Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 186, 14 June 1920 — Page 8
!
PAGE EIGHT THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND MONDAY, JUNE, 14, 1920
I TWNK. TOU ARE. AvWFULL WELL -OOKT I U 8 "ML OOOOH! OA04HTE: VWb A T ? I ' L. " 1 MEKH-DWMyf-TORNOT CWtNO ME CBT HERE'S I "T -Wilt0OT I TO - -H-rY Ntw DREWHO CWTO -.I&mV I MKHT JOtT 111 ' ' i ffl THE NONEV to BOV THAT THE" MOHEY P" J xou U lLVk OUT YMTH HER.-MX CLOTHES) - As WELL MAKE ij, NEWDRVHQwKWT6oj V iHllW LMW' 3HW7.li' , r DON'T CT- $teL- WbERVATlON j J
If
, .
REDS ON TOP RUNG; ELLER OR FISHER TO PITCH GAME TODAY BROOKLYN. N. Y., June 14. Those Reds are again in first place. It happened at Brooklyn, Sunday afternoon when Jimmy Ring held the Dodgers runless and allowed but C scratch The Reds meanwhile were able to cop but one run. It was sufficient, however. By virtue of Saturday's and Sunday's victories, the Reds are leading the league with a half game margin. Two more battles are listed with the Dodgers, however, and the Reds will have to cop one of them in order to retain first place. Manager Moran will use either Eller or Fisher in Monday's game, reserving Reuther for Tuesday's game. The score: CINCINNATI AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Rath. 2b 4 0 1 5 5 0 Daubert. lb 4 1 1 10 0 0 Oroh, 3b 4 0 1 0 1 0 Roush. cf 3 0 1 2 0 0 Duncan, If 4 0 1 2 0 0 Kopf. 68 4 0 0 3 2 0 Neale. rf 3 0 0 2 0 0 Rariden, c 3 0 1 3 0 0 Ring, p 3!J:Totals 32 1 6 27 9 0 BROOKLYN AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Olson, ss 4 0 1 0 2 0 Johnston. 3b 4 0 0 2 0 0 Wheat, If 3 0 0 6 0 0 Myers, cf 4 0 0 1 0 0 Konetchy. lb 4 0 211 0 0 Griffith; rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 Kllduff, 2b 3 0 1 1 5 0 Miller, c 3 0 0 4 0 0 Marquard, p 2 0 0 0 2 0 smith n 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mitchell 1 0 1 0 0 0 jMeip 0 0 0 0 0 0 JjMcCabe 0 0 0 0 0 0 . Totals 32 0 6 26 9 0 Batter for Marquard in the eighth tRan for Mitchell in the eighth. 1 JtRan for Konetchy in the ninth. 6Roush out, hit by batted ball. Cincinnati 000 001 0001 Brooklyn 000 000 0000 Two-Base Hit Mitchell. Double Play Kopf, Rath and Daubert, Left on Bases Cincinnati, 5; Brooklyn, 6. Hits Off Marquard, 6 in 8 innings; , off Smith, none in 1 inning. Struck Out By Ring, 3; by Marquard, 4. Wild Pitch Marquard. ' Bases on Balls Off Ring, 1 ; off Marquard, 1. Winning Pitcher Ring. Losing Pitcher Marquard. Umpires Klem and Emslie. ' Time 1:37.
League Standing
NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs. Won. Lost. Cincinnati 28 20 Brooklyn 27 20 St. Louis 27 23 Chicago 25 25 Pittsburg 21 22 Boston .21 23 New York 21 28 Philadelphia 19 28
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Lost. 17 18 22 21 24 27 33 35
Clubs. Won. Cleveland 33 New York 34 Chicago 28 Boston 25 Washington 24 St. Louis 21 Detroit 16 Philadelphia 16
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs. Won. Lost.
St. Paul 39 Toledo 28 Milwaukee 30 Minneapolis 28 Columbus 25 Louisville 23 Indianapolis 17 Kansas City 18
GAMES TODAY. National League. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. St. Louis at New York. Pittsburg at Philadelphia. Chicago at Boston. American League. Washington at Chicago. New York at Cleveland. Boston at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Detroit. American Association. Milwaukee at Toledo. Kansas City at Indianapolis. Minneapolis at Louisville. St. Paul at Columbus.
15 22 24 28 25 26 32 36
Pet. .583 .574 .540 .500 .488 .477 .429 .404 Pet. .660
.654 .560 .543 .500 .437 .327 314 Pet. .722 .560 .556 .500 .500 .469 .347 .333
Yesterday's Games
2
and
R.
