Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 226, 3 August 1921 — Page 9
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND WEDNESDAY, AUG. 3, 1921.
PAGE NINE
BROOKLYN DODGERS COME FROM BEHIND ; TO GRAB OFF VAN
CINCINNATI, Aug. 3. Another one of those bitter disappointments yra staged in the first game of the series with the champion Brooklyn team, hen the Dodgers staged a batting rally in the ninth frame and won the game, 4 to 3, after the Reda seemed to have the victory well in hand. Luque had pitched great ball In the first eight rounds, only to weaken in the ninth, and allowed the champs to forge ahead before he could be removed from the box. Both pitchers were on edge at the half way point. The Reds had a chance in the first, when Neale opened with a single and stole second, but the heavy end of the batting order failed to help him. Cadore allowed only two hits during the first five frames and Luque did not allow any hits up to this point.
The Reds nicked the former lieu
tenant for nine blows, and he walked
four men In addition, but the attack
limped, and 11 of the Red athletes were left stranded on the paths. The score:
CINCINNATI.. ..AB R IB PO A II
Neale. rf..... 5 0 1 3 0 Bonne 2b 5 2 2 2 1
Groh. 3b 4 Roufih. cf 4 Daubert, lb .5 Duncan, If 3
Wingo, c 4 0 Kopf, ss 1 1 Luque, p 3 0
0 0 0 0
0 6 9 0 4 3 0
FIVE LEADING BATTER8 OF EACH MAJOR LEAGUE American League
O AB R H Pet. 98 395 81 16? .423 78 304 77 121 .398 88 330 74 125 .o?'J 93 410 84 151 .364 92 348 75 128 .368
National League G AB R H Pet. Hornsby, St L. 96 377 82 156 .414 Young. N. Y. , . . 88 301 57 109 .362 McHenry. St. L. 94 357 66 125 .350 Cutshaw, Pitts. 73 280 40 98 .350 Williams, Phila. 92 357 42 123 .345 (Figures include Tuesday's games.)
Heilman, Det.. Cobb, Det. .... Speaker, Cleve. Tokln, St. L... Williams. St L.
r - How They Stand -j
; Totals . .34 3 9 27 11 1 r BROOKLYN AB R IB PO A E Olson, ss ....5 0 0 4 2 1 ' Johnston, 3b 4 0 0 2 0 o Griffith, rf 4 1 1 2 0 C meat, If 4 0 12 0 0 Myers, cf 3 11 10 0 Schmandt, lb 4 0 1 3 2 0 Hood 0 1 0 0 0 0 Krueger, c... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kilduff, 2b 3 0 0 2 6 0 Taylor, c 4 0 2 1 0 0 Janvrin. lb..... 0 1 0 3 0 0 Cadore, p ....3 0 113 0 tNeis . 1 0 1 0 0 0 Mitchell, p 0 0 0 0 1 0
35 38 39 49 48 55 57 65
36 35 48 53 51 54 54 61
Totals 34 4 8 21- 14 1 ' "Hood ran for Schmandt in ninth inning. tNeis batted for Cadore in the ninth inning. Cincinnati 000 001 2003 Brooklyn 000 000 103 1 Left on bases Cincinnati, 11; Brooklyn. 6. Struck out By Luque, 2. Bases on balls Off Luque. 1; off Cadore, 4. Base hits Off Cadore, 8. Umpires McCormick and Hart. Time of game 1:43. "
NATIONAL LEAGUE ' W. L.
Pittsburg 61 New York......... .61 Boston 53 Brooklyn 51 St4 Louis . 48 Chicago ; 41 Cincinnati ...41 Philadelphia 30
AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L.
Cleveland 62 New York..! 59 Washington .55 Detroit 48 St. Louis 46 Chicago 43
Boston 43 Philadelphia 36
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Louisville 60 46 Minneapolis 55 44 Milwaukee 57 47 Kansas City 54 47 St. Paul 49 63 Indianapolis 47 56 Toledo 46 57 Columbus 42 60 GAMES TODAY National League Brooklyn at Cincinnati Boston at Chicago New York at SL Louis Philadelphia at Pittsburgh 'American League Chicago at Boston. SL Louis at Philadelphia. Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Washington. American Association Milwaukee at Toledo. Minneapolis at Louisville. St. Paul at Indianapolis.
Kansas City at Columbus.
FORMER WHITE SOX ARE ACQUITTED OF CONSPIRACY CHARGE
Pet. .633
.610 .576 .510 .500 .427 .418 .316 Pet .633 ,.628 .534 .475 .474 .443 .443 .371 Pet. .566 .556 .548 .535 .480 .456 .447 .412
Games Yesterday
GIANTS FALL BACK BY GAME AND HALF , By "Associated Press NEW YORK. Aug. 3. While the Pirates were idle yesterday due to rain, the Giants were wallopped by the Cardinals, the New Yorkers falling
back a game and a half, behind the
league leading Pittsburgh club.
