club when it played the New York Giants last year, beating that club 3 to 1 with Schupp cf the Giants pitching. Winterman has been secured, as he can bring players to Richmond thai can play first-class ball. Next Sunday when the Richmond club plays Indianapolis road team here at Exhibition park a new hurler will been seen in action for the local club. Al Leek, an old American league pitcher who used to twirl for Boston, has been secured and will open the. game while Pete Winner will be held in reserve. Leek is now at Dayton. Try to Sign Haas. Everett Haas, local catcher, has not been signed yet but an attempt will be made to line him up before next Sunday. Paul Jennings of Whitewater, another local player, will start with the Richmond club one week from Sunday, the management announced Thursday. The Richmond directors announced their plans to have four or five players of class AA in club with the local players to complete the. lineup. Arrangements will be made this week to secure regular work through the w eek for these players if possible and the club will be considered complete if they make good next Sunday and the following Sunday. j Directors are elated over the prospects of having "Bugs" Winterman j take charge of the club because of his j knowledge of the playing ability of most cf the leaguers who are out for a Job. Winterman is in close tcuch with a large number of first-class players, among which is Jake Fromuolz, the old Central hurler. Pitching Staff Strong. - Charles C. Carr, organizer of the Indianapolis road club, has not announced his lineup, but he assures the Indar.a state league managers that his lineup will be first-class and will give any team in the circuit a stiff battle, teing drawn from the best players of semi-pro and league ball around Indianapolis. With Al Leek, the veteran hurler, Harding and Minrer on the Richmond pitching staff that department of the local club is well prepared for battle. All that will be needed is a short stop and two outfielders with probably another infielder to handle the third bag next Sunday. Winterman will announce his full lineup the latter part , of this week.. . In two Sundays the Richmond club will be able to play ball with the best of the Indiana state league clubs and hold its own in fine shape. Baseball fans will be given some of the best exhibitions of their favorite pastime on the park diamond, declares the baseball management. A. S. M. Lineup Announced To Meet Palladium Nine The American Seeders, managed by George Hodge, announced the lineup that will start the baseball game with Th Palladium, Friday night. Otten and Fay will form the A. S. M. battery against Suits and Long for The Palladium. Other members of the team are Patti, Hodge, Boyce. Williams, Mansfield, Hillman, Miller, Park, Wettig, Price. Deem. Mansger Hodge expects to use all his men during the game but will start the first nine men. Sam Suite, captain of Tho Palladium team, wll chose his nine from the following list of players: Vansant, Sheridan. Parker. Radke, Frame, Hutson, -Handley, McMann. Ewing, Long, Warfel and Jordan. No real boy is expected to be an angel and he never disappoints you by being one. DEMPSEY SHOWED
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CORNELL RUNNER BREAKS RECORD IN
For the fifth consecutive time Cornell has shown her supremacy in track and field athletics by winnine the annual intercollegiate meet. The Ithaca athletes rolled up 39'i points. Pennsylvania finV -JLUi -7 rz rf BASEBALL INTEREST GROWS IN RICHMOND All trails lead to baseball diamonds in Richmond. Enthusiasm in baseball Js rapidly increasing and the number of teams being organized is augmenting. By the first of next week a meeting will be called to organize another twilight league for evening ball. Sam S. Vigran announced Thursday that he would help to launch the new league in a satisfactory manner. The Adam H. Bartel, the Fred Bethard companies and barbers and bankers are some of the latest possibilities lor a new league besides the Progress Hat, Richmond Baking company and Webb-Coleman. The new league promises to ITave more teams than the present Commercial league which is operating with six club3 on the evening schedule. The present prospects are that there will be baseball at both the playgrounds and Exhibition park almost every evening after work. Industrial concerns are recognizing that recreation is a big asset for their employes .and are expected to back their respective baseball ventures. Baseball in the Commercial league an dthe new league to be organized is not so much for the winning qualities of the teams but more for the exercise and recreation that the teams receive. Almost every city of any size in the country has already adopted this plan of recreation as the best means of solving the problem. Methodist Boy Scouts To Organize Baseball Team Boy Scouts of th Methodist roop are requested to meet at the First Methodist church, Thursday night to form a baseball team. Every one of the Scouts in the First Methodist troop is eligible for the team. The troop expects to form a fast baseball club to meet other teams when the league commences play after the Scout camp is over at Miamisburg.
