Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 196, 29 June 1921 — Page 13
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T
,THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1921.
PAGE THIRTEEN
HOD ELLER STARTS BUT IS FORGED OUT BY ST. LOUIS BATTERS ST. LOUIS. June 29. Hod Eller mad his first start of the season In the final game with the Cards, Tues
day afternoon, and last long enough to have two homers crashed off his delivery- The first man up In the first round pounded out one and the first man up in the second duplicated the trick. The Reds opened as if they were going to master the Doak delivery who was working for the Cards. Bohne smashed a single to center and went to second on a balk. Daubert scored him with a single to center and took second when McHenry threw to the plate. Groh sacrificed Jake to third and he scored on Roush's slow roller to Hornsby.
Eller was relieved by Marquard In
the second after McHenry had hit into the right field stands, Mann's single and Schultz double scored a run in the third and the Cardinals were in the lead which they never lost. The Reds hit Doak freely in the early rounds, but with little result. They wasted two hits in the third and three on the fourth without being able to score. The last tally for the Reds came In the seventh on doubles by
Groh and Roush. CINCINNATI AB R BH O Bohne, 2b 5 1 2 1 Daubert. lb 5 1 6
Groh, 3b 3 Roush. cf 4 Duncan, If 3 Kopf, ss .4 Bressler, rf 4 Wingo, c 4 Eller, p 1 . Marquard, p 2 Napier, p 0 Coumbe, p 0 Haxgrave 1
Woman Writer Gets Exclusive Interview With Bashful Jack Champ Says He is Glad Mr. Carpentier Says He is Going to Hand zee Demps zee Knockout in zee Fourth Because
He Will Watch that Round
3 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
A 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 3 10 24 ST. LOUIS AB R BH PO Smith, rf 1 1 1 0 Mann, rf 2 111 Fournier, lb 4 0 0 11 Schultz, 3b 4 0 1 1 Hornsby, 2b 4 1 2 3 McHenry, If 4 115 Lavan, ss .'.3 2 2 1 Clemons, c 4 1 3 5 Heathcote, cf 3 0 1 0 Doak, p 3 0 0 0
By Anne Jordan ' ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. June 28. A knockout Isn't such a terrible thing, unless you happen to be the knockee. I saw Jack Dempsey knock a man out today, and it looked so simple. A big boxer named Larry Williams, was snooping and biffing about a foot from the champion when suddenly Jack unloosed his selling talk, and his opponent curled up on the floor and started snoring audibly. Jack having crowned him queen of the May, jogtrotted around the ring, while the dazed and unconcerned bimbo was
helped to his feet and another spar
ring partner climbed into the sauared
' circle.
I really went ont to ask Jack Dempsey to settle all this argument about
who is going to win on July the twice, "Are you going to knock Mr. Car
pentier out?" I asked the champion.
point-blank, so he couldn't dodge the
issue. "I don't know," 6aid Dempsey? smil
ing his nice, even-tooth smile through
his luxuriant home-grown hedge he
only shaves twice a week, to keep
from making his face tender. Won't Get Confidential
I was cruelly disappointed. Surely
if anybody knows Mr. Dempsey's intentions it ought to be Jack.
"Do you like boxing?" he countered.
always keen to talk about anything rather than William Harrison Dempsey, otherwise known as. Jack. (His
mother calls him Harry, they tell
me.)
vo you speak French? I came
back at him with a left hook. "I mean
so you'll be able to talk to Mr. Car
pentier, and know what he's calling
you?" "No, ma'am, I don't speak French,'
he laughed. "I guess Mr. Carpentier and I won't do much talking at Jersey
City," he added grimly.
But how many rounds do you think
Totals 32 7 12 27 14 2 Cincinnati 200 000 1003 St Louis Ill 002 02 7 Batted for Coumbe in ninth. Two base hits Schultz, Groh, Roush, Clemons. Three base hits Wingo, Heathcote. Home runs Smith, McHenry. Stolen bases Daubert, Groh. Sacrifice hits Groh, Lavan, Heathcote.
Double play Kopf and Daubert Left oa bases Cincinnati 10;
Louis 4.. Bases on balls Off Marquard 1; off
Doak 1. Hits Off Eller, 3 in 1 inning;
Marquard 6 in 6 innings: off Napier
3 in 2-3 of an inning; off Coumbe none in 1-3 of an Inning. Hit by Pitcher By Doak, Roush.
