Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 10, 11 January 1923 — Page 11

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., THURSDAY, JAN. 11, 1923.

PAGE ELEVEN

TEAM PLAY ENABLES PHI DELTS FIVE TOYIN FROM BRYANT, 34-30 By means of a fast passing game, 1 coupled with good shooting in the final ; period of Wednesday's game, the Phi ' Delta came from behind and emerged victor over the Bryant Wonder five , in the Coliseum, by a 24 to 30-ecore. "The Delta played the beet ball -which they have played this season, in winning from the Bryant team which has a good record in state circles. Score at half time was 16 to 12 with the Bryants leading. Only by a rally in the final five minutes of the first half were the locals able to come up to a total of 12 points. A brilliant finish with plenty of speed play of passing and dribbling, was the feature of the Phi Delt victory over the visitors, who presented a strong front throughout the fray.

"Shel" Simmons, lanky Phi Delt center, had his eye on long shots and connected for five of this variety during the game. Simmons' work at center was largely responsible for the play of the locals, for play was built around him at various intervals in the game. lie seemed to be Just at the .right place to help in getting the ball down the floor. "Tobe" Jessup played his usual good floor game and connected for twolong shots, which helpel materially. Jessup stopped many trips down the floor which were attempted by the Bryant players. Host and Porter paired 'off well at forwards, working in and out for short passes and under-baeket shooting. Host was effective in the foul goal shooting department, making six during the game.

Lovln worked unusually good under trying conditions. The Bryant play- : crs were all taller than he and it

.was a trying circumstance for him to try to stop the bigger men. Whenever a short shot was made from un- ! der the basket, Lovin was not rei sponsible, for he never could have ! reached the taller men. Jessup helped him at all times. From the start things looked like a walkaway for the visitors, and it looked as though the Phi Delts were going to have a bad night. Not a man on the Phi Delt team was working with another. One player would get the ball and attempt to dribble all the way through the opposition. But, with eight minutes, to play in the initial half and the score standing 3 2 to 5 in favor of Bryant, the locals awakened and started working as one machine and the points began to pile up. Score was 14 to 9, with but a few minutes to play, but two foul goals by Rost and a field counter brought the Delt total to 12, while Bryant made their score 16. Passwork Improves The second half was featured by the machine-like playing of the local fraternity athletes, who seemed to gain new life and attitude. The opposing guards were drawn out time and again for short shots in this period, and after the score had been tied several times in the final session, the locals started . to pull to the front through field goals by Host and Simmons. The gun sounded with the score standing at the winning point of "4 to SO for the Phi Delts.

Manager George Brehm intends to keep booking fast teams for games here in the future. Summary:

Rryant (30) If. Ford F.

v lauu Liars f. Oliver C. Cliff Clark G. Macklin G.

Field goals Itoyce 2, Claud Clark 3, Oliver 7, Shirk, Rost 4, Porter 3, Simmons 5, Jessup 2. Foul goals: Oliver 4, Rost 6. Substitutions: (Bryant) Shirk for R. Ford. . Referee: Parker.

INTERSCHOLASTIC WATER CHAMPION PREPS FOR MEET

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SCHAEFER IS ENTITLED

TO TRY FOR TITLE CniCAGO, Jan. 11. Jake Schaefer

of San Francisco, CaU today was entitled to another try for the 1S.2 balkline billiard championship Willie Hoppe wrested from the elder Schaefer, "the wizard," and has held for 17 years, excepting last year, when young Jake astonished the billiard world by capturing it in a tournament play and defending it in match play against Hoppe. Schaefer emerged victor over Conti in a poorly played 1,500-point threenight match here last night, 1,500 to 781. Conti at no time was a match for tie coast player and played far below the form he had previously shown. Schaefer was pressed at no time during the three 500-point blocks, and

went about taking the French champion's measure in leisurely style. Conti last night was able to average but

8 3-16 and his grand average was

18 25-42. Schaefer averaged 29 7-17 in the final block and his grand average was 34 3S-43. Conti's high run was 115,

scored on the opening night, and Schaefer's 160, collected on, the second night The Schaefer-IIoppe match for the world title has been set for March. It will be played in New York.

