Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 261, 2 November 1922 — Page 13

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1922.

PAGE THIRTEEN

WALKER WINS TITLE , FROM JACK BRITTOH

IN FURIOUS CONTEST

a By Associated Press) ; NEW YORK, Nov. 2. A grinning, towsel head young fellow from Elisabeth, N. J., has the -welterweight boxing championship of "Hie world today, ; Decaaae he had absolutely no respect for old age, -wisdom and cunning -when ; he ran athwart them at Madison Square Garden last night He signs his checks Michael Edward Walker, but the boys call him Mickey and his appearance does not believe the aptness of the monicker. Mickey Walker is the new champion and Jack Britton, the sage of the ring, is again an ex-champion. Its not exactly a new role for Britton, hut it ap

pears likely to be a permanent one now. Jack held the title for nearly a decade, first losing it to Ted "Kid" Lewis and later regaining It from the

same man.

Hinshaw, Ex-Captain of

Earlham Football Team, Dependable All-RoanJ Man

COMMERCIAL BOWLERS ROLLING GOOD SCORES

King's Hats, Bakers and P. and N.

bowling teams won two out of three of their games with the Telephones,

Item and Steinharts. respectively, in

the Commercial league on the R. and

W. alleys Wednesday night.

High score was made by King at 243

and be also took high average at 199 The Bcores:

F. and N. Player 1st 2nd 3rd

Epping . 159 170 Benge 124 180 C. O'Maley ..158 187 VfcGamp 136 133 vJrp. O'Maley ..100 116 Handicap ....221 221

173 149 155 148 146 221

Tl. 502 453 500 417 362

At

167

151

167 139 121

Totals 898 1007 992 Steinhart. Tlayer 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. At. Halliday 99 138 153 390 130 Oehring .....154 134 109 397 132 Brown 140 150 119 409 136 Whitcomb .4.156 123 137 416 139 Sharp 147 136 191 474 158 Handicap ....269 269 269 Totals..,.'. .965 950 978

nigh average Epping and O'Maley

(tied). 167.

High ecore O'Maley, 187. Bakers. Tlayer 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Dunham .....i73 148 132 453 151 Eckler 108 109 183 400 133 Farwig 103 109 103 Castelluccio ..146 147 159 -452 147 King 243 185 169 597 199 Zwissler 128 169 297 99 Handicap 173 177 177 Totals .....946 894 989 Item. Player 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Sherer 169 215 179 563 188 Kluesener ...143 179 161 483 161 Dillon 126 133 147 406 135 Thomaa 154 208 156 518 173 Bennett 148 179" 179 506 169 Handicap ....144 144 144 Totals 884 1038 966

Chips and Slips

' ' l f fi i , ff Lr ; V

Photo by Bundy. "Cobby" Hinshaw Hinshaw was captain of the Earl

ham college football team last season;

and he is now in his fourth year for

the Maroon and White. In his fresh

man year, he gained a regular berth by means of his speedy end runs and line bucks. Robert is his given name but he Is

generally called Bob or "Cobby". He was handicapped la6t year following a broken wrist which he sustained in scrimmage, but he is now travelling

at a fast pace. Hinshaw is one of the most dependable backfield men the college has

ever had. It has been his job to do the punting for Earlham this year, and

when he left the Earlham-Hanover

game Saturday, his absence was keenly felt by the remainder of the team. This is his last year and Earlham is

loosing a valuable athlete.

One day the cashier of a bank said to an old customer, "The board of directors at their last meeting decided that they would no longer renew your note." "That's going top exceedingly embarrassing," replied the customer; "because this note has been in the bank now about 25 years." "Well," responded the cashier, "the directors are not going to turn you down, exactly. They have decided

they can no longer discount your note, but they are going to charge you storage for it"

Purdue university is whipping the football team into condition for Wabash gridders, who invade Lafayette Saturday for what is predicted to be a great football game. The Little Giants have staved-off all efforts on the part of their opponents to cross their goal line, thus far this season and they have a big chance to win in the Purdue game.