Struck out By Marquard 3; by
Doak 4. Wild pitch Eller. Balk Doak. Losing pitcher Marquard. Umpires Rigler and Moran. Time 1:47.
St.
off
GEORGES STAYS CALM
AS FIGHT DRAWS NEAR
DEMPSEY EAGER FOR TRAINING GRIND END; PLANS LONG VACATION
rived after they were 30 and Jack is only 25.
Boxing just comes to people," he
told me. "Sometimes it comes easy.
for some people Just take to it natur
ally; but most of the time success
comes only after hard, strenuous
work. The secret of it is keeping In
trim, never letting up and, most of all,
having a manager who understands
you and knows hows to match you to
advantage. Jack Kearns is the great
est manager in the world, I think. And
the best pal and all-round good fellow, j
Yes, ma'am, I love all this that you
call work. If I wasn't a boxer, I d still run 10 miles before breakfast and keep in trim. It makes you feel so good, and you sleep so well. By 9 o'clock you're so sleepy you can't
keep awake."
Anybody who has gained the Im
pression, from the film news or otherwise that Jack Dempsey has been in Atlantic City sniffing seadust tinctured with a dash of Mary Garden, while
Georges has been mulling with moocows in a deserted Long Island village, should have seen him glistening in the broiling sun at today's workout. After tugging at pulleys, dancing a
solo shimmy with uppercut variations.
CBy Associated Press) ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. June 29. Today Is the beginning of the end of Jack Dempsey's two months training grind. The champion is all through with his workouts in the open air arena and the last workouts this after
noon probably will be staged behind barred gates in the old airplane shed back of the training camp. The work will be light and may not include boxing. The champion, dreading the last three days of marking time, is glad that the long siege of training is nearing an end. He does not display any cutward signs of nervousness or irri
tability and his handlers agree that his physical condition could hardly be improved. "I'll be glad to have this thing over with," Dempsey said. "You have no idea of the hardships of a long training grind. It's terrible. If I was offered five hundred thousand for a fight a month from now I would not go
through all this again. I am tired of training. I want to take a rest. Just as soon as I can get my affairs in shape after meeting Carpentier, I am going home to Salt Lake City then on west for a vacation." Three Pounds Overweight. Dempsey is about three pounds over the figure he expects to scale when he climbs into the ring at Boyle's Thirty
Acres, Saturday afternoon, but expects
Dempsey's Ring Brain Directs Champion in Infallible Manner Jack is Greatest Natural Fighter that Ever Lived His Instinct Has Directed His Every Move to Victory " Never Makes False Step
Other men Willard. Morris, Fultonwere more powerful by nature than
j : - t j ; .v.
five or sue ungentle partners, then fin- tmTinrrnw QI1,f ,tw nrairw, wL
ished off with a wrestling tussle with
Bull Montana. I'll bet all the baby
vamps who have been represented in B. V. D. bath suits as a background to Jack's scenery, have only caught their glimpse of him while he was engaged in exhibition training at the stadium. The Better He Likes His Dogs I have it on good authority that Dempsey hasn't been in swimming since he came here, and seldom emerges from the tall fence around his training camp, except to take his
morning runs.
