Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 162, 18 May 1920 — Page 7

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY,' MAY 18, 1920.

PAGE SEVEN

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WORK OUT SLATE AT MEET TONIGHT

Final arrangements forthe opening of the Saturday Afternoon baseball league Saturday afternoon will bo worked out at a meeting of team managers In the Y. M. C. A. Tuesday night. Both games of the afternoon are to bo played at Exhibition Park. Present indications are the Starr Piano and Xateo aggregations will prove the class of the circuit. At that, the Piauo Makers have an edge on the Natcoes. Manager Al Mayer has five of the best pitchers In town on his team. Hawekotte and Sturm aro to bear the brunt of attack, however. Winner is supposed to bo the peer of both, but he will pitch Sunday baseball and play short for the Starrs. Carl Kutter and Dunham aro other Starr hurlers. Holmes First Sacker. Johnny Holmes has been listed as the Starr first sacker, Maro Justice on second and Gugus Redenhaus on third. Byrkett, Hiatt, Mayer and Red are Starr outfielders. Paul Witte and Retz will take care of the receiving end. Otis Byrkett is sub-inflelder. The Natco has Spot Schepman at pitchers and Everett Haas as catcher. Ilerble and Johnny Logan, Wink Holmes and Olapp are infielders. Phil Roser, Snyder and Lamb are outfielders. . Tho Jenkina-Vulcans are supposed to have a formidable aggregation. Wayne Works rooters have nothing to say. Dope indicates, however, that the Starrs and Katcos will bo the class of the league.

I League Standing v NATIONAL LEAGUE Won. Lost. Cincinnati 16 10 Brooklyn 12 9 Pittsburg 12 10 Chicago 14 12 Boston 10 ft Philadelphia 10 14 St. Louis . 9 14 New York 8 13 AMERICAN LEAGUE Won. Lost. Cleveland 17 7 Boston 15 8 Chicago 12 10 St. Louis 12 12 New York 12 12 Washington 12 13 Philadelphia 8 14 Detroit 6 18 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost St. Paul 22 6 Louisville 13-, 10 Toledo 14 11 Minneapolis 15 14 Milwaukee 13 14 Columbus 11 14 Indianapolis 8 15 Kansas City 9 21

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

Aw, Be Good! Earlham Girls' Appeal to Jupiter Plavius Perhaps tho sour old weatherman will hoed the appeal of the Earlham co-oils for jiood weather. His fit of badtemprr caused the postponement of Monday's baseball games between the Kroshio-Junior and Senior-Soph girls at Reid field. These games will be played Wednesday, if it don't rain. Friday the Juniors are to meet the Seniors and tho Fresliies meet tho Sophs. Next Monday will see tho Freshie-Scniors and Juniors and Sophs entangled. Baseball captains are: Reagan for the Seniors. Calvert for the Juniors. Lindley for the Sophs and Sellag for the Freshies. Mabel Moyer Is baseball manager. Girls' nrchery and tennis tournaments are to start next week. Practice for the annual field day on May 2i has bcun. The girls have been making pood showings. The W. A. A. banquet on May 29 will close the athletic season.

The great lace industry of Malta Is almost exclusively confined 1o women and girls, and many families have special designs that are handed down from one generation to another.

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Stanley Coveleskie. By NORMAN E. BROWN. When some Cleveland scribe several seasons ago nicknamed Stanley Coveleskie the "Dependable Pole," he was saying something. For this righthanded pitcher, who is proud of his Polish blood, is the star pitcher of the Cleveland ball club and one of the steadiest pitchers In the ranks of stardom. Covey has been a star of the Indian mound staff ever since he joined the club in 1916 from Portland. In the four campaigns he has worked for Cleveland he has won S7 games and lost 52. His first year up he won 16 and lost 13. The next season he copped 19 and lost 14. In 1918 he won 23 and lost 13. Then, last year he stepped into the records with 24 victories and only 12 defeats. That's a mighty consistent record, we'd say. This year Covey has hung up a string of consecutive victories for the opening drive for the other hurlers to shoot at. Coveleskie adds more fame to the town of Shamokin, Pa., the home of the famous Shamokin Blues and the starting point of Steve O'Neill and several other big league stars. Stan was born there July 13, 1S!t0. His playing in Shamokin attracted the attention of the Lancaster team owners. From Lancaster he was transferred to Atlantic City and Connie Mack took him away from that club 1o give him a tryout. Connie decided Stan needed more seasoning and sent him to Spokane. Spokane sent him to Portland in a player agreement and Cleveland called him to the big show from Portland at the close of the 1915 season under their working agreement with McCredie's club.

