New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 8

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s DOAK JUSTMISSES A NOHIT GAME | Cardinals' Star Hurler Blzmks| Phillies, Allowing One Bingle | St. Louis, Mo Bill D the Cardinals Philadelphia 1 the game of the yesterday. Wath the Giants losing the Cardinals are only three one-half behind the The only the I infield tap by Walker second one-hit game only run off fitth on Fc piteh, and July 14 star spithaller, to 0 1k with one hit, fourth serie now and | leaders, | 1t ¥ of the year. ime Singleton i Me PHILADF Rapp, It ( Parkinson, 2 g of 3. Smith o8 Whiiams Walker Lee, If Fletcher Leslie, 11 Peters; ¢ Binglet ¥ *Wirightstone of MeCurd Lavan Doak | | Again Injured. 2 4 —Chicago staged a batting rally in the twelfth inning and defeatzd New York yesterday, 5 to 4. The Giants also lost the services of “Heinie'" Groh, who returned to the lineup yesterday after being out more | than a month because of an inj fvvl‘ Kknee Groh turned the same knee in at- tempting to fieid a bunt by O'Farrell in the twelfth and had to be carried | off the field Chicago played an up- | hill game behind Aldr pitching and tied the count ninth. Score: NEW YORK ab, . in Bancroft, se. Groh, 3b. Rawlings, 2 Frisch, Mousel, Young, rf Kelly, 1b. Robertson Gunningham, Bmith, c . Causey, p. ... of. . ct. Heathcote, xFriberg . Callaghan, Hollocher, Terry, 2b Miller, 1f. Barber, rf Relleher. Krug, O'Far s Aldridge, p. «ooveeee xRan for Heatheote | New Vork Terry; Bancroft to bases, New York balls, off Ca out, by Aldr! pitcher, by Ald Klem and Pfirmar | Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ju 'he Reds to hit Vance at timely mome terday, while Couch was batted freely when hits meant runs and Brooklyn won 4 to 3, stoppi the winning streak on the Reds Both teams fielded well. Mitchell hit a home in the fourth inning, ahead of him The score: ailed | yes- . BROOKLYN ab, T 5 Olson, High, 3 T. Griffith, rf, Wheat, If 0 | xDressler eBatted for Wingo in Ot xBatted for Couch in 8th. Brookiyn . Cineinnati Two base hi three base hit run, Mitchell; stolen ba Myers; double plays, K to Daubert; left on has cinnati 9; base on out, by Smith 1 innings, off &mit ning pitcher, O'Day; time, P ———————— FOR THE MAN WITH A FACE AS TENDER AS A BABY'S— Harper T. Griffit i win- and | none in 2-3 e; umpi shut out | [ bt Portland, BASEBALL PLAYERS HAVE NARROW ESCAPE Lightning Strikes Clubhouse at Polo Grounds in Which Yanks and Browns Were During Storm New York, July 14.-—While the St |Louls Browns and the New \'m'k‘ | Yankee teams were in the clubhouse | yesterday afternoon dodging the elec- trical storm they narrowly missed serfous injury when a bolt of light- ning wrapped iiself around the flag pole carrying the Yanks' champion- ship pe i, ripped the poie to splinters and tossed the pennant into the Harlem rives Bob Shawkey, only player Yank outside pitcher, when the streak of electricity arriv- just missed being hit on head as a part of the pole came iown to flatten bleacher was the wandering crashing a he flag freak of the m has added another jinx to the Yanks list, the players claiming a bigger collection than any other club n the league RUNS FOR THE WEEK NATIONAL LEAGUE. S BT WL T 4 5 4 snatching Tt New York Tirooklyn Poston Phila cinnati St AMERICAN L 5 B3 T S Ttl New o Phila Washing'n Cleveland Detroit Chicago §t. Louis York 7 on X 0 b | 13 13 9 1 3 3 2 5 1 X X INTI“ZRN':\TI()N:\L LEAGUE. 