Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 254, 5 September 1921 — Page 11

PAGE eleven: - EAGLES TALONS FAIL TO STOP GRAY FLOOD IN ELEVENTH INNING DOVVNEY READY TO PROVE HIS VICTORY OVER CHAMPION WILSON WASN'T FLUKE PIRATES' GREAT FIELDING FIRST SACKER

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, SEPT. 5, 1921.

PIRATES GAIN LAP ON CROWDING GIANTS BY DEFEATING REDS CINCINNATI, Sept. 5. The Pirates, struggling desperately to retain their lead in the National league race, gained a lap on the crowding Giants by taking a brilliant pitchers battle from the Red3 after 12 bard fought rounds Sunday afternon at Redland Field, by the score of 2 to 1. Luque and Glazner were heroes on the mound In this overtime battle, and both worked wonderfully well. Although he lost the decision, the actual shade was with the Cuban. He lost in the twelfth after two were out on Tiemey's triple and Grimm's Kinelp. The winninz run was not

scored until after the Reds had flivered several chances to score. Many times Glazner was saved by sensational plays on wicked driven balls from the bats of the Reds. Traynor alone cut off three runs by seemingly Impossible plays on apparently safe hits. The score: Cincinnati AB. R. IB. PO. A Bohne, 2b 5 1 0 1 10 Konf. ss 6 0 1 4 3 Groh, 3b 5 Bressler. rf 4 Daubert, lb 4 Fonseca, If 4 Duncan, cf 5 Wingo. c 4 Crane 0 Luque. p 4 tRoush 0 JCoumbe 0 i 5 15 2 o 4 5 0 1 0 0 Totals 41 1 9 36 18 0 Crane ran for Wingo in twelfth inning. tRoush batted for Luque in twelfth inning. tCoumbe ran for Roush in twelfth inning. Pittsburah AB. R. IB. PO. A. E. THirhee. If . 5 0 1 4 0 0 Carey, cf " 0 Maranville, 83 5 0 Robertson, rf 5 0 Traynor, 3b 5 0 Tierney, 2b 4 1 Grimm, lb 5 0 Rrattem, c 5 0 Glazner, p 4 1 Totals 43 ? 8 36 15 0 Cincinnati 000 100 000 0001 Pittsburgh 001 000 000 0012 Two-Base Hit. Kopf. Three-Base Hits Daubert, Tierney. Left on Bases Cincinnati, 11; Pittsburg, 6. Double Play Grimm (unassisted). Struck Out By Luque, 3; by Glazner, 4. Passed Ball Brattem. Base on Balls Off Luque, 1; Glazner, 4. Hit by Pitcher By Glazner, 1. Umpires Quigley and ODay. Time 2:12. off DOWNEY AND WILSON READY TO MIX IT JERSEY CITY. Sept. 5. Bryan Downey, of Cleveland, and Johnny; WllSOn Ol DOBLOI1, UaillC .Jaj from their training camps to settle Iheir dispute over the world's middle weight boxing title in the pine bowl on Boyles' Thirty Acres. Both weighed i in at 160 pounds, the required weignt, at 10 o'clock and declared themselves fit for the fray. In their last bout in Cleveland. Downey floored Wilson twice and claimed the referee's slow counting on the knockdowns prevented him from annexing the championship. The referee claimed Wilson had been fouled and awarded him the decision. The Massachusetts boxing commission upheld the referee, a Boston man, while the Cleveland commission awarded Downey the title.. The men will box 12 rounds without a decision this afternoon, and Downey must defeat Wilson by a knockout in order to be recognized as the title holder. Both pugilists have trained hard for tlx weeks and asserted they would try to end the fight inside of six rounds. Panama Joe Gans, holder of the negro middleweight championship belt and Mike McTigue, the Irish pugilist, will meet in the semi-final bout, a scheduled 12 round affair. In another preliminary Johnny Buff, flyweight champion, will meet Indian Russell at 12 rounds. EATON TEAM WINS OVER NEW MADISON EATON, O., Sept. 5. Eaton defeated the New Madison baseball team on the local diamond Sunday afternoon by the score of 5 to 4 in one of the best played games of the season. The locals were outhit, but the visitors could not make their bits into runs. The hitting of Lipps for New Madison was the feature of the game. He connected for three hits out of four trips to the bat, including two doubles. The score: New Madison 300 000 1004 10 2 Eaton 100 030 Olx 5 8 1 Garthwaite and Eubanks; Webb and Hannel. SINGLE G WILL MEET FAST PETER MANNING HARTFORD. Conn.. Sept. 5. Twc features stand out in the Grand Cir cuit meeting which opens today at the historic Charter Oak track here One is the race on Tuesday between a great trotter and a great pacer Single G. 1:59, famous lateral stepper, is to meet Peter Manning, Murphy's noted trotter, In a special two-heat match race for $5,000. Pedictions that records will fall, have been made. The other feature of the meeting is the Greater Charter Oak stake for $20,000, a new event this year, which combines the $10,000 Charter Oak trot with two $5,000 trotting events. Thirty-nine of the leading trotters are entered in the three divisions of the event. Cleveland cut down New York's lead to a game and a half by winning a slugging contest from Detroit 9 to 5. The Yankees were idla Sunday.