tomorrow and another pound when he dries out Friday. He will abstain from eating certain foods and will oniy drink water the day before the battle. He scaled 193 pounds yesterday and expects to go into the ring at the 190 pound notch. The program mapped out for the champion today calls for some light exercises and perhaps a round or two of boxing if he feels inclined to pull
on the gloves. He will perform be-
By FRAVK G. J1EXKB Jack Dempsey has a ring brain as infinitely superior to George's parpentier's that there is no real comparison. Such a statement may surprise many who acknowledge the Frenchman as one of the smartest fighters of any era and who count on that
braininess to assist him in climbing to the top of the mitt whirling world on July 2. But the braininess that Is Carpentier's is not the kind that will be put to a test on July 2. Carpentier perhaps knows more now about Shakespeare than Dempsey ever will know but they're going to fight, not recite on July 2. The Frenchman probably can hum all the scores from the1 operas but they aren't going to sing on July 2. Georges
undoubtedly knows the proper usage of every fork and spoon that ever was manufactured but it's Koine to be a
prize ring fight, not a test of dining room etiquette, next Saturday. Wins on Relativity. Without question, Carpentier could breeze home an easy winner if he got into a debate with Dempsey on relativity, perpetual motion, international politics, the proper dress for morning and also evening weddings, and the correct usage of grammar. But how is that going to help in battle of fists? Carpentier is a quick thinker, clever and shrewd. Naturally, his agile brain will be a helpful factor in the battle with his American foeman. But his record shows that in days gone by
his ring braininess is limited. It guides him splendidly when things are going nicely for him. But it fails in moments of stress in moments when he needs braininess the most. Carpentier is a manufactured fighter not a natural one. He was an ac-
bind locked gates away from the cu-'robat in nis youth. He cared nothing
it'll last? You ought not to be so dogs, "Doc Hemingway" and "Sophie
Even his burly police' li llf?f
modest. Georges has been quoted as
saying that he's going to hand you the count in the fourth. Aren't you going to give a few points to your friends?" "The fourth, is it?" he repeated after me. "I'm glad you told me. I didn't know he had decided. I'll have to watch out for that round." "But you are going to beat, aren't you?" And then the trolley slipped the wire again. Jack started talking about cities Frisco, where he worked in a ship-yard and was discovered as a boxer by Jack Kearns; Los Angeles, where, he said, the movies were all right, but not as exciting as fighting; New York, which he likes better from the suburbs than right in town. Then, yielding to my questions, a bit of his history. Early-to-Rise Champion
He said he could hardly remember when he wasn't boxing. He was about 18 when the first real matches came, however. And, under pressure, he admitted that he is "about the youngest
champion," as most of the others ar-
How They Standi
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Ginsberg
phere of
etc-
have that satisfied atmos
'The more he sees of women,
Clubs. Won. Lost. Pet. i Pittsburgh 43 22 .662 : New York 40 25 .615 Boston 34 29 .540 St. Louis 34 32 .515 Brooklyn ..... 33 34 .493 Chicago 29 33 .468 Cincinnati 25 39 .391 Philadelphia 19 43 .306AMERICAN LEAGUE. Clubs. Won. Lost. Pet.
Cleveland 43 24 New York 39 2S Washington 37 32 Boston 32 31 Detroit 33 33 St. Louis 23 SS Chicago 26 35 Philadelphia 25 40
(By Associated Press) MANHASSETT, N. Y., June 29. As the day for the woVld's championship bout draw near, everyone in the challenger's camp is getting nervous excepting Georges and he alone appears to be worrying about as much as a school boy when ready for a picnic. He wants to go and is having lots of fun making preparations. Outside of this, he has not displayed the least trace of anxiety. The escape from the crowd of visitors yesterday afternoon
was not made so much because Louisville 39
Georges was nervous, but because of ; Minneapolis
bis friends. His rnena Pierre Vianet, who has increased his cigarette consumption 50 per cent In the last few days, plotted to get away because he didn't want Georges to be bothered. Manager Descamps has begun to wring has hands and pull his hair and Trainer Wilson has betrayed a slight Irritability. Georges' only worry is his short hair. Since his blond pompadour was clipped by the barber of Manhassett he has been wearing a cap. He runs his hands over the top of his head and feems amused at the sensation in his fingers. Today Carpentier entered into the final stage of training and he expects te be on edge when he calls a halt tomorrow afternoon.
Jack Is strictly a man's man, and
all the fellows who work for him, and with him, are simply cuckoo on the subject of him. They almost shed tears trying to tell you how fine Jack is. Teddy Hayes, his secretary and anti-biographer, or something, had a catch in his throat telling me how Jack went into his first fight to send his mother some money, and how good he has always been to his people. He has bought his mother a summer home at Murray, and a town house in Salt Lake City. Jack's mother and father were originally from Kest Virginia, and he hasn't lost the knack of saying "Yes, ma'am" and "No, ma'am," and other expressions that mark the Southern
er. He speaks with a slow drawl, and has nice, friendly brown eyes, dotted on his forehead by a few honest freckles. His smile, as I said before, is delightful though you needn't look for it in the ring because, as he says, when he's boxing he means business and never hears a word that's' said, for him or against, from the sidelines. "Is it true that you're a woman hater?" I asked presently. "No, ma'am, I like the ladies, all
right." He looked so boyish as he said it. "But I don't have much time
Yes,' I like to dance, or try
in front of the box office have been
yanked down and the ticket boxes have been turned over to the owners. Only newspapermen and perhaps a f-w friends will be admitted this afternoon and tomorrow. Attaches of the camp already have begun the task of getting things in shape for the champion's departure. According to present plans, Dempsey and his party will leave for Jersey City, Friday. He will spend the day in the seclusion of a private home in Jersey City and will be kept in seclusion until the time to go to the arena. The day before the battle will be the longest of all and Dempsey's handlers are preparing to
nurse nim with extreme care. The champion's workout in private yesterday was brief. He boxed a round with the light bag, another with tho heavy one and a round- each with Eddie O'Hare and Larry Williams. He eliminated shadow boxing and was on the way to the shower within fifteen minutes.