Yesterday's Games

v . .. NATIONAL LEAGUE. At Pittsburg R. H. E. X. York 130 000 000 000 0026 12 3 Pitts. . 000 040 000 000 0037 13 7 Toney, Douglas, Barnes and Snider; Cooper, Carlson, Ponder and Schmidt. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Boston U. H. E. Chicago 000 000 0101 8 3 Boston 100 000 Olx 2 7 0 Wilkinson and Sehalk; Jones and Walters. At Washington It. H.E. St. Louis 020 000 0002 9 2 Washington .... 010 000 0001 6 2 Shocker and Severeid; Zachary, Erickson and Gharrity. At Philadelphia R. II. E. Detroit 430 010 1009 9 3 Philadelphia ... 000 011 0237 10 2 Dauss and Stange; Kinney, Rommel, Bigbee, Moore and Perkins, Myatt. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Minneapolis R. H. E. Columbus 000 010 0001 6 1 Minneapolis .... 100 000 lOx 2 8 1 McQuillan and Wagner; Whitehouse and Mayer. At Kansas City R.H.E. Indianapolis ... 003 100 0004 10 0 Kansas City ... 000 310 30x 7 14 1 Flaherty, Murray and Ilenline; Tuero, Ames and Brock. At St. Paul R. H. E. Toledo ,0-00 004 15010 17 2 St. Paul 025 100 20x 11 15 3 Brady, Nelson and McNeill, Kelly; Williams, Merritt and Hargrave.

STARR NINE GIVES AND TAKES LICKING

More than 700 Richmond baseball fans saw the Starr Piano divide a double bill with the Kokomo C. N. V.'.s, at Exhibition park Sunday afternoon. The visitors won the first game 6 to 2, but received a 10 to 1 walloping in the second stanza. For six innings of the first game, Russ Hawekotte of the Starrs, mowed tho visitors in one, two, threo order. Then came the fatal seventh and aided by a couple of errors and bunched hits, the visitors scored six times. The Starrs managed to score twice. Manager Al Meyer sent Sturm to the mount In the second game. Wib held 'em. Tho Starrs went on a batting rampage, driving four of the colored hurlers to the showers and scoring ten runs. It is possible tho rub game will be played.

Brooklyn Series Is Test

Of Early Season for Reds CINCINNATI, Ohio, May IS The four games with Brooklyn, starting Tuesday and ending Friday, will either mark or break the Red's chances to grab a firm hold on first place. The Dodgers are among the best of the eastern teams and has a pitching staff that will no doubt prove interesting to our Reds. Manager Moran lias selected Reuther to start the series, providing the weatherman does not pinch-hir. The storm clouds gushed forth Monday, spoiling the last game of the Redrhilio series.

Commercial Leaguers To "Bust" Season Open Tuesday The weatherman permitting, the first baseball game of the prospective Commercial league will be played between the Palladium aggregation and the Home Telephone nine at Exhibition Park Tusday afternoon. Neither team has played this season so the game will serve as a limbering-up exercise. Representatives from five prospective league members were present at the meeting in Sam Yigran's store Monday night. Preliminary plans were made, the finale to come off at a meeting Friday night. The Palladium. Item, Rimes' Dairy. Y. M. C. A. and Home Telephone com pany are the five organizations definitely lined up. Efforts are to be made before Friday to induce the postoffice or Pennsylvania to make the sixth team.

Turn Out! Is Urge To City Tennis Enthusiasts Richmond tennis enthusiasts Tuesday were urged to make a good showing at the meeting in George Brehm's store at 7 p. m. Friday. "The larger the attendance the greater the city officials will be impressed with the necessity for more tennis courts," said a member. Even with the three courts now under construction at Glen park,

, courts are lacking. Connersville and

Newcastle, half tho size or menmonu, have more courts. The Glen Miller project is only a starter. Friday's meeting is to form a tennis governing body. Rules governing length of time courts may be occupied and dues to be charged toward upkeep, will be decided by a committee to be appointed. SOLDIERS' BODIES ARRIVE NEW YORK, May 18 The navy Monday brourht back to the homeland tho bodies of more soldiers who perished overseas during the World War The naval transport Nereus, docking at the naval supply base in Brooklyn, carried below decks more than 150 nag-draped coffins. As each casket was borne ashore, it passed through a double line of sailors and marines, standing at. :lute.

CENTERVILLE NIBBLES AT SUBURBAN LEAGUE HOOK Richmond delegation to Centerville Monday night was partially successful in organizing a Suburban baseball team. A committee headed by Harry Hatfield, was appointed to investigate popular opinion for the jague. A representative will be present at the Suburban league meeting in the Y. M. C. A. Tuesday night.

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Louisiana has nineteen registered women statisticians, which exceeds the record of any other state.