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Champion Bryan Downey exercising on the weight machine at Grupp'a gym. New York, and inset of Johnny Wilson. Bryan Downey, generally recognized as middleweight champion b;Muse of his knockout victory over Johnny Wilson in- Cleveland a short time ago. is showing his sportsmanship ty giving Wilson a chance to regain the title and prove his claim that he was "robbed" of the title. The pair meet Labor Day at the Jersey City arena where Dempsey dropped France's hope. Downey says: "I'm going to lick him again. That ought to end the dispute, hadn't it?" Wilson is equally confident of winning.

How They Stand NATIONAL LEAGUE Clubs Won. Lost. Pittsburg 79 50 New York 79 52 St. Louis 71 59 Boston 69 59 Brooklyn 67 63 Cincinnati 58 72 Chicago 51 77 Philadelphia 44 86 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Clubs Won. Lost. Pet .612 .603 ; .546 I .530 f .515 .44C .39.' .33 , P t. .1 12 ; 17 .515 .490 .488 .470 .426 .355

New York 79 46 Cleveland : 79 49 St. Louis ....67 63 Washington 65' 66 Boston 60 63 Detroit 62 70 Chicago 55 74 Philadelphia 44 80

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. .591 .557 .545 .489 .474 .471 .460 .414

Louisville 81 56 Minneapolis 73 58 Kansas City 72 60 Toledo 65 68 Milwaukee 64 71 St. Paul 65 73 Indianapolis 63 74 Columbus 55 78

GAMES TODAY National League. Cincinnati at Pittsburg (2 games). Chicago at St. Louis (2 games). Philadelphia at Brooklyn (2 games). Boston at New York (2 games). American League. Chicago at Detroit (2 games). Washington at Philadelphia (2 games). St. Louis at Cleveland ,(2 games.) New York at Boston (2 games). American Association. Columbus at Toledo (2 games). Louisville at Indiantpolis (2 games). Kansas City at Milwaukee (2 games) Minneapolis at St. Paul (a. m.). St. Paul at Minneapolis (p. m.). Games Yesterday NATIONAL LEAGUE At Brooklyn Philadelphia .. 200 000 020 R. H. E. l 11 z Brooklyn 130 050 lOx 10 19 3 Hubbell, Betts and Henline; Mitchell and Krueger. At New York Boston 000 330 000 R. H. E. 6 12 0 New York 011 100 0003 8 0 i j j . n- v rt.ii Oeschger and Gowdy; Nehf, Sallee and Smith. At St. Louis R. H. E. Chicago 000 110 0002 12 0 St. Louis 000 000 0000 4 1 Martin and O'Farrtll; Pfeffer, North and Ainsmith. Second game R. H. E. Chicago 000 000 0202 4 0 St. Louis 040 000 OOx 4 10 2 Freeman, York, Creeves and Daly; Sherdell and Slemons. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Chicago R. H. E. St. Louis 030 011 32010 15 2 Chicago 300 100 70x 11 12 4 Bayne, Vangilder and Severeid; Thompson, Hodge and Schalk. At Detroit R. H. E. Cleveland 000 013 1409 14 0 Detroit 302 000 0005 7 0 Sothoron and O'Neill; Dauss, Parks, Walsh and Bassler. No other games scheduled. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION At Indianapolis R. H. E. Louisville 010 000 0506 10 0 Indianapolis ... 000 001 0001 3 2 Sanders and Meyer; Weaver and Dixon. At Toledo R. H. E. Columbus 000 000 102 000 003 9 2 Toledo . 001 002 000 000 01 4 15 2 Danforth, Clark and Wilson;' Bedlent and Schauffel. At Milwaukee R. H.E. Kansas City 300 041 000 S 10 2 Milwaukee 100 020 0003 6 5 Ames and McCarty; Barnes, Sherman and Sengstock. Second game R. H. E. Kansas City 042 000 00 6 13 1 Milwaukee 000 000 00 0 4 0 Baumgartner and McCarty; Brady, Lingrel and Sengstock. At Minneapolis R. H. E. St. Paul 010 400 020 7 9 3 Minneapolis .. 000 304 03x 10 14 3 Benton and Allen; Mangum, Russell and Crosby. Davis Cup Assured, U. 5. Goes After Japs FORREST HILLS. N. Y., Sept. 5. Ownership of the Davis cup already assured for another year, the American tennis team hoped to make it five straight from their Japanese opponents today in the final matches of the challenge tournament on the West Side turf.

