Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Aug. 2, 1921, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE MORNING STAR, WILMINGTON, N. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1921. THREJB WALLACE PROVES EASY FOR MT. OLIVE OUTFIT PITCHING OF ROSEMAN SHUT OUT WILMINGTON Faison Takes Opening Game of Series 5 to 0, Thanks to Roseman (Special to The Star) FAISON, Aug. 1. Roseman, formerly A me mber of the "Wallace team, who has ivr.'d the locals, was the whole show : this afternoon. His pitching and hlttire predominated the opening game ; -u- en Faison and "Wilmington which .. Vioals easily annexed, 5 to 0. F'-iur scoreless innings had bson p :;yed when Roseman went to hat in tre fifth with two runners on the bases. He smote a clean cut double to the ,v;:er gardens, driving in two runs, f . ff.cient to win the game. Another r came in the eighth when Sykes -. for the circuit. Roseman allowed the hard hitting W: :'.minerton team but three hits, two s-.rsrles and a double by Trust. He v a ked one and fanned three and was v.ver in danger, although three errors --ere made by his supporters. Compton, hurling for the visitors, : a l a lot of "stuff" but was unable ;.- get the ball over the plate when h used it. He passed seven men and the walks were expensive, too. He fanned two men. Behind him the visit ors put up the bestexhibition of field ing seen here this season, not an error being made. Three fast double plays were pulled during the game, by Grif fith. Buedy and R. Burnett, they serv ing: to materially cut down the local score. The game was remarkably fast and was completed in an hour and 25 ninutes. The box score and summary: Faison AB R H PO A E Smith, 3b 3 0 2 1 1 0 Faison (J. E.), cf . . . . 2 0 0 2 0 0 Sykes. If ...4 1 1 0 1 1 Barnes, ss 3 0 0 1 3 1 Morton, rf 1 1 0 2 1 0 F.oylan. c 4 1 1 4 1 0 Roseman, p 8 1 2 0 4 0 Daniels, 2b 3 0 1 5 4 0 Faison (J. M.), lb 3 1 1 12 2 1 Totals 27 5 8 27 15 3 Wilmington AB R H PO A E Trust, cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 Griffith, ss 3 0 0 2 6 0 Purnett (R.), lb. ... 4 0 1 14 3 0 Rnswell. If 3 0 0 0 0 0 Fundy. 2b 3 0 0 4 3 0 Feasley. 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 F'jrnett (R. H.), rf. . . 3 0 0 0 0 0 Fell, c 3 0 0 3 0 0 '"ompton, p 3 0 0 0 3 0 Totals 29 0 3 24 15 0 Sore by innings: Faison 000 030 llx 5 AVilmington .. ........ 000' 000 000 0 Summary: Two base hit Roseman, Trust. Home run Sykes. Stolen ba3e Smith. Sacrifice hit Griffith. Double plays Griffith to Bundy to R. Burnett, three; Morton to Daniels. Earned runs Faison, 5. Struck out by Rose man. 3; by Compton. 2. Base on balls .-ff Roseman. 1; off Compton, 7. Um pires Mr Gibbons at plate, Mr. Car--o;i on baes. . Time -of ganae ls25. : OFflOS BEAT IDIAXS Two youiful baseball teams, the Indian Sluggers and the Oriole Fat-r-pakers, met in combat on Robert Strange playground yeserday after noon and the Orioles came away vic arious, 20 to 9. It was the first de feat of the season for the lndlxnw, " 'no thought they were unbeatable, and r'fMr victors of yesterday say they will -r he making any such boast again. F!att and Shepherd hit three-baggers rr,d Alp. Jackson and Boykin each got fvo-baggers, while James hit for two rases on two occasions. n,ARKTO IS DEFEATED, 3-1 LUMBERTOX. Aug. 1. Clarkton's errors proved costly., Lumberton win ning a close but rather listless game here today, 3 to 1. The score: R. H. E. Clarkton 000 001 000 1 8 6 Lumberton .. .. 