IF TIGER PITCHERS COME THROUGH COBB WILL SCARE LEAGUE

Richard HowelL Richard Howell of Chicago, who holds the national interscnolaatie record for the 100-yard and 220yard dashes, hopes to lower his marks in both events In the big water carnival in Detroit.

Phi Delts (34) Rost ....... Porter . . . . Simmons i Jessup Ixjvin

CENTERVILLE DROPS LEGION FIVE, 46-21

CENTERVILLE, Jan. 11. Richmond American Legion basketball players

were defeated in a fast game here Wed

nesday night, 46 to 21. Score at half

time was 17 to 10, with the local in dependents on top of the decision.

Mathews, Johnson and Cook were the star performers of the evening for Centerville, registering six, six and five field goals each, respectively. John Logan and Chappel worked best for the visitors, who were unable to hit the draperies for the necessary points. Centerville plays in the independent tourney at Economy January 20. Summary: Am. Legion (21) Centerville (46) Chappel F Johnson Eubanks F Mathews Kennedy C...., Cook J. Logan G Davis O'Neil G Rogers Field goals: Chappel, Eubanks, Kennedy 2, J. Logan 4, Medearis 2, Johnson 6, Mathews 6, Cook Z, Davis, Terry 2. Foul goals: Eubanks, Kennedy 2, Johnson, Mathews 5.

Substitutions: (Legion) Medearis for

Chappel, Vogelsong for O'Neil, O'Xeil for Eubanks, Burgis for Vogelsong, Eubanks for Burgis; (Centerville) Terry for Johnson, Shadle for Davis. Referee: DeaKyne, Centerville.

Great Base Stealer Signs To Swipe Bases For Dodgers During 1923 Pennant Race Guardians of the infield stations in the National league may do well to watch their , bases when the Dodgers come to town next season, if reports emanating from the Dodger headquarters be true. For the Brooklyn team has signed the greatest swiper of bases that the Southern Association produced last year. He is J. F. "Stuffy' Stewart, second baseman with the Birmingham club last Beason. Stewart pilfered a total of 47 bases in 137 games. Stuffy won't be a really-truly newcomer in the big show when he trots out with the Dodger hopefuls nest spring. He has had two brief sessions in the National league before, but was found lacking in experience. This time, Dodger scouts say, he is ripe. Florida Claims Him Florida claims Stewart as about the only native son representing it in the bis show in recent years. He was born in Jaspar, that state, January 21,

1S96. He drew the attention of big league scouts in 1915 and the Cardinals

grabbed him with the Jacksonville club in the Sally league in 1916. He

was given a chance in nine games with the Cards that year and hit .176

and fielded fairly well. The next year

he played . thirteen games w ith the Cards and Then was sent to Denver, where he batted within three points of .300. After the war Stewart started over again with the Sanford team of the Florida State league in 1919 and was grabbed by Birmingham in 1920. That year he stole twenty-nine bases in 129 games and the next year pilfered sixty-six in 154 games. EATON TO MEET BROWNSVILLE EATON, Ohio. Jan. 11. Eaton high school will take on Brownsville, Ind., high school here Friday night oa the armory court. Next week Eaton will play McGuffey high school at Oxford. Eaton goes Saturday to Richmond, Ind., to participate in an invitational school basketball tournament.

