Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 182, 2 August 1922 — Page 11
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND.. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 2, 1922.
PAGE ELEVEN
BOSTON BRAVES WIN CONTEST FROM GINGI; MARQUARD CREDITED
How They Stand
National League. Clubs Won Lost
!New York 58 39 ;St. Louis , 60 41 Chicago 53 45
I Cincinnati - ' 53
BOSTON, Aug. 2. Boston banked I Pittsburgh .7... 49 their hopes on Rube Marquard for Brooklyn 47
48 47 49 57 62
Tuesday's game -with the Reds and the i Philadelphia S5 veteran "was successful In his attempt : Boston .33
to turn back the peppery Cincy play- American League.., ers. The score 'was 3 to 2. Pete Don- Clubs Won Lost
ohue was the Red hurter who opposed, St. Louis 58 the Rube, but it was the Braves' time New York ..57
ROOKIE HURLER THREATENS TO LEAD , PITCHERS IN BAN JOHNSON'S LEAGUE
to take a game and the brilliant Cincy
hurler was credited with a loss. Jimmy Caveney was given considerable blame for the defeat of Cincinnati, after he had been so brilliant in
his play in the previous games of the
Chicago 53 Detroit 54 Cleveland 53 Washington 45
.Philadelphia 39
Boston 39
41 44 46 47 50 53 57 60
American Association. Clubs Won Lost
St. Paul .. 64
series. The shortstop had two chances to stop hardhit balls, but passed them
ud allo-wins the halls to eo for hits.
After the two teams had battled the ; Kinwaujtee ka eight innings, Boston leading 3 to 2, 1 Indianapolis 59 the Reds had two runners on base in j Minneapolis 54 the ninth with none out, but that was 'Kansas City 54 all there was to it. Harper and Fon- Louisville ....50 seca hit safely. Harper stopping on! Columbus 40 third. 'The next three .batters hit'Toledo ..36
hard, but all three attempts went ponarely into the hands of a Brave fielder. Marquard started off at a rapid clip, getting the first 13 men who faced him. Several times during the game Cincy had runners on first and third, but the invincible control of the veteran Marquard was enough to hold in the pinches. Pull Double Steal. A successful double steal executed by Boston enabled the Braves to win
the game. Hargrave and Fonseca were slow- in handling the play and the winning run flashed over in plenty of time. Harper led off with a 6ingle in the ninth and Fonseca's hit blew him along to third. Hargrave smashed a hard one, but It went right into the hands of Ford, who made a fast play on it and got Harper at the plate for the
first out
38 46 45 48 54 55 66 68
Pet. .598 .594 .541 .525 .510 .490
.380
.347 Pet .586 .564 .535 .535 .515 .459 .406 .394
Pet.
.627 .578 .567 .529
.500
.476 .377 .346
GAMES TODAY National League. Cincinnati at Boston. Chicago at Philadelphia. American League. Washington at Chicago. New York at Cleveland. Philadelphia at SL Louis. Boston at Detroit.
JAMES ASHMORE WILL HEAD ATHLETICS AT DEPAUVV UNIVERSITY
SHOPCRAFTS TO PLAY
GAME AT BALL PARK THURSDAY AFTERNOON
Another half day holiday game will
be staged at Exhibition nark Thurs-J Nashville last night, and accordin
Fred Toney Declares He Won't Join Braves (By Associated Press) NASHVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 2. Fred Toney, former New York Giant pitcher, who was traded to Boston last week as part of the consideration in the deal that sent Pitcher McQuillan
of the Braves to New York, arrived in
to
day afternoon, when the Richmond i Wends has decided to quit baseball 1,.. ck ' ,.t toam will set! rather than play with the tail end
nendents at Exhibition nark. The
local team took the Logansport nine down the line last Thursday afternoon In a 'real thriller and the Thursday afternoon idea is proving quite popu
lar with local fans, who have nothing, to do on the afternoons of the hot, days. i
Boston will be strengthened with a new battery, upon which they will bank most of their hopes for a win. The remainder of their lineup will be of the best which they have. Ttuey have some real ball players in the little southern city and they play ball
all the time during the nine innings.
