Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 217, 21 July 1920 — Page 9

.GIANTS OPEN FIVE GAME SERIES WITH GINNGY REDS TODAY

CINCINNATI. Ohio, July 81. The rushing Giants open Ave game aeries at Redland Field, Wednesday afternoon. The Giants are going to be hard for the Moran outfit to down as they hare been Koine like a cyclone on the -western trip. Chicago, Pittsburg and St. Louis falling before the McGraw clan. Jimmy Ring has been delegated to hurl the opener. The Brooklyn Dodgers copped the odd game of the series from the Reds Tuesday afternoon. Although winner, the Dodgers do not look any better than the Reds. The latter team has substitutes In three games. Brooklyn had all the breaks. The performance of Hod Eller Tuesday was encouragig to Manager Pat Moran. He now las Eller, King, Keutner, uuque anu Fisher to depend upon. Senor Luque, Ring and Reuther are the big three, however. The Bcore of Tuesday's game: CINCINNATI AB. R. H. PO. A. B Groh, Sb 4 0 0 0 Daubert, lb 4 0 1 7 0 a 0 0 4 1 4 Roush, cf 4 Duncan, If 4 Kouf, ss 4 6oa. rf 4 Sicking. 2b 4 Wingo, c 3 Eller, p 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 2 9 27 13 1 BROOKLYN AB. R. H. PO. A. E. !son, ss 4 0 Johnston, 3b 4 1 Griffith, rf 4 0 Wheat, If 4 1 Myers, cf 2 0 Konetchy, lb 3 1 Kilduff. 2b 4 0 IMer, c 4 0 Grimes, p 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 10 1 12 6 0 3 2 0 13 Totals 32 3 9 27 14 0 Cincinnati 000 000 1012 Brooklyn 000 100 0023 Three-Base Hit Konetchy. Left on Bases Cincinnati, 6; Brooklyn, 5. Double Plays Kopf to Sicking to TJaubert; Wheat to Kilduff. Struck Out By Eller, 1 ; by Grimes, 3. Bases on Balls Off Eller, 1; ofT Grimes, 1. Time 1:43. Umpires Rlgler and Moran. Pennsy Will Contest With Cohmbus Sunday Richmond and Columbus division baseball teams of the Pennsylvania division league, will hook up at Columbus, Wednesday afternoon for leadership in the Central Ohio grand division standing. Richmond has trimmed Zanesville and Columbus defeated Cincinnati. Although Zanesville players said Richmond was superior to Columbus, Manager Gus Pfafflin is not overly confident of the outcome of the game. The Richmond line-up has been changed, Riner hurling and McConaha In left field. The complete line-up: Riner, p; Dunn, c: Craycraft, lb; Fitzgibbons, ss; Winters, 3b; McConoha, rf; Runnells. cf: Garthwaite, 2b; Boyd, If; Moore, Wilson and Henstler, utility. Starr Piano-Natco Game HonJHnes Snndnv's Prneram Saturday's S. A. L. baseball program has the Starr i'iano-JN atco game ai exhibition Park, as headliner. The Wayne Works and Vulcans at Reid Field will furnish a good game, however. The last meeting of the Starrs and Natcos resulted in a victory for the Natco. The Starr foolishly started a 6crub pitcher and allowed the Natco to amass a lead that was never headed. Manager Al Mayer says that Hawekotte or Sturm will start Saturday's game, with Pete Minner in reserve. Schepman will hurl for the Natco. The new lineup of the Wayne Works Is expected to offer all the opposition needed by the Vulcans at "eld Field, Saturday, for a hot game. Cy Fitzgibbons, Charlie Klinger, Holmes, Haas and Johnson are additions to the Wayne Works clan. Indianapolis Reserves Face Eagles Next Sunday The Indianapolis Reserves are to clash with the Richmond Eagles at Exhibition Park, Sunday afternoon. Manager Everette Haas said Wednesday. Haas is authority for the statement that the Reserves will cause the Eagles to play their very best to cop the big end of the score. Ladies will Hgain be admitted to the game free. The city street car company has announced it will run cars from Eighth and Main streets to the hall grounds every sevein minutes Sunday, between 2 and 3 p. m. PENN'S IDEA APPROVED. CAPE MAY, N. J., July 21. A league of nations patterned after the ideals of William Penn was Indorsed at today's session of the general conference of Hicksite Friends. hear ye:: MNES Home T" . 1 . T . . t- - X- XT' VnnVAA

slugger, poled his thirty-second home I run of the season In the first game of

a double header with Chicago Tuesday. The clout was one of the longest ever made at the Polo Grounds, the ball traveling over the right field grandstand. The Yankees lost the came, however.