Numerous football fans over the country haven't forgotten the game between Wabash and Butler at Indianap

olis last Saturday. Many criticisms have been afloat about the win of

Butler ever the Wabash clan. Th

fact that Butler made all her points on goals from placement, made man;

fans object to the claim of Butler's superiority over the Wabash players. Wabash scored a touchdown in the game and Butler was never dangerous

to the goal line of the Little Giants

CHICAGO SMASHING WAY TO FIRST TOUCHDOWN AGAINST TIGERS

- - . W "Vr . ? v- : 1 , 4i" " J X ' ' ' I -V vv , s

Left half Pyott of Chicago, at extreme right, being downed oa line plar sear Princeton's goal just before tirst touchdown. . Not remarkable interference and defense action at left, -

Princeton's spectacuiar 21 to IS victory over the University "of Chicaeo furnished grid faas their greatest thrill of th last week end. Smart! tiff uidei the 9 to 0 defeat of last year the

Tigers went Into the final charter with th score 18 to 7 against them and scored two touchdowns with a scries of open plays which left the Maroons t tunned. John Thomas. h ro of last year gauie, was Chic? go's scoring star.

registering all three touchdowns his team rang op. Chicago rooters went wild when John Thomas scored the first touchdown of the game early in the first quarter after a series of line ilunpe by himself and Pyott, left half.

The Franklin high school basketball

team, champions of ' Indiana for the past three years, will open its season Friday night at Center Grove with Center Grove. The champs lost a great many of their men of last year, but their present squad is considered fairly Btrong. Richmond Hi football artists will have a big time this Saturday. They predict that Bluffton will be fairly easy picking and the boys are out to garner a few laurels in the way of scoring points.

Persons Betting on Fights in New York Called "Saps

High average King, 199. High score King, 243. Telephones.

- 1st 2nd 3rd

...149 ...131 ...133 ...110 .'..137 ....238

Player J. Moss . G. Moss Hartman Jenkins Q Patterson Handicap

138 124 154 84 154 238

160 162 155 142 134 238

Tl. 447 417 442 336 425

Av. 149 139 147 112 142

; Totals 898 892 991 King's Hats. Player . 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Fisher ,186 158 175 519 173 B. Saffer ....101 159 112 372 124 Berman 176 158 160 494 165 Schrader 138 142 192 472 157 M. Saffer 133 139 122 394 131 Handicap ....186 186 186 Totals 920 942 947

High average Fisher, 173. High score Schrader, 192.

HIGH GRID MACHINE READY FOR BLUFFTON

A week of careful tutoring has kept

jbc high school footfall players in

their winning mood, since their 39 to 0 win over Shortridge Hi of Indi

anapolis last Saturday, and when Bluff-

ton high school faces Coach Little

machine on Reid field Saturday after

noon, a record crowd of grid enthusi

asts is expected to be on hand to fur

nish the players plenty of reason for their remarkable showing in recent Fames. The game startsat 2:30 o'clock and general admission to the public

wfil be 50 cents. , In the opening game of the season, Richmond lost to Hamilton, 20 to 0

The Ohio eleven was much heavier and more experienced. Muncie was

defeated decisively in the second

t game, 26 to 0. Sheridan sprang a sur

prise by winning from Richmond, 37 " to 0, in the third game. Newcastle fell to the locals. 35 to 13, then Shortridge

fell harder before the team. 39 to 0

Therefore, with a record of three

wins and two defeats, the team en

ters Saturday's game with Bluffton

with a chance to further prove its come-back since the two set-backs

earlier in the season.

Bluffton has a good eleven this year,

but players are not considered as far advanced in the grid game as the

Richmond lads. They should put uo

a good fight in the first half, but following this time, the Richmond offense undoubtedly will -be able to cut loose for a comfortable margin to win. Richmond's lineup will be as follows: Kohnle, left end; Parker, left tackle: Semler. left guard; Mathews or Mattox, center; Walls, right guard: Muey, right tackle: Sauter, right end; Malone, quarterback: Kessler, left half; Kennedy or Mattox, bullback; Jones or Eubanks, right half.