100 100 Olx 3 6 2 ' Thompson and Hardy and Porter; Hodgin and McMillan. IVAXHOE WINS TWO GAMES IVAN'HOE, Aug. 1 Ivanhoe defeated Tomahawk, 9 to 8, Saturday and Hick ory Grove, 5 to 2, in two of the best games seen here this year. The heavy hitting of Tomahawk and the team vork of the Ivanhoe featured the first -we. Darkness ended the second n seventh inning. ROBINS PREY OF EAGLES OREENTILLE, Aug. 1. The Eagles ntinued to soar today, defeating the K'nston Robins here, 2 to 1. The score: R. H. K. K nston 000 000 100 1 4 1 Or'enville 020 000 OOx 2 2 1 OI inger and G. Kuyk; Beale and r?rson. INTERNATIONAL ' f Toronto 10-5; Rochester 6-1. -ir Reading 5; Jersey City 4. -; Syracuse 3; Buffalo 2. ' "-' games scheduled. A MERICAV ASSOCIATION Columbus 4; Milwaukee 7. Toledo 1; Kansas City 10. Louisville 4; St. Paul 8. J. M. SOLKY & CO. "One Price Clothiers" Home of Kappenhelmer Clothes Few Days Left In Our Sale of MANHATTAN SHIRTS and Other Brands PALM BEACHES MOHAIRS COOL CLOTHS Two-Piece Suits Reduced 25 Per Cent 1- Wrestling- g - bwimming MINOR LEAGUE RESULTS W. W. LEAGUE Results Yesterday At Faison 5; Wilmington 0. At Mt. Olive 6; "Wallace 2. Where They Play Today Wilmington at Faison. Wallace at Mt. Olive. Standing: of the Clubs Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. Wilmington 6 4 .C00 Mt. Olive 6 4 690 Wallace 4 5 .444 Faison 4 7 .?64 PIEDMONT LEAGUE Results Yesterday At Durham 10; Raleigh 2. At Danville 7-6: High Point 9-R At Greensboro 4-0; Winston-Salei 2-4 Standing; of the Clubs Clubs-. Won. Lost. Pet. High Point . 15 7 .6S2 Durham 12 10 .545 Winston-Salem 11 11 .500 Greensboro 10 12 455 Danville 9 13 409 Raleigh 9 13 109 SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE , Results Yesterday At Charleston 4; Charlotte 7. At Augusta 3; Spartanburg 4. At Greenville 8; Columbia 12. Standing of the Clubs Clifcsi Won. Lost. Pet. Spartanburg 6 2 .750 Charlotte 6 3 .67 Augusta 5 4 .556 Charleston 2 4 .333 Greenville 3 6 .333 Columbia . . 1 4 .200 SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Results Yesterday At Atlanta 4; Memphis 6. At Mobile 7; Birmingham 1. At New Orleans 8; Nashville 2. At Chattanooga 1; Little Rock 4. Standing: of the Clubs Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. Memphis 75 31 .708 Birmingham 62 41 .602 New Orleans 62 44 ..85 Little Rock 63 46 .535 Atlanta 51 50 .505 Nashville 41 67 .380 Mobile 41 67 .380 Chattanooga 33 72 .314 VIRGINIA LEAGUE Results Yesterday At Newport News 6; Wilson 2 At Norfolk 1; Rocky Mount 0. At Richmond 10; Tarboro 1. At Portsmouth 2; Suffolk 0. Standing of the Clubs Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. Norfolk 18 7 .720 Wilson ...15 10 .600 Richmond .. 15 11 .577 Portsmouth 14 U .560 Rocky Mount 13 12 .520 Suffolk . . . .- 13 12 Newport News 8 16 .333 Tarboro .. . . 4 21 .160 BOTH GIANTS AND THE PIRATES WIN A GAME National League Leaders Still Running Close Superbas Annex Cards Game NATIONAL lEAGlE Results Yesterday Chicago 1; Philadelphia 6. Cincinnati 4; New York 5. Pittsburgh 7; Boston 3. St. Louis 7; Brooklyn 8. "Where They Play Today Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. New York at St. Louis. Boston at Chicago. Standing; of the Clubs Clubs Won. Lost. Pet. .635 .622 576 .505 .495 .427 .423 .316 Pittsburgh 61 New York 61 Boston 63 Brooklyn 60 St. Louis 47 Chicago 41 Cincinnati 41 Philadelphia 30 35 37 39 49 48 55 56 65- PITTSBURGH, Aug. 1. r-Adams kept the visitors hits scattered today and Pitsburgh won from Boston, 7 to 3. The score: R- H- K- Boston 100 110 0003 9 2 Pittsburgh 311 000 02x 7 11 1 McQuillan, Fillingim and O'Neill; Adams and Schmidt. GIANTS AJVD REDS EVEN fTvrTWATT. Au c. 1. New York and Cincinnati broke een in the six ame series, the Giants tax'ng me ma. t.dav. ftc i. TV. a arti.A -TV. XI. Hi. New York 000 001 3015 12 0 Cincinnati 002 001 001 4 ii u Toney. Sallee, Barnes ana omnn, Markle and Wlngo. DODGERS TAKE A GAME ST LOUIS, Aug. 1. Brooklyn, scor ing five runs In the ninth inning, came up from behind and won its first gam of the season In St. Louis, 8 to 7. The contest was marked by ten two i kite nf which Mann made three " p it m The score: " Brooklyn ' 110 000 1058 13 2 it Louis 300 010 210-7 18 2 Schupp. S. Smith and Taylor, Kruesr er; Haines, Sherdel and Clemons. PHILLS COPPED FOUR CHICAGO. Aug. 1. Philadelphia made it four out of five from Chicafeo today by winning the Anal game ofthe i a 1 v I' R.H.E. Philadelphia f . . . "0 100-6 9 J Chicago 000 010 1 3 1 G. Smith and Bruggy; Cheeves, York and O'Farrell (game called in seventh rain). - Golf INDIANS FALL BEFORE THE YANKS, SCORE 5-2 Senators Get Third Off Tigers White Sox Beat Macks Again Boston Blanks Browns AMERICAN LEAGUE Results Yesterday New York 5; Cleveland 2. Philadelphia 4; Chicago 5. Washington 1; Detroit 0. Boston 2; St. Louis 0. Where They Play Today Cleveland at New York. Detroit at Washington. Chicago at Philadelphia . St. Louis at Boston. Standing of the Clubs Clubs Won. Lost. Pot. Cleveland 62 36 .633 New York 59 35 .628 Washington . . ' 54 18 529 Detroit 48 52 .4S0 St. Louis 44 61 .4C3 Boston 43 52 453 Chicago 43 54 .443 Philadelphia 36 61 .371 NEW YORK, Aug. 1. The New York Americans reduced Cleveland's lead to one game by winning today. 