Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 195, 28 June 1921 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1921.

LONG LOSING STREAK IS BROKEN BY REDS

IN WIN OVER CARDS g

How They Stand

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Clubs. ' Won. Lost.

Pittsburgh 43

ew York 40

J Boston 34 ST. LOUIS, June 2S. Eppa Rixey'St. Louis 33

was la fin form Monday afternoon i Chicag0 2

against tne cardinals, ana a oatung Cincinnati 2"

rally in the second frame by the Red3 gave them five runs which, enabled them- to break their losing streak, winning by the score of 5 to 2. The Reds scored all five of their tallies after two men were out, and four of them came after Schultz had been offered a chance to retire the side. Duncan and Kopf had been sent back to the bench. Bressler doubled to right. Wingo scored him -with a clean single to left which McHenry fumbled long enough to allow Wingo to reach second. Rixey hit a bounder to the third sacker, who booted it, and Ivy scored.

Bohne sent a hot single over third

which would have been a double had

Eppa speeded up a little. Daubert cracked a long hit over Mann's head and he made the circuit without exerting himself. The Cards scored one in the fourth and one in the fifth, and threatened to score more in this round. With two down and the bases full, Rixey

walked Hornsby, forcing in a tally, but McHenry, trying for an extra base hit whiffed at three straight ones, retir

ing the side. The Cards did not threaten' again during the contest. The

20 25 -29 32 34 33 3S

43

Philadelphia 19

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

Clubs. won. Lost.

Cleveland 42 New York . . . 39 Washington 37 Boston 31 Detroit 33 St. Louis 2S Chicago 26 Philadelphia 25

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs. won. LosL

-ouisvme 39 Minneapolis 37 Milwaukee 32 Kansas City 32 St. Paul 32 Indianapolis 31

Toledo 30 Columbus 28

24 28 32 31 35 37 35

39

27 27 32 32 33 34 37 39

Pet. .683 .615 .540 .508 .493 .450 .397 .306 Pet .636 .5S2 .536

.500

.485 .431

.426 .391

Pet.

.591

.578

.500 .500

.492

.477 .448 .418

score: CINCINNATI Bohne, 2b ....... Daubert, lb . Groh, 3b ......... Roush, cf . Duncan, If - Kopf, ss . . . . Bressler, rf Wingo, c Rixey, p ..........

AB. R. H. .511

Totals . -36 5 7 ST. LOUIS AB. R. H. Mann, cf .......... 5 11 Fournier, lb 4 12 Schultz, Sb. . ... 4 0 2 Hornsby, 2b . 3 0 0 McHenry, If 4 0 1 Lavan, S3 ......... 4 0 1 Dilhoefer. c 3 0 0 Heathcote. rf 4 0 0 Walker, p 0 0 0 Riviere, p 1 0 0 Sherdel. p 0 0 0 Neibergall 10 0 tEwing 10 0 tClemons 10 0

O. 1 11 2 4 1 1 0 6 1 27 O. 1 14 0 0 4 3 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

A.E. 2 0

9 2 A.E. 0 0

0 3 6 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0

GAMES TODAY. National League. Cincinnati at St. Louis. New York at Philadelphia. Pittsburgh at Chicago, (2 games). American League. St. Louis at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Boston. Washington at New York. American Association. Louisville at Columbus. Indianapolis at Toledo. Kansas City at Minneapolis. Milwaukee at St. Paul.

Games Yesterday

Totals 35 2 7 27 14 5 Batted for Walker in third. tBatted for Riviere in sixth. tBatted for Sherdel in ninth. Cincinnati 050 000 0005 St. Louis 000 110 0002 Two-Base Hits Duncan, Schultz, Bressler. Home Run Daubert. Left on Bases Cincinnati, 6; St Louis, 9. Bases on Balls Off Rixey, 3; off Riviere, 1. Hits Off Walker, 5 in 3 innings; off Riviere, 2 in 3 innings; off Sherdel, none in 3 innings. Hit by Pitcher By Sherdel, Kopf. Struck Out By Rixey, 5; by Riiviere, 2. ' Passed Balls Wingo, 2. Losing Pitcher Walker. Time 1:55. Umpires Moran and Rigler.