By FRANK G. MEXKH The world's champions sap is the person who bets as much as one dime on the outcome of fistic affairs within New York. And the runner-up in the race for paresis honors is the bloke who thinks that all decisions are rendered on the level. If John D. Rockerfeller had half the money which the insiders of the pugilistic gambling clique in New York have taken from the suckers in the past 15 months, John D. could use it to pay his income tax for several years to come and have a sizeable

residue.

There's no better tip-off as to con

ditions in New York than came the

other day, when William A. Muldoon, chairman of the Stcte Athletic commision, ruled that ring referees and

ring dudges no longer will be permitted to hobnob with known gamblers.

When you learn that gamblers and

some of the judges and referees have

been cronies, you probably may have at least a partial explanation for decisions of outrageous kinds which

have followed some or the bouts in New York.

Dope for Gamblers It has long been charged around

New York that certain ring officials

prejudge a fight And likewise - it

has been said:

"Find out which man the gambling

insiders are betting oa and then go bet the same way. You can't lose."

No better insurance of strange,

strange ded3 by referees and judges

can be cited than the Tom Gibbons-

Billy Miske fight in Madison Square Garden a few weeks ago.

For several days before the battle

there was a proverbial ton of money laying around waiting to be bet on

Miske at odds of 8 to 5. Just why Miske should have been such a favorite over a man who had whipped him twice was a mystery to some, but not to all.

The "smart boys" otherwise the "sure thing ' gentry was laying It

It knew that even money wouldn't

be attractive to the whole army of suckers so it laid 8 to 5. And. naturally, the "suckers" stepped forward and made such an enthusiastic grab

for the Gibbons end of the bets that at ring time Gibbous not Miske was an 8 to 5 favorite. Bet on Miske It's estimated that at least $150,000 was bet by the "insiders" that Miske would win. Now let's review the startling things that happened that night Gibbons made a punching bag of Miske made him lock like the worst fighter in the world. Gibons rolled up so many points in the first nine rounds that Mske could have overcome that advantage only by knocking out Gibbons. Then came the tenth. Gibbons shot a right hand upper-

cut for the body. Thousands of ringsiders will insist to their dying

day that the punch landed far above

the belt line. Muldoon, boss o the commission, is one of that number

He declared later that it was a fair and square solar plexus punch. Miske dropped to the floor in ap

parent agony. Kid McPartland, the referee, stood over Miske and didn't

know what to do. He started some

thing akin to a count, then stopped

and took another look at Miske, who was pulling some great tragedy stuff.

Then McPharland looked over at Artie McGovern, one of the judges the very same McGovern who ha3 officiated at certain fights which re-

OFFICER O'FLYNN

suited in decisions that drew a mighty volume of hoots and hisses from the crowd. ,r.

"McGovern signalled to McPartland that the blow was a foul one. . Just why a referee needed to have a judge tell him what happened is a mystery but no greater than other things that have been happening in the New York rings recently. Having been properly assisted . by McGovern, the great Mx. McPartland

in majestic fashion, then pushed Gib

bons to his corner, called an announcement into the ring and had him inform the world: Decision Saves Insiders

"Gibbons Is disqualified and Miske

wins on a foul.

So it was that Tom Gibbons was deprived of the glory of a knockout tri

umph andxso it was that the bets

of the insiders were saved. Whatever lingering doubt there might have been concerning the fairness of the blow was removed later by the club physician who examined

Miske carefully and found absolutely no evidence of a low punch? And to climax the affair came the statement from Muldoon himself, in which he said: "I am firmly convinced that the blow was fair. It was the same blow Fitz-

simmons used to beat Corbett Gibbons won with a fair knockout punch, but inasmuch as the officials had ruled on the fight before I; could take up the matter, there is nothing to do but to abide by their ruling which makes

Miske winner of a fight in which he

was knocked out."

(Copyrlsbt 1!K!1 11 r Kins Features Syndicate, Inc.)