about fistic warfare as a sport. He became a fighter because Descamps
so ordered. He has remained one because he has been succssful and because the ring has made a fortune for him. Is Natural Fighter. On the other hand is Dempsey, perhaps the greatest natural fighter that ever lived; a man who has been directed by brain and ring instinct for years that has been infallible. No warrior lived who ever has shown fistic braininess beyond the champion. There is something uncanny about the working of Dempsey's brain when he is in the ring. It never has direct
ed a false move; never has failed him; always, ever, it has directed him, through devious ways some
times, but always unswervingly, to
the goal of success. Dempsey battled through boyhood
years because of sheer love of it. He knew no greater joy than when pitted against some other youngster. Nature
COBURN WINS TROPHY IN QUAKER SHOOT
Breaking 98 out of a possible 100 birds C. D. Coburn won the high gun trophy, in the shoot given by the Quaker City gun club at the grounds
to, but I hate cabarets. And honestly, l , Z , AT, J ?f Jrucn" I hate to go anywhere. People are I of 0xford' - were
so well, so funny. They come right
up and put their faces into mine, and say out loud, 'That's Dempsey!' It makes me feel like I'm a wild animal or something." "Why don't you tap 'em on the jaw like you did that big boy a while ago?" I asked. "I'm real sorry for Carpentier, after seeing that little feat." "But you haven't seen Mr. Carpen-
Palms to Challenger
He's some man
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs. Won. Lost.
Milwaukee 33
Kansas City St. Paul Indianapolis
Toledo 30 Columbus 2$
39 27 38 27 33 32 32 33 32 34 31 34 30 r,7 2$ 39
.642
.5S2 .536 .508!
.: i tier yet, have you
424; himself." .4261 (He pronounced it Carpenter, and I . 385 j felt foolish for still garnishing up the ! Frenchman as "Carpont-eeay," that Pet. j some high brow had tipped me into .591 i titling him.)
.oSo! "i -wish
.508 ; going to
.492 1 don't? Carpentier will take the title i
.4So'to France, and then somebody else
.4 1 will try to get it back to America, eh
Dempsey. Yet he whipped them all. It was the fighting instinct, his amaz
ing fighter's brain that was the power
behind those fists
A bulldog can tackle any dog twice or three times his size and strength and win 90 times out of a hundred. Why? Because nature intended him for fighting. He knows by instinct how to fight. The other dogs may be able to do more tricks than he does may have intelligence far beyond the bulldog. But when a fight is waged there is usually but one result. Has Ring Brains.
Ring brains of a marvelous kind
a fighter's instinct developed to the zenith those are the mightiest of assets that Dempsey ever has carried into the ring with him. He seems to know every second of the way what to do and he does it. Instinct told him that Fred Fulton was of the timid type; instinct told him that a whirlwind, rushing attack
would whip Fulton almost as soon as the fight started. And Dempsey, following its dictates, tore into Fulton and battered him into defeat in 14 seconds. He fought Jess Willard but not in the same way. He knew Willard expected him to rush. His ring brain dictated "Cross Willard. stay back; let him come to you." Willard, a little annoyed because Dempsey didn't rush, came in to make a jabbing at
tack. And then Dempsey let loose a fury of blows that annihilated the champion. Dempsey found that he wasn't quite himself the night he fought Bill Brennan in New York and he discovered that Bill was a whole lot tougher than
had been imagined. Did Dempsey become panic-stricken; did he begin a wild, furious attack? Not at all. "Beat him down gradually," ordered the Dempsey brain.