Hawekotte will probably do
hurling for the locals. The game will!
According to these friends Toney
said: "I have $50,000 and don't have
to play ball with the Braves."
Efforts to reat;h him by telephone
early today were unsuccessful.
EAGLES, CAMBRIDGE
MEET AGAIN SUNDAY
Without doubt, Sunday's game at Ex
hibition park between the Cambridge
City Greys and Richmond Eagles will
the 'be the stellar game of the year. The
start , time).
at 4 o'clock (daylight savins
GREEN CASTLE, Aug. 2. James N. Ashmore, head coach of baseball and
Pinelli and Caveney then basketball at tho University of Iowa
hit into the hands of the outfielders . for the last three years and assistant
to Athletic Director Howard Jones,
without any
and the rally was over damage done to Boston. The score: CinptnnafI
AB B iBPO E'eIauw university, according to an
Burns, cf. , 4 Daubert, lb 4
Herman Pillette in action.
Phenbms may come and phenoms may go, but Herman Pillette keeps right on humbling American league teams as fast as they are brought on. Ty Cobb's rookie hurler has won twelve games, or thereabouts, and lost but a third of that number. He is the big reason why tbje Tygers are up"with the leaders. Cobb wouldn't trade him for Walter Johnson, Faber or Coveleskie. And to think Pillette was thrown in for good measure in the deal which brought Johnson, another pitcher, from Portland for a wad of cash. Let Ty chuckle.
BROWNS WIN FOURTH GAME FROM RED SOX
two team3 have met before, but this meeting is to he one marking the climax of the season's games. Cambridge has been on the local diamond twice before this year, winning one and losing one. In the first game, "Lefty" Harmon hurled the birdmen to a 1 to 0 win over the visitors and this same hurler will oppose the visitors on the mound agn this time.
It has been a consistent style of ball
(By Associated Press) NEW YORK. Aug. 2. Behind Ray KoId's steadv huiline the St. Louis
Browns won their fourth straight game i which the Cambridge team has played
from the Rex Sox and increased their; this season. They have used the same
lead over the Yankees, whose game'jlme-up most of the way m all their with Chicago was halted in the fourth games and have developed into a
irame Dy rain, to two tun games. iae saoom running maenme
has signed a contract for one year to
i take the reins a3 head of athletics at
Duncan, If. . - 4
Harper, rf 4 Fonseca, 2b 4 Hargrave, c 4 Pinelli. 3.b 4 Caveney, ss 4 Donohue, p. 2 Bressler 1 tNeale 0 Keck, p 0
0
0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
1
14 3 0 3 0 1 2 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 2 9 24 16 1 Bressler batted for Donohue in eighth inning. tNeale ran for Bressler in eighth in ning. Boston.
AB R IB PO Powell, cf. ..3 1 1 2
Christenburg, If. ... 3 Nixon, rf 4 Boeckel, 3b 4
0 j announcement by the DePauw alumni-
0 1 athletic boara. ol Ashmore comes to DePauw with a 0 1 remarkably successful record at Iowa 0 ! and will take up his new duties as 0 ! soon as possible. He will succeed 0 ! Fred Walker as director of athletics 0 at DePauw. 1 While with the University of Iowa, 0 Ashmore was official football scout 0 for Head Coach Jones. Although his 0 1 services were valued at Iowa, the of-
Ificials did not interfere with his res
ignation, inasmuch as he was on his way to advancement.
Holke, lb. Ford, ss. .
f Kopf, 2b 2
Gowdy, c. Marquard,
p. ..
R 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
3 3 2 12 1 2 2 0
Totals 27 3 8 27 13 0 Cincinnati 000 020 000 2 Boston 003 000 OOx 3 Two-base hits Hargrave, Boeckel.
Left on bases Cincinnati, 6; Bos
ton, 4. Double plays Pinelli to Fonseca to Daubert; Caveney to Fonseca to Daubert. Struck out Ey Marquard, 2. Bases on balls By Donohue, 3. Base hits Off Donohue, 7; off Keck, 1. Time of game 1:21. Umpires Klem and Boutell.