HUSBAND OF

(Continued from. Page One)

a fine man and I know my wife would not have done anything wrong." Mills declared he had never beard gossip about his wife and Hall and had never heard of her having trouble with any one. He betrayed resentment when shown Mrs. Hall's answer

"I do not care to say" to the question whether she considered Mrs. Mills a vamp. "She kcew Just as I know that my wife was a good woman" Mills flared. Mills asserted he thought it "peculiar that Mrs. Hall should not offer a reward for the murderers." The first time Mrs. Hall cam to

the Mills home, on Friday morning after the disappearance, the first question she asked was, "Was any one sick at your house last night?" ac

cording to the church janitor, and

afterward spoke about foul play.

Mills said he had seen f3csimilies

of one of the letters Hall is alleged to have written hia wife and that he was satisfied it was in the rector's

handwriting;.

Usually mild-mannered and timid,

Mill3 betrayed flaring emotion again

when he declared, "Who ever the murderers were, they certainly got me in

an awful jam."

3ays Jealousy

"All these theories about blackmail

and robbery are all rot It was Jeal

ousy, and I think her throat was cut in spite against her singing." Mills retold of going , to. the, church about 2:10 in the' morning' Friday when his wife failed to come home. "Seeing , she was not home. 1 thought she might have been taken ill and had a fainting spell at the church, and I w ent there, but did not see anybody. 1 returned and put out my

light at 2:30. - f , .

"At S.30 Friday morning Mrs. Hall .

came into the church while -1 was there. It was not about 7 o'clock as she says. I know it could not have been earlier because the children bad already gone to school.

It was then that she spoke about

foul play. She stayed only a short

time. The first thing she asked was

was anybody sick at your house last

night?'

Came To His House. - "About noon time she came to my

house, and walked , up the steps. I

said 'I havent heard anything.' She replied 'I haven't either 'and walked

away. . - - - -

"Mrs.. Hall is -wrong when she says

she did not come here at 5:20 that afternoon. I remember that I had Just

returned with some ice and was put

ting it in the ice box. I had to chip it

oil because it was too me.

"She only stayed a minute that time. "I saw her again about 7 o'clock

when I went to her house. I asked her if she had any news and she said

she had none. I stayed there a little while and talked. She did not seem

to take it nearly as hard as I did." .

Mills admitted thajt his .wife V'could

have received letters from Hall, without me seeing them." He .denied he

had ever- been any nearer the Phillips

farm where the . bodies were .found than "the landing bridge." .

CATARRH GERMS

Move Out When Hyomei Moves In.

Milton Not To Lose

Sight After Accident (By Associated Press) SAN FRANCISCO, Nov.1 2. Tommy Milton, 1921 national automobile speed

champion, who injured one of his eyes while racing at Cotatl, near here, Sunday, will not lose his sight, according to atending physicians. Milton was put out of the race in the last lap when a splinter flew from the track, hitting his goggles and breaking the glass, a

piece of which lodged in Milton 8 eye.

No stomach dosinjr. Hvomel Is made chiefly of oil of eucalyptus taken from the eucalyptus forests of inland Australia, and combined with other excellent antiseptics. In inland Australia the atmosphere Is so impregnated with balsam thrown out by the eucalyptus trees that germs

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If You Want a New Suit That Really Fits, See G. H. GERLACH Main St Over Farwlg's

Aeon a man of robbm' widow or bumin' a orphnafk ' he may b momentarily peeved but, tell him he has no uiue of humor, an' hell prova jre are right by hwomin' yar Demy for Ufa.

Earlham is sending her team through hard work in preparation for the Muskingum game at New Concord, Ohio,

this Saturday. The Quaker machine is being -oiled well by Coach Mowe this week and he intends to speed up the 6low moving backfield, which was the big handicap last Saturday. Next week will be the opening o? the Community Service basketball leagues on the Dennis junior high school gym floor. Tuesday night the Closed league will open and on Thursday night, the Open league will make its first appearance.

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