5 to 2. Hoyt pitched a strong game, especially in the pinches. Bagby was ineffective and the Yankee hit him consistently. First game: R. H. E. Cleveland 000 100 010 2 8 1 New York ... 012 Oil OOx 5 10 2 Bagby, Uhle and O'Neill; Hoyt and Schang. TIGERS DROP ANOTHER WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Washington took its third straight game to day from Detroit, 1 to 0. It was a pitcher's duel in which Mogridge bested Oldham. A triple by Shanks and O'Rourke's single accounted for the run. Manager Cobb was absent, hav ing been called home by illness in his family. The score: R. H. E. Detroit 000 000 000 0 .6 0 Washington . . . . 010 000 OOx 1 7 1 Oldham and Bassler; Mogridge and Gharrity. RED SOX BLANK BROIVNS BOSTON, Aug. 1. Joe Bush held St. Louis to one hit today and Boston won 2 to 0, by taking advantage of Shocker's wildness in the first inning. The score: R. H. E. St. Louis 000 000 (100 0 1 0 Boston 200 000 OOx 2 5 0 Shocker and Severeid; Bush ard Ruel. WHITE SOX WIN AGAIN PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 1. Chicago made it three straight today by de feating Philadelphia 5 to 3. Ernlo Johnson scored the winning run wlion Strunk's grounder bounded high over Galloway's head. The score: R. H. E. Chicago 110 100 0115 11 1 Philadelphia 200 020 000 4 S 2 Wilkinson and Schalk; Naylor and Perkins. V DOUBLE A'S WIN AGAIN The Wilmington Double A.'s. fast negro baseball team, defeated a sim ilar aggregation from Winston-Salm here yesterday afternoon, 1 to 1. It was a pretty game, but tne visitors were kept on the offensive rom the start. There will be games this aftern''oa and tomorrow afternoon nere between the same two teams. The score: R. H. E. Double A s 4 8 0 Winston-Salem 1 6 3 Batteries: Pistol and Nutall; Ken nedy and Johnson. Today, Stone and Moore will pitch and receive, respectively for Winst h- ! Salem, and Everett and Nutall will tie the battery for the Double A's. TARBORO GETS FRANCHISE OF PETERSBURG IN VIRGIN! 4. ROCKY MOUNT, Aug. 1. The fran chise recently forfeited by the Peters burg club in the Virginia league has been awarded to Tarboro it was an nounced here tonight by Vice-President W. S. Moye. The players of the Peters burg club and all accessories will go with the franchise, and the first game of the Tarboro club will be played with Rocky Mount here Thursday, Mr. Moe stated. "SALLY" LEAGUE IN COURT COLUMBIA, S. C, Aug. 1. Associate Justice R. C. Watts, of the South Caro- : lina supreme court, today issued an j order to W. H. Walsh, president of the j Scuth Atlantic association, to show I cause August 18, before Judge Mem- j minger in Charleston why an injunc- tion against "splitting the season"" should not be granted. The injunction sought by the Char leston club and attorneys for both the Charleston and Columbia clubs appear -ed before Justice Watts. NEW BERN TEAM WINNER WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. The Bea.-s continued to win today, beating the Washington Tar Babies 5 to 4 in a hard hitting game. The score: R. H. K. ( New Bern Ill 001 100 5 7 4 Washington . . . . 