FATHER -rpwvwl n fe TSTTsferm ii Ztl X "iWrirv

WALTER JOHNSON'S NO-HIT PITCHING FEAT ADDS TO A TRULY GREAT PITCHING CAREER

Walter Johnson. When Walter Johnson the other day in hia unassuming mannet hurled a no-hit game he added hia sixth great pitching- feat to the records. Probably Johnson's most celebrated feat was nis strike-out record of 313 men in 1910.

Yesterday's Games V . . I NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago R. H. E. Boston 300 100 0004 9 2 Chicago 300 200 2209 15 1 Scott, Watson and O'Neill, Scott; Carter, Hendrix and Killefer. At Pittsburg R. H. E. New York 000 013 0105 8 0 Pittsburgh 000 000 0022 4 2 Nehf and Snyder; Cooper and Schmidt. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Detroit (first game) R. H. E. Detroit ..001 002 210 000 0017 15 0 W'sh'ton 000 002 004 000 0006 14 3 Oldham, Dauss and Ainsmith; Court ney, Schacht, Erickson and Picinich. Second Game Detroit 000 001 010 2 7 0 Washington 000 000 100 1 5 2 Ehmke and Stanage; Shaw, Snyder and Picinich. At New York (first game) R. H. E. Chicago 000 021 0047 11 2 New York 100 310 0005 10 2 Faber, Kerr and Schalk; Quinn, McGraw and Ruel. Second Game Chicago 011 000 0102 10 0 New York 200 400 00 6 8 2 Cicotte and Schalk; Mogridge and Ruel. At Boston R. H. E. Cleveland ....412 000 000 02 9 14 0 Boston 002 002 210 018 15 6 Morton. Niehaus, Uhle, Bagby and O'Neil; Fortune, Karr and Walters. At Philadelphia R. H. E. St. Louis 000 003 1105 10 1 Philadelphia 100 002 1004 12 0 Burwell, Davis and Severeld; Moore, Naylor and Perkins. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Minneapolis (first same) Indianapolis 000 000 0000 4 2 Minneapolis 400 000 02 6 12 0 Cavet, Goldsmith and Henline; Schauer and Mayer. Second Game Indianapolis 200 000 031 6 9 2 Minneapolis 100 100 001 3 10 3 Jones and Gossett; Robertson, Hovclik and Mayer. At St. Paul R. H. E. Louisville 101 000 0002 7 2 St. Paul 000 311 01 6 11 1 Long and Kocher; Griner and Hargrave. Kansas City R. H. E Toledo 013 000 0004 9 2 Kansas City 120 100 0015 9 3 Brady, McColl and Murphy, McNeill; Ames and Brock. At Milwaukee R. H. E. Columbus 300 003 1108 9 3 Milwaukee Ill 010 05 9 16 2 Mulrennan and Hartley; Reinhart and Gaston. Former Rivals in City Tennis Championships, Play Tuesday Jim Harrington and Ted Lanning, two of the crack tennis players of Richmond, had a warm two-set tennis session at the playground courts, Tuesday afternoon. Lanning is employed out of town, but is here on a visit. He was a former opponent of Harrington's for the city championship. Thus the tennis feud was renewed Tuesday. Lanning was victor In both seta. Harrington was master at placing but Lanning's terrific lobbing was too much for the former St. Mary star. Harrington scored most of his pointu on a back hand stroke. He was also effective on hard fore arm drives. But one spectator witnessed the best tennis matches held at the playgrounds this year.

TOTTBICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

League Standing NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs Won. Lost. Tct Brooklyn 52 35 .598 Cincinnati 46 35 .568 Pittsburg 40 39 .506 bt. Louis 42 43 .494 Chicago 43 45 .489 New York 40 42 .488 Boston 33 42 .440 Philadelphia 33 4S .407 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. Cleveland 58 28 .674 New York 58 152 .644 i Chicago 52 34 .605 i St. Louis 42 43 .494 Washington 39 42 .481 Bostpn 38 44 .463 Detroit 29 53 .554 Philadelphia 24 64 .273 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. St. Paul 64 26 .711 Minneapolis 50 42 .543 Toledo 46 44 .511 Indianapolis 45 44 .506 Louisville 43 44 .491 Milwaukee 43 46 .483 Columbus 36 51 .414 Kansas City 29 59 .330 GAMES TODAY. National League. New York at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Chicago. Brooklyn at Pittsburg. Boston at St. Louis. American League. Cleveland at New York. Chicago at Boston. St. Louis at PhiladelphiaDetroit at Washington. American Association. Columbus at Milwaukee. Toledo at Kansas City. Indianapolis at Minneapolis. Louisville at St. Paul. International League. Reading at Akron. Baltimore at Toronto. Jersey City at Rochester. Syracuse at Buffalo. GIANTS WILL BATTLE WITH CONNERSVILLE The Richmond Giants and Connersvllle Giants are to hook up In a giant baseball scrap at Exhibition Park Thursday afternoon. The Connersville team is reputed to be one of the best colored aggregations in the middle west. Two full blooded Indians compose their battery. Manager Cooper, of the Richmond Giants, says a game full of comedy and snappy ball playing will be furnished fans. Also that ladles are to be admitted free of charge to the park. , IN THE CELLAR FOR US. The Palladium commercial league baseball team deepened Jts cellar position Tuesday, incidentally losing to the Item, 10 to 9. The Item made 5 of its runs in the first inning on five errors and one hit Five more were made in the fifth. With the score 10 to 9 and the base full and two gone. Art Williams, Pall catcher, pulled the Casey and fanned. Himes Dairy and Pennsy are to clash Thursday. BRUSSELS, Belgium. A film censorship board composed of three fathers of families i3 to be formed in Belgium. T,hey are expected to bar productions depicting scenes of violence.

SUN - TELEGRAM, ItTCHMONB,

KRASSIN; BOLSHEVIST MINISTER, WORKS FOR A BOURGEOIS PEACE (By Associated Press) LONDON, July 21. Leonid Borisovitch Krassin, who came into the public's attention when he came to London this summer as head of a commission to negotiate the reopening of trade relations between Soviet Russia and the outside world, has been one of the few "moderates" to bo given a place of responsibility in the Soviet governmental machinery, and has been characterized as a "bourgeois Bolshevist." For engaging in a students' demonstration, Krassln was expelled from the Petrograd Technological institute. Subsequently ho engaged In a number of plots against the Czarist regime, but continued to advance in his profession, that of an electrical engineer. Following the Bolshevist coup of October, 1917, Krassin was offered a seat in the ministry which he declined as he thought Lenine's adventure too risky and his theories too sweeping. But his relations with Lenine were cordial and he accompanied Lenine and Trotzky when they went to BrestLitovsk to negotiate the treaty with Germany. When it became apparent that the Bolshevist government would last, Krassin threw in his lot with it and became Commissary of Food in the Red army. A "bourgeois Bolshevist," Krassin Is said to have little or no belief in the theories and aims of the Soviet government. For the time at least, however, he was convinced that noth I Owe My Life to Mr. McKinley's letter brings cheer to all who may be sufferers aa he was. Read it: "I can honestly say that X owe mr H I'eruna. After some of the best doctors In the country g-ave me up and told mo I could not live smother month, Peruna aved me. Travelling from town to town, throughout the country end ,r-irln,r trt cm into all lcinriil & of badly heated stores and buUdhours at a. time while plying my trade aa auctioneer. It is only natural that I bad colds frequently? eo v.hen tlila would occur I paid little attention to It, until last 3ccernber when I contracted a severe case, which, throuuli neglect on my part settled on my lunprs. "W hen almost too late, X hrpan doctorlnar, Irat, without avail, until I aeaxtl of Pervna. It cured met so I cannot praise it too highly.

Sale of MEN'S SHOES All our highest grade Men's Oxfords are now on sale. All Shoes carry regular guarantee.