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Many Wise Professors at Earlham, Bat Cupid is Leader of Curriculum Persons connected with Earlham college have marveled at what some of them call the Earlham "lovecourse". Of the approximate 10,000 persons who have attended Earlham 1,370 have received degrees and 913 have married. "Oh the culpable cupidity of cupld", bemoans the Earlham Press. Among these 913 matrimonies there have been more than a hundred purely Earlham "affairs" which have resulted in over 100 "alumni homes" composed of husband and wife both of whom are graduates of Earlham. About 40 of these homes are guided by husbands and wives who were classmates In Earlham.

U. S. WOMEN

(Continued from Page One) the energy and enthusiasm of the American women was a constant source of wonder and praise. There are two places at least in England where the mention of America never fails to produce spontaneous applause one is a Sinn Fein assembly, the other a meeting of temperance workers. Pays Respect6 to U. S. The LLshop of London struck the Keynote of resisjance to the Yankee invasion. The bishop spoke at Saint Paul's cathedral on the closing day of the convention, and, as usual, addressed himself to thp Americans. He declared that drunkenness was increasing at an alarming rate since the war; that twice" as many women were arrested for drunkenness this year than last; that the nation had signally failed to handle the problem. The churches were going to do something about it, he said, but in not fo drastic n method as that used bv our

good friends in America. He outlined a plan of the churches of England that includes Sunday closing of public houses, so the bar maids will have a rest and poor children won't have to come to Sunday school without their dinners; continuation of wartime closing hours; local option and fewer, public houses. He believed every word of the good things that prohibition had dorte in America, he said, but things were different in England. Local Option is Plan As sifted down before the W. C. T. . convention, the temperarve fight here for 10 or even 20 years will be one solely on a basis of local option. Scotland lias felt the impress of the invader, and is considered as seriously "uienac.""l" by "prohibition". Wales, where many American speakers have been paving the way for local option, is considered in "danger" and even England is not so free from the "pussyfoot" influence. Only Ireland is safe. It is to be expected that a country that regards public houses important enough to run cars and 'busses to and from them, is not going to part with such institutions without a struggle. One doesn't get off a tram car at a certain street, he gets off at the Thatched House or The Green Man or The Old Blue, or The Spotted Dog. In Aylesbury, a market town near Oxford, there are 99 public houses in the town square, sometimes two or three next to each other. Even determined resistants to "pussyfoot" acknowledge that three "pubs" in a row is unnecessary. As regulations now stand, under the defense of the realm act, public houses are open from 12 to 2:30 o'clock and from 6 to 10 o'clock in the evening. It is generally declared that the "pubs" make as much money under thf present closing law as they did when they wptp oiion all the tintf.

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A halt pint used to cost a penny. English money, hut It's five times that or more now, and the new budget Just proposed will add to the cost by the tax imposed on Fpirits. American Women at Meeting The American women who were here to attend the V. C. T. U. convention could not understand the attitude taken toward the meeting by the London newspapers. In the States, for a great many years, a gathering of women, especially a world meeting, has received attention and courteous consideration from the newspapers. But the London press only mentioned the convention to sneer at it and give advice to the American speakers. A hopeful young London reporter gave a sensational description of the chilling reception accorded German and Bulgarian delegates but there were no Germans and Bulgarians there. Even the Bishop of London denounced the 'campaign of misrepresentation" which the English newspapers have been conducting concerning prohibition in America. Pauper statistics from such states as Maine and Mississippi are quoted to show the harm prohibition has done; and the newspapers are always carrying pictures showing how the Yanks are evading pussyfoot. Although Canada is following in the footsteps of dry America, the press is silent about the horrors in that part of the empire, preferring to center its attack on what it considers the originator of the monster the United States.

ilVKS ntKDIT THROVGH LAND Uackache, lame and stiff muscles and rheumatic pains are oftn symptoms of deranne.l kidneys. "I had wek bladder, bad kidneys and liver." writes Willie Carter. I.uxar. T'a. "1 rould not sleep well and my hark pained me awful. I had a dizzy feeling in the mnrtiIntr. Since taking: Foley Kidney Pills I have been relieved of all such alkments." They rid the system of the poisonous acids that cause aches and pains. For sale by A. O. Luken & Co., 630 Main St. advertisement.

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We Started Together : Let's Stick Together!

This is American Legion Week You will be called upon to join this organization that was established for YOU. Sign up Now! So that you may answer "Yeo" when the roll of new members is called. Tell your "Buddy" tell him to tell his "Buddy" to fill out the blank below. The American Legion is doing big things but they need your support to do even bigger things.

MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION BLANK

My name is (Please Print) (First) (Middle) (Last) (Miltary Rank) Present address Permanent address

Military or naval organizations in which I served. .

Civil occupations I hereby subscribe to the Constitution of the AMERICAN LEGION and apply for enrollment in the Harry Ray Post, No. 65, of the Department of Indiana.

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