Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 216, 11 September 1922 — Page 25
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, SEPT. 11, 1922.
PAGE TWENTY-FIVE
EAGLES HIT TIMELY TO SHUT-OUT GRAYS; 'RUS AND 'GY' STAR
Dr R. It REID That spit-ball of "Rus" Hawekotte's and the errorless play ol the Eagle fielders set the Cambridge Grays back Sunday at the local ball yard, 4 to 0. The Bhut-out was made possible by the fact that the diminutive Eagle hurler allowed the Grays but two hits during the encounter. Stickle' and Hunt were the collectors of these two precious hits. The Cambridge batters were l itting high into the outfield, and well enough for the Eagle players in the gardens, the balls all came nice to field, with a few exceptions, Cy Fitzgibbons was the player in the right garden wno had ome of the most difficult flies to get under. In several cases, the clever right fielder's speedy legs carried him under possible texas-leaguers. Cy is There Again It is no more than justifiable to take this space, to pay a bit of respect to t the play of Cy Fitzgibbons. Tne right ' fielder has played his berth throughout this season and in past seasons, without any side-slipping of the least bit He is without doubt, the best iead-off man the Eagles have had eince their organization. A player that gets on base as often, as Cy does, either by hits, walks or hit by pitched balls, can bejated none other than an all-iound man at the game. In Sunday's game,
he collected three hits in four times to the plate, stole three bases, made thee put-outs and wa3 there without an error for the nine frames. It has always been his business to beat Cambridge. ' Six hits were collected by ' the Eagles, half of them going to Cy. J. Logan took the fourth of the number by collecting a nice double. Minner came In for a single and Hubbard topped the half dozen with a finaL Birdmen Show Class No doubt, from now on, the Eagles are going to win ball games, for they have nothing other than a clasay outfit, capable of playing clever exhibitions of the national pastime. To start on the winning ways, the Eagles made good for one tally in. the
second inning, which should never
have been recorded on the score sheet
Clear as the eye could distinguish, Hubbard let one go by in the second inning, which was as good a strike as ever crossed the pan, but Umpire Cornthwaite called it a ball. Two men were down and the two strikes had been made and tho decisian prevcnied the Grays from retiring the side. The result was that Hubbard s'r.g'.ed on Battson's next offering, scoring Henges ahead of him. The clubs, rocked along for a tew more innings, with nothing any more exciting than a hit by Stickler for the Srays in the fifth inning and a billiard play on Diffenderfer's grounder. Hawekotte stuck his glove in front of Diffenderfer's hot grounder and allowed it to billiard over to Logan, at second,
who made the assist to first base. "Rus" had better go out and . chal- j lenge'Schaeffer for the billiard title. Logan Doubles To make things a bit more lively, the Eagles started things right, in the sixth, icing the game away. Fitzgibbons led-off with his second single of the game. J. Logan attempted to sacrifice him along twice, but failed; so after Cy had stolen the base, John soaked the third chance to left, good for two bases. Diffenderfer got his hands on the ball, but the ground was too rough for him to keep his equilibrium and he let it drop into the ditch under the score board. . The Gray fielder did his best, but Logan took credit for a two base hit. Fitzgibbons,
of course, came in on the blow. Minner singled to center, scoring Logan, who made home easily after Long had
let Minner's hit go through his legs
The two runs were all, for Byrkett, Knight and Enbanks went out in order
on ground balls. ,
Cambridge never had much of a
chance to score, inasmuch as they
failed to get a runner past first base. The spitter was working in fairly good shape for "Rus" and the Grays were
not touching it in the right way. All their crashes went high into the air, thus enabling the Bird fielders to get under them and wait for them to come
down. .One More In Eighth ,
One more Eagle rally came In the eight inning when Cy led-off with his
third single of the matinee. The
speedy player stole hi3 third base. J.
Logan sacrificed him along to third,
Cy scored on the throw to first to get Minner. who had hit to short Hunt
dropped the ball, allowing Minner to remain on base, Byrkett was out by a fly to Long. Knight hit to short
and forced Minner at second.
Diffenderfer and Winters fanned in the ninth and Long went out, J. Logan
to Byrkett.
The Eagles wm play at Cambridge
, , next sunaay.
