Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 289, 15 October 1920 — Page 13
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FARMLAND RETURNS TO GUP WIDE WINGS OF RICHMOND EAGLES
Another good baseball game Is promised the fans when the Eagles and Farmland get together for the "rub"' game at Exhibition Park, Sunday afternoon. These teams are evenly matched as is seen by the score of the last game which the Eagles captured by a 1 to 0 score. Farmland captured the first- game of the series by a larger margin, the breaks of the game figuring largely in their making of runs. The Eagles are going the best now they have at any time during the season and will undoubtedly give a good account of themselves. Farmland will bring its usually strong lineup without any changes, to try and annex the deciding same of the series. Hawekotte on Mound, Hawekotte will be on the mound for the Eagles. This little hurler has been dishing up the curves in great style during the last two contests and with his team giving him some fair support he should be able to turn In another victory for the locals. TJie lineup for Sunday's game Is as follows: Farmland!. Clark, c, Ranle, lb., Clemens, 2b., Jennings. 3b., Tuhey, ss., Coats, rf.. Delporte, cf., E. Clark, If.. Skvock, p.. Free. p. Eagles Fitzglbbons, rf., Shepman, If., Logan, 2b., Reddlnghaus, 3b., Minner, ss.. Justice, cf.. Burkett. lb.. Hass, c, Hawekotte, p., Ewbanks, utility. Bowling Team Won Lost Pet. Maher's Meats 12 3 .800 Hill's Laddies 8 7 .533 1. H. C 7 8 '467 Feltman Tramps 7 8 .467 Wilson Cleaners 6 9 .400 Lee Tires 5 10 .333 Games in the City' Bowling League were the closest of any this season at the Twigg alleys Thursday night. The playing last night finished the first round and handicaps will be distributed for the next go. Maher's Meats completed the first loop in the lead with a comfortable margin in spite of the fact that the Feltman Tramps walloped them two out of three Thursday night. This was the first series the Mahers had lost. Dope was overbalanced a little when Lee Tires took a couple from Hill's Laddies. The Wilson Cleaners mauled enough pins for a majority win over the I. H. C. five. Frank Youngflesh continued his spectacular hitting of the maples and copped high score with a 210; he did rot gpt the high average. Hugh Smith gleaning this honor with 192. The scor follow: Maher's Meats. Handicap, 169 pins. Player 12 3 Maher 153 149 146 Mercurio 147 190 114 Maag 158 141 141 Nick 167 114 161 Zyen 185 154 158 Team totals.. 979 917 889 Feltman's Tramps. . Handicap, 131 pins. Player 12 3 Youngflesh ..181 167 2ta Todd 170 142 176 Crawford ....147 182 158 Conklin 134 169 135 Meyers 197 175 194 Tl. 448 451 440 442 497 Av. 14'' 15C 147 147 16G Tl. 558 48 487 438 566 A " 1 16:1 162 146 189 Team totals.. 960 966 1004 .., High score Youngflesh, 210. High average Meyers, 189.
I. H. C. Handicap, 140 pins. Player 1 2 3 Tl. Av. Ellis 137 150 149 436 145 Epping 165 166 176 507 lo'J Miller 142 178 179 499 16J Snyder 160 163 162 485 162 Haner 146 159 188 493 161
Team totals.. 890 956 994 Wilson's Cleaners. Handicap, 84 pins.
Player 1 2 3 Tl. Av King 179 170 164 513 171 R. Miller 193 185 162 540 180 Sherer 170 169 169 508 1CJ Smith 201 209 167 577 13. Bennett 135 175 178 488 16G Team totals.. 962 992 924
High score Smith. 209. High average Smith, 192. Lee Tires. Handicap, 125 pins.