FIRST CHAMP TENNIS TOURNEY THURSDAY
PROF. OSBORNE CHAMP
BOOMERANG THROWER
Professor William A. Osborne, of
the University of Melbourne in Aus
tralia, carries the title of champion
boomerang thrower of the world. Prof. Osborne will be in Chicago for
the Duroose of attendine the meetin
of the committee on education of Ro
tary International. He is the president of the Rotary club of Melbourne
The boomerang i3 the pet weapon
of the natives of Australia, the result
being that Prof. Osborne became ex-
ceptionally proficient in its U3e ana
today he is recognized throughout Australia as the foremost hurler of the boomerang. He knows the history ot
the boomerang and knows every trick
which can be done with the weapon.
Prof. Osborne has given several ex
hibitions in the United States and in
Los Angeles recently, aroused the ire
of the motion picture industry by bringing it to a complete standstill
while Douglas Fairbanks and one or two other ambitious stars played hookey from work to learn how to throw the "pesky" things.
Boxer Quit in 15 Out of 1 6 Bouts
Yet Was Great Drawing Card
The first championship tournament to be held on the new tennis courts on the Knollenberg lot on South Ninth and J streets will be staged Thursday afternoon under the direction of Mrs.
Ethel R. Clark, of the Townsend
branch of Community Service. There will be a doubles championship for men at 2 p. m. followed by two mixed doubles exhibitions. The singles championships will be started at 4 o'clock. It will be necessary for each contestant to be on the courts ready to play 10 minutes before the time scheduled for his match. Two out of three sets will be played. The schedule follows: Doubles Championships. 2 p. m., Hayes and Burden versus McKay and Spinner. 2 p. m.. Hanners and Sains versus Goins and Tevis. 2:30, winners of above will meet in finals on court number one. -Singles Championships. 4 p. ni., Hanners versus Burden.
4 p. m., Haye3 versus Texis. 4:30 p. m., Sains versus Goins. . 4:30 p. m., Spinner versus McKay. 5 p. m.. The semi-finals. 6:30 p. m.. Finals. Mixed Doubles. 3 p. m.. Miss Rebecca Rowe and Carl McKay versus Mrs. Susie Okey and Orville Goins. 5:30 p. m., Mrs. May Burton and Roderick Sains versus Miss Hallie Sampson and Jerome Hanners.
Yesterday's Games
John Black Expected To Win Over Death (By Associated Press) SAN JOSE. Aug. 2. After winning in the qualifying round of his tournament with death yesterday, John Black,
ratjnally famous golfer today, was in
what his physicians Deuevea to De the semi-finals and "one up at the turn." Black still is "in the rough." as he lies in a hospital here, with his head injured and several of his ribs broken
as a result of an automobile, accident;
Hamilton Brown. San Francisco clubman, broker and friend of Black, was killed in the accident that injured the master golfer. Although "in tho rough," Black's physicians are counting on his iron to get him out. His gallery was increased last night by one physician, and consists today, of Dr. Raymond Maylard, Dr. L. S. Anderson, a nurse and his wife. They are backing him to
I win and today expected him soon to
s be on the fair way to recovery. - There was a marked improvement in
j Black's "play," Dr. Wayland said, but
! declared it was the hardest match the little Scotch champion of California ' ever had. The crisis is near, it was said.
National League. At Boston R H E Cincinnati 000 020 000 2 9 1 Boston ...003 000 000 3 8 0 Donohue, Keck and Hargrave; Marquard and Gowdy. At New York R H E Pittsburgh 200 700 100 10 12 2 New York 100 100 000 2 11 3
Cooper and Goochm, Mattox; Ryan,
jonnara, scott ana anyder. St. Louis-Brooklyn, (rain). Chicago-Philadelphia, (rain). American League. At St. Louis R H Boston 000 000 002 2 11 St. Louis 010 001 30x 5 10
Collins, Ferguson and Ruel; Kolp
anu couins.
