Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 216, 23 June 1919 — Page 11
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1919.
PAGE ELEVEN
Dayton winner rnntlA ninnnRnnn
BY SINGLE
RUN
Richmond bad only one more chance to score and that did not come until after two outs had been made. In the ninth, after Schlebker bad sent an easy one to short and Popkins bad struck out for his fourth consecutive time, Leininger hit to center, but Korfhagen whiffed, giving Dayton the game by one run. Dayton
AB. R.
Local Nine Defeated by 3-2 Score Pete Minner Off Form.
Brennan, cf . Wellbaum, sb Fricke, 2b Funk. Sb .... Shuey, If. Steck, rf. .... Ohmer, lb .. Williams, c. . Larson, p ...
Totals
Dehner, If. . . Bacon, cf. ... Hill, rf. Schlenker, 2b. Popkins, lb. . Leinenger, 3b. Korfhagen, ss. Durban, c. . . . Minner, p.
Totals Score: Dayton .. Richmond
Summary
A single, a three-bagger in one inning and two doubles In the next gave Richmond the small end of a 3 to 2 ecore at the hands of Dayton, Sunday afternoon at Exhibition park. Pete Minner, local hurler, was completely off form In the box as well as at bat. He only struck out three men during the entire nine sessions, while Dayton hit him six times. "Chuck" Larson. Dayton Ditcher, was
there with the good. He registered ten. strikeouts during the game and allowed but five hts, one of those being three baggers which gave Richmond two runs in the sixth inning. Larson is an oldtimer having played in the Western, Central and Association, . A change in umpires in the fifth inning caused the remainder of the game to be played under protest but as Dayton collected a total of three run3 off four hits a single, a three-base and two doubles the idea of protesting the game was dropped. Umpire Slows Game. Up until the fifth the game had been running smoothly although the um
pire was slow in getting his decisions
avivDo. iuv liivie Luau iuui uat:ucu Clubs
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nuu anuuugu tumeuuia were lew, iuv fielders on both clubs were getting in some good work. But in the fifth, Kofhagen, second man up, sent a slow ont to Funk, Dayton third baseman, who fielded the ball but threw badly to first, placing Korfhacon safe. Durban was called out on etrikes, which started the riot, as the decision was thought to be unfair. Mr. Umpire .was removed as a result and Sam Vigran officiated. Then with two outs and one man on base Minner stepped to the plate and sent en easy one to second. In the sixth Richmond broke up the game but in the next Dayton did worse than the Quakers ever thought
about an in one inning. Dehner, first
man up for Richmond struck out but as Williams, Dayton backstop, dropped ihe ball, be had to be thrown out at first. Popkins Makes Strike. Then Bacon singled, and Hill, who sent a terrific three bagger to right, scoring Bacon. Schlenker hefted one
to deep' left, and Shuey could not re-1 Milwaukee
turn it to the mneia oeiore hm scored. ; Toledo Popkins struck out for the third time i retiring the side. In the first of the seventh, Funk Bent one down the first base line.
1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0
H. 0 1 1 01 2 0 0 1
..35 3 6 Richmond AB. R. H.
. 3 .. 3 .34
0 1 1
PO. 0 1 0 2 4 1 10 9 0 27 PO. 2 1 1 13 4 1 3 0
A. 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0
A.
0 0 0 4 1 r 2 2 5 -r14
E. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
, Yesterday's Results
NATIONAL LEAGUE At Cincinnati New York ....020 010 000 03 6 0 Cincinnati ....102 000 000 14 8 2 Batteries Benton and Gonzales; Reutber and Raridan At Chicago Brooklyn . .... . .000 000 0101 6 3 Chicago 103 010 03 3 13 2 Batteries Pfeffer and M. Wheat; Vaughn and O'Farrell.
000 000 2103 ..000 002 000 2 Two-base hits. Grennan.
Fricke; three-base hits, Steck, 2. Hill. Strikeouts Larson, 10; Minner, 3. Passed balls Durban, 1. Base on balls, Minner (Ohmer.) Umpire Vigran. Attendance, GOO.
League Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. .......33
Cincinnati 31 Pittsburgh 29 Chicago ............ .27 Brooklyn 24 St. Louis .......... .22 Philadelphia ,' 16 Boston .'. 15
L. 16 19 22 24 28 28 29 31
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Clubs W. Chicago 1 .32 New York .29 Cleveland .31 St. Louis .21 Detroit 23 Boston 20, Washington ..... is" Philadelphia ........13
L. 18 16 18 24 26 26 SO 33
Pet. .673 .620
.440
Pet. .640 .641 .633 .500 .460 .444 .375 .283
Pittsburgh 000 220 0037 12 0 St. Louis ......000 2p0 0406 11 C Batteries Carlson, Hamilton and Mayer; Sherdel and Snyder. AMERICAN LEAGUE At New York Boston 000 000 2002 5 1 New York 000 20J 02 6 15 1 Batteries Jones. James and Walters; Shore and Hannah. At Detroit Chicago .........100 002 001 4 9 3 Detroit ... .. .... 103 000 01 5 8 1 Batteries Shallenback and Schalk;
Dauss and Stanage. At Cleveland St Louis ........000 030 0003 10 1 Cleveland .... .. .000 000 000 0 8 1 Batteries Sothoron and Severeld; Uhle, Enzmann and O'Neill. At Washington Philadelphia ....042 002 000 8 16 2 Washington .-. .. . 000 200 020 I 9 0 Batteries Naylor and Perkins; Shaw, Craft, Whitehouse, Naylor and Gharrity, Perkins.
them as well as did the visitors. Whitewater took a two-run lead in the first inning, maintaining it until the fifth, when Arcanum crossed the plate twice, tying the score. One run
in each of the next three frames put the game on ice for the visitors. Next Sunday Whitewater will play Centerville. Score R. H. E.
a AAA A A 4 ' A If 1 ?
Arcanum ...... u vi w-o ln the, Indiana ; state league Whitewater ... 010 000 001 3 5 1 goL.- neld th rA -
Batteries: Groan ana oaa; Baser and Wolf, Wright . . '
9 4 5 3 Mil-
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Clubs
St. Paul . . Louisville . . , Indianapolis Columbus . . Kansas City
Minneapolis ,
W.
. .31 ..30 ..27 ..24 ..26' ..21 ..20 ...11
L. Pet. 4 is .6r ! 19 . .612 22 .531 20 .345 23 .531 25 .457 30 .400 33 .250
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Columbus (first game) Indianapolis 000 000 000 0 6 3 Columbus .......000 300 10 4 4 1 Batteries Crum and Leary; Wilkinson and Wagner. Second Game Indianapolis ....000 000 0000 5 1
.569 ; Columbus .......001 000 01 2 9 0 .52? ; Batteries Steele and Gossett; .462 George and Pecheous.
At Toledo (first game)
Louisville ....T.. 000 010 0001 Toledo ......020 030 00 5 Batteries Long and Kocher;
jus and Murphy. Second Game Louisville .020 001 001 4 9 0 Toledo 000 010 0001 7 1 Batteries Stewart and Meyer; Brady and Kelly. At Kansas CityMilwaukee ........000 000 11 5 0 Kansas City .... . .400 011 06 14 1
Batteries Hansen, Walsh and Huhn; Graham and LaLonge. Game called in eighth on account of rain. At Minneapolis St. Paul 001 200 010 4 11 0 Minneapolis ....221 041 01 11 13 4 Batteries Burk, Schauser and Owens; Hall, Monroe and Hargrave.
Saturday's Results
NATIONAL LEAGUE. At Chicago R.H.E. Chicago ...... . .000 000 000 0 3 3 Brooklyn .......000 210 0003 9 1 Batterieti Martin, Hendrix and O' Farrell; Mamaux and Miller. At St Louis R.H.E. New York i.000 000 1102 5 1 St. Louis .006 001 000 1 6 1 Batteries Causey and Smith: Doak and Snyder. At Pittsburg R.H. E. Pittsburg ......000 100 000 1 5 0 Boston ....... ..000 000 000 0 6 0 Batteries Adams and Schmidt; Keating and Tragesser. At Cincinnati R.H.E. Cincinnati ......000 000 130 4 12 2 Philadelphia . . . .020 000 0305 8 1 Batteries Fisher. Ring and Rariden; Packard and Adams. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Washington R. H. E. Chicago . . .... . .000 120 000 3 9 3 Washington ....200 022 OOx 6 7 4 Batteries Faber, Danf orth and
Schalk, Lynn and Jenkins ; Johnson
and Picinich. , At Boston R.H.E. Boston ...... . . .020 000 0103 7 6 Boston 020 000 010 03 7 6 St. Louis 003 000 000 03 6 2 Batteries Weilman, Caldwell and Severeid; Pennock, Shocker and WalGame called by agreement. . ters. At New York R. H.E. Cleveland 000 010 0001 11 2 New York . .000 100 Olx 2 4 0 Batteries Morton and O'Nell; Thormahlen and Hannah. At Philadelphia R.H.E. Philadelphia ....201 040 41x 12 14 2 Detroit ...020 000 003 5 12 2 Batteries Perry and Perkins; Boland, Love and Stanage.