Player 1 2 3 Tl. Av. Way 170. 168 154 492 104 Stonecipher. .155 ... 177 332 16". Smedinghoff. .163 154 ... 319 159 Muhl- 170 188 167 520 173 Foster 1G9 167 134 470 1ST Snaveley 161 180 341 170 Team totals . .954 939 937 Hill's Laddies. Handicap, 143 pins. Player 1 2 3 Tl. A v. Kelly 178 163 141 4S2 1 CI Ed Hill 143 165 179 4S7 162 Father Ryan.. 165 153 137 455 152 Lahrman 155 151 144 450 150 Runge 147 199 182 528 170 Team totals.. 931 974 926
High score Runge, 199. High average Runge, 176. Handcuffed Sailor Now Making Bicycle Tour Sailor Tony Pizzo, who is making a trip from New York to Los Angeles and return, handcuffed to a bicycle, passed through the city Friday on hir return trip. He is said to be a sailor from the U. S. S. S. Ward and was relipved from active duty to make the roast to coast journey, showing the ?ndurance of a sailor. During the entire trip, he must eat, sleep, bathe and perform all necessary functions handcuffed to his bicycle. Mayor Hylan, of Now York City, sealed ihe handcuffs April 24. I920 and 'hey cannot be opened until the task is Rnlshed. Piazzo says he will be back in New York in about two weeks. GREB WILL START TRAINING FOR GUNBOAT SMITH MATCH (By Associated Press) SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Oct. 15. Harry 3reb', of Pittsburgh, who will box Gunboat Smith at Springnj-ook park on the svpning of Oct. 21, is expected to establish training quarters here within the next few days. Greb has been working out at Pittsburgh in preparation for the battle, but. wants to get fc.is final training near the scene of the -or test, according to word received -'TP,
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PARK HIGH TEAM BRACED FOR ELKHART GAME; SUBS SHOW SPEED Final scrimmage for the high school before their clash with Elkhart Saturday was held Thursday evening at the Playgrounds. Most of the time was spent in scrimmaging from which the team emerged without any casualties. The scrapping bet ween the scrubs and the first team was the most evenly matched of any time this year, the scrubs managing to slip over their first touch-down of the season. Students at the high school are planning to back their team to the limit and a big "pep" meeting was held in chapel Friday morning at which members of the football team. Coach Null of the high school and Coach Mowe of Earlham; talked. A mutual root fest will be held on Reid field when high school and Earlham meet their respective opponents. Scrubs Develop. The second squad has been working out hard every day and several of them show promise of developing into first string men. Howard Webb has been helping coach t he seconds while Null handled the firsts. A number of substitutes will be available this week who lacked training last Saturday. Tickets for the games tomorrow will be on sale by students of the high school and at the gate before the game. Admission will be 50 cents for adults and 35 cents for children. SPEEDY LEGION TEAM PLAYS AT GREENVILLE Practice for the American Legion team will be held Sunday moraine at the playgrounds at 8 o'clock. Signal drill will be the only thing tried before the ex-service men make their trip to Greenville in the afternoon to take on the heavy eleven of that place. The Legion has a good outfit and plenty of weight and speed. They are expecting to put Richmond on the football map before the close of the season. Requests for games are rolling in on the locals from teams all over the state." This is attributed to tVio ticavv Khellivvillo Kmiarl last Sun- ' . ----- - - - - -- x day. People who are intending to attend the game at Greenville Sunday are asked to notify Manager Sheridan of the Legion team if they can accommodate a player by taking him to the game. Members" of the Legion' who are expecting to see the game are asked to meet at the Legion rooms immediately after noon and help swell the crowd to help bring home the bacon. MANY WOMEN IN ATTENDANCE AT AMERICAN LEAGUE GAMES (By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 15. The growing interest which women are taking in baseball is evidenced by attendance figures for 13 "Ladies Day" games here during the past season, which have just been made public by officials of the American League club. In all, 11,886 women attended on the days when their only entry fee was the 10 cents war tax. In April, for two games, the total was 377; May, two. 621, and in June. August and September, with three games each the respective attendance