Beats Him Down. And so Dempsey, instead of trying for a cyclonic knockout, went ahead methodically to cut down Brennan. He abandoned pot shots for Bill's jaw. He just took him close in the clinches and rammed the Brennan body until he had softejped it. Along in the 11th he sensed that Bill was weakening under the chopping attack. Then he started to tear in with heavy blows. The end came in the 12th. Study Dempsey's record, and youll find he never has fought twice in the same way. That's because his brain grasps the fact that all men are different and that different methods
must be used against every man. But
never once has he ever taken one sec
ARMY OF WRITERS WILL WITNESS BOUT
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, June 29. Probably more newspaper correspondents than were employed on the battlefields of France during the World war will be on hand to report the Dempsey-Car-pentier fistic encounter at Jersey City next Saturday. Ike Dorgan, who has charge of the press arrangements, said there would be seven hundred newspaper men at the ringside, two hundred of, whom
would be dictating to telegraph oper
ators while the bout was in progress, and the remainder encircling the arena directly in front of the holders, of fifty dollar tickets. It will be the greatest army of fight chroniclers, or indeed chronclers of anyother kind, ever assembled to "cover" a single event.
Five Teams Entered in Tennis Tourney July 2-4 Five teams have entered for the tennis tournament to be held under the auspices of the Richmond Tennifi association, July 2, 3 and 4. More enentries are expected to come In between Wednesday and Friday night, when the entry list closes. Following are the teams entered: Mather and Ball; B. Simmons and J. Harrington; S. Simmons and Rost; Zeyen and Gal-
vm; Isley and Holliday; Kushowski and Crum. The association had accepted a challenge of the East Main street Friends church tennis club for a match of mixed doubles. The date will be set later. All the matches will be played on the Earlham courts. Efforts will be made by the association to stage a match with the tennis players of the Country club.
Many Changes Made by Commercial League Teams Several changes were made in the rosters of the Commercial league teams at the regular weekly meeting. All the teams except the Himes Dairy and the Press made additions to their teams. The Bakers released King and Packer and signed Harrison and S.
i Parker; KIwanis signed Roughan:
Bankers released Hoover and signed Walthers; Policemen released Firth and Hunt, and signed H. Fitzgibbons; Maher Meats signed Mose Byrkett: Postoffice released Kuhlenbrink and signed R. Beck.
had made him a fighter and the bat- ond Ionger tQ finish & man ag
tling instinct cropped out in the years
when the average youngster thought only of marbles and tops. Batters His Way. Again and again through the following years, Dempsey fought men who were his superiors in every way but one. They were taller, heavier, had more experience- and more cleverness. But one by one he beat them down and battered his way to the championship. What did it? His mighty fists? Yes but something directed those fists.
Chips and Slips
tied for second
Five men were tied for first in the 50 bird handicap shoot. The five men breaking 22 birds apiece. The scores:
100 Target Event Cleveland and St. Louis engaged
Tavlor ( Pro . qt I in a swatfest Tuesday afternoon at
White fPro.1 1 Cleveland in which a total of 33 hits
Davis (Pro.) 70
Coburn 9g Gentry sr Harter Manlove 95 Blair 93 Greenameyer 93 Elwell 93 Leveck 92 Hamilton 92
Urr 92
Zy If Howard 91 .bounded back so sharply that he win. What 11 happen if you K. . " ... .
were made. St. Louis connected for 17 of the blows but could only score four times on the blows while the Spokemen tallied 12 times. Welsh, one of Connie Mack's young athletes, made the longest single hit in Fenway park in the sixth inning of the game Tuesday, when his long drive struck the clock that is elevted
over the left held fence. The ball
was
.448
.418
CASUALTIES FEATURE TUESDAY'S CONTEST
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, June 29. Fire Na
tional league batters were hit by
pitched balls in yesterday's contests. The two injured men. Shortstop Hollocher and Pitcher Freeman, of Chicago, were struck by pitched balls previously.
Hollocher sustained a broken nose
when a grounder hit by Cutshaw, of Pittsburgh, bounded badly. Freeman was struck just above the temple by a swiftly batted ball, and had to leave the field. In the first game between the Tirates and Cubs, Hollocher was hit by a pitched ball by. Glazner. Freeman himself hit two batters, Whitted and Bernhardt. The other National batsman struck was Rousch of Cincinnati, hit by Doak of St. Louis.