FIVE LEADING BATTERS OF EACH MAJOR LEAGUE American League. G. AB. R. H. Pet. Heilmann, Det.128 511 102 203 .397 Cobb, Det. ...109 432 105 170 .394 Ruth, N. Y....125 440 147 170 .386 Sisler, St U...114 482 100 181 .376 Speaker, Clevell8 456 101 170 .373 National League. G. AB. R. H. Pet. Hornsby, St. L.130 509 114 207 .407 Cutshaw, Pitts. 85 314 44 110 .350 Fournier, St. L.128 494 87 172 .348 Roush, Cin. ..101 376 59 130 .346 McHenry, St.L.128 486 79 166 .342 (Including Sunday's games.)

INDEPENDENTS LOSE TO LYNN, 21 TO 3 LYNN, Sept. 5. Lynn defeated the Union City Independent baseball team on the local diamond Sunday afternoon in a slugfest by the score of 21 to 3. Union City at no stages of the game threatened to overcome the big lead obtained by the locals. Chips and Slips Pittsburg increased Its lead to one full game by copping a 2 to 1 contest wiin i ne ,incmua.i-i xvt-us ouuuaj, while Boston set the Giants back a half game, 6 to 3. President Doak Roberts has added two new umpires to the Texas league staff in the persons of Roy Brashear and Herman Morris. Their coming was subsequent to the novel resignation of Hunter Hill, who quit the Texas staff, telling President Roberts that if he stayed on he either would kill somebody or somebody would have to kill him, so he thought he would resign, while everybody was alive and well. The co-operation of all American riflemen is asked in an effort to locate the Leech cup, the oldest and sociation trophies. The whereabouts !0f this magnificent and historic prize have been unknown since 1913. Since the disappearance of the trophy became known persistent efforts have been auietly made by the . National Rifle Association, with the hone that whoever holds the troDhv. or who is responsible for its loss, could !. . ... be located, but so far all efforts have been unavailing. KAISER WILHELM IS T

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Irving "Kaiser" Wilhelm aa he appeared when pitching for Brooklyn 11 years ago. Irving Wilhelm, who was one of the pitching stars of the big leagues a dozen years ago, is the new manager of the Phillies, named to succeed Bill Donovan. Wilhelm, known then as "Kaiser," was a great spitball artist and succeeded Elmer Stricklett as the star twirler of the Brooklyn National League club. He was trainer and coach of the team when named to fill Wild Bill's shoes.