MAILMEN VICTORIOUS OVER CLUB OF COPS

NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago .R. H. E. Pittsburgh 013 000 22210 15 1 Chicago 101 100 000 3 11 2

Morrison and Schmidt; Vaughn, Jones and O'FarrelL At Erooklyn R. H. E. Boston 001 000 1002 12 1 Brooklyn 000 140 00 5 11 0 Scott, Fillingim and Gibson; Grimes and Miller, Taylor. At Philadelphia R. H. E. New York Oil 000 510 R 13 0 Philadelphia 241 021 20 12 19 0

Douglass and Smith ; Hubbell and Bniggy. AMERICAN LEAGUE

At Cleveland R. H. E. St. Louis O00 000 1012 14 0 Cleveland 013 000 00 I 11 0 VanGilder and Collins; Mays and Nunamaker. At Boston R. H. E. Philadelphia 001 010 0305 10 2 Boston 020 000 022 6 10 4 Rommel and "Perkins; Russell, Karr and Walters. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Toledo R. H. E. Louisville 013 020 3009 12 2 Toledo 000 051 2008 13 3 Koob. Estell and Meyer; Brady, McCullough and Schauffel. At St Paul R. H. E. Kansas City 150 000 2109 14 0 St Paul 000 000 1001 9 4 Carter and Scott; Merritt, Kelly, Foster and Allen. At Minneapolis R. H. E.

Milwaukee 001 020 200 5 7 0 Minneapolis ...200 600 11 10 20 0 Gaw, Barnes and Gossett; Yingling, George and Mayer. At Columbus R. H. E. Indianapolis 050 120 000 8 17 2 Columbus 300 000 3107 14 2 Bartlett, Cavet Roggre and Dixon; Clark, Odenwald and Wilson.

Won. Lost Pet.

3 3 4 4 5 6 6

.700 .625 .600 .556 .500 .455 .400 990

Clubs

Kiwanis ........ 7 Bakers 5 Press 6 Mahers 5 Bankers 5 Himes 5 Post Office 4 Police 2

Playing a consistent brand of ball

the Postoffice team defeated the Policemen nine in a Commercial league game Monday afternoon by the score of 6 to 3. The Postal men kept plugging along, scoring in the first four rounds. Hartman, the Policemen's pitching ace, and to retire after the third frame because of a sore arm and was relieved by Parish who pitched a fairly good game of ball. Consistent hitting aided by errors allowed the Postal men to score one or two runs In every round but the fifth and sixth. , Stevens, who has been doing the hurling for the Postalmen, was unable to play Monday, so Burley was called upon to do the twirling and did a very nice job of it, although he weakened a little in the last frame. He held the Policemen to four scattered hits while his teammates were piling up a total of 10 blows. The seven errors made by the Po

licemen were largely responsible for

their defeat. The score:

Policemen 000 2013 4 7 Postoffice 212 1006 10 2 Batteries Hartman, Parrish and

Retherford; Burley and Kleusner.

Hobohen Astrologer Reads Dempsey Victory in Stars HOBOKEN. N. J., June 28. Prof. Gustave Meyer, Hoboken astrologer, reads it in the stars that Jack Dempsey will knock Carpentier out in five or six Tounds on July 2. "As an American scientific astrologer," says the professor, "I wish to state that I have obtained the data of

the birth of Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier. I find that Dempsey was born at Menassa, Col., June 24, 1895, at 11 p. m., and that Georges Carpentier was born at Lieven, near the city of Lens, France, Jenuary 12, 1894, at 10 p. m. I wish to state, without fear or favor or prejudice, that the stars say that Dem.. -ey will retain his title and will knock out Carpentier in a most sudden, peculiar and unexpected manner in a short and furious fight of not more than five or six rounds. Dempsey will make Carpentier imagine a comet hit him."