The only other game played in the
National circuit resulted in a ninth in nlng victory for Brooklyn over Cincin nati.
The Washington Americans added to their . third position percentage in
the American league by winning their
eight consecutive victory and the su Louis Browns took a double header from the Boston Red Sox on the latter team's home grounds, i The Yankees, unable to play the ' fourth game of the series with Cleveland yesterday because of rain, took on the Detroit Tigers at the Polo grounds today. The latter team has not won a game in New York this year. HIPPO VAUGHN JOINS ; RANKS OF SEMI-PROS (By Associated 1 rs)
! CHICAGO, Aug. 3. James "Hippo"' ; Vaughn, former premier twirler of the Chicago Cubs, will make his debut as s a semi-professional pitcher here today.
on the mound for the Fairbanks-Mor-! rls team of Beloit. Wis. Their opponf1 ents will be the Pyotts of Chicago, in ' one of the twi-light games, starting at 6:15. now in vogue in the mid-west
leaeue. a group of industrial teams
Vaughn was suspended by Manager Wars for deserting the Cubs in New York after being hit for home runs by Pitcher Douglas and Catcher Snyder,
in one inning on July 19.
VauKhn has been In major league
baseball for 16 seasons, coming to the
Cuba from Kansas City in 1913. He Is
reoorted to have a contract with the
Cubs calling for $9,000 a season.
NATIONAL LEAGUE At St. Louis ' B, H. E
New York 300 000 100 4 8 2 St. Louis 002 000 40x 6 10 1
Barnes, Ryan and Snyder; Pfeffc-r,
Bailey, Walker and demons. Other games postponed; rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Washington R. H. E
Detroit 010 120 0004 11 0 Washington 040 000 Olx 5 8 0
Ehmke ,and Woodall; Courtney,
Acosta, Zachery and Gharrity. At Boston - " R. H. E
St. Louis 000 040 2208 12 0
Boston 000 020 0305 11 0
Vangilder, Kolp, Bayne and Sever
eid; Jones; Karr, Thormahlen and Ruel. Second Game St. Louis 200 003 0005 11 1 Boston 001 000 1 002 8 4 Davis and Severeid; Pennock, Russell, Thormahlen and Ruel. Other games postponed; Tain. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Louisville R. H. E.
St Paul 022 020 54015 22 2 Louisvijle ......100 601 011 9 16 4
Williams, Foster and McMenemy;
Wright, Sanders. Estell and Kocher.
Other games postponed; rain.
The owl parrot of the South Pacific
islands rarely flies.
Babe Must Make Horner
Today or Fall Behind 1920 (By Associated Prms
.' NEW YORK. Aug. 3. Babe Rurh i must make a home run today or he
will fall a day behind his 1920 pre mm for the first time this season
On Aueust 2. 1920. he made his SSth
home run and this year he equalled
that total on August 1. Yesterday rain nrevented him from trying to
add another.
Ruth has great hopes of increasing his total in the Detroit series which
starts today as most of his homers
this year have been made off Tiger Ditchers. , His record against each
team is as follows:
Detroit, 9; Boston. 7; Washington.
6; Philadelphia, Cleveland and St "Louis each 5: Chicago. 1.
(Br Associated Press) CHICAGO, Aug. 3. The seven former Chicago White Sox players and two alleged gamblers, brought to trial in the baseball scandal case, today stood legally cleared of any connection with the alleged conspiracy for tho White Sox to throw the 1919 world rerles to Cincinnati, a. Jury last night having found them not guilty on tho first ballot.
The verdict freeing Buck Weaver.
Happy Felsch, Chick Gondii, Joe Jack-
eon, Claude Williams and Eddie Ct cotte the former players and Carl
Zork ef St Louis and David Zelcar of Des Moines, was returned shortly before midnight amidst a storm of wild
cheering, whistling and yelling from 500 spectators which would have seemed more natural in the bleachers of a basebal park than in the dignified
court room of Judge Hugo Friend.
Judge Friend's balits vainly tried
to establish order out of the pande
monium which broke - loose despite
the judge's previous request. The judge finally motioned to let the demonstration go and Joined in by congratulating the defendants and telling
the Jury it had returned a just verdict " Swept From Boards.
While only nine of the IS persons
Indicted in the baseball investigation
were defendants when the case was
tried, it is believed that the baseball
scandal has been forever swept from
the boards eo far as the courts of Cook
county are concerned. Bill Burns's
case was dismissed in return for his
evidence for the state during the trial, and the cases of Ben and Louis Levi,
of Kokomo, Ind- were dropped.