Dr. J. A. Thomson Dentist Murray Theater Building Hours: 9-12, 1-5, 7-8; Sunday 9-12 Phone 2930

With a loud crash the Eagles blew up In the eleventh frame in the contest with the Cambridge City Grays Sunday afternoon at Exhibition Park. Both teams were playing a fast brand of ball for 10 innings, when the fatal eleventh stanza came along. The Grays went wild in this frame and scored six runs before the side had been retired. The final score was 8 to 2. The game was the most hotly contested game played at Exhibition Park this season, each team- fighting from the start to finish. Hawekotte and Knott staged a pitchers duel that is rarely witnessed on any independent baseball grounds. The fielding of both the teams, especially the visitors, was also exceptional. Should Have Ended Sooner. The game should have never gone into extra innings, and had the Eagles been on their toes on the bases, the contest would have been over at the end of the ninth frame, with the locals two or three runs to the good. On several occasions the Eagles had chances to score but poor base run

ning checked the chances. In the fifth frame the first four men to face Knott connected for singles and only one runner crossed the plate. Fitzgibbons singled to left and Minner followed suit, Fitzgibbons going to third and Minner to second. Byrkett singled to right, scoring Fitzgibbons and Minner trying to score was thrown out at the plate. Long singled to right Byrkett holding second. Reddinghaus hit a fly to left-which Diffenderfer muffed and Reddinghaus thinking Byrkett had scored ran Long off of second and before he could return to first was thrown out, completing a double play. The Eagles started out strong, the first two men up singled, but the succeedine batters failed to score either one of them. The first tally was made j in the third frame on a pass to Fitzgibbons, a stolen base and a passed ball, and Byrkett's long fly to center. Call Police to Field. Police had to be called upon in the seventh inning to restore order when the game nearly broke up in a fight. Cregar hit a liner to left field that Long barely managed to get his hands upon, the ball rolling in the ditch, Creagar making one circuit. Umps Hass ordered him back to second base according to ground rules. This Cregar refused to do and a heated argument followed, several of the visiting spectators ran upon the field, engaging in the argument and had to.be ejected , by the police. After several minutes of argument, Cregar returned to second base and the game continued. Monday afternoon the same teams will play at Cambridge City. Next Sunday afternoon the Farmland team will play a return engagement here. The score: Cambridge City AB. R. H. O. A. E. Knott, p 6 2 3 2 4 Bois, ss 5 0 2 0 4 Runnels, cf 4 o 2 1 15 2 4 2 0 Cregar, rf. cf. . . Winters. 3b. Hunt, lb Diffenderfer, If. , F. Strickler, c. , Caldwell, 2b. ... R. Strickler, rf. . Total 42 8 11 33 15 3

Eagles AB. R. H. O. A. E. H. Logan, ss 5 0 1 4 3 0 Fitzgibbons, rf 4 2 2 2 0 1 Minner, cf 5 0 1 3 1 0 Byrkett. lb 4 0 1 14 2 0 Long, If 3 0 2 0 0 0 Reddinghaus, 3b. .. 5 0 0 2 3 1 Knight, c 5 0 1 4 1 0 J. Logan. 2b 4 0 1 3 1 1 Hawekotte, p 3 0 0 1 4 1 Total 38 2 9 33 15 4 By innings R. H. E. Cambridge C. 000 001 100 068 11 3 Eagles 001 010 000 00 2 9 4

Stolen Bases Runnels, Logan, Fitzgibbons, 2. Sacrifice Hits Winters, Byrkett Base on Balle Off Hawekotte, 4; Knott, 3. Struck Out By Hawekotte, 3; by Knott, 4. Wild Pitches Hawekotte, 1; Knott I. Hit by pitched ball Hawekotte. Umpires Haas and Peele. BIG LEAGUE PILOT QUALITY FOOTWEAR for Men, Women and Children BM'fflg

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Charley Grimm In action. II the Pittsburg Pirates withstand the onslaught of the Giants and edge into the world's series the work of Charles "Lefty" Grimm at first base for the Pittsburgers will be watched with interest. Grimm has earned the name of being the greatest fielding first Backer the Pirate crew ever has had. He has played a leading part in the stellar work of the Pirate infield this year.