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Fiv f the men counted on to make Tigers formidable contender this year. Above, Bobby Veach. left, and Harry Heilman. Below, Lester Johnson, left, Herman PUlette, center, and Bill Pertica.

have akidded. An lnlu.7 halted l OIb en eet eoioe. witch Cobbs

Johnson'a career. This Tear Cobb I crew. Backed bv eood pit'shinff.

has added Rip Collins f m the I Veach. Heilman, Bassler, Pratt

' Red Sox, Bill Pertica oz i Car

dinals and Ray Francis, prvmising leftie. If these newcomers deliver and Johnson, Pillctte and

The rtgers finished t' iro In the American league scramble last year despite the fact they were Handicapped by nncertal. pitching. But for brilliant sptrrta by PUlette, Johnson and Olsen, rookies, at times the team would

and Co. can just about 9!ab their

way to the top or least make it decidedly interesting for club that beats them ov

WILLARD WORKS OUT BEFORE SPORT SCRIBES TO PROVE HIS ABILITY

NEW YORK. Jan. 1L To show the newspaper men and ultimately th public, that he really isn't baluchltherlum (and according to scientists a

baluchi herium was an animal bom 2,000,000 years ago. and 12 to 24 feet in size) Je69 Willard. who has been drinking from Ponce Do Leon's fountain of youth, will workout publicly today, stripped to the waist. - Neither Jess 2S5 pounds nor Tes Rickard's imperturbatability were mussed up foday over the pronounciamento of the state boxing commission that the former heavyweight champion would not be allowed to measure punches with Jack Dempsey in this state. But what they Intended to do about geting Jess a fight with somebody was unrevealed. Since Tom Gibbons, the St Taul dancing master, brother of tho terpsichorean Mike, came to town quietly yesterday and talked with Rtckard. the prognosticates are unable to say which is going to do battle with Dempsey, of whether Willard and Gib bona are to meet in an elimination bout before either does. Rickard Indicated that he was going ahead to match Willard with somebody, maybe Dempsey, in some corner where Jess veracity about his socalled birthday finds deeper root, and Jess' claiming to come from a he-man's country w-here they , were too busy sowing alfalfa to record births, is preparing to . prove that no old man could skip the rope and shadow box like he can. Jess has just about decided to un

pack his trunks in New York or its vicinity, and get down to brass tacks, lie said today that his workout would be the first of a program that would continue from now on. In the meantime New York is holding its breath (sides) nntil Jack Kearns, manager of Dempsey, who is reported both as "enrouta". and "not started" from the Pacific coast, comes on to confer with Rickard.

BURROUGHS LADS WIN CLOSE BASKET TILT

Those long heralded Muncie Midgets went down to defeat before the Richmond Burroughs net lads in the Coliseum Wednesday night, only after a hard fight put up by both teams. Munc ie, minus four players, suspended during the last week on account of making trouble while in school, was able to

stage a fine come-back in the latter part of the game, which threatened to overcome the lead gained by the Burroughs. Score at half time was 16 to 14. with the locals holding the edge. Burroughs have a light, but well-bal-rir.sed and smooth working machine, with the brunt of the scoring falling

upon Brehm and Hark:ns. The defensive department proved a little weak in Wednesday night's game, but this is hoped to be remedied by heavy practice before the next game. Work Floor Well For the Burroughs, Brehm and Harkins proved their ability by playing fast floor games, and being able to connect with the hoop, the former making four counters and the latter connecting three times from the field and six times from the foul line. George for the losers, played a consistent brand of the court game throughout the contest and it was through his individual efforts that the rally was started that nearly sewed up the came for bis team. He made four markers from the field and two free throws, and played a fast dribbling

game.

HOOSIER OURTSHIP

Richmond will be the center of attraction Saturday when the Morton high school makes its first attempt to stage an invitational basketball tournament in the Colliseum. It will be a miniature district tourney and the interest and enthusiasm which accompanies district tourney time, is expected to be manifested in this, which is Richmond's first attempt at an invitational tournament. LLiberty and Eaton should put up an extraordinarily good game at S o'clock Saturday morning, with the latter team holding a slight edge over the former. Eaton held Richmond to a 12 to 6 win on the Eaton floor during the Christmas holidays, and for this rea

son, the Ohio team has big chances in this tournament.

second team is going at a good clip

and could furnish a great game for any team which desired to play them. Burroughs had addedup a heavy score They did not seem to need much more, But Muncie began to pass and multiply Then the adding machine was the reply.