Distinctive styles in Black and Brown; medium, broad toe and English lasts, at $9.65

I

NEFF & NUSBAUM

iiijaCTWMiBaaBianwBBMaaagBa MWMMWMBnMaaMMBanaMMgMwawaBMWwwwwwBaBaMawwwMB

IND., WEDNESDAY, JULY 21,

ing waa to b gained by resistance to the control of the workers. Ho came to an understanding with the workmen In hia own factory, giving shape to the Soviet experiment. During his tenure of four ministerial offices he has worked imperceptibly for the restoration of the plain bour. geois methods of commerce. To him the nationalization of commerce was one of the most stupid of Lenine'a blunders. As for the world revolution, he is an entire skeptic, and is all for a bourgeois peace. He would lead Russian Sovletism into the normal ways of democracy. "Who believes in Socialism In Russia?" he is reported to have asked. "Not I, nor Leniaei," A large proportion of th usurers who lend money In the poorer London districts are women. PLAYING WITH FIRE. The United States has literally been playing with fire to the tune of 325 million dollars a year. This is our total loss from fires last year, according to the report of the National Board of Fire Underwriters. It is the largest aggregate of losses in any year except two, 1906, when the San Francisco earthquake disaster caused such wide destruction, and in 1918, when several large munition plants were blown up. The total, which the under writers' experts justly designate as "appalling," means a loss of about 900,000 per day for every day in the year, and is equivalent to $3.13 for every man, woman and child. PF-RII-N A

Cured' Me fW' Mr. Samael McKlnley, 2504 R 22nd St., Kansas City, Mo.. Member of the Society of U. S. Jewelry Auctioneers. Bold E Ter j where. Tablet or Uqnld Form

BROWN VICI Nature list, high grade BROWN RUSSIA English last, high grade BROWN BROGUE English last, high grade

$065

Shoe Prices Down to

Women's $6.00 White Kool

Pumps and Oxfords, Louis or military heels; sale price ....2,89 Women's White Reinskin Pumps, eyelet ties and Colonial Pumps, with neat buckles, high Louis, baby Louis or military heels, $7 values, reduced to S3.69 Women's gray kid Shoes with military heels, a grade that sells regularly for fS.OO; sale price. .$3.98

Sowar COLONIAL

1920.

PURE WATER SUPPLY ASSURED FOR CITY "Shortage of water purifying chemicals, alum and chlorine, will have no effect on the Richmond water supply," said Carl Meyers, of the Richmond City Water Works company, today. Richmond's supply of water, Meyera said, comes from natural springs. Government tests show these springs to be purer than the supply from the, most modern filtering plants. I Reports from the public health service commission indicate that a ser ious shortage of alum and chlorine t threaten larger cities. The chemicals are plentiful enough but because of I

Gold Bond is a

an's Drink

that the Family

Cool foaming sparkling with a palate tickling zip that no sweet drink ever had or ever will have. There's a tang to Gold Bond that just makes you say "Let's have another." Gold-Bond is the kind of a drink that you repeat on time and again. Why not have a case sent out to the house ask your grocer or your druggist if they don't care to bother then phone us., : "

B. & B. Bottling Works

713 N. D St., Richmond, Ind. Phone 2371

Never Before and Never Again Will You be Able to Buy Good Shoes at Such Prices as Offered in This

Going Out of Business Sale

Cloth Women's regular $15 Colonial Pumps, Theo Ties, patent or dull French kid, hand turned soles, covered Louis 24-in. heels; sale price. .. .$6.98 Women's black kid Comfort Oxfords, plain toes, rubber heels, regular $5 values, reduced in this sale to S3. 19 Women's Black Kid military Oxfords, regular $7.00 values, reduced now to ....$4.69 Shoe Co. BLDG

. 7TH & MAIN ST., UPSTAIRS I! I

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

PAGE NINE

government priority orders, the chemicals are not properly distributed. Ten atatea have made emergency appeals to the government to rush shipments of the chemical. The hot days of August will cause the water to become affected if the chemicals are not available. Carl CYouiv MeimiCarp" V Whole Likes! Bedrock Men's black "Milwaukee" grain Shop Shoes, all solid leather, regular $6.00 values; sale Price S4.45 M e n's extra quality Work Shoes, brown waterproof leather, solid leather throughout, with double solee, nailed. Union made. Worth $3 a pair; sale ..$5.69 Formerly NEW METHOD SHOE CO. C. R. Mlchaelree, Mgr.