At Cleveland R H E
Washington ...200 000 001 3 14 1 Cleveland 007 320 50x 17 21 1
Francis, Zachary, Erickson and Picinich; Bagby and O'Neill, Shinault. At Detroit R H E Philadelphia ...000 201 100 4 9 0 Detroit 014 300 30x 11 16 2 Naylor, Hasty, Heimach, Ogden and Perkins, Bruggy; Dauss and Manion. Chicago-New York, (rain). American Association. At St. Paul R H E Indianapolis ...000 000 000 0 6 1 St. Paul 000 010 OOx 18 0 Hill and Krueger; Benton and Gonzales. Second game .R H E Indianapolis ...000 000 201 3 12 1 St. Paul 000 004 lOx 5 10 0 Petty, Cavet and Dixon, Krueger; Martin and Gonzales. At Kansas City R H E Toledo 000 000001 1 11 1 Kansas City ...200 200 32x 9 15 0
Terry, McCnllough and Kocher; Zinn
Dy FRAKK G. MEXKB This is the tale of a fighter who
quit in 15 out ot the 18 battles he fought at the old Fairmount A. C. in
New York and yet was its greatest drawing card. )
Billy Gibson, now manager of Benny
Leonard, then matchmaker for the club, tells the story:
He was Buck Hagen, a Bronx light
weight, now dead," relates Gibson.
'The only- fight he ever won at my
club the only one in which he didn't deliberately quit was the time he met a faster quitter who beat him to the floor. Buck was so ashamed because
he was outquit that night that he never would appear at my club again.
"When Buck quit in the first fight,
I decided I was off ot him for life.
But he came around a few days later,
unhmbered some plausible sounding alibi and I matched him again.
"He quit in that fight even faster
than he had in the first. That made me conclude I was off of Buck for life. Buck didn't appear on our card the following week. Can you imagine my surprise when the crowd began yelling for Buck? And during the next three days I received about 100 letters from the regular patrons at the club demanding that I re-establish Buck as a Fairmont attraction. . I did. And Buck then rolled up a record of 15 successive quits Crowd Jammed Place "The crowd always jammed the
place- when Buck appeared there.! They wanted to see him quit As soon as the first bell rang, the gang
used to whistle or sin? 'Please Go
Way and Let Me Sleep.' They'd inter
rupt their own song frequently by yelling reminders to Buck that it was past his bedtime.
Whenever Buck appeared, most of
th boys with ringside, seats brought
along old ,cushions r pillows. As
soon as Buck would go down they knew and everybody else knew he
intended staying there.' So the ringsiders would jump into the ring and stiek the cushions or pillows under Buck's head to make it easier for him. "One night the crowd decided to
have a little extra fun with Buck. It dressed up his opponent in the or
dinary undertaker's regalia high hat,
swallow tail coat and all the other funeral trimmings over his tights. And with the undertaker-fighter heading the procession and six fellows carrying a real coffin which they had borrowed somewhere, the gang paraded into the ring where Buck was waiting. " 'This,' the spokesman said, 'is for you if you quit tonight.' -"Buck looked a little scared erot a
bit white. He foueht well ' for two
rounds Then habit overcame his fear of a coffin. He took the floD.
Had Certain Ritual "The peculiar thine about Buck was
that he always had to" go 'through a certain ritual before he took a divj. He wouldn't flop suddenly not Buck. He had to do a little phoney staggering at first. And, after a while, the
timekeeper, becoming wise to Buck's peculiarity, took advantage of it and always forced Buck to fight a round or two longer than Buck had planned.
i ne very instant that he saw Buck
begin his wobble, that timekeeDer
used to ring the bell, ending the round.
no matter whether it had gone three
minutes or three seconds. And Buck, temporarily foiled, never failed to register wild anger over the timekeeper's trick. One night he got so
mad because the timekeeper ended three different rounds, that he tried to jump out of the ring and knock him for a row ofbuttercups.