1o e s U o | Jalti 3 Reading Buf 12 Jersey City 11 Newark 11 GRAND CIRCUIT RACING Peter Coley Defeats the Favorite Nedda, in 2:05 Trot Toledo Track. , July 14,—Peter Coley, A. E. “indlay, Ohio, gelding, with y Stokes driving, won the Mau- mee 2:05 trot, feature event of the Grand Circuit card here yesterday, by nosing out Nedda, the favorite, in the last two heats In the first heat Nedda overtook the field at the quarter post after a bad start and pulled away for a length win ahead of Kilowatts and E. Colorado Peter Coley broke badly at the stretch and finished a poor fourth Nedda trotted a great race in the second heat after getting away fully four lengths behind the others at the flag Peter Coley won by a from the fast stepping favorite, Nedda went the fastest mile of the year, separately timed, completing the circuit in The little mare nose 4 | made the last half in 59 seconds, the fastest half of the year In the final heat Driver Fleming held Nedda for a stretch finish but the mare was unable to overtake the IFindlay gelding and finished second IPour heats were necessary to decide the 2:10 race, which was won by Parker Boy WILLARD GETS OFFER Promoter Wants Big Ore.. Kansan to Mect a Selected Heavy- weight Sometime in August. I former the world, has received Captain Harry Hansen, for the Portland, Ore commission, “available" heavyweight boxing champion a telegram match- Muniei- inquiring for a date al hear bout in of from maker pal boxing whether he is in August to meet some ten round weight in a an {open air show ALLEGED GAMBLERS FREED Forty Accused of Betting at Cubs’ Ball Park Discharged Chicago, July 14.—The forty men arrested at the Cubs’ baseball park Wednesday charged with betting were discharged yesterday when six police- men were unable to point out any one as having specifically violated the law to their knowledge Judge Samuel Trude warned police against bringing in violators en | masse again without sufficient evid- ence to make a case President William I. Veeck of the Chicago Cubs declared that the man- agement of the team was in for a no compromise warfare against ‘tin horn gamblers.”” The arrest of the forty men accused of placing bets in the park during the game was made through fea® that gamblers might influence the players, he said but because some of the betters de- rided the players when they believed their money was in dangr the not HODDER WINNER ON LINKS Boston, July 14.-—Clark Hodder, Commonwealth, and J. B. Batchelder, United Shoe, will meet today in the final of the Massachusetts jurtor golf champlonship at the Comgmonwealth Country club. In the semi-finals yesterday Hod- der defeated Arthur, Sweetser, Wake- field, 5 up and 4 to play, and Batch elder defeated Arthur Ahlstrom, Greenhl!!, 4 and 3. Yesterday at| Angeles, July 14.—Jess Willard, | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, F RICKARD GRANTED NEW JERSEY PERMIT 'Eilonts of Ministers to Preveat Future Boxing Bouts Thwarted Baseball in Brief L ——— NATIONAL LEAGUE. Results Yesterday Chicago 5, New York 4. (12 innings) Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 3, St. Louls 1, Philadelphia 0. Boston at Pittsburgh rain. Standing of the Cluhs | Jersey City, N. ., July 14.—Dempite| New work ... 0. yon Lost the vehement protests of a delegation|&t, Louis ... |of clergymen headed by Canon Chase L:h!cuo |of Brooklyn and Herbert Clark Gil- ’fx‘r"’)g‘)'(‘"’)“n“ son, a Jersey City lawyer, Tex Rick-|pjttshurgh ard received a year's llcense yesterday | Philadelphia . afternoon from the New Jersey Box-|Boston ing Commission to conduct boxing contests in that state, The promo- ter also was granted a sanction to stage the Leonard-Tendler light- | weight championship match in Boyle's Thirty Acres on July 27, much to the firritation of the ministerial opponents of glove contests, Chairman l.ouis Messano of the Boxing Commission had invited the| |clergymen to attend the meeting so as to afford them an opportunity to express their views on the subject. |In the course of the discussion Law- | ver Gilson made so many serious ac- cusations against Rickard that theé | promoter finally became aroused and | started after the lawyer in a beliig- |erent manner. Rickard was restrained |by Chairman Messano and the hear- |ing proceeded to a serene conelusion. | Gilson rehashed the charg¥s that | Rickard had once