000 030 010 4 7 2 Linberg and Morris; Snyder and Rowland. APPALACHIAN LEAGUE At Knoxville 3; Johnson City 1. At Cleveland 1; Bristol 2. At Kingsport 4; Greenville 2. FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE At Jacksonville 2; Tampa 4 (thirteen innings). At Daytona 9-2; Lakeland 3-6 (sec ond game, seven innings--agreement). At Orlando 2; St. Petersburg 5. LIP'S "THE CIGAR WITH 8e Everywhere. s Distributed by ATLANTIC TOBACCO COMPANY, In. 815 Nntt Street (Incorporated) - i " " " " , . :. - - - Winners Clout Hard and Timely and Have Little Trouble Winning 6 to 2 MT. OLIVE, Aug. 1. The locals had an easy, time winning from Walla'y here this afternoon, thanks to effect hitting and good pitching by Southard. The score was 6 to 2 and the locals were in danger at no time. Southard eased up toward the end of the game, the visitors scoring twice in the ninth. Southard's pitdhing was a feature. He held the visitors to three hits, walked but one man, and fanned seven. He easily had the better of? the argu ment with Stone. Wallace hurler, who allowed 14 hits, walked one and struck out five. ' The box score and summary: Mt. Olive AB R H PO A E Whitley, rf 4 1 1 l o 0 Hood, c 4 0 0 7 1 0 Fittman, cf 5 0 1 2 0 0 Edwards, lb 5 1 2 13 0 0 Stewart. If 5 0 3 1 0 0 Woodard, 2b ,5 1 1 i i Edgerton, 3b 3 1 3 1 2 0 Faulkner, ss 4. 0 0 2 3 2 Southard, p '. . 4 2 3 0 1 0 Totals .. ., 39 6 14 27 S 3 Wallace AB R H PO A E Maxwell, 2b 3 0 0 0 4 1 Barden, ss 4 0 0 2 2 2 Mallard, If 4 0 0 0 0 0 A u trey, cf 4 1 0 1 0 0 Stone, p 4 0 0 0 1 0 Jerome, c 3 1 2 6 0 0 Blue, lb 3 0 0 10 0 0 Bickett, 3b 3 0 0 2 0 1 Johnson, rf 3 0 1 3 0 0 Totals 31 2 3 24 7 4 Score by Innings: Mt. Olive .. 000 231 OOx 6 Wallace 000 000 002 2 Summary: Two base hits Pittman, E-dgerton. Three base hits Jerome! Sacrifice hits Whitley. Hood. Stolen Base Edwards. Bases on balls off Southard, 1; off Stone, 1. Struck out by Southard, 7; by Stone, 5. Time of gametwo hours. Umpire Mr. Bd-mondson. By the Wayside Well, I see they are going up on mowing cemetery lots," said a man yesterday. "I just got a bill from home for $3; last year it was $2." One stumbles across reverse normalcy quite often while waiting for the much touted return. Waiting for Normalcy is a great thing if you can stand the strain and nothing breaks meanwhile. Affairs of the republic are settled and the country saved, in the smok ing cubby hole of the train; but with such weather as has been enjoyed this summer, the hot debates on national and world problems which one hears so often on cooler days, are not much in vogue. If some freak starts a heavy line of conversation about the league of nations, peace treaties, dis armament or the tariff, it isn't long before somebody else deftly turns the talk to baseball or what kind of dog you got for next winter's hunting. It is too hot and too dusty in the aver age coach to save the country. People are tired of saving the country, any way. There have been so many sud den, loud yells of "crisis" during the past few years that, like the cry of "wolf" in the fable, an alarm gets very little reaction. Folk have about con cluded that some way, some how, some time, the old boat will make port and everything will be all right again. A veteran restauranteur of the city, discussing the times, says that busi ness l a thing of the past. He asserts that in ten years he has never seen it so absent in his line. "The trouble is," he says, "they haven't treated the farmer right. In town we buy his but terbeans at 20 cents a quart and sell them for 40 cents, and such doings all down the line have pretty nigh ruined the country." Then he collected 60 ceits for a cantaloupe, two eggs and some bacon, and rang a tune on his cash register with an air of profound gloom. Railroading is a wonderful, pot to say fearful affair and an outsider who merely pays for being hauled around sees some marvelous stunts staged by . i j i .1. . is r . me insiaers wno wear me livery ui Liie transportation lines. Other day, a Sunday it was, a mob of excursionists, weary and perspiring in a hot "wait ing" arena, banked themselves against the irpn barriers at the gates, and waited the pleasure of the cap and buttons who also waited, according to the rule book, for the time to come when the mob could be let into the cars. Meanwhile the train was ready, engine poppin' off. The wait was'quite long enough for every excursionist