BAMBINO GETS EVEN

FOR COBB'S RAZZING; FANS GEORGIA PEACH

By FRANK G. MEMCE (Editor's Note Thi3 story "Bambino's Revenge" is a sequel of yesterday's "Razzing Tyrus.") Miller Huggins, manager of the

Yanks, looked quizzically at Babe

Ruth and asked: "Why?" "Because you've gotta see?" came back Ruth. 'That stiff Cobb thought he showed me up yesterday and I'm out to get revenge that's what I want revenge. You lemme pitch agin them Tigers until I can strike out that stiff see?" "But you haven't pitched to amount

to anything for two years," countered

Huggins.

"Y eh that's right But I pitch to

day," was Ruth's answer. And so it was that the umpire announced that afternoon, to the sur

prise of the home town crowd, that

the "ba-atur-ees for New York" would

be Ruth and Schang. Steps Up With Grin. Up stepped Ty Cobb with a grin of derision on his face, a finger pressing down his nose to imitate the flattened beak of Ruth up he stepped to the plate as Ruth, tense in every muscle, made ready for his revenge. "Ball one," droned the umpire. "Ha a has-been," jeered Cobb.

"Ball two." A "little too fat, eh, to get 'em

over, commented Cobb for the benefit of Ruth, out there on the mound, sweating through every pore of his ponderous body. "Ball three." "Ball four." ' And Cobb trotted down to first, pointing derisively at the big stomach of Babe Ruth pointing at that and at the Ruthian nose that never was a thing of beauty and perhaps will be for Ruth a source of discomfiture forever. "ni gitcha yet," snapped Ruth. Along came the third. Cobb stepped jauntily to the plate. "Put one over," he ordered. Slam? Long Fly. Ruth did and Cobb slammed a Ions fly to the outfield.

And then came the never-to-be-for-!

gotten (for Ruth) fifth inning.! Through three days he had been forced to stand up under the merci

less kidding: of the "Southern Typhon;" for three days he suffered anguish and humiliation. "Strike one," bawled the umpire, as Cobb watched a fast one sail by. Whereupon Ruth grinned and tightened his belt a trifle more. "Ball one," as a wide one whizzed past. "Strike two" Cobb had fouled one off. Ruth tightened his belt still more around his rotund stomach, wiped the strains of sweat from his forehead, nodded assent to the catcher's signal, moved into action, whirled his husre

left arm and like the flash of lightning the ball zipped plateward. Cobb Hesitates. Cobb say it For the barest fraction of a second he hesitated the ball looked bad. But now it was curving it it would cross the heart of the plate. The greatest hitter of all time tightened the grip on his bat swung and missed. "You're out," barked ,the umpire

wild tumult of cheering for Ruth and a commingling of boos and jeers for Cobb. . Out on the mound a huge specimen of manhood, again wiped his forehead,

HAS DUFFY LEWIS REACHED THE END?

wis.

Duffy Le

Washington has declared the veteran Duffy Lewis, who starred with the Red Sox and Yanks before joi--ine the Nats, a free agent. He veteran bero of world's series find many campaigns is considering managerial oilers and business chances outside of baseball.

Nurmi, Finnish Champion,

Sets Two New Marks STOCKHOLM, June 28 Paavo Nur

mi, the Jb innisn cnampion long distance runner, covered six miles in 29 minutes 41.2 seconds here. He ran

10 kilometers, or 6.2137 miles, in 30 minutes 40.2 seconds. Both are claimed to be new world's records.