conducted a gam- bling resort ia the west; that he had staged boxing contests in that section |of the country; that he had bheen the | promoter of the Demps Arpentier combat in Boyle's Thirty Acres and that he had been convicted of trans- /porting films of the Dempsey-Carpen- | tier contest from one state to an- lother. Rickard sat unmoved during these charges, but when Gilson de- clared that the promoter did not| have a clean reputation Rickard jumped up and made an aggressive move toward the lawyer. The pro- moter said he did not propose to have any one misrepresent him, but the chairman of the commission quieted him Canon Chase Heads Clergymen, The clergymen who appeared at the meeting were Canon William 8. Chase of Brooklyn, Rev. Frank S. Ritter of Jersey City and Rev. Harvey L. | Wyatt, Jersey City. In his argument for the clergymen Gilson declared they were not op-| posed to boxing from the standpoint |2 of sportsmanship, but were against the brutality and commercialism of the game as practiced toda Gilson then made an attack on Leonard and Tendler, asserting that both had been repeatedly charged with framed bouts and fouls. He re- ferred to Leonard's bouts with Brit- |ton and Dundee and said that a foul by Tendler in a Brooklyn bout had been the cause of a near riot. | Gilson also insisted that the match between Tendler and Leonard was a |grudge fight, growing oyt of Tend- ler's retention of a $5,000 forfeit that had been posted by Leonard. Gilson |declared that the title could change | New Haven |hands in the Leonard-Tendler con-|Waterbury test only in the event of a knockout| Pittsfield which would be exceedingly brutai Hartford The lawyer then accused [Lickard Pridgeport of having sold the first twenty-one Albany | rows. of seats to speculators in order | Springfield . to evade the New Jersey law restiict- | Fitchburg® ... |ing the price of tickets to $15. This, |statement was denied by the promot- er through his attorney | = G ¥ - | Canon Chase made a long specch| NEW-HIONEN o ppigubiey. boxing and declared that asl Games Today New York at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. Boston at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at St. Louis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Results Yesterday. St. Louis at New York, rain. Cleveland 4, Boston 2. Philadelphia 9, Detroit 4. Chicago at Washington, fourth inning, rain). Standing of the Clubs, Lost 34 36 37 42 42 44 44 47 (called in St. Louis .. New York Chicago Detroit . . | Washington | Cleveland .... Philadelphia .. Boston Games Today St. Louis at New York. Detroit at Philadelphia. Cleveland at Boston. Chicago at Washington. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Results Yesterday. Jersey City 15, Buffalo 3. Toronto 9, Newark 1. Rochester 12, Reading 4 Syracusze 4, Baltimore 2. Standing of the Clubs Won Lost 20 33 39 42 43 50 55 59 Raltimore | Rochester Jersey City .. Ruffalo Toronto Games Today Newark at Toronto. Jersey City at Buffalo. Reading at Rochester. Baltimore at Syracuse EASTER Results Yesterday. New Haven 10, Fitchburg 3. Bridgeport 3-3, Albany 2-4 Other games postponed, rain. Standing of the Clubs Won Lost 45 23 3 30 30 33 36 40 40 47 Games Today Fitchburg at tford b Bridgeport at Pittsfield. | any at § 1d. | prize fighting was illegal the Boxing| Albany a gprmgflrj IA | Commission would® be guilty of con-| spiracy if it granted the applications made by Rickard Dr. Wyatt contended that the AMERICANS ARE BEATEN. | Roehampton, England, July 14— znn,,‘Th" American college tennis players, fight committee of the Federation of |TePresenting Yale and Harvard, who Churches represented 600,000 Prot- sailed from the United States on July estant voters opposed to the Leonard-|4: for a series of matches in England | Tendler bout, and Dr. Ritter br.n;\»,“"‘*"r'l y were defeated by the Roe- of the ill effects of boxing on the hampton club