REFEREE FOR BOUT WILL BE SELECTED SOON, IS REPORT TOLEDA, June 23 With the arrival today of Major, A. J. DrexeV Bid-
idle, president of the army, navy, and
Maxwells Take Game From Anderson Eagles, 9-2 NEWCASTLE, Ind., June 23. The Newcastle Maxwells proved too much for the Anderson Eagles here Sunday afternoon, defeating them 9 to 2. This
makes their fourth consecutive victory
i the. Indiana ; state league. t Sommera held the Rose City team
to four bingles. while his teammates civilian board of boxing control, the collected 13 blows off Wright's de-Imuch discussed question of selecting livery. The hitting of Stuppes, the la , referee, and possibly two Judges, local's third sacker, was the feature I for the heavyweight championship of the game. Stuppe hit safely three contest between Jess Willard and Jack out of four times at bat, each hit Dempsey here July 4. is expected to scoring one or more runs. Coonsi''be settled before night. . played his usual game in centerfield Adam Empie, secretary of the board
ior Anaerson ana secured one of their four hits. ,
Score:
000 002 000 2 4 2 Ill 150 OOx 913 0
Wright, and Haas; Som-
mer and Yantz. Umpire, Durham. Attendance, 700.
Anderson . Newcastle . Batteries-
... .X Boston Beats Brownsville
BOSTON, Ind., June 23. Boston easily defeated the Brownsville nine here Sunday afternoon, 8 to 3, hitting Moore, the Brownie hurler, for four earned runs.
has been in Toledo since Saturday,
FT. WAYNE HAD SUFFERED TWENTY YEARS Says Tanlac Relieved ' His Trouble Two Years Ago is Still in Perfect Health.
"You may put me down as one Fort
of the Toledo boxing commission. A nomination has been in progress among Toledo sports in the interest of Ollee Pechord, official referee of the Toledo boxing commission, whose appointment as third man in the ring has been openly urged. As the In-
w rt Pi C O O ' impendence aay maica win De nem III LrrOT-teSt; oCOTe O'Oi under license issued by the Toledo
commission, it 13 regarded as probable that the commission will have considerable to do in naming the referee. . . . The consensus of opinion seems to be that in addition to a referee, two
Brownsville started the scoring, i judges also will be named. The box-
making one run in the second inning ing board has expressed a preference
discussing the issue with Promoter Wayne man who will always nraise
Tex Rickard, Willard, Jack Kearns, j Tanlac, for the medicine has relieved manager of Dempsey, and members me entirely of a case of stomach
and two the third, but failed to score
again. Errors accounted for the Bostonians' eight run total. Chicarico struck out 18 men while Moore whiffed 12. - . Next Sunday Boston meets the Peru C. & O. shop team at Boston, and off July 4 will play the Richmond AllStars. - The Score . R. Brownsville .... 012 000 0003 Boston .......... 002 200 4008
CYCLONE KILLS 200
(By Associated Press) FARGO, N. D., June 23 Approximately' 200 persons were killed by a cyclone that struck Fergus Falls, Minn., yesterday afternoon.
to this manner of deciding the con
test, and as neither Willard nor Dempsey has made and objection, the plan may receive its first American tryout in the heavy weight championship contest. The referee would be caller upon to render a decision only in case of a disagreement between the two judges.
Children's Day Exercises At St. John's Next Sunday Children's day exercises will be held at St John's Lutheran church, next Sunday. The Sundayschool and the pupils of the parish school will take part. An offering for mission work has been announced.
which Popkins scooped up, but Shuey ! next man up singled to center and j
Steck tripled to right scoring Shuey. Ohmer dropped one just over short which Dehner mussed- up, allowing Steck to score. Williams snapped one to third and Larson dropped one in a hole retiring Dajton with the score tied. - Dayton Takes Lead Leininger did his part to bring in another tally, singling to center with no one out. Korfhagen sacrificed him to second, and Durban poped to third to second, and Durban popped to third since playing with the Quaker club. Dayton then took a one-run lead. Brennan let loose a heavy one that bounced clear int othe left field ditch, for two bases. Wellbaum shoved a hot one to Minner, but Fricked walloped another two-bagger scoring Brennan Funk hit to Minner, who threw out Fricke at third. Shuey rolled to short and was out.
GAMES TODAY National League Chicago at Cincinnati (Two games) Boston at Philadelphia Pittsburgh at St. Louis
American League Cleveland at Chicago St. Louis at Detroit Philadelphia at New York Washington at Boston
American Association Indianapolis at Columbu3 Louisville at Toledo Minneapolis at St. Paul
St. John's Sunday School
To Picnic July Fourth The annual picnic of St. John's Sun
day school and parish school will be held at the Wernle Orphan's Home on the Fourth of July. Motor service between the city end the home has been arranged. Committees are planning for the affair. -
Young Soldier's Hair Is Turned White By War CHEYENNE' Wyo., June 23. Serg. J. W, Roberts, formerly of Des Moines, has white hair, though he is not out? of his 208. Roberts recently was discharged from the army at Fort Rus
sell: In eighteen months overseas he participated in several battles and was wounded to; each, receiving five rifle
wounds in the legs. On top of all this he came home only to find that his father, mother, wife and two children had succumbed to the Influenza during the epidemic last winter. Now he is working with the Union Pacific railroad company here as a crossing watchman.