The score and summary:
How They Stand
National League Won Lost Pet New York.. w.79 53 .598 Pittsburgh, . . . . . 76 59 .563 Cincinnati 74 62 .544 St. Louis U 73. 62 .541 Chicago ..72 62 .537 Brooklyn1 k 66 69 .489 Philadelphia j. 48 83 .366 Boston s. 46 84 .354 ' American League Won Lost Pet New York "..S3 53 .610 St Louis ...82 .55 .599 Detroit 72 66 .522 Chicago C9 68 .504 Cleveland 67 70 .489 Washington 60 73 .451 Philadelphia 57 78 .422 Boston 54 81 .400 American Association. Clubs Won Lost Pet. St. Paul 92 51 .644 Minneapolis ....79 65 .549 Indianapolis 78 68 . .538 Kansas City'.. 76 69 .524 Milwaukee 75 72 .510 Louisville '.....70 78 .473 Toledo &8 89 .394 Columbus 5 91 ,377
GAMES TODAY National League Boston at New York (2) American League New York at Philadelphia. American Association Indianapolis at Columbus (2) Louisville at Toledo. , . . Milwaukee at St. PauC Kansas City at Minneapolis.
FASltST THREE-YEAR-OLD TROTTER OF GRAM D-CIRCUIT.
r -'fii Xr uy... fr.- S: r j I I I . Iv'-.vf -if. - -".r w-fr jsJ ' t . - . i . w ' - -
PETER EARL Winning AMERICAN HORSE BREEDER'S FUTURJTY In his brilliant race Peter Earl trotted the first half of his fastest mile in 1:01 and then stood off another challenge by Helen Dillon in the home stretch, winning by an open length in 2 :04 . This is not only the fastest heat of the season, but one of the fastest heats ever won by a three-year-old so early in he campaign. After winning the race Nat Ray, who drove Peter Earl, declared that he would jive the colt a record of 2:03 or better at Xexincfton. .
1 4 Saturday's Games '
National League. .At Cincinnati R H E St. Louis 300 001 30512 16 1 Cincinnati 110 001 304 10 16 5 Sell, North, Sherdel and Ainsmith; Keck, Markle, Luque and Wingo. At Philadelphia R H E New York 010 000 020 3 7 2 Philadelphia . . .000 000 101 2 8 1 McQuillan and Snyder; Ring and Henline. At Pittsburgh It H E Chicago 001 000 030 4 10 0 Pittsburgh ...201 103 OOx 7 14 1 Alexander, Cheves, Jones and O'Farrell; Glazner and Schmidt. Second game R H E
Chicago 000 200 500 0 7 11 0 Pittsburgh ...001 101 130 1 8 13 4 Osborne. Cheeves, Kaufman and O'Farrell. Wirts; Brown, Morrison, Yellowhorse, Hamilton and Gooch. At Brooklyn R H E Boston 001 010 300 000 5 18 2 Brooklyn ..000 210 020 001 6 11 3 Miller and O'Neill, Gowdy; Grimes and Miller, DeBerry. American League.
At New York R H E
Washington 100 000 000 2 8 1
New York 010 100 001 3 10 0 Mogridge and Gharrity; Jones and
Schang.
At Chicago R H E Cleveland 011 000 001 3 8 0
Chicago 101000 000 2 9 2
Edwards, Uhle and Sewell; Blanken
ship and Yaxyan.
At St. Louis . H-E
Detroit 000 000 000 0 5 1
St. Louis 520 210 42x 16 20 0
Pillette, Holling, Moore and Wood
all, Manion; Valgilder and Collins.
At Boston R H E
Philadelphia ...010 001 001 3 7.0
Boston 000 000 001 1 6 0
Ogden and Perkins; Pennock, Pier-
cy and Chaplin.
Second game R H E
Philadelphia ...000 010 100 2 7 1
4 4 3 .2.
.3
CAMBRIDGE
Diffenderfer, If Winters, bs....