to have boarded the train and achieved the comfort incident to removing one's weight from weary feet. And when the gates were opened, and the tired mob just naturally hurled itself at the narrow passage, the uniformed god grew sarcastic. "That's right," he ex claimed; "break your necks; you ain't got but a minute," he jeered. After having barred them out so long, the least he could do was to keep his mouth to himself, and if some hefty ex cursionist, sweaty ' and tired and his sunburns peeving him, had landed a hook to the jaw, it would have seemed just right and proper. It is related of a certain insurance man of the city that he lately under took to interest farmers who owned high bred cows to take out policies on their lives, but after a number of visits to herds, he came back to his office in despondent mood, without any pep a-tall. Asked the reason for his gloom, he said that the sad-faced cows so af fected his sensibilities, he could not pursue his scheme to Insure livestock any further. "A cow," he averred, "is the saddest thing in the world." DON'T FAIL TO KEEP UP WITH THE TRIAL WHICH STARTED MONDAY 3a 44 19 MOST FRIENDS' Telephone htc-aos - -j - - SEMINOLE IS IN PORT WITH 3 SUB-CHASERS Cutter Will Resume Voyage to Baltimore Today The coast guard cutter Seminole, with three sub-chasers which she is towing from Key West, Fla., 'to Bal timore came into port Sunday night and spent yesterday here at the gov ernment dock in front of the custom house. The trip to Baltimore will be resumed about noon today, but Capt. E. S. Addison, commander of the Semi nole, thinks that the smaller craft may be turned over to some other vessel at Norfolk for towlns on to the Mary land metropolis. Several days ajo the Seminole left here for Charleston, and while at the latter port srot a call to proceed to Key West and Miami to help tow several sub-chasers north. She went and got four the Hansen, the Taylor, the Smith and the Kangaroo. The last named was left at Charleston, and it is the other three she now has with her. The coast ruard cutter Talla poosa, which brought four other sub chasers from Key West, left the Semi nole at the mouth of the Cape Fear river Sunday evening, and proceeded to Norfolk with her charges. Capt. Addison said yesterday that on the whole the weather encountered on the trip to and from Key West was altogether pleasant. The sub-chasers brought north were used for several months for patrol duty on the Florida coast. HiALEIGH'S MOTOR CAR POND BEING PUMPED OUT NOW RALEIGH, Aug. 1. First water was dTawn from the abandoned rocky quar ry owned by the state near Raleigh to day and by Saturday, witout mishap, it is believed that the bottom will be laid Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. Relieves pain and sore ness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, etc. (Adv.) LOWER PRICES Price for 5 or 6-pound iron $6.95 Price for 3-pound irons . . . S6.25 Less $1.00 for the old one. good or bad Tide Water Power Company watch for the Unparalled Sale Nothing before like it at tempted in Wilmington See The Star Sure Thursday! wi"""kiw r" " ,-'"-p1" bare, exposing automobiles alread lo cated there a ta depth of 29 feet. The drainage of the quarry was un dertaken by the state board of public s r i Bottled In Wilmington by ELECTRIC BOTTLING WORKS Tenth and Princes Street n H"a')jjg m mm ii h Why Worry with your old Electric Iron or let the old burned out one set around when you can get $100 for it on the purchase price of a new one? x NET SHIPMENT JUST RECEIVED AT buildings and grounds upon the request of the solicitor of the district aftei? thtree automobiles had been discovered and dragged to the surface. v4t dll fountains or in bottles Small Billy Ray and tall sister May Never complain of the heat of the day. Tbey keep themselves cheafiil, comfy and nice Sipping Green Rivers just off of the ice. Telephone No. 80 fillip 5 rV 1 7 ,f
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Aug. 2, 1921, edition 1
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