GAMES TODAY. National League. New York at Boston. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Pittsburgh at Chicago. American League. Chicago at St. Louis. Detroit at Cleveland Philadelphia at Washigtoru Boston at New York (2). American Association. Kansas City at Minneapolis. Milwaukee at St. Paul. Indianapolis at Toledo. Louisville at Columbus.
Games Yesterday
Benny Leonard Leaves For Michigan Workout CHICAGO, June 29. After working out here today, Benny Leonard, lightweight champion, leaves for Benton Harbor, Mich., to put the finishing touches on his training for the bout with Sailor Freedman on July 4. Freedman has been training in Michigan to comply with the Michigan boxing law, which requires contenders to be in training in the state at least four days before the bout '
"Mr. Carpentier says he's not going
to box again." "You know he can't mean that! But you're not going to ever stop boxing, are you?" "No, ma'am. Win or lose, I'm still going to keep on boxing, as long as I'm any good. Of course, even if I do win this bout, somebody else will take the belt away from me, some day. It's all in the game." "Well, remember, Mr. Dempsey, we're all looking to you to keep the championship in America," I said as
I started to leave. He bowed, like the big bashful boy that he is, and said earnestly: "Yes, ma'am, and I'm sure going to do my level best to do it." He walked to the door with me. Tall man alive! He could eat soup off my head. , Gee, I wonder who's going to win!
Kirby 91 ; held to one base.
-Miller 89
Newman S8i There
absolutely necessary-
No one can remember a time when Dempsew ever was panicky in a ring, or when he wasn't full master of himself. Nor was there ever a time when he fought a battle that any living man could have improved upon if he had been asked to duplicate it. Carpentier may have a brain better fitted to grasp the intricate things of life but Dempsey has a brain faultless in the prize ring. (Copyright lf2t By KInar Fratrnvi Syndicate, Inc.) SEVASTOPOL TEAM VICTOR The Sevastopol baseball team defeated the Twenty-second playground baseball team in a major league game Tuesday afternoon by the score of 16 to 2.
Delegates for Overseas Dry Convention Named (Ey Associated Press) WASHINGTON, June 2S. President Harding has appointed as American delegates to the 16th international congress against alcoholism to be held at Lausanne, Switz., next August the following: The Rev. Edwin O. Dinsiddie, Washington: Ernest H. Cherrington, Wester-
vme, u.. uettz Picket. Washington, D. C. Monsignor M. F. Foley. Baltimore, Md., E. L. C. Hohenthal, South Manchester, Conn., the Rev. Dr. Charles Scanlon, Pittsburgh, Pi-., Dr. A. J. Barton, Alexandria, La., George F. Cotterill. Seattle, Wash., Miss Cora Frances Stoddard, Boston, and Mrs. Lenna Low Yost, Morgantown, W. Va.
When Napoleon Bonaparte was made emperor his empire included nearly all of Europe, with the exception of Russia, Turkey and Great Britain.
Army Russet Shoes in good condition, special, pair S2.25 and S2.50 American Shoe Shop Nick Sena, Prop. 402 N. 8th St.
.87
National League. At Chicago R. H. E. Pittsburg - 000 000 010 1 9 0 Chicago 010 0O0 Olx 2 9 0 Hamilton, Carlson and Schmidt; Martin and O'Farrell. Second game . . R. H. E. Pittsburg 010 500 000 6 11 1 Chicago 100 007 OOx 8 12 4 Glazner, Carlson and Schmidt;
Freeman, Tylex and Kimter. No other games played, rain. American League. At Cleveland RH.E. St, Louis 000 011 011 4 17 1 Cleveland 022 024 20x12 16 0 Deberry, Burwell, Bayne and Severeid; Coveleskie and Nunamaker. At Boston R.H.E. Philadelphia 000 000 1001 8 3 Boston 200 002 04s 3 13 0 Naylor, Barrett and Perkins; Myers and Ruel. No other games played, rain. American Association. At St Paul R-H.E. Milwaukee 020 005 05012 14 3 St. Paul 021 300 000 6 11 2 Schaak, Gearin and Gossett; Hanson, Kelly and Schlee. At Minneapolis R. H. E. Kansas City ...003 020 300 8 15 4 Minneapolis 030 046 OOx 13 15;3 Lambert, Scheneberg and Svott; Loudermilk, Schauer and Schestak. No other games scheduled.