COMMERCIALS BOWL WEDNESDAY NIGHT

King's Hats and R. and W. Specials, and Item and Bakers bowled on the R. and W. alleys Wednesday night. They were the only matches played in the Commercial league. Scores: King's Hats Player 1st 2nd 3rd TT At. Fisher 163 151 158 474 15S B. Saffer ... 151 115 168 434 14S Schroeder ... 167 144 150 461 154

M. Saffer ... 148 173 187 508 170 Bejman 173 205 1C5 513 171

R. and V. Player 1st 2nd 3rd T'l Av.

Youngflesh... 180 197 199 576 192 Kloss 173 123 143 439 146 Cox 217 163 225 605 202

Fits 183 211 230 626 209 Rees ..'. 169 166 192 527 176

Item

Player 1st 2nd 3rd T'l Av. Sherer 221 171 194 586 195 Dillon 168 155 1S5 508 170 Hill 154 176 164 494 165 Kluesener... 174 166 169 509 170 Bennett 199 15S 192 549 1S3 Bakers Player 1st 2nd 3rd T'l Av. Nick 3 47 183 163 493 164 Dunham 159 119 130 408 136 lEckler 147 143 140 430 147 Gardner 207 183 168 558 1S6 King 149 191 203 543 1S2

i

4 S

Brownsville and Richmond should furnish the hair-raiser of the tourney. The little team from down south will come to do battle in great style, and with the fact well in mind that Richmond eliminated them last spring In the district tourney, the Brownsville lads will be all the more anxious to

cop their big chance for tourney honors. Richmond, however, holds an

edge over the southern school.

Summary:

Muncie (27) Shaw George Shields Walsh lrkey

Field Shields

goal?

. .F. . . ..F... ..C... ..G... ..G... Shaw

Burroughs (28) Thomas Taylor Brehm Harkins . . . Eikenberry 3. George 4.

rne winner ot tne 8 o clock game

should get a hard game from Center

ville at 11 o'clock the same morning,

Centerville will come prepared for a battle and will have an edge, inasmuch as the team which opposes them, will

have played just two hours previous.

At 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon, Mt.

burnout and Fairview, of Dayton, will present the unknown quantity. Little is known of the latter quintet, and

dope is not so plentiful on the Mt.

Summit team. At any rate, the game

should be a whirlwind.

Phi Delts emerged very much victorious From a net game which was most glorious.

Walsh, Hoover, Thomas, Por

ter 3. Brehm 4, Harkins 3. Foul goals: Shields 5, George 2, Harkins C.

Substitutions: (Muncie) Hoover for j

Shaw, Shaw for Shields; (Burroughs) i Richmond is supposed to be the

Porter for Taylor. strongest team entered in the tourna

uereree: Reid. , : ment, but it will have to play but

i three games to win the tourney if for

! tunate enough to take the finals. The

! schedule drawing came , out so that

Richmond played out tnree games while Liberty, or Eaton, Fountain City or Milton, would have to play four games to win the honors of the day.

JOHNNY BUFF STARTS

HIS COME-BACK CAMPAIGN ! (By Associated Press) ' ! SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 11. Johnny i Buff, former holder of the world's i bantamweight and American fly-

weigni ooxin? cnampionsnips, was m San Francisco today from Jersey City, N. J., to engage in four-round bouts with Pacific coast boxers a3 part of a campaign for a return match with Joe Lynch, present bantamweight title-holder.