Long, cf Knott, 2b Reddirtfrbaus: 3b
Runnels, rf 2
Hunt, lb 3 0 1 Stickler, c... 3 0 Battson, p 3 0
Totals :..27 0 EAGLES AB R FKzgibbons. rf 4 2 J. Logan, 2b... 3 1 Minner, ss 4 0 Byrkett, lb 4 0 Knight, cf. . 4 0 Dubanks, If 3 0 Henge3. 3b 2 1 Hubbard, c 3 0 Hawekotte, p 3 0
AB R II PO
1 0 1 4 1 0 12 3
A 0 3 0 2 2 0 0 0 5 ,
2 24 12 H PO A
3 3
1 3 10 3 2 0 5
0
1 1 0
0 0 0 1 0
0 5 0 0 0 0 2 2 2
BEDS CLIMB BACK TO THIRD PLACE SUNDAY BY TRIMMING CARDS
CINCINNATI, Ohio, Sept. 11. Pat
Moran's Redlegs took their berth in
third place by virtue of a slugging win
over the St. Louis Cardinals at Redland field Sunday. Seventeen his by Red batters made the contest a lively
affair, while the Cards were not far behind with 14. Pete Donohue started, tn his usual form with a fast delivery in the first three rounds, but he began to weaken
at this point and wobbled so badly
that Moran took him out in the seventh. A five run lead in the first threo innings put the Redlegs out in front, and it was well for Donohue that they did, for his pitching with normal hitting, would never have wron for Cinci. Two home runs and a steal of home featured the final matinee with thu St. Louis Cardinals. Daubert drove into the right field stands for his cir-
Boston 000 010 002 3 8 0 Rommel and Perkins; Quinn, Ferguson and Ruel. American Association. At Toledo R H E Indianapolis ...020 000 000 2 8 1 Toledo 000 170 OOx 8 14 1 Seib, Cavet and Krueger; McCullough and Kocher. At S$. Paul R H E Milwaukee 000 000 000 0 3 2 St. Paul 300 000 OOx 3 9 0 Gearin and Myatt; Hall and GonAt Columbus R H E Louisville 030 000 000 3 10 3 Columbus 101 100 001 4 10 1 DeBerry and Brottem; Gleason and Hartley. At Minneapolis R H E Kansas City 010 000 040 5 9 3 Minneapolis ...205 000 Olx 8 15 1 Wilkinson, Dawson and Shinault; Yingling and Mayer.
cuit smash and Bottomley drove into the same locality for the same distance. Sara Bohne entered the contest after Jimmy Caveney had hurt his leg in beating out a hit. The speedy Bohne took Caveney's place at third bass after the Re4 shortstop had trippled and limped into the bag. The peppy Bohne remained on the bag but a few seconds, for he was off with the first pitch, obtained an enormous lead off of Doak and was over the plate before ClemjDns had received the pellet It was a lightning play and the fans really appreciated it to the limit. Two Red-tallies came -in the first inning on singles by Burns, Duncan and Harper along with a pass to Dau
bert. In the third frame, Pertica pass
ed three men and the walks, with a double by Duncan and a 6ingle by Caveney, sjusted the hurler. Three runs crossed the pan. Run Up Tallies The Cards got to the offerings of
Donohue in the four succeeding inn
ings, following the fouth. Th.y run their total up to seven tallies to 10 for
Cinci. A three run rally in taa sev enth on the part of the Redlegs cinch ed the contest.
Daubert's homer, Duncan's double
and a single by Fonseca put three Red
tames across m tne seventn for a
total of 13. Fans were well pleased with the ac
tion produced by the teams Cincinnati. The score: j
AB
St. Louis. AB R IB PO A E Blade, ss, ......... 3 01 3 2 1 Smith,. cf. ......... 3.2 3 0 0 1 Hornsby, 2b 5 1 1 4 10 Bottomlv. lb 5 2 3 7 0 0 Stock. 3b 5 0 1 1 6 0 Schnltz. rf 3 1 1 2 0 0 Mann, If. 5 1 2 2 0 0 Ainsmith, c. ..... . 1 0 0 3 1 0 Clemons, c .2 01 2 1 0 Pertica, p. 10 0 0 2 0 Barfoot, p 2 11 0 0 0 Doak. p 0,0 0 0 0 0 Sherdel, p 0 0 0 0 1 0 Fournier 1 0 0 0 0 0 North, p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 8 14 24 14 2 Fournier batted for Sherdel In
eighth
Cincinnati 203 005 30x 13 St Louis 000 112 301 8
Two-base hits Duncan 2, Hornsby,
Schultz, Mann.