NATIONAL LEAGUE. At New York R- H. E. St Louis 110 210 0005 9 0
New York 010 000 2003 8
Doals and Dillhofer; Barnes Smith. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Cleveland
New York 601 Oil 02314
Cleveland 000 000 000 0
Shawkey and Hannah: thle, Myers, Faeth and O'Neil. At Chicago R. H. E.
Washineton 100 000 0113 8 0
Chicago 100 020 42 9 11 1
Coatney, Shaw and Picinich; Wil
liams and Schalk. At Detroit R
Philadelphia 003 000 000 03 Detroit 000 010 020 14
Perry and Perkins; Ehnke and Arn
smith. At St. Louis R. H.E. Boston 000 100 013 5 9 4 St. Louis 102 010 61x 11 13 7 Jones and Walters; Shocker and Severoid. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Minneapolis . R. H. E. Minneapolis .... 000 022 2028 13 2 Indianapolis .... 210 002 Q00 5 9 4 James and Mayer; Petty and Her.line. 2nd Game R. H. E. Minneapolis 000 000 101 5 0 Indianapolis 000 002 002 6 2 Craft and Mayer; Jones and Gossett. At Louisville R. H. E. Kansas City ... 100 000 0102 8 1 Louisville 100 000 0001 9 1 Hortsman and Brock; Wright and Kocker. At Columbus R.H. E. Milwaukee 200 201 010 6 10 0 Columbus 300 421 lOx 11 15 0 2nd Game R. H. E. Milwaukee 000 010 0001 7 2 Columbus 001 004 Olx 6 11 1 McWhinney and Gaston; Danforth and Hartley. At Toledo R. H. E. St. Paul 0O0 000 0213 5 3 Toledo 000 400 OOx 4 8 1 Williams and Hargrove; Middlelawn and McNeil.
STORM LETS RUBBERS
GARRY HOME CONTEST
The rain came down at Exhibition Park Sunday afternoon in time to en
able the Dayton Rubbers to carry
home a 4 to 2 victory from the Rich
mond Eagles. The 500 fans attending the game all believed the Eaglee would have eventually won out, as Minner, Richmond hurler, was going great and Jones, visiting pitcher, was being hit hard. Dayton won the game because of a temporary loss of control by Minner in the second inning. When the rain started, the 500 fans in the stand were huddled behind posts and seats, the wind driving the rain through the stand in solid sheets. Dozens of streams of water poured through the leaky roof. The storm soon passed but the baseball game was ended, the diamonds being turned into a miniature lake. The score: Dayton Rubbers. AB. R. BH. PO. A.E.
RACES FOR TOP OF HEAP EXCITING IN BOTH BIG LEAGUES
Cincinnati ousted Brooklyn from the National league leadership Sunday, while the New York Americans overwhelmed Cleveland and brought about a virtual tie in that league. With the two leading teams in each
league fighting each other, the St. Louis Nationals loom up as a rival to Cincinnati and Brooklyn. The American league leaders, however, enjoy a good lead and are going at a good gait. Cincinnati was far from world series form in. the New York series.
! but showed to better advantage
against Brooklyn. Brooklyn is averaging only about two runs a game since returning to its home grounds, while the pitchers are proving ineffective against the western visitors. St. Louis, in the midst of its .first winning streak, is meeting little opposition In the east. The cardinals have won 11 of their last 14 games. Chicago dropped from top of the league to fourth place, winning yesterday its first victory in 11 games. Boston and Pittsburgh showed much improvement over the previous week. Change of Shortstops Benefits The exchange of shortstops by New York and Philadelphia apparently gave new life to both teams as the Quakers had their first winning week in a month and the Giants began to play steadier. In the American League, Cleveland and New York seemingly have little to fear at present from the other teams. Good pitching aided Cleveland last week, but today the Yankees pounded their pitchers for 18 hits and 14 runs. New York averaged seven runs a game in the last 24 contests, of which it won 20. Boston ended its losing streak when it went west last week, taking three games out of four from Chicago by good batting and steady pitching. St.-
! Louis found the Red Sox twirlers easy.
Chicago hit hard in its other gami
and downed Washington today for 'the second time. Washington and SL Louis are putting np a strong attack, but the Senators are being scored upon heavily. Detroit's second victory over Philadelphia today pitched the Athletics into last place, which the Tigers had been occupying since the season ''began.