Whitewater Defeated By Arcanum; Score, 5 To 3 WHITEWATER, Ind., June 23 Arcanum baseball team sprung a surprise on the Whitewater nine Sunday afternoon here, beating them 5 to 3. Each team made the same number
of hits, but the locals did not place
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Toledo (first game) .R. H. E. Louisville ......102 101 0005 8 2
Toledo 000 000 0000 2 3 Batteries Davis and Meyers; Sanders and Murphy. Second game R. H. E. Lauisville . 200 002 000 4 5 2 Toledo . . . . .010 000 0102 6 2 Batteries Eennett and Meyers; Adams-nd Murphy. At Columbus R. H. E. Indianapolis ....001 200 0003 10 3 Columbus ...010 200 lOx 4 11 2 Batteries Covette and Leary 1 Sherman, George and Wagner. At St. Paul R. H.E. Minneapolis 000 200 0002 8 0 St. Paul .. .000 000 0011 5 2 Batteries Hovlik and Henry; Griner and Hargrave. At Milwaukee R.H. E. Milwaukee ... - .000 010 000 1 9 1
Kansas City ....100 002 01x-4 "8 0 Batteries Howard, Hansen and Stumpf, Huhn; Shackleford and LaLonge.
STATE LEAGUE STANDING Club. Won. Lost. Pet Newcastle .......... 5 0 1.000 Muncie 3 2 .600 Dayton ..... 1 1 -500 Richmond .......... 2 3 .400 Anderson 2 3 .400 Indianapolis 0 2 .000
Sunday's Results.
Richmond, 2 ; Dayton, 3. Newcastle, 9; Anderson, 2. Next Sunday's Games. Muncie. at Richmond. Indianapolis vs. Dayton at Anderson. Newcastle at Anderson.
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trouble that had followed me for
twenty years," said E. B. Lepper of; 1212 Naumee avenue, in a conversation with a special Tanlac representative-, recently. Mr. Lepper, who is an ez-re fighter, served as engineer in the Fort Wayne Fire Department for twenty-five years. He has lived, in Fort Wayne for thirty-two years end numbers his friends by his acquaintance. ' -' "Yes, sir." he continued, "my stomach was in such a bad condition for twenty years that nothing I would eat agreed with me. My food would always sour and after meals I would have a heavy feeling like a lump in the pit of my stomach. I would bloat
up terribly with gas, which always brought on severe pain and awful sick headaches, and when these spells came on me I was almost deathly sick at my stomach and simply had to sit down. If I had been a big eater I would have laid my trouble to that. But I was a very light eater never ate between meals or after dinner in the evenings but no matter bow careful I was I suffered just -the same. I was never able to get a good night's rest and always got up in the mornings feeling completely fagged out. I was also very bilious and sometimes during those headaches I 6poke or I would get so blind I couldn't see twenty feet ahead of me and just have to hold on to something. "Seeing what others had to say about Tanlac I concluded to try it. Well, the rst bottle made a considerable change and, as remarkable as it may seem, by the time I had nished the second bottle my trouble had actually disappeared. My stomach stopped bothering me and I could eat what I wanted without having a pain or an uncomfortable feeling afterwards. I was also free from headaches and dizziness and was feeling
! like a new man in every way. I kept
right on taking the medicine, however, until I took a full course to make sure of a good job. And a good job it was, for it was in the Spring of 1916 that Tanlac straightened me up and to this day I have had no return of my old troubles and my digestion is as good as it ever was. So I-can
) testify to both the immediate and last
ing results that one gets from Tanlac. I don't hesitate to endorse it for 1 believe it the best thing ever sold in a drug store for any sort of 6tomach trouble." There Is not a single portion of the body that is not benefited by the help-
i ful action of Tanlac, which begins its J work by stimulating the digestive ' and assimilative organs, thereby enriching the blood and invigorating the whole syetem. Next, it enables the weak, worn-out stomach to thoroughly digest its food, permitting the nourishing elements to ho converted into blood, bone and muscle, j It overcomes, it is said, that great cause of disease, weakness. It renders the body vigorous and elastic, keeps the mind clear and energetic and throws off the symptoms of ner
vousness and indigestion. It Duiias up the constitution weakened by disease and mental and physical overwork, quickens convalescence, and is an unfailing source of comfort to all suffering from such troubles. Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite's stores and the leading druggist In every town. Adv.
NOTICE OF REVIVAL Evangelist D. T. Kock of Ravenna, O., will be with us for a week's meeting beginning Sunday evening, June 22. The Church of God. Rhoda Temple. THOMAS DUCKWORTH
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