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BETTER THAN JESS AGAINST SAME MEN
Upper left corner shows Charley Miller boxing Jim Fly nn. Miller is at the left. Upper right. Gunboat Smith. Below, Arthur Pelkey. at left, and Carl Morris. Four heavyweights have met both Jack Dempsey and Jess Wills rd. The results of these clashes are interesting although they do
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" IS, t QUINN'S SHOWING JUSTIFIES FIGHT HUGGINS PUT UP Jack Quinn. Although Jack Quinn has lost 3 couple of hard-luck games recently, the Yankee hurler"s work has justified the tight Miller Huggins nut-tip to get him from the White Sox. The Sox claimed him last season when he did a comeback from the coast. Huggins finally got him through an old string th? Yanks had on him whr he slipped out of fast company, lie won three games before being nicked at all this season. Ritchie To Box H anion For Shriners9 Entertainment . INDIANAPOLIS. June 5. Willie Ritchie of Milwaukee, and Jimmy HanIon of Denver, will box the headline contest of a show for the entertainment of the Shriners here Monday not necessarily throw any true light on the relative merits of the pair who will lock horns &i Toledo July 4. The four men are Arthur Pelkey, Charley Miller, Gunboat Smith and Carl Morris. Dempsey disposed of all four easier than Jess did. The old John L. dope shows that Dempsey put all four to sleep, handmsr a double dose to a couple of them. Willard's showing against the quartet was very poor. All managed to stay the limit with the champion 'and one gained a popular decision over the big cowboy. Of course, Willard's adherents will tell you Jess toyed with the birds. But Jack's friends point out that Dempsey toyed ia a more effective way.
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COLLEGE MEET
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Ivan Dresser of Cornell breaking record In winning two-mile event at I. C A. A. A. A. games and . E. Myers of Dartmouth winning pole vault event. ished second with 29 points. Three men, Walker Smith, Kurta Mayer and Ivan Dresser, won five firsts for Cornell. Dresser set a new record of 9:22:2-5 in winning the two-mile event. He clipped 1 2-5 seconds from the record set by J. S. Hofmire of Cornell over the same track at Harvard stadium in 1914. E. E. Myers was one of the stars of the meeting, doing spec tacular work in the pole vault. He won the event with a height of 12 feet 6 inches.
night at the meeting of the Imperial Council of the Shriners. The contest will be for ten rounds. There will be two other contests on the card, each of ten rounds. Chuck Wiggins of Indianapolis, will box Hugh Harrison, of Chicago, at 168 pounds. The third contest will be between Don Curley of Indianapolis, and Bud Christiana of Buffalo, at 135 pounds. The referee will be Howard Wilcox of Indianapolis, who won the 500 mile race last Saturday in the Liberty Sweepstakes at the Indianapolis Speedway. Shriners from all parts of the country will be in attendance. The seat sale is large, indicating the largest crowd that ever attended a boxing con test in Indianapolis. It will be held at the Coliseum at the State Fair Grounds, a building which seats 18,000 League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE
Clubs V. L. Pet. New York ..........24 10 .706 Cincinnati 20 15 .571 Brooklyn..... 20 16 .556 Chicago .........18 17 .514 Philadelphia ........15 16 .4S4 Pittsburgh 17 20 .459 Boston ..... .....12 21 .364 St. Louis ...11 22 .333