A Richmond amateur basketball player was playing out ot the city against an independent team. When questioned as to the safety ot playingwith the team and running a risk of being pronounced a professional, he

OFFICER OTLYNN

Ml uS3! JPS3lffo 5 'itfV-r " 1-fl

Turner Barber s Playing In Outfield May Terminate; Likely to Play First Base Goodbye, outfield for Turner Barber. Unless Manager Robinson's plans go blooie for former Cub, obtained by the

Dodgers recently in a trade, will play first base regularly for the Brooklyn team in the 1923 campaign. Ever since Barber broke into the big show as a Cub in 1917 he has been torn between two emotions or jobs the outfield and first. Last year, for instance, he played in 47 games as an

! outfielder, in 16 as a first sacker and

21 other games as a pinch hater or runner. His clean work at first in those 16 games gave Uncle Robbie the hunch to get him for that post. Barber did npt boot one chance in those 16 contests. He accepted 168 chances. Made Few Errors. He made but four errors in the 47 games he plaved in the outer regions. He accepted 82 chances. , Barber was born in Milan. Tenn., July 9, 1894. He journeyed to Winston-Salem in 1915 to begin his professional career'and in August of that year sold to the Washington club for $600. Griff sent him to Baltimore under option July 25, 1916. and after giving him another trial in 1917 released him to the Orioles. The Cubs paid a reoorted price of $15,000 for him July 28, that year. Barber's busiest and best year was 1921, when he played 127 games and hit the ol' apple at a .314 gait, one point better than he averaged in 1919. 'The acquisition of Barber may mean the passing of Ray Schmandt, for whom a brilliant future loomed when he broke into the big show in 1918. But more about him later.

replied, "Well, I consumed name."

will play untid a

Barman was conti vatiye. TV public simply runs th' humbugs down an smothers 'em with kisses - an' th' witch doctors, rain makers an bunk artists are doia' a holiday trade th' year round.

Hi Seconds will play any of th defeated teams In the tournament, which wishes to play in the curtain-raiser to the finals Saturday night. The

KIDNEY TROIBLK

I WISES LAMENESS "A lameness followed me for some

time, and I felt that It was caused from kidney trouble. One bottle of Foley Kidney Pills had the desired effect."

writes H. B. Arbuckle. South Barre, Vermont. Backache, rheumatism, duil

headache, too frequent or burning urination are symptoms of Kidney and Bladder trouble. Disordered kidneys require prompt treatment. Neglect causes serious complications. Foley Kidney Pills prlve quick relief. A. O. Luken Drug Co., 626-628 Main St. Advertisement.

Independent basketball established itself in Richmond Wednesday night

when the Phi Delts brought a victory

to the city over the strong Bryant quintet. The entire team played fine

ball for the Phi Delts.

Was there ever anything more atrocious than the attempt to "smoke up" a return match between Jack Dempsey and Jess Williard? Can the human mind conceive any fistic encounter which sizes up as more one-sided than that which would toss Dempsey into the same ring with the worst champion the heavywewight ranks ever knew? Let's ponder a bit on Williard. In the beginning of things he was at-cow-puncher. He became a "white hope" and for several years he was a terrible specimen. Two men, so much smaller than himself that they were but dwarfs in comparison, beat him

up and beat him handily. One was Gunboat Smith and the other was the very mediocre Tom McMahon. Made Williard Quit Joe Cox, one of the jokiest of ring

jokes, always has claimed that he made Williard quit in a fight. And Carl Morris nearly scared Williard into paralysis when they met 10 years ago. In 1913 Williard met Jack Johnson in Havana. The negro was. quite ancient then, thirty pounds overweight, years beyond his fistic best and with several years of wild disapation to kill off what little there was left of

a once great fighting machine. Yet Williard. fighting thl3 old man, this fat man, this fistic wreck, never landed a solid punch for 20 rounds. At the end of the seventh well, this is

what Jim bavage, who was one oi Wililard's seconds that day in Cuba, reveals : "Jess didn't want to go out for the eigth. He came back from the seventh and said that it wasn't any use trying to fight Johnson that the negro was too fast for him. ' Just can't hit him, that's all, there's nouse trying to fight him any longer,' Jess said. Jabbed With Instrument "As the bell rang for the eigth, Jess was jabbed with a sharp instrument. It made him jump right up. Inasmuch as he was on his feet and Johnson was coming at him, he had to fight Yet Jess continued for quite a few rounds thereafter to insist that it wasn't any use trying to whip Johnson, even though Tom Jones (Williard's manager) kept telling him that he simply couldn't lose the fight if he just kept getting out of his corner for a sufficient number of rounds." The whole world remembers that finish of the fight. Williard dropped a right hand somewhere around Johnson's ear. The negro dropped to the floor, shifted around his body until he was as comfortable as he could be, shaded his eyes from the glaring sun and was counted out. Says It Was Framed Afterward Johnson claimed it was a "framed affair." He said that he had agreed to lose in the tenth but that Williard had made such a miserable showing up to that time that he didn't dare quit then because every-