Abe Attel, Hal Chase, Fred McMul-1
lin, Rachel Brown, of New York, J.
J. Sullivan, of Boston, and Ben Franklin, of St Louis, still are -under Indictment but it was reported at the
state attorney s office today that their cases will be allowed to lapse. Players Jubilant The seven former members of the Chicago White Sox, were jubilant today over their acquittaL Some of them
expressed hopes that they would be reinstated in major league baseball
quickly. ' Joe Jackson, former 6tar outfielder, was the only one who declared he was "through with organized baseball." The others said they would leave their baseball future in the hands of the officials of organized baseball. "The jury could not have returned a fairer verdict," said Jackson. "But I don't want to go back to organized baseball. I am through with it" "Everybody knew I had nothing to do with this so-called conspiracy," said "Buck" Weaver, once the third base
man of the White Sox. "t believe that
I should be given my old position back. I cannot express my contempt for Bill Burns." Asserts Innocense.
"I am entirely innocent and the jury has proven that" said Charles Risberg former shortstop. "I leave pay future In organized baseball in the
hands of the officials."
"How could the verdict have been
anything else," asked. Claude Will
iams, pitcher. "I am going to stick fa.
semi-professional baseball." "All I want to do is to get to De
troit" said Eddie Cicotte . once the leading pitcher of the American league while he shook hands with the jurors.
"Talk, did you say? Never again, talked in this building, never again.'
"The jury has said all that I can say," said Oscar "Happy" Felsch, former outfielder. "I am not guilty and never had anything to do with any so-
called conspiracy." Had No Doubt
"I never had any doubt about the
verdict" said "Chick" Gandil, former first baseman who did not return to
the White Sox in the 1920 season. "If
it had not been for those two liars.
Bill Burns and Billy Maharg, I would
not have been here. ,We are going to
form a semi-professional team in cnicago.and play a few games for the benefit of the wounded soldiers."
David Zelckr, of Des Moines, alleged
first lieutenant of Arnold Rothstem
in the conspiracy, declared he never knew Rothstein and had nothing to do with any conspiracy.
"1 don't know why they brought me
up here,", said Carl Zork of St Louis,
another defendant I never knew any of the other defendants until I met them in court"
Chips and Slips
Only 29 batsmen faced Joe Bush, of
the Boston Americans, in his one-hit shutout victory over St Louis yesterday The men who reached first base
did so after two men were out Sisler singled in the first inning and
Gerber walked in the second. The
next 21 batters went out in order,
Six of the Browns were strike-out victims. Bush is the first American leaeue twirler to pitch a one-hit game
this season. Douglass, of the New
York Nationals, has two such perform ances to his credit
The defendant accused of stealing chickens, had been duly examined-in
Pirates-Twirler is Pitching v
Club Toward Pennant Heights
"Whitey" Glazner is a Born Fighter Spirit Shown on
"No Man's Land Is Leading Him to Big League Greatness.
court and at the conclusion the judge said: "As I understand it Sam, you en
tered the henhouse, and then deciding to resist temptation, left it Is that correct?" "Yessuh, judge. Dass about right" "In that case can you explain how two of the hens were missing?' "It was jes dis way, Jedge, I took 'em. I reckoned I was entitled to dat many fo leavig de res'." Adams, the Pittsburg National ret. eran. twirler, won his" seventh consecutive game, holding the Boston batters in check.
Tyrus Cobb Is spending a few days
at his home in Augusta, Ga., getting
acquainted with his youngest son.
born last week. He will rejoin his
club at Washington, Wednesday.
HOMERS GALORE.
A total of 621 home runs were hit
in the major leagues last year, 370 by American league players, and 261 by
National leaguers.
That made 1920 one of the biggest.
if not the biggest, home run year in
the history of the game.
But 1921 is going to make It look
sick.
Rabbit Powell, Braves,; Frank Ba
ker, Yankees, and Frank Welsh, Athletics, each hit a home run Monday.
These three homers brought the 1921 total up to 631, according to the
best unofficial figures obtainable at
this time. There so far have been 314 homers hit in the National, or 53 more than were hit in the senior league all last season. American leaguers have hit 317, or 53 less than they gathered in the entire 1920 race. " '' As the players of both leagues still have two months in which to sock the pill, 'it would be no surprise L see close to 850 homers as the year's total for the two leagues.