players in their first growing population. q test, five matches to four. Then Applications Are Granted. | ] Previous to the meeting of the |commission a communication had been received from Gov. wards in which he advised the members of that body to observe the law in their ac- tion on the Rickard applications The governor had also informed a delegation of clergymen that if they |would furnish proof that the pro-! | posed match between Leonard and | Tendler was a prizefight and in con- |travention of the law permitting box- | ing contests he would instruct the | commisgion to refuse further licenses. | |Mr. Edwards asserted yesterday that |the clergymen had not advanced any proof that the contest was Yo be & ‘\mmunn of law | The same ministerial forces ar-| rayed themselves against the bout be- | tween Dempsey and Carpentier a| year ago, and were signally defeated Rickard smiled when he had re- ceived his license and said: “It is |a singular thing to me that these| ‘minlm—rs of the Gospel, who are ap- | | parently so fearful that the law will \be violated, are eager to have officials appointed to enforce the boxing regu- | lations violate their oaths of office| by refusing to enforce that law.” | - SCHMIDT WILL PLAY con OFFICE AND SHO! Know THEY'LL Manager McKechnie of the Pirates In- | P ¢ duces Holdout Catcher to Join Club | il vt | —Must Be First Reinstated. Modesto, Cal, July 14—Walter| | Schmidt, star catcher, will report to the Pittsburgh Pirates Yo finish the| present season as soon as Judge Lan- dis reinstates him, he announced here |on receipt of a telegram from Man- | |ager Bill McKechnie of the Pirates, | agreeing to his price to catch the bal- |ance of the season. | Schmidt held out for $10,000 this |spring and Barney Dreyfuss refused [to allow him the $2,000 increase. As soon as McKechnie took hold of the! Pirates he started negotiating with 1Er‘hmlrn. whose home is in Modesto, where he has large ranch interests Schmidt plans to leave Saturday to join the club at Pittsburgh. .| of the Washington college team. ILL Go DowN To THE GANG MY SWOLLEN FACE- SORRY FOR ME - | NEED SYMPATHY | CAN HARDLY SE& \ AND MY NOSE FEELS AS BIG AS A GRAPE- FRUIT - IT'S VERY RIDAY, JULY 14, 192z P ———————— SEVERAL COLLEGIAN STARS IN LINEUP OF BROOKLYN A. C. WHICH PLAYS KACEYS HERE NEXT SUNDAY — YANKEES AND BROWNS PLAYERS | HAD A NARROW ESCAPE FROM INJURY, WHEN LIGHTNING STRUCK CLUBHOUSE AT THE POLO GROUNDS—ARCHERS AND GOLFERS IN CONTEST COLLEGIAN STARS HERE ON SUNDAY (Brooklyn A. C. of Waterbury, Has " Several of Them in Lineup | The Brooklyn A. C. team of Water- | bury, composed in the most part of | collegian players, will play the Kaceys |at 8t. Mary's fleld next Sunday after- The game will start at 3 o'clock. The record of the Brass City |team Is an impressive one, Last season the team played 19 games, 'winning 17 of them, and among the vietims was ‘the Beacon Falls nine, which scored a 2 to 1 win over the locals here two weeks ago, Count Stars in Lineup, In the lineup of the Brooklyn A. C. | will be the following: James, a mem- ber of the University of Pennsylvania team, who will do the flinging James is a former Crosby High school ath- letic star. O'Brien, a member of the Connecticut Aggles team, will cavort in center field: Mulville, who started the past season at shortfield for the Catholic University team, of Washing- ton, D. C.; Kemp, a member of the Tufts team; Dumschott and Carroll, The two latter players will be remembered |us the stars of the famous Kaceys' basketball team of Waterbury, which held the state championship title for several seasons. Locals After Revenge The two recent reverses sustained by the locals have caused a smarting, and the team is anxious to get back |into winning form again. Mike Lynch will umpire behind the bat Sunday, !with Eddie Crowley officiating on the JAPS' NEW STAR Fukuda Makes Sensational Record On noon, Courts Defeating Champion; ‘Will Help Davis Cup Team. by Tokio, July 14.