Nurmi is the 10,000 meter Olympic

champion and the 10,000 meter Olym

pic cross-country titleholder. He was

one of J-he few athletes to score a

double victory at Antwerp last August

The previous world's record for six miles was 29:59 2-5, made in 1904, by

Alfred Shrubb of England. The Amer

ican record holder for six miles is

Hannes Kolehmainen, who ran the

distance in this city in 1913 in 30:30 2-5. No official record is shown for 10 kilometers.

i

Chips and Slips

as an expression of happiness came over his generous features. He bowed slightly to the cheers of the multitude then his glance followed the form of Tyrus Raymond Cobb, as the longtime king of baseball, with a bit of dejection in his stride, walked back to the bench. "Oh, the big stiff the big stiff," chuckled Ruth. "I 6aid I'd get him I said I'd do it. And I got 'im struck him out struck him out Struck out the great Mister Cobb the big stiff, WOW that tickles me." And so it was that Babe Ruth got revenge for the "monkel nose" and the "pot belly" taunting of his rival for the glory of being baseball's starriest star. (Copyright lt21 By King Features

Sj-ndfeate, Inc., I

Philadelphia and the New York Naionals engaged in a slugging bee Monday, in which 32 hits were made. The game w-as featured by seven home mns being knocked, Philadelphia getting five of them. The Brooklyns' infield executed an uncommon double play in the third frame of a recent contest against the Phillies. Jack Miller led off with a single and he advanced to second cn Meusel's safe hit, which followed.

Wrightstone attempted to sacrifice and

the bunt was fielded by .Burleigh Grimes, who lost no time in throwing to Johnson for a force play at third. Jimmy hurled the ball over to Ray Schamdt on first and it arrived there a step ahead of the batter. Parkinson, the next batter, was retired and the Phillies were held scoreless.

ARCHITECTS START ON PLANS FOR NEW BANK Pans for the new First National bank building will be drawn up within about 90 . days and construction work will be started about September 1, according to a statement by A. D. Gayle, president of the First National bank, Tuesday. Architects for the new building areH. H. Hei stand of Eaton, and Weber Brothers of Cincin natL As the designer of buildings in Columbus, Dayton, Piqua and other Ohio owes, Mr. Hiestand has already

won a national reputation as an ar

chitect. He designed the Eaton court

house and the Capitol building for the state of Kentucky. The new building will contain two mezzanine floors, one front which will be for the benefit of the women customers, and one rear in which directors' meetings will be held. The entire structure will be modern in every particular.

Pershing Clinic Opens Wednesday Afternoon PERSHING, Ind, June 28. A. free clinic and physical examination of all children under six years of age In this neighborhood will be held under the auspices of the county Red Cross authorities, Wednesday afternoon. Examinations will be conducted by Dr. Ehle, of Pershing, . and arrangements will be under the direction of Miss Florence Tayor, county : Red Cross nurse. She will be assisted by Mrs. Karl Kaufman, of Penville, chair

man or the nursing committee. Many country children are being brought in for the examination. The clinic will be conducted all afternoon Wednesday and will be held in the school building "at "Pershing. Weighing and nursing and the elimination of physical defects will be the chief topics discussed.

Cincinnati broke her long losing streak Monday at the expense of St. Louis, winning by the score of 5 to 2. The Reds had lost six straight jimes up to Monday.

Johnny Evers, Cub manager .avers that there are many players in the big leagues who are loafing. They are tired of their present jobs and want to be traded elsewhere. It would be a good idea, he thinks, for the game if there were more trades, for a player can remain too long in one town.

Michigan Voters to Fill Vacant Seat in Congress (By Associated Press) KALAMAZOO, Mich., June 28 Electors of the Third Michigan district voted in a special election today on candidates for congress to fill the seat left vacant by the death- of Wil

liam H. Frank Hauser, of Hillsdale. Former Congressman J. M. C. Smith, of Charlotte, Republican, was opposed by Howard W. CaYanaugh, Battle Creek, Democrat. In previous elections the district has consistently returned Republican majorities. Little pre-election interest was shown by the voters and neither candidate conducted an active campaign. Some political observers predict a vote of not to exceed 5,000.

i f' i

A ADVERTISEMENT HELPED 11EH Mrs. Lucille Mackey, 16 Buena Vista St. Washington. Pa., writes: "Last winter my three-year-old girl got a cold which left her with a dry cough. It bothered her most at night and she would cough until she vomited. I think she must have had whooping cough. I saw an advertisement for Foley's Honey and Tar. I tried it and bought two bottles and her cough left, her before she finished the second bottle. She had gotten awfully thin, but now she is as fat as ever." A. G. Luken and Co., 626-62S Main St. Advertisement.