was 2.S20, 2,849, and 5 219. ' Prior to the war, officials say, the average attendance never was more than 300. It is also noticeable, officials add. that many women now do their own scoring a phase of the game to which they formerly paid little attention. LINE DEVELOPMENT FORMS BIG PROBLEM FOR ILLINOIS (By Associated Press) , TJRBANA, 111.. Oct. 15. Development of the line has proved to date a big problem of the 1920 Illinois football season. Followers of the team recard the backfield as far stronger ' than that the university had last year, but have felt that this advantage is offset to some extent by a weakness in the line. Jack Watson, captain of the 1915 team and rated as one of the best linesmen who ever wore the Orange and Blue, is helping with the line candidates, as is Lundgren and Belting, both former varsity players. Watson was coach of the Utah Agricultural college team. 1917 champions of the Pacific Coast conference. He is taking almost complete charge of the forwards. ONE ARMED ATHLETE TRIES OUT FOR FOOTBALL (By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 15. Robert Allison, a one-armed athlete from Blackburn College. Carbondale, 111., is one of the 20 candidates for the freshman eleven at Washington University this year, making his bid for a place in the backfield. Allison, who lost his arm while working in a steel mill at Pittsburgh. Pa., played two seasons with the Rlackburn football team, and captained both football and baseball teams there. He is a law student. SEARCHLIGHTS AID PRACTICE OF PURDUE FOOTBALL SQUAD (By Associated Press) LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 15. Early twilight does not cut short the afternoon football practice at Purdue University this season. Four huge searchlights have been placed on the bleachers so that the gridiron is brilliantly lighted and with the aid of the ghost ball Coach Scalan keeps his squad at work long after the sun has set.
BRINGING UP FATHER BY McMANUS
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Eagles' Hall October 21 HURST If this match is successful the Wayne Athletic club is planning to stage bouts frequently throughout the winter. The first will be indicative of the ones to be expected later. Tickets are on sale in several of the downtown cigar stores. EGAN PLANS TO STRENGTHEN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION' TEAM (By Associated Press) MILWAUKEE, Wis., Oct. 15. With the re-appointment of Jack Egan as manager of the Milwaukee club of the American Association for the 1921 campaign, plans are already underway to strengthen the team with new players. Egan was well satisfied with the liberal terms made him by owners of the club and lost no time in signing a contract. He has the nucleus of an excellent club to ctart with, but hopes to make a trade and perhaps purchase new talent. Into the texture of a MAN'S thoughts of treasured things is woven an imperishable strain of love for his HATS.
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IMPORTANT CLASHES ON HOOSIER GRIDIRON CARD FOR SATURDAY (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 15. Indiana college football teams will go into action again tomorrow for some of the most important games on their schedule. Games set for tomorrow are the following: Indiana and Minnesota at Minneapolis. Purdue and Ohio State at Coulmbus. Nebraska and Notre Dame at Lincoln, Neb. Wabash and Chicago at Chicago. Wilmington and Butler at Indianapolis. Rose Poly and. Earlham at Richmond. Hanover and Franklin at Hanover. Valparaiso and Northwestern College at Valparaiso. DePauw University this afternoon met the Albion College team from Albion, Mich., on McKeen field. The two Methodist institutions are represented by strong elevens and the Hoosiers expected a real battle. Albion last year held the Michigan Aggies to a low score. Indiana, Purdue Hopeful. Purdue and Indiana the two Hoosier representatives in the Big Ten are hopeful that tomorrow's contests will get them out of the conference cellar. Indiana gained heart over Northwestern s defeat of Minnesota last Saturday and a few of the teams iaiuuui roiiowers win go 10 miniira puidefeat over the Gophers. Purdue finished up the week with a light scrimmage and journeyed to Columbus prepared to give the Buckeyes a battle. Without Harley the Ohioans are not considered as formidable as last season. Football fans throughout the state will await with interest the attempt of Wabash to invade