—This year's tour- nament of the Tokio Lawn Tennis | club has brought to the front another | Japanese star and an aspirant for next | year's Davis cup team in Mr, Fukuda, who defeated Nomura, last year's champion in straight sets, 6-0, 6-3, | 6-0. Fukuda contemplates a visit to America to play in this vear's tour- naments on the Pacific Coast. He is | a member of the Poplar club, a pure- ly Japanese organization, and has | played for two years in the summer tournament at Karuizawa Dbesides | coaching the students of Waseda Uni- | versity. Fukuda did not have much ) difficuity in reaching the finals of the , Tokio tournament, his most formid- | able rival, Harada, the school boy | wonder, having fallen an easy victim !to the new champion's tactics, which keeps his opponents on the back line. Besides the singles championships Fukuda with his partner again won the doubles championship. ARCHDEACON, Detroit Club Secures Speedy fielder From Rochester. BU Out- >hiladelphia, July 14.—Maurice Archdeacon, the Rochester outfielder, has been bought by Detroit. When the Athletics tried to get Outfielder Fothergill from Rochester, they found that the Tigers had surrendered title |to this hard hitting youth, thereby | revealing a big minor league trans- acton. | Jothergill is now the property of Rochester because Detroit gave him in part payment for Archdeacon, holder of the base circling record, and Second Baseman Cliff Brady, who once was tried by Boston. Archdeacon Brady report to Cobb next fall. | Ty expects to develop the speedy ‘Archdeacnn into a star. | W THE FEEL POISON (VY T TERPIBL T FATAL and | JACK IVE BEEM ON MY VACATION AND 1 INTC A MESS OF I'VE HEARD THAT 1S DANGEROVS AND SOME TIMES |GOLFERS VS. ARCHERS IN NOVEL MATCH Unusual Contest To Be Staged Next Sunday At North Jersey Country Club New York, July 14.—An unusual match between two archers and two golfers will be staged at the North Jersey Country club, Paterson, N. J., | Sunday when Frederick W. King and Daniel W. Singer, well known ama- teur sportsmen and staunch expon- ents of archery will shoot their ar- rows against the driving of golf balls by Philip O'Connor and"Joseph Rein- er, professionals of the North Jer- sey club, The flight of the arrow will count as a drive of a golf ball except that while the golfer will putt for the cup the archers will shoot at a target the exact size of the cup's opening. PLAY RED §0X New Departure 1o Mect Boston Cluh in Exhibition Match Sunday at Muzzy Field—Regulars to Be Seen. The management of the New De- parture baseball team has secured one of the best attractions of the season for this Sunday at Muzzy fleld, Bris- tol, when the Boston Red Sox nine will play an exhibition game against the Bearing Makers, The Hub team appeared in Bristol on one former occasion when Babe Ruth, then a member of the Boston club was with them. Manager Duffy of the Red Sox has promised to bring along his regular lineup Sunday, including Joe Dugan, the New: Haven boy, “Muddy” Ruel and Del Pratt, former Yankees, and Mike Menoskey, the hard hitting out- flelder. The New Departure will use the regular lineup which has been going at a fast pace this season. Either Lester Lanning, former Athletic, or Pete Condon, former state league hurler, will twirl for the Bristol club. The dine-up will be as follows: Scott, If., Horkenheimer, ss., Halbach, 3b, Reilly, cf., Zielke, 1b., Forslund, 2b., Goodridge, rf.,, Waters, ¢. and Lanning or Condon, p. THE DUKE IS THROUGH Kahanamoku, Famous Hawalian Swimmer, Will Not Appear in Com- . petitive Contests, Fle Says. Los Angeles, July 14.—Duke Kaha- namoku, Hawaiian swimmer, an- nounced here today he is through with competitive swimming. “For that matter,” he continued, “I have been through it for a year. All talk about a meeting between Johnny Weissmuller and myself to settle the matter of supremacy is foolish, He is the greatest swimmer the world his ever seen.” BONIFACE WINS RACE. Windsor, Ontario, July 14.