"When the timekeeper saw him coming, he yelled to Buck. '"If you Eoak me I'll never let you quit.' "That threat cooled off Buck. He answered the bell for the next round and ran into a, clinch. .When he came out of it the other fellow hit
him on the elbow. Buck didn't wobble he didn't take the chance; of having the timekeeper ring the bell. He Just dropped. After he was counted out he got up, stuck his tongue out at the timekeeper, and hooted: "'Yah! I fooled you that time, you big stiff.' s Matched Two Quitters "While all thi3 was going on there
was a fellow running another clun who said he knew a better and faster quitter than Buck. I doubted it. We
matched up the boys, without tipping
off either as to the natural inclination of the other. Then we let 'cm go. "I had secretly warned each that he'd get no money if he quit before the third round. The boys went along
at a pretty good clip for two rounds. The third opened and I saw Buck making ready to do his dive. H picked out his spot. He pulled an amateurish feint, the idea being to draw in the other fellow, coax that fallow
to hit and then go down. "But that other bird was a champion himself. He Just leaped into Buck's feinting left hand and promptly dropped. Jt surprised Buck so much to see an opponent on the floor that he nearly collapsed himself. After the other bird was counted out, Buck went to his dressing room, mumbling to himself. " 'What's the matter?' someon asked him. J
" 'When a dub like that can beat me j
to the floor, then I guess I'm all
St. Louis Nationals, idle because of the rain, profited by the Pirate's fourth consecutive victory over the Giants and ar within a few percentage points of "first place. Cobb's men, with Cobb himself leading in the batting attack, made a clean sweep of the four-game series with the
Athletics and went into a tie with the; Sunday.
White Sox for third place in the league race. Cobb's two hits increased his record of hitting in consecutive games to 16. The Browns' victory was marked by
Ken Williams' 27th home run. 'placing him in a tie with Hornsby of the Cardinals for major league circuit blows. Cleveland took another heavy hitting encounter from the Senators 17 to 3. Gardner, the Indian third sacker, led the attack on the Washington hurl ers with a homer, three doubles and a single in five times at bat. The Braves came out of their slump to defeat the Reds, 3 to 2.
On the other hand, the Eagles now
have a line-up which is dependable and one which is on its way to a winning streak. A new man stationed on every position of the infield is enough to help any ball club and with the players who now brave these berths, ev-
erything Ehould go off in bang-up style
Riley On Deck.
Riley, former Connersville Minute-
Men third sacker, will be on the hot
corner for Richmond again this Sun
day. The Eagle management states
that he will remain there for the rest of the season. He is a consistent third
baseman and handles everything which comes his way without much trouble. He is a good hitter, espe-
TEX R1CKARD TRYING '
FOR BOUTS BEFORE FOOTBALL LOOMS UP
NEW YORK, Aug. 2. Five more big championship fights before the boya get footballing is the rather sizeable program now receiving the attention of Tex Rickard. . Figuring that Johnny Kilbane can do a Benny Leonard and battle a couple of times in two months, Rickard wants to match him with Joe Lynch, the bantamweight king, and then send him against Eugene Criqui, the reigning champion of the weigh, in Europe. Benny Leonard Is In line for some more work. Benny needs it. as he has earned only $200,000 in the last six weeks. Rickard wants the light
weight champion to work on the winner of the Charley White-Bobby Barrett bout. Another international bout Is in project between . Jimmy Wilde, the world's champion flyweight, and Johnny Buff, the holder of the -American title. (Wilde is said to be in a receptive mood, although he has, exaggerated notions about a purse. Willard Second Edition. Rickard is going to pull that Demp-sey-Willard 6econd edition or bust. He has an idea the world's series is going to be played in New York again in October, and he likes that date for the second massaore. Willard is balking at early October but cash may
help him to change his mind.