Dayton Fans Believe Blockie Edwards Will Win DAYTON, O., June 29. Jack Lawler, the Omaha flash who meets Blockie Richards, local light-weight in a 12-round decision bout Friday night at Triangle Park before the Miami
Athletic club has arrived in town and look to be in fine trim for a gruelling contest Blockie has been working faithfully and his admirers are backing him heavily to win with a knockout. With the announcement of the bout a week ago, Lawler ruled a 7 to 5 favorite due to his decisive defeat of O'Connel in Cincinnati and his previous win over Blockie, but at the present time the betting shows that the fans figure Blockie has an excellence chance to get over a kayo.
His
Longbrake S6 Nelson S5 Packer 84 Dailey 55 50 Target Handicap
Yds. Greenameyer 22 Orr 22 Howard 20 Harter 22 Coburn 22 Blair 21 Manlove 21 Nelson 19 Massie 18 Higgs 19 Leveck 21 Packer 19 Kirby 19 Newman 19
Snyder 20 Miller 19
Gentry 22 Dailey 16 Davis (Pro.) 20
Birds 45 46 46 45 44 44 44 44 44 42 42 42 42 42 41 40 39 37 44
French Students Caught
Reading About Big Bout
(By Associated Progs) PARIS, June 29. Emotion over the Carpentier-Dempsey match has penetrated Sorbonne circles, somewhat to the dismay of the faculty. M. Seignobos, professor of French history in the TJniversiay of Paris, has been observing that his students were coming into the lecture room with pink newspapers, which upon examination
by the curious professor, turned out to ! be sporting dailies, with long articles relative to the prospects of "An Amer-! ican named Dempsey and a French-i man named Carpentier." j
was no postponed games
played off in the Commercial league Tuesday afternoon, but the Maher Meats and the Himes Dairy will cross bats Wednesday afternoon. From the way William T. Tilden is whipping the tennis stars in Europe he will soon hold the championship of all the countries of the world, and will have to retire from the courts for lack of opponents. Cincinnati dropped another game to the Cards and are giving the Phillies a hard race for the cellar position, and from all indications will soon overtake them. Poe Lynch, bantamweight champion.
was shaded by Joe Burman, of Chicago, in their 10-round bout at East Chicago, Ind., according to the opinion of newspaper men. A referee's decision was not permitted. This is the fourth time the men have met, each having won a decision and the other being a draw. Lynch did not lose his title.
In this world we don't always get what we ask for. After asking for PARIS, see that you get PARIS: Look for the famous PARIS kneeling figure and oval trademark. A STEIN & COMPANY Chicago SSCahr New York
Take a tip buy Paris today remember they've been
ffm m. .ii .m W La
and up
w
1 H 11 rn Mli 11 IW m liiliii 1 HlWT iTIMrilil ifBfc nHli I
Avoid the Hot Weather by taking a good, cool
ON WATCH RECOVERS ' (By Asaoclated Press)
NEW "YORK, June 29. On Watch,
one of the foremost race horses of the 1920 season is recovering after an operation for an affected windpipe. The racer, which won ten events last year, and was successful In the Paummock handicap this year, showed indications of "blowing" after two or three workouts recently and it was decided to operate on the anlmaL
Bicycles ELMER 8. SMITH The Wheel Man 426 Main St. Phone 1808
Swi
m
Competent life-savers; perfectly safe for women and children. Pool in perfect sanitary condition. All suits and towels are washed and sterilized after usage. Hawkins Bathing Beach Located 300 yards north of Glen Miller Park, or take North 19th street road passing Perm, shops C. O. PARKER, Mflr. Phone 4135
mmmmmm
At Kennedy's - i
at -yn P:'r.--j 1 1
Good News
For men who are planning a Fourth of July vacation we are offering super-values in
Palm Beach Suits
$18.00 and $20.00 Straw Hats at $3.00 to $5.C0. Men's Knit ' Ties for summer wear. Soft Shirts, Silk Hose, Belts, Traveling Bags, etc. Our prices you'll find reasonable.
Afosr fyrwwo or Mcv end. 'Boys .
803 Main Street