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Johnny Evers has a first division club as far as hitting is concerned. But the Cubs lacJthe speed and pitching to go far. In speed and pitching the Chicago club does not rank much better than the lowly Phillies.

YOST APPOINTED ANN ARBOR, Mich.. June 2S.

Fielding H. Yost, for 20 years football

coach of the University of Michigan, has been appointed director of intercollegiate athletics. His appointment was the first of two that are to be made under the new department of physical education. The other office is that of director of physical hygiene and public health.

Connie Mack is beginning to build up a new pitching staff. One of his latest finds is Harry Freeman, who hails from the Western Normal college at Kalamazoo .and is rated as the best hurler turned out by that school since the days of Ernie Koob.

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CLEANING, PRESSING and ALTERATIONS Prices Reasonable GERLACH & MOORE 337 Colonial Bldg.

Bicycles ELMER S. SMITH The Whse! Man 426 Main St. Phone 1806

The National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen WilheW xnina. At all druggists, three sizes. LmIi far tha un CUM Md oa -rry ban ad accapt ae imitation

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BICYCLE TIRES all styles while they last SI. 85 MEYER & KEMPER N. 5th Opp. City Hall

Preparedness is good stuff for the fellow who wants battery results. Willard Service helps a lot KRAMER-EDIE BATTERY CO. 1105 Main Phone 2826

Tailor & Cleaner For Men Who Care We Call and Deliver C. Carl Young

8 No. 10th

Phone 1451

Harley-Davldson Motorcycles EARL J. WRIGHT W31 S. Fifth St.

Hes why CAMELS ate the quality cigarette

BECAUSE we put the utmost quality into this one brand. Camels are as good as it's possible for skill, money and lifelong knowledge of fine tobaccos to make a cigarette. Nothing is too good for Camels. And bear his in mind! Everything is done to make Camels the best cigarette it's possible to buy. Nothing is done simply for show. Take the Camel packa ge for instance. It's the most perfect packing science can devise to protect cigarettes and keep them fresh. Heavy paper secure foil wrapping revenue stamp to seal the fold and make the package air-tight. But there's nothing flashy about it. You'll find no extra wrappers. No frills or furbelows. Such things do not improve the smoke any more than premiums or coupons. Andremember you must pay their extra cost or get lowered quality. If you want the smoothest, mellowest, mildest cigarette you can imagine and one entirely free from cigaretty aftertaste, It's Camels for you.

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PHOTOS

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"Say It With Flowers" LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP 1015 Main Street Phone 1093

UtiininnniiiiHiiiUHitfUMiHnniuiuiMitiinMtuHiiiiiiiiitnntiniiiuiuiituiiiinitii PRICE REDUCTION- 1 1 10c Bugle Beads, now .5c 50c Bunch Cut Beads, now ....25c I Just Received New Assortment 1 1 LACEY'S, 8 South 9th St.! Over 1st Nat'l Bank Ph. 1756 lllllllnllUHIIUIMIUMHIMtIIIUIumtllMlUtlUililllllUUI!UJtlUimiiUUUiaUU;utiT

BUY SUGAR at E. R. BERHEIDE Phone 1329 244 S-5th St Free Delivery

"Front Rank" Furnaces and Sheet Metal Work ROLAND & BEACH

1135 Main SL

Phone 1611

OAKLAND MOTOR CARS E. W. Steinhart &.Co. 10th and Sailor St. Phone 2955

STEVE W0RLEY GARAGE Agents for MITCHELL AUTOMOBILES First Class Repair Work . XJ. S. Tires and Accessories 211-213 N. W. 7th SL Phone 4878

New Nash 4 Now on Exhibit . , at .. WAYNE COUNTY NASH MOTOR COMPANY ... "" 19-21 S. 7th Phone 6173

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