S. A. L. Baseball
Extra base wallops and frequent errors featured the 13 to 12 victory gained by the Natco S. A. L. team from the Starr Pianos on Reid Field at Earlham, Saturday afternoon. The Natco pounded Byrkett, Hawekotte, Minner and Sturm. Schepman was driven from the mound in the eighth inning. Mike Knott went into the box and saved the day. Herbie Logan hit a home run in the fourth, the ball carrying all the way to the left field fence. This was one of the longest its ever made at Reid Field. The score and summary:
tnan 4; Knott, 1. Base on balls Schepman 2; Minner 1. Umpire, Mowe.
Miller 'Kemper s Swamped, 16 to 1, at Eldorado, 0. The Miller-Kempers were completely swamped by Eldorado Sunday afternoon, the final score being 16 to 1. It probably would have been larger, but E!dorado players were tired running around the bases. The score: R. H. E. Miller-Kempers 100 000 000 1 7 7 Eldorado 430 410 40x 16 10 0 Dunham, Lantz and Craycraft; Jud-
ay and Haas.
..6
Starr Piano Hiatt. cf., rf. ... Reddinghaus. 3b. Minner, 2b., p.
Holmes, lb 6 Justice, cf., 2b., ss. ..5 O. Byrkett, 68., 2b. . .3 Hawekotte, cf., p., rf. 6 Witte, c 4 Byrkett, p., cf., rf. ..5 Sturm, p 2
AB. R. H. O. A. E.
.6 2 2 .5 2 0
1 2 1 2 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 2
0 1 2 3 7 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Total 48 12 15 24 11 4
Natco
AB. R. H. O. A. E.
H. Logan 5 3 Schepman 4 1 J. Logan 5 2
Knott 5 4 3 Haas 5 0 2 Holmes 4 0 0
0 9
4 3 0 0 2 0
Cummins 4 0 Meyers 4 1
1 1 2 1 3 2 2 0 0 0
CROQUET MATCH IS HELD AT WHITEWATER GROUNDS Walter Stegman, supervisor of the Whitewater school playgrounds, arranged a croquet tournament Saturday that ended with the following results: First round, McKinney defeated W.
Salzarulo; Clark defeated Mitrione; Davis defeated Hamilton. Second round. McKinney defeated Clark. Finals, Davis defeated McKinney in a close game. Doubles first round. Hall and McKinney defeated Davis and Million; Burrell and Salzarulo defeated School and Mitrione; Clark and Hamilton defeated Yates and Cottman. Second round. Hall and McKinney defeated Burrell and Salzarulo. Finals. Clark and Hamilton defeated Hall and McKinney.
Centerville Shows New Madison How to Play Ball Centerville continued its winning spree Sunday afternoon, taking New Madison into camp by a 11 to 4 count. The visitors made three runs in the first inning, but were helpless thereafter. 1 Daughtery and Bowman composed the Centerville battery. Toney pitched for New Madison and Harter was behind the bat.
0 0
Roser
.3 2 0 1 0 0
Totals 39 13 13 27 8 6 Summary: Home runs, H. Logan; Sturm. Triples, Witte. Two base hits, Holmes, Hiatt, Haas. Struck out by Hawekotte, 5; Minner 1, Schep-
No.meteJ can touch. you give satisfaction
Tavenor. ss 2 0 1 2 Borderwisch, 2b. ... 2 0 1 0 Kavanaugh, If. 2 0 0 2 WIssel, rf 3 0 0 0 Steck, cf 2 1 1 0 Textor, lb 1 1 0 7 Peffley. 3b 1 0 0 0 Rens8inzehn, c 2 1 1 4 Jones, p 1 1 0 0
0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0
Saturday's Games NATIONAL LEAGUE. Cincinnati. 4; Brooklyn. 3. Pittsburg, 6; Philadelphia, 4. St. Louis. 2; New York, 0. Chicago. 8: Boston, 1. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Detroit. 4; Philadelphia, 3. New York, 4: Cleveland, 5. Boston. 4; St. Louis, 15. Washington, 8: Chicago. 9. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. St. Paul. 6: Toledo. 2. Kansas City, 0; Louisville, 10. Minneapolis, 2; Indianapolis, 4.