Three-base hits Caveney, Barfoot. Home runs Daubert, Bottomly. '
Burns, rf . . . Daubert, lb. Duncan, lf.
Harper, cf.
Fonseca, 2b 4 Pinelli. 3b. 4 Caveney, ss 4
1 4 ... 1 ...4 ... 1
Bonne, ss. . Wingo,' c. .. Hargrave, c. Donohue, p. Cgfueh, p! . .
R 2 2 3 C 2 2 0 1 0 0 1 0
IB PO 2 3
Totals 39 13 17 27 17 0
WELCOME FAIR VISITORS 7
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LEADS THE FIELD WHEN IT COMES TO SUIT VALUES Compare them, point for point, then you be the judge. - We know yon will decide In their favor as hundreds of other men have. "They know." They have been in our store and purchased one of these wonderful suits we are selling at one price, '
Totals SO 4 6 27 11
Score by innings R. H. E. Cambridge 000 000 000 0 2 1 Eagles 010 002 Olx 4 C 0 Two hase hits J. Logan. Sacrifice fcits J- Logan. Strucw-ont By Hawekotte, 5; by Battson, 3. Bases on balls Off Hawekotte, 3; off Battson. 1. Double plays Cambridge, Reddinghaus to Knott to Hunt Left on bases Cambridge City, 3; Eagles, 3. Umpires Haas and Cornthwaite.
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NEW PARIS BATTERS
GRAVEL BALL CLUB ' -( ' ; ' NEW PARIS, , Ohio, Sept 11. New Paris handed" 'the. Richmond-Greenville Gravel company a crashing shutoat here Sunday, 21 to - The locals battered the - visitor's hurler for 19
hits, while tie best that "could be ob
tained off Swisher's delivery was five safe blows.; f As far as the outcome of the game
was concerned, It was won in the first
inning when the home club tallied once. The boys went rampant in the ', :
Left on ; bases Cincinnati,. 8; St. Louis, 8. . : . Pbuble plays Caveney to Daubert; Bohne to Daubert r Pinelli to Fonseca to Daubert ' to Fonseca; Stock to Hornsby to Bottomly. Struck out By Donohue, 1; by Pertica, 2. Bases on balls Off Donohue, 4; off Couch 3; off Pertica, 4; off Barfoot, 1- , ' ;Base hits Of f Donohue, 12 ; off Couch, 2; off Pertica. 6; off Barfoot, 6; off Doak, 4; off Sherdel, 1. Time of game 2:16. ! Umpires Quigley and Moran.
eighth frame and scored 11 runs. Th score: ..... . . ... , . , .. Rlchm&njf-Greenville Gravel-Qo.
H C 1 6 0 1 3 fl a G
AB R H PO A Mattox, c. . . .. . 0 . 0-11 0 M. Rboads, sa. ...... 4 0 2 .1 3 Pete Daugherty, rf. . 4 0 1 0 0 George Ray, cf. 4 0 0 0 0 John Bjeese, p. ... 4 010 3 Young, 2b. 4 0 0 1 2 Williamson, 3b. ... 3 0 0 1 0Mowdy. If 4 0 i 1 1 W. Breese, lb 2 0 0 9 0 j Total!. 33 0 5 24 9 I New Paris Grays. I AB R H PO A
Benson, ss, -Jennings, 2b. .
Harrigan, u. . . McGill, c. . .". . . Reid, . 3b. Cunningham, lb,
H. Daugherty, cf.
6 5 5 5 6 5 5
C. Dunham, rf 5 Swisher, p. 4
2 0 0 1 1
5- 0 0 0
B a 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0
......46 21 19 27 .000 000 0 00 0
5-
...102 031 311x 21 19 2 hits Swisher, Dunham,
Totals.... Gravel Co. New Paris Two-base
Reid, 2. Three-base hit Reid. Sacrifice nits Jennings, Dangherty. Harrigan. ' ' Struck out By Breese, 8: by Swisher, 15. Base on balls By Breese. 4; oy
Swisher, 2.
Time of game 1:30.
Umpire Melody.
7,1 y-
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