—Bon- iface, with Turner up and owned by Commander J. K. L. Ross, won the nineteenth renewal of the Frontier Handicap, with 810,000 added here yvesterday, passing under the wire two lengths ahead of his stablemate, Reg- istrar. Planet finished third, a neck| back. Boniface's time for the mile |and ome-eighth was 1:52, three-fifths of a second slower than the track rec- |ord for the distance established by | Best Pal last year. The track yester- | day was lightning fast. The Ross lorse won in a field of eleven start- rs. Golden Sphere, Mainmast, John | Finn, Firebrand, Bygone Days, Radio, Manoeuvre and Louis finished in the t Tigers secured the Texan for |order named. It May be Comedy for Some Folks, But Its Tragedy for Me . RAN - ISN T ISN'T T € ° \T AAY Bi ] romEOY Fi OH- BOYS. ;;; FOLKS COME HERE A MINUTE! SOME THING FUNNY — SA SCREAM! A SIGHT ATHLETIGS AGAIN DEFEAT TiGens Hellmann Does Some Nilty Clct- ing, With Two Homers r—— Philadelphia, July &:hl‘u Yesterday defeated . In the Yourth game of the series, th\'n;;‘l Ehmke was found for !h!r: een hits including a paf and doubles, BATRL ipidy Helimnnn made home runs in th e sixth and eighth, running his total to sixteen. Veach also hit a home run, Score: 14.—Philadel- Detroit, 9 to DETROIT ab, o = Blue, 1b, Jones, 3bh, . Cobb, cf, . Vench, If, Hellmann, rf, Clark, 2b, Rigney, ss. Manion, c. Ehmke, p. P e sl e Do Srema s e oS R f 9 38 PHILADELP) ab. 3 Young, 2b. Galloway, es. Walker, 1f. Hauser, 1b, . Miller, 'cf. Perkins, c. . Welch, rf. Dykes, 3b. Hasty, p. . cwomaEe I Mg | TR -1 vl oocoomono® wlowosossoo? TR 000 002 020—4 tee... 500 003 100—9 Young, Perkins, Clark; Hauser 2, Rigney; home 2; Wtolen base, Welch; left on bases, Detroit 8, Philadel- phia 5; bases on balls, off Ehmke 3, off Hasty 1; struck out, by Ehmke 2, by Hasty 3; umplres, ‘Moriarity and Nallin; time, loloonno Detrolt Philadelphia Two base three bage runs, Veach, s, hits, Hellmann 15 2 Cleveland 4, Boston Boston, July 14.—Jim Lindsey re- lieved Uhle {n the sixth inning and held Boston to one hit for the rest of the game which Cleveland won 4 to 2. The two winning runs were scored in the eighth when with the bases full and two out J. Sewell bounded wide to Burns, who threw to W. Collins. The Red Sox pitcher col- lided with Sewell at first and his foot was injured, but Sewell was ruled safe. The score: (‘LE\'ELbA,\'D ab, 3 = » Jamieson, 1f. Wambsganes, Speaker, cf. . Wood, rf. . J. Sewell, ss. Gardner, 3b, Melnnis, 1 O'Neill, c. oo~o00 Z o Lindsey, p. f o et e ajeo B S e ! wloos 2 = 33 BOSTON ab. S g oy Letbold, cf. E. Smith, cf, Menosky, 1f. Burns, 1b. . Pratt, 2b. Dugan, 3b. J. Collins, Ruel, c. Pittenger, &s. W. Collins, p. . Quinn, p. ... rt. lowwnnnionrn ol cccomoonuoor ®lorormummy |l cowmwoos wloocooscooronn 3 e wloorooscoooso? o 000 001 120—4 000 101 000 Sewell; th Cleveland Boston ... Two base hits, Epeaker, base hit, Uhle; stolen base, Menosky; s rifices, Wambsganss, Pratt; double pla, McInnis to J. Sewell, Ruel to Pratt, Burns to Pratt to Pittenger; left on bases, Cleve- land 5, Boston 5; bases on balls, off Uhle 1, off W. Collins 2; struck out, by Uhle 1, by Lindsey 2, by Colline 2, by Quinn 1; hits, off Uhle § in 5 innings, none out in 6th, off Lindsey 1 in 4 innings, oft W. Collins 9 in 7 2-3 innings, off Quinn none in 1 1-3 innings; winning pitcher, Lindsey; losing W. Collins; umpires, Evans and pitchej Hildebrand; time, 1:45. TIGERS GET HYMAN. Philadeiphia, July 14 —Roy Moore, left-handed pitcher, was sold to De- troit today by Philadelphia. No play- ers were involved. It is said that the the waiver price. m Hyman, former ' Georgetown University left-handed pitcher, cign- ed a contract and joined Detroit yes- terday. LOOK AT THAT €AR' ?

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