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oody would have known that it was a fake. . That bout made Williard a world champion. A year later he met the wild-swinging Frank Moran and just shaded bim. And in 1919 he took on Jack Dempsey with the result that he was knocked down seven times in the first round, punched from one side 'of the ring to the other in the second, and was battered into a state of nausea and collapse by the time the third ended. As he sat in his corner, he decided he had enough and a towel was tossed into the ring to signalize defeat the first time in history when a champion lost a fight while sitting in a chair. Nearly four years have skidded into history since then. Williard has

grown fat, he has grown flabby,

BRENNAN FAVORITE OVER, FLOYD JOHNSON

NEW YORK, Jan. 11. Bill Brennan. the perennial stalking horse ot young men aspiring to a. championship match

with Jack Dempsey.'king of the heavyweights, has been installed the favorite by a wide margin over Floyd John-

sen, the Iowa; Adonis, for their 15round match at Madison Square Garden tomorrow. ; Brennan,. despite the barnacles and the cauliflowers, is regarded as in better shape than he was for pome of his more famous bouts, and Johnston, notwithstanding his pink-hued condition, is spoken of as having been brought along too fast since he emerged from the west to draw the spotlight of the fistic world. The lowan has finished training with his three giant partners and expects to weigh about 193 rounds when he climbs through the ropes of the garden.

Physiicans Advise Real First-Aid Method To Relieve and Break Up Colds.

is something like 40 years oid per

haps older. Age has rusted his joints; age has taken the flexibility from his muscles; inactivity and the skidding years have slowed him immeasurably and they certainly have robbed him of the power to st-and up under punish, ment. Yet there are some promoters who think that they can steam a nation of sport lovers into the idea that this Williard person, who never whipped a good man in his life, who won his title on an alleged fake, ,who is four years away from his last fight and forty years old, is a match for a man who pounded him o the goriest pulp that ever was assisted from a prize ring. Can it be done? (Copyright 1021 By Kin Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

HOT MEDICINAL TEA

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the Chilled Blood and Flush the Waste poisons From the Intestines and Bowels.

Fountain City meeting Milton at 9 o'clock, should have little difficulty in winning this game. The Fountain youths have been hitting a fast clip and they cannot be underestimated for tourney play.

Cold in the Chest 6ore throat coutrhs apply Jack Frost Cream on flannel cloth, melt small portion in mouth and swallow loosens cold, relieve soreness. It soothes and heals. All drugrcfets.

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It is a recognized fact that hot medicinal herb tea is one of the very best home remedies to use- to assist in breaking np colds which when neg lected often develop into influenza, pneumonia or other serious sickness. It is old fashioned of course, but nevertheless1 its effectiveness is readily admitted everywhere today. Many physicians now -advise their patients to always -have- on hand a supply of medicinal tea for emergency purposes. Harsh, drastic, habit-forming drugs should be avoided. The risk to one's general health is too great, because certain drugs hava- tendency to depress the heart action and disturb the nervous system. Millions of people - all over the world are today using Bulgarian Kerb Tea as a reliable first-aid to help break up colds, and also to keep the intestines and bowels cleansed and free of the waste poisons that so often cause sickness and ill health. Bulgarian Herb Tea is prescribed by many physicians, and druggists everywhere honestly recommend this pUJ-e" healthful laxative tea tonic to their customers. Why not see your druggist at once and get a small package for emergency purposes? You or some other member of your family may need it to help fight a cold this wint er. Advertisement. Altering, Repairing, Relining

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