By FRANK G. MEN KB The darbiest slinger uncovered this semester is the property of Barney Dreyfuss, of Pittsburg. The youth answers to the name of Glazner. At the baptismal found they prefixed "Charles' to it But in later years when he developed a crop of very blonde hirsute adornment the Charles was supplanted by "Whitey". And so it's a "Whitey" Glazner who is the huge warrior in the great fight the
Pirates are making for possession of
Pennant Heights.
Fighting comes rather natural to Glazner. He got a lot of it In France.
He was there with the 321st Infantry; sniffed much battle smoke, plus poison
ed gaa and was in the thickest of the
battling, especially during the closing
months of the titanic warfare. Glazner
was among the last Americans to go
"over the top."
Escapes Leaden Death.
It may be recalled that the armistice
was signed at 11 a. m. on November 11, 1918. Six hours earlier Glazner and his mates were sent into "No Man's Land" to make a gallant and winning charge on the Germans. Many of "Whitey'B" mates went down in that onrush to rise no more. But Glazner escaped a leaden death and came back to pitch his way to big league greatness. "Whitey" encased himself in a "pro" uniform for the first time in 1913 when
he wandered from Sycamore, Ala., the
old home town, to play with Anniston
in the Georgia, Ala., league. . He
served time there until 1916 when he
was "graduated" to Winston-Salem in j which place he won 21 games in 25
trials. The following season found hi mslinging for one of the teams in him slinging for one of the teams in Then "Whitey" went to war. Goes on Shelf After his retum from the other side, he hooked up with Birmingham. His very first game brought about a pitching duel which endured for 18 innings. The strain was too much, coming right on top of a near nervous breakdown which Glazner had suffered due to shell shock. And so he went onto the shelf for the balance of the year. , But in 1920 Glazner performed a
"come-back" which caused a rush of
scouts to the southland. He triumph
ed 24 times in 34 trials and at least
half of his losing struggles were due
to poor support In the general scram
ble for possession of Glazner, the bozo
who scouts for the Pirates clutched
the-prize to his buzzum and Glazner went to Pittsburgh. Upsets "Skeptical" Dope Those who have become skeptical through experience over the "bush phenoms" weren't skeptical long about Glazner's ability to stand the major league gaff. With the first cry
of "play ball" the jsoutaern youngster,
wno u just average in size, went out and proceeded to teeter the opposition upon its alabastor brow. . ; t Glazner, possessed of splendid . control, a great change of pace, speed and a great assortment of twisters all glorified with iron nerve and coolness has whipped practically every team in the circuit slung his way into the pitching leadership and etill goes merrily on in his efforts to pitching the Pirates to the baseball crest - (Copyright 1M1 By King; Featarea Syndicate, lac.) -
WHITEWATER TEAM
HORSESHOE CHAMPS By winning five and losing four games the Whitewater horseshoe tearu won the city playground championship from the Warner school playground team. The match was played on the Finley playground, Tuesday afternoon. The Warner team won the first match of three games, but the Whitewater team came back and took the remaining two sets, which gave- them the championship. The-teams "were in a tie at the end of the tournament, which was held two weeks ago, and a playoff of the tie was required. - '
Postotiice, Bakers, Game Again Delayed by Rain Rain again caused the postponement of the Bakers and Postoffice game that was to have been played off Tuesday evening at Exhibition park. The game will be played at a later date. Wednesday evening the Police and the Meats are scheduled to play six rounds. -
SET POSTPONED GAME DATE (By Associated Press J
PITTSBURGH, Aug. 3. The National league baseball game between the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia teams postponed yesterday on account of wet grounds will be played off Sept. 27, it was announced today by officials of the Pittsburgh club.
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In the treat fight Carpentier hit Dempter
with swift powerful blows that had the speed of run fire. The yelling mob saw him land
bis famous right on Dempsey's jaw, yet
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ping tearing, merciless power, landing ter
rific punches on bead, body and jaw until Carpentier quickly weakened and then another powerful punch and again Dempsey showed himself to be the superman of the age the greatest Champion the world has ever known. The London Daily Mail, of July 4th, quotes
Carpentier as saying "Dempsey is the most powerful man I have ever met in the ring. He
Is incredibly strong. To hit him is like hitting a mountain. To take his punches is like feeling the wallop of an avalanche. If I were asked what lead to my defeat, I would say the two tremendous blows Dempsey landed on the nape of my neck. I was not the same after that" Dempsey says, "I feel I won through greater power, exutumnce. fighting skill and strategy. I took Carpentier's hardest blows on my chin and while they knocked me back they did not daze me in the least. I am sure Carpentier bas not the endurance to stand the hard blows that I can stand, neither has he the strength to deliver them. I understand his methods of training are entirely different from mine. While I believe in scientific boxing stiU I never lose sight of the important fact that other things being equal it is the
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(pi rC
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