Rickard has become so convinced
that Willard has a good chance in. an
other bout that be may forget himself and bet on the big Kansan. Benny Leonard is figuring on going to Europe with his whole family in the fall. . He figures that he can make some money on the other 6ide, as the British folks have been talking about a Ted Lewis- Leonard fight, and they also would like him to show how rotten their champion, Ernie Rice, is. Rickard is looking around for some one to take a fall out of Johnny Wilson. He figures that the middleweight champion slipped one over on . him when he ran out of a match with Harry Greb, and he is not particular
who he gets to knock over. the Boston Italian. The Dundee-Frush fight for the. New
York featherweight championsshiy
Don Byrket will be over on first' and the bout between Harry w ills ana base again, J. Logan on second, Pete j Tut Jackson for the dark heavyweight Minner on short and Harmon on the i title are the next big bouts on the
open once. In 1916, the year he won the national open, he also won the national amateur. The other time he
won a national title 1920 he also
won the western title. Travers, one of the grandest men the links has produced, has won four national amateur titles and one open. He never has held the' western amateur. Travis has held the national amateur three times. He never has been western champ. The brilliancy ' of Evans' play in
these western tourneys furnishes golf enthusiasts interesting reading. After winning the title in 1909 by defeating Albert Seckel, runner-up,, one upf and Warren K. Wood in 1912 by the same
margin, Evans triumphed by decisive
, scores in every final. Beginning with ! an 11 un and 9 victorv over J TV
Standish, Jr., in 1914, Evans' margins in the next four contests over Standish, Clarence Wolff, R. E. Knepper
and G. Van Elm were 7-5, 5-4, 3-2 and 5-4, respectively. Evans stands out as the only golfer to hold both national titles the same
year and to hold one national and the western amateur at the same time. He was bonuia Indianapoli3 and is 32. Sir Auckland Geddc-s said at a Washington dinner party: ."It's a good thing that Charlie Chaplin and our other film stars are now taking foreign tours occasionally, for
mound. If that doesn't sound better,
something is wrong. It looks like a clever infield and it will get its test this Sunday. Snyder has been shifted to center and he works well out in the garden, with Fitzgibboha on his left and Eu-
banks to the right
program, but KicKara nas a linger in neither one of them.
FIVE LEADING BATTERS OF EACH MAJOR LEAGUE National League. G AB R H Pet.
Hornsby, St L....101 396 85 155 .391
The visiting team will probably use! Grimes, Chi 83 303 61 110 .363
Batson on the mound and Stickler behind the bat. The remainder of their line-up is the same as in past games.
wood producer who. was shooting the boudoir of an empress. Suddenly he
stopped the performance. He pointed Sisler. St.
savagely to a small spittoon of pink j Speaker, .Cleve, and white porcelain that stood beside j Heilman, Det. a marble Venus. (Schang. N. Y.
"'For Mikes sake!" he roared, look at that there spittoon! Can't I never make you boys understand, that we're shootin' the boudoir of an empress a royal empress? Take that cheap little old-fashioned spittoon out of here and fetch us a big, nifty, up-to-date bronze cuspidor.'"
Hollocher, CM. 99 379 67 136 .359 Daubert, Cin. ...102 399 80 142 .358 Bigbee, Pitts 95 386 65 137 .355 American League. G AB R H Pet.
Cobb. Det 86 349 67 144 .415
L 93 393 86 158 .402
92 339 67 124 .368 95 366 75 131 .358 72 232 27 81 .349
Indianapolis has been falling lately, St. Paul winning a double header from them Tuesday. Each game was won by home run swats.
through around here as a fighter.'
"And Buck never again would battle at the Fairmont, because, as he put it, he had been disgracefully beaten." CopyrlKb 11121 Ht Kins Fcatnrra Syndicate, Idc.I
and McCarty.
At Minneapolis R H E Louisville 002 000 001 3 6 0
.Minneapolis ...130 400 32x 13 16 2
iong, OeEerry. Estell. Davlim anrt
Brottem; Hollingsworth, Schauer and
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RICHMOND GASOLINE More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. 6th St. and Ft. Wayne Ave. For More Pep, Use '
CHICK EVANS Holds one golf record unequaled in the history cf the game. And this record, in addition to his other achievements, must place him on a par with Jerome Travers and
Walter Travie in America's golfing
hall of fame.
When Evans won this year's amateur title at Kansas City he acquired
the title for the seventh time. It
made the third consecutive time he
had won the honor. At one other
time in the 13 years he has been in
terested in the title he held the championship two successive years. And while drawing the limelight in the western amateur year after year, Evans has won the national amateur championship twice and the national
They hit for the circuit Tuesday. Dressen, St. Paul; Haas, St. Paul; Gardner, Cleveland; Oarey, Pittsburg; Wade, Minneapolis; McManus and Williams, St. Louis Browns.
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(Copyright 1922, by Basil L. Smith)
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