AMERICAN LEAGUE Clubs W. L. Chicago ........ .....24 U Cleveland ..21 12 New York .19" 11 Detroit ...17 16 St. Louis .16 16 Boston 14 16 Washington ...... ...10 21 Philadelphia ........ 6 24 Pet. .6S6 .636 .633 .515 .500 .467 .323 .200 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Clubs W. St. Paul 23 Indianapolis .. .. .,20 Louisville ... IS Columbus ........... 15 Kansas City .....16 Minneapolis 16 L. 11 14 14 15 17 16 21 20 PcL .676 .588 .563 .500 .485 .500 .400 .231 Milwaukee ...... 14 Toledo .............. 6 GAMES TODAY National League New York at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis. American League St. Loui3 at Washington. Cleveland at Philadelphia. Chicago at New York. Detroit at Boston. American Association Indianapolis at Milwaukee. Toledo at Kansas City. Louisville at Minneapolis Columbus at St. Paul. . Pennsy Team Wins 12 To 0 In Game Against Postoffice The Pennsy shop team of the Commercial baseball league pounded Beck the postoffice twirler. hard in the first inning and won its first game at Ex hibition park Wednesday evening, by the score of 12 to 0. Eight of the twelve runs were brought across the pan in the first rovd of rlay. In the second, Beck held the Panhandlers scoreless, but they managed to nip two more in the third. After the first inning, with good support. Beck could have held the Pennsy team down. At bat, the postoffice team did not fare well, and attempts at stealing, alter getting on bases, resulted in BILLIARDS OWLING
Coolest Spot in the City . S : ' Sodas Soft Drinks
"Meet Me 12 N.
outs fo rthe federal team. Baspacey.
pitching for the Pennsy team, showed good speed. The score: Postcffice 000 00 0 6 7 Pennsy 802 0212 12 A Batteries Beck, Murray and Den nis, Baspacey and Winters. SATURDAY AFTERNOON SEES SECOND ROUND OF FACTORY LEAGUE S. A. L. SCHEDULE ' Starr vs. A. S. M. Jenkins-Vulcans vs. Johnson-Fry, I. G. C. Wayne Works ve. Swayne-Roblnson Next Saturday starts the second round of Saturday Afternoon league at Exhibition park and playgrounds. Although only two games have been played thus far in the factory league because of bad weather, the games have not been. up to standard, and SamVIgran, president of the league, expects to call a meeting of the league managers and use the needle to inject some pep into the clubs. . The Wayne Works started on May 3 In good. style, but owing to a' lack of players last Saturday, failed to come up to its usual standard. All the other clubs played below par as players failed to show up for the game and the teams had to be mixed up. The Starrs and the A. S. M.'s had the majority of players present for the games. Saturday will see a different atti tude on the part of the players if the managers and officials of the league can produce it' The Saturday Afternoon league, with the loss of players last year, presented better ball than 60 far has been witnessed at the park this year. Yesterday's Results NATIONAL LEAGUE At St. Louis Cincinnati ......000 201 0003 8 3 St Louis 010 010 20 4 9 3 Batteries Sallee and Wingo: Goodwin, Tuero and Clemons, Snyder. Pittsburgh ....000 000 000 11 11 1 Chicago .. 000 000 000 00 3 0 Batteries Hamilton, Adams and Lee; Vaughn and Killifer. At Boston, first game Brooklyn .......100 510 0018 15 0 Boston ....100 000 0023 11 3 Batteries Marquard and Krueger; i Fillingim, James and Gowdy. Second Game Brooklyn 030 000 0003 5 1 Boston 210 011 10 6 9 1 Batteries Mamaux, Cheney and Krueger; Scott and Wilson. At New York Philadelphia ....100 050 0208 12 0 New York .020 000 000 2 S 3 Batteries Jacobs and Adams; Perritt, Barnes and Gonzales. AMERICAN LEAGUE At PhiladelphiaNew York 020 032 21010 12 1 Philadelphia 00 201.022 7 10 5 Batteries Nelson, Russell and Hannah; Rogers, Naylor and McAvoy. At Washington Boston .: 010 124 000 S 9 1 Washington 100 000 0113 8 3 Batteries James and Schang; Robertson, Thompson and Agnew, Gharrity. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Minneapolis Louisville 000 000 000 000 000 0 9 2 Minneapolis 000 000 000 000 0011 12 0 Batteries Davis and Meyer; Schauer and Owens. At St. PaulColumbia ....000 000 001 001 5 0 St. Paul ....000 000 010 012 10 1 Batteries George and Hartley; Grlner and Hargrave. REMARKABLE CURES Thankful People Tell What San Cura Ointment Did For Them Thistlethwaite's Six Drug Stores sell San Cura Ointment on the money-back plan no relief no pay. Guaranteed to relieve eczema, tetter, salt rheum, itching, bleeding or protruding piles, burns, cuts, bruises, old sores, pimples, boils, carbuncles, chapped hands, chilblains, festers, insect bites and poison from ivy. "My face and neck were one mass of sores; doctor said I had eczema and erysipelas. I had not slept for weeks with burning, itching pain. The first time I used San Cura Ointment; 1 slept an nignt ana m a snort time was completely cured." Chas. Fay, Townville, Pa. "My wife stepped on a rusty nail and ran it into her foot. San Cura Ointment drew out a poisonous brown pus and cured her promptly." Eugene McKenzie, Plum, Pa. "I had been afflicted over thirty years with piles and spent over $500 for pile medicine. Two jars of San Cura Ointment cured me." James Lynch, Enterprise, Pa. San Cura Ointment costs 30c, 60c and $1.20 a Jar at Thistlethwaite's Six Drug Stores, and is a splendid remedy for burns, scalds, cuts and bruises. ' SOAP REMOVES PIMPLES San Cura Soap will remove pimples, blackheads and many skin diseases. Makes the complexion clear and the i skin velvety. 25 cents at Thlstleth-' waite's Six Drug Stores. If your druggist does not have it send to Thompson Medical Co., Titusville, Pa. Adv. 6 TABLES ALLEYS at Twiggs" 8th St.
OVERSEAS BOYS STAGE
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General Pershing watching tarRet at A. E. F. rifle shoot at D'Anvourf Range, near Le Mans, France.
General Pershing attended the opening of the groat A. E. F. rifle ani
pistol shoot which opened recently at the L Anvours Kange. near lb juans. France. He inspected the range, spoke to the contestants and watched s airhi -r-i i nrlc; Privet Karl S. Kennedv. 141st infantry. Texas National
Guard, won the preliminary round of out of a Bcssible 150. .14. t ' " -T WRESTLING DATE CHANGED The date of the Chanos-Zook match at Cambridge City has been changed to June 14, according to Chanos. The change was made as Chanos was n'ot able to secure a place to wrestle Dixon of Chicago. He had planned to stage another match at Richmond, but as he could not reach an agreement with either the Coliseum or Eagle Hall management, this match was postponed and the date for his meeting of Zook set for that time at Cambridge City. RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER Deep Seated Uric Acid Deposits Are Dissolved and the Rheumatic Poison Starts to Leave the System Within Twenty-Four Hours. Every druggist in this county 13 authorized to say to every rheumatic sufferer in this vicinity that if two bottles cf Allenrhu, the sure conqueror of rheumatism, does not stop all agony, reduce swollen Joints and do away with even the slightest twinge of rheumatic pain, he will gladly return your money without comment. Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous results have been accomplished in the most severe cases where the suffering and agony was intense and piteous and where the patient was helpless. Allenrhu relieves at once. Immediately after you start to take it the good work begins. It searches out the uric acid deposits, dissolves the secretions and drives rheumatic poison out of the body through the kidneys and bowels. It's marvelous how quickly It acts. Blessed relief often comes in two days and even in cases where the suffering is most painful all traces disappear in a few days. Mr. James H. Allen, the discoverer of Allenrhu, who for many years suffered the torments of acute rheumatism, desires all sufferers to know mai ne aoes not want a cent of any-j One's money unlPSS Allenrhu rip CIS- i ively conquers this worst of all dis eases, and he has instructed all druggists to guarantee it in every Instance. Adv. I RJ
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