Stagg Field after an absence of fifteen years. The Little Giants of 1904 battled Chicago to a 15 to 5 score. The Scarlet will have the support of a large band of loyal rooters who will go from Crawfordsville and from this city and will be joined in Chicago by the Wabash College Alumni asociation. Butler Confident. Butler's big victory over Hanover last week has given the Indianapolis collegians confidence and they expect to continue their good season with a victory over Wilmington. Hanover and Frairtin may each be expected to put up a strong fight in their contest. Valparaiso returned from the Harvard game in good spirits and the eleven is confident of a victory over the Northwestern College gridiron contingent tomorrow. LEWIS STARTS I. U. SQUAD ON BASKETBALL PRACTICE (My Associated Press) BLOOMINGTON, Ind., .Oct. 15. Caps
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Basketball practice will begin at Indiana University, Monday, Oct. 16. Coach Lewis will start with three regular workouts each week until the close of the football season when daily practice will begin. WEST COAST BALL PLAYERS SUBPOENAED By Associated Press) LOS ANGELES, Oct. 15. SubpoenaeS for five Pacific Coast League baseball players have been issued in preparation for the investigation starting today of charges of corruption in connection with coast league games. Representatives of the Los Angeles club, which lost to Vernon in the 1919 pennant race, have declared that the race last year was "fixed". The Los Angeles county grand jury will hear the witnesses subpoenaed by the district attorney's office. Those summoned according to W. C. Doran. chief deputy district attorney ere Walter H. McCredie, manager ofi the Portland team: Arthur Kohler and j Delmar Baker, Portland, catchers, j Robert Fisher, Vernon, second base-' man, and W. Baker ("Babe") Borton, j former Vernon captain and first baseEARLHAM GIRLS OUT FOR HOCKEY TEAMS i 1 - inter-class hockey games for the plrIs. tpams wiH be , d at Earlham ,his fa as has been the custom tcr : jne pas fgyf yp; ears, according to Miss Clara Comstock, women's athletic d.1.It' Pnimnor! li O VVIUIUgl You see it more and more each day! Prices ARE coming down! And now we are swinging into line with another smashing econo my drive that brings you shoes of super fine quality ana per fect style at a tremendous saving Sale Begins Tomorrow Morning at 8 O'Glock.
f.un Metal and Koko fif Mahogany. Now only U.UU Do not mistake the nature of this event. It is not a "lucky purchase" of shoes bought expressly for a sale, or anything like that. It is our own entire brand new, regular Fall stock of NEWARK shoes that were built to sell at $8.95 and which were in every respect the same grades that previously brought $10 and $12. But by the time the Fall season rolled around things had changed. We saw the hand-writing on the wall. Prices were tumbling on nearly everything. And so we deliberately slashed the price of these shoes from $8.95 to $6.00! Such a radical move at the very threshold of a new season has never been known before in ordinary business practice, but neither has this country ever gone through an ordeal such as it is now weathering.
' 3 Lre,t Chain f Sho. Stom in Ik. United SUUfe. Richmond Store 705 Main St. Colonial Bldg.
PAGE THIRTEEN
THE WCHT-HEAOED
rector. The teams will be lined up as the sophomore-senior and Junioifreshman combinations. The junior class has a bunch of star players and with a little aid from the fresh they probably will carry off honors for the year, they having been largely instrumental in their side having won lor the past three years. Forty girls are out for archery, spending each evening shooting at the bullseye. Miss Comstock expects some of her proteges to bo able to be able to hang up some high, scores before the annual tournament nexv. spring. If you pretend to be something you are not, don't be surprised if people expect you to do things you can't perform. REDUCED PRICES are still In effect on our entire line of Silk Shirts We are also offering our complete line of SILK TIES at special reduced prices, now for Christmas. Buy Lichtenfels In the Westcott Thousands of Pairs of New Fall NEWARK Shoes for Men, Built to Sell at the Closely Marked Price of $8.95, and the Equal of Pre v ious $10 and $12 Values-All to Go at $6.00 FOR MEN Tblw U Medtl One of the nnr e!e?nt rtylM that were built to rll for $8.95 this Fall. Choiceof
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