Tesreau, Losing Out on Giants9 Pitching Job, Triples Income Cut Loose from Baseball in Time of War, Unable to Come . Back at Close, Hurler Organizes Semi-pro Team and Goes Out for BearSucceeds. By fraxk c METRE .netting him about three times as much Jeff Tesreau is one of those citizens Per year as he got from the Giant ... ... i -u : uoiiere in his best day.

wno can turn ms ironuspiece m general direction of big league base ball and laugh boisterously and gleefully. Most bozos, cast loose from their moorings under the "Big Tent" have a rather tough time of it adding skekels to the family exchequer. But "The Ozark Gear" is somebody different. Departure from his $5,000 job as a slinger for the Giants made it possible for him to triple his income. Back in 1910 the huge slinger from the mountain district of Missouri, was lassoed by the Giants and hauled in for pitching duty a year later. Almost immediately he became one of the sensational moundsmen of the game. Made Quick Success. i Possessed of blinding speed, armed with a spitter almost faultless in delivery, and with a great change of pace, Tesreau promptly whirled himself into fame and greatness. The big fellow was one of the mightiest factors in the Giants successful battle to the baseball championship of the world in 1912. Through the years that followed until 1918 he was an indispensable cog in the New York machine one of its most feared pitchers. - .. - . Soon after the outbreak of war, Tesreau quit the Giants to engage in an essential industry. He was exempted from the draft because he has a wife and family, but, just the same, he determined to do his bit by labor ing in one of the steel plants. On his afternoons off he pitched for one of the Steel League clubs. Has Own Ideas About Baseball. When the war ended, there was no big league job for Tesreau at least not with the Giants. He might have lingered around with some other out-

for a while or gone to the minors. . , , . ,ttV, But Jeffie had different ideas. He sawj ?cptph? 1?,,! possibilities in the semi-pro field injhuerdel hmltmS tne Cub bmS,es to New York that no one else had dis- ( : covered that is, not quite in the -

Tesreau way. Tesreau sensed a return of baseball fever. He figured that semi-pro com-, bats between good clubs would draw a regular patronage of its own and the overflow crowd from the polo grounds. ' So he organized the "Tesreau j Bears" which was made up of former j big and minor league stars and young- j sters who might have gone into big; league jobs if they hadn't been content to stay around the old town and get; a little sport and money playing onSaturdays and Sunday. Builds Up Own Contests. j He then rented a big field which I had been used occasionally for base-' ball. He improved it and added to the . seatine capacity of its stands. In the end, it was possible to accommodate ; close to 5,000 with the field so arranged ' that there was standing room for 3,000 . more. ! Knowing that baseball combats thrill only when evenly matched teams are t competing. Jeff influenced other folks to organize teams to send against his. : The result was about eight semi-pro . clubs, each with a field of its own and . each strong enough to give any group of ball players a stiff argument. j The games bristled with starry plays. Each was hotly contested. En-, thusiasm reached a fever pitch. And, ! as a result the parks were jammed and the receipts for Sunday games especially at Tesreau's park frequent ly went between $o,000 and $10,000. Has "Slack Season" Job. Even while he was making semi-pro ball a prosperous proposition in New York, Tesreau was offered a job as coach of the Dartmouth collexe dia mond performers. He accepted it i ltTirtcr a Innc torm pnntrart TT-iot I work keeps him busy through the late winter and early spring. During the summer when Tesreau nis oeares lie jumps uruuou me country picking up $100, $200 and sometimes $250 for pitching a single game for some semi-pro team which is involved in a titular clash in its own home town. Tesreau was a fairly well paid athlete when with the Giants. But in this era, his profits, ownership of the Tesreau Bears, his salary as a collegiate coach and his "pickups" are Army Russet Shoes In good condition, special, pair $2.25 and $2.50 American Shoe Shop Nick Sena, Prop. 402 N. 8th St. BICYCLE TIRES $1.75 and up ELMER S. SMITH The Wheel Man 426 Main St. Phone 1806