Totals 16 4 4 15 5 1 Richmond Eagles. AB. R. BH. PO. A. E. Fitzgibbons, ss 3 0 1 0 2 1 Schepman. If 3 0 1 1 0 0 Logan, 2b 3 0 1 1 2 0 Hiatt. rf 2 1 1 0 0 0 Holmes, li., cf 2 1 1 6 0 0 Hewitt, cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 Reddinghaus, 3 b . . 2 0 0 1 0 0 Haas, c 2 0 1 5 1 0 Minner, p 2 0 0 0 1 0 Knight, lb 0 0 0 1 0 0
Totals 21 2 6 15 6 1 Summary.: Three bast hit Hewitt. .Two base nits Logan, Haas. Sacrifice hits Tovenor, Peffley, Borderwisch. Stolen bases Renssenzehn 2. Bases on balls Minner 2. Struck out by Jones 5; Minner 5. Hit by pitcher (Textor). Umpire Klutter. Scorer McMinn. Time One hour.
Baseball Scores Made In All-Stars-Boston Contest The Richmond All-Stars were leading the Boston C. and O. baseball team 15 to 10 at the end of the fourth inning at Boston Sunday afternoon when the Storm King put an end to hostilities. Therefore all the slugging and runs irored didn't mean anything. The last ball pitched by Hartman, of the All-Stars, caused his right arm to Jump out of joint. Alvey and Farnsworth composed the Boston battery.
Lynn Shows Strength by Beating Strong Senators Lynn demonstrated that it has to be heard from in picking the Suburban league winner, by giving the strong Richmond Senators a 15 to 9 trimming at Lynn Sunday afternoon. The Senators piled up an early lead but the Lynn sluggers soon wiped this out. Lynn batters slugged 7 two baggers and one triple. Duke and McCoy composed the winning battery. Madge and Hawk composed that of the Senators.
BMW
MMi
mm
mm
mm
mm
WW
Leave it to Camels! They'll pass you a new deal in cigarette enjoyment!
"W'OU get out of every Camel you smoke everything you ever wanted in a cigarette! They are a delight! Never has such a cigarette been offered smokers! We ask you to compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at any price!
Camels are mold everywhere in scientifically sealed packages of 20 cigarette: or ten package J200 cigarettes) in a glassme- paper covered carton. We strongly recommend this carton forthehomeoroffice supply or -when you travel. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Winston-Salem, N. C
fCAs
Camels are unusual not only in their quality but in their expert blend of
choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos. You will prefer Camels blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight.
1? ii
You can smoke Camels liberally without tiring your taste; besides, Camels leave no unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant cigaretty odor. Camels an
swer every ciea- TOfe
" as
rette question as
it has never been
answered before!
3fi
for Sorrow and Suffering the heritage of all Women
E
for Experience that refines the Soul of all Women
x
the Great Unknown in the fascinating game of Life
i
il !!
Bargains For all in the Great Going Out of Business SALE
Women's Black Kid House Slippers Going Out of Business Sale C1 Ofi
OL.OV
price
Girl's "Sister Sue" Rubber Sole White Canvas Slippers, all sizes up to 2. Going Out of Busi- QQness Sale price iOC
Men's and Boys' Tennis Bals and Oxfords, white and black. Going out of Business Sale QQ price UoC
Girls' and Boys' Barefoot Sandals, all sizes to 2. Going Out of Busi- QQ ness Sale price... iOC
Men's $4.00 Tan Elk Outing Shoes with viscolized soles, sizes 6 to 1L Going Out of Busi- (Jrt QQ ness Sale VO
Men's Spring Style Oxfords and Shoes, English and wide toe lasts, all sizes and widths, worth up to $10 and ?12 a pair.
Going Out of Business
Sale price $4.98, $5.89
$7.95
Men's Brown Ducking Rubber Sole Shoes with, heels, water proof. Coins Out of Business QO A Q Sale price tP.IO Boys $2.33
Men's S3'0 Palm Beach and V.'hiro Canvas Oxford with 11 - rubber soles; pood lasts. Going Out of Business (T- QQ Sale price J)70
Women's regular $15 Patent Colt Lace Hoots with brown kid and fieldmouse kid tops, hand-turned covered Louis heels, all sizes and Widths. Going Out of
Business Sale price
S5.98
Women's small-size Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords; Going Out of Business Sale
price $1.95, $2.39
$2.69
Men's Gun Metal Blucher Shoes, Goodyear welt sewed, solid oak insoles, $S values; sale J(T QQ price VWtOt
Women's White Canvas Rubber Sole and Heel
Pumps; Going out of
Business Sale price
S1.98
New Method Shoe Store
Upstairs, Colonial Building Entrance Between Barber Shop and 5 and 10c store