Ig it won(ler he chuckles

any whenever he thinks of those fellows who murmured "tough luck, Jeff" when he was wafted out of the majors? (Copyright 1021 By Kins Features Syndicate. Inc.) BOSTON RED SOX CAPTAIN PLAYS 801 STRAIGHT GAMES BOSTON, Mass, Sept 5. WTien Capt. Everett Scott of the Boston Red Sox completed Saturday's game with the Athletics, he increased the string of consecutive games in which he has played, to 801. His continuous play, long since a record, started June 20, 1916. The former record was Jield by Fred Luderus of the Philadelphia Nationals, who in 1919, completed 533 consecu tive games. The longest known previ ous record of organized baseball, 577 games without a break, vas made by George Pinckney of the Brooklyn American Association team over a period from 1885 to 1890. MAURICE ARCHDEACON SETS NEW MARK ON DIAMOND ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. 5. Mau rice Archdeacon, center fielder of the Rochester International league club, established a new world's record for circling the bases of a baseball diamond in a formal trial before Saturday's Rochester-Newark game. He made the circuit in 13 2-5 seconds, finishing the final stretch in the face of 13 4-5 seconds, was made by Hans Lobert in 1910. Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cards played two four hit games Sunday. The Cubs won the first when Speed $20.00 Buys a New Style Fine Quality Cloth, Perfect Fitting Young Man's School or College UIT These garments are finely tailored and each is fully warranted to give absolutely satisfactory wear. Many styles at $20.00 Others up to $35.00

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NEW YORK GIANTS m LOSE GROUND TRYING TO OVERTAKE PIRATES (By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sept 5. The - New , York Giants lost ground yesterday in their rush to overtake the Pittsburg Pirates in the National league. While the Pennsylvanians added a victory to their percentage column in a 12-inning contest with Cincinnati, the Boston Braves checked New York's winning streak. Pittsburg today was ' leading the New Yorkers by 10 points. . Pitcher Oeschger of Eoston, was

hard for the Giants to hit safely. Boston outfielders had 12 putouts, half of them by South worth, who also decided the game with a home run in the fifth inning, scoring two runs ahead of him. In the American league, Cleveland hit the ball safely 14 times in winning from Detroit, gaining half a game on the league leading Yankees, who were idle in Washington due to rain. The leaders today were 15 points ahead of Cleveland. Rightfielder bmitn or Cleveland furnished a batting feature with a home run, with two men on base. All teams in both major leagues were scheduled to phay two games today. TRADE WITH RUSSIA LESS THAN 1919-20 fBy Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Sept 5. American trade with soviet Russia amounting to ju.ww.ooo for the fJrst six months of this year, fell far fbelow the corre sponding period of either 1919 or 1920. During the first half of 1921, the re port said, imports from Russia amounted to $692,000 and exports to that country totaled: $12,000,000. while for the same months of 1919, Imports were $2,975jOO0 and exports $39,454,000, and for the corresponding period of 1920 imports totalled $8,555,000 and exports-$35,500,000. Rtrin Delays Progress of Roqae Tournament (Special to The Palladium.) NEW PARIS, O, Sept 5. Rain interfered with the roque tournament here Saturday, only two games being played of the six or more scheduled. Results of Saturday's games: First Division M. T. Reeves . 32 D. R. Swisher 16 W. L. Hahn -. 32 C. A. Hawley 15 Boys' School Shoes, Built Strong We buy our Boys' Shoes from manufacturers who are known to put only the most . rugged leathers and thorough workmanship into their product. That is why we think these sturdy, reinforced School Shoes are the best thing to put on your boy. Because they aren't rough and 1 clumsy looking don't think they aren't strong If any sttoes can withstand the wear and tear of boys' play these certainly can. NEFF & NUSBAUM 7th and Main flittHttHiinmiiitmuiiiHUmiiiiiiiHimitiunuituttinniiHUiiiuinimnnitHHaiin I BOYS' SCHOOL BLOUSES ! j 480 J Rapp's Cut Price Co. I 525-529 Main St 3 i Ttiiint 1 it until ut inmmin iituiuitniiiiHiiitHinii uminuuntMtiuiniHmimiHfiui See the New Fall Hats for Men LICHTENFELS 1010 Main Street NtmtntitttniniitinttuntiiitiniiitiiiiitimtrnuiuuuuiwimtttUfiiHttimmuiniw BOSTON STORE One Price to All