Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 28, 1921, edition 1 / Page 14
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THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 28, 1921. 14 r E Gheen Puzzle To Charleston Except For One Heavy Inning; Hornets Fighting To The Last Insects Make Hard Effort to Tie Score in the Ninth Inning. Charleston, June 28 The Pals staged a batting rally In theeighth inning of the game with the Hornets here Mon day, good for three runs, and won, 3 to 2. tp until the eighth inning Gheen held Charleston helpless. The Hornets scored In the sscond Inning and again in the ninth. In the second Ben Paschal led off with a sintrle. Williams sacrificed him to sec ond. He went to third when Bob Kirke was put out at first and scored when Luke Urban hit to right field. ' In the ninth Williams walked. Kirke was hit by a pitched ball. Urban sacrificed the two another base. Ken nedy flew out to center field, Williams scoring on the fly. Carrol was put in to bat for Gheen and was given a base on balls. Milner fanned for the third out. " The Pals opened their rally with Bogan getting to first on an infield hit. McCormick doubled, Brogan go ing to third. Felix lined to center, the ball going over Kingston's head, Felix getting three bases and Brogan and McCormcik scoring. Felix came in on Von Kolnitz's doub-. The Pals could get in no more but the three runs proved to be plenty Luke Urban played shortstop for the Hornets. He looked good, getting two hits, one of which brought in the Hornet's first score. The friends of Ezra Midkiff gave him an ovation when he first went up to the bat. CHARLOTTE: AB B.H PO A E Milner, lb .. .. .. 5 0 1 6 0 0 Kingston, cf 3 0 0 2 0 0 Midkiff, 3b .. . . . . 4 0 1 1 4 0 Paschal, If 3 1110 0 Williams, 2b. .....2 1 0 4 0 0 Kirke, rf ...2 0 0 2 0 0 Ur-an, ss 3 0 2 1 1 1 Kennedy, c 3 01 6 3 0 Gheen, p .. 3 0 0 0 1 0 x Carroll 000000 Totals 28 2 6 24 9 1 Charleston: AB R H PO A E Bridwell, 2b 3 0 1 7 2 1 McCormick, cf .... 3 1 2 1 0 0 Felix, If 412110 Von Kolnitz, 3b 4 0 1 3 0 0 Swacina, lb 3 0 1 7 0 1 Marshall, c 4 0 2 5 4 0 Matthews, rf ,4 0 0 2 1 0 Clausser, ss 2 0 0 1 4 1 Brosp, p 3 1 1 0 4 0 Totals 30 3 10 27 16 3 x Walked for Gheen in ninth. Score by innings: Charlotte . . . .' 010 000 001 2 Charleston 000 000 03x 3 Two-base hits, Von Kolnitz, McCor mick. Three-base hits, Felix, Milner. First on balls, Gheen 3; Brogan 4. Struck out, Gheen 5; Brogan 4. Sacri fice hits, Paschal, Williams, Urban, Kennedy, Bridwell. Batter hit. Kirks. Left on bases, Charlotte 8; Charleston 7. Time of game, 2:00. Umpire, Guyon. SPINNERS MAUL SPART HURLERS WINNING 6 TO 3 Take the Game After Spar tanburg Had It Stowed Away. Spartanburg, June 28. The Spin ners landed on Spartanburg's pitchers in the eighth inning of the game here Monday, scoring four runs. The final count was 6 to 3. Spartanburg had the game until the Spinners got to work with the stick. The box score: Greenville: AB K II PO A E Koval, ss . . 4 0 2 1 5 0 Hunter, 3b 3 0 0 0 2 0 Folmar, cf 310000 Bankston, rf 3 1 1 1 0 0 Wendell, 2b 310 3 10 Kistner, c 412 700 Crouch, lb 4 1 1 12 2 0 Devereaux, If .. ..411100 Devinney, p 3 0 0 2 2 0 Totals 31 6 7 27 12 0 Spartanburg: AB ft H PO A E Benton, cf 5 1 2 3 0 0 Acliinger, ss 3 1 1 Z ;! 1 Kolseth, lb 3 1 2 13 1 1 Wlitry, c 3 0 1140 Marlette, 3b 3 0 0 1 0 1 Hunnicutt, rf 4 0 1 3 0 0 Brooks, If 4 0 0 1 0 0 Braun, 2b 4 0 1 Z 3 0 Girard, p 2 0 0 0 0 0 Utt, p 10 112 0 Totals 32 3 9 27 13 3 Score by innings: Greenville 010 000 Oil 6 Spartanburg 000 003 000 3 Stolen bases, Kolseth 2. Two-base hits, Achinger, Bankston. Three-base hits, Kolseth, Devereaux. Sacrifice hits. Achinger, Marlette, Giard, Bank ston. Base on balls, Giard 2; Utt 1; Devinney 2. Struck out, Giard 2; Devinney 5. Hits apportioned, Giard 6 in 7 innings; Utt 1 in 2 innings. Double plays, Braun to Kolseth; Kol seth (unassisted). Time of game, 1:45. Umpires, Johnscn and Brandon. BENNY LEONARD WILL QUIT RING Has Accumulated Half Mill ion and Will Quit Game Within Six Months. HORNET PITCHING IP R H W L T PC Webber .. ..33 16 31 2 1 0 .667 Gheen 95 45 . 81 5 5 0 .500 Wilson .. .. 104 45 94 6 6 0 .500 Gatchel .... 26 25 35 0 4 0 .000 Knowlson ... 14 40 16 0 3 0 .000 Higgins .... 5 4 7 0 0 0 .000 K. O. FOR FULTON. Syracuse, N. .Y., June 27. Fred Fulton, of Rochester, Minn., knocked out Dan Daly, of Pittsburgh, in the first round gf their scheduled 12-round bout here tonight. The men are heavyweights. Call Us We'll Call AT A GLANCE YOU. CAN See that our way of pressing and repairing elothes is the right, way. . If you value " service investigate. Drop in when passing, phone us or send a card. We want to com pare our workmanship with others. City Pressing Club ELLIOTT & FINK, Prop'rs. 223 North Tryon St. Phones 573 & 574. Benton Harbor, Mich., June 28. Dame Rumor frequently has announced that Benny Leonard, world's champion lightweight pugilist, planned to retire from fighting and Bennv nhnsplf hnq never maintained that he expected tt maite Doxing nis me work, but now, for the first time, the prince of the smaller boxers actually has set it down in writing that he is going. to forsake the business that made him famous. - Leonard, in a letter to Floyd Fitz simmons. promoter rf the. 1,.1. Friedman fight here July 4, announces that he will remain in the ring game a maximum of six months longer. During the next six months, Leon ard says, he will "meet air the worth while opponents left in the lightweight field, clean them out, and retire with half a million dollars, while I still have two good ears and a straight nose." "I have two good ears and my nose is still just as nature wanted it to be," writes Benny. "I have never won any beauty prizes, but I'm very proud of the fact that I have exposed theso parts to perhaps a million boxing gloves and still have preserved them. I mean to keep them too. "I am worth half a million. I have made investments that pay sufficient to keep myself and my family for the rest of our lives. No, the world is mis taken if it thinks Benny is going to go the way of many others in the pro- lession. "When I have met all the worth while opponents in the field, and I do not think that will require more than six months more, I'm going to put the old gloves in the moth balls and caTl it quits. The boxing world has been kind to me and I'm going through to the finish. Then I don't think the fans will have any complaint. I do not bp lieve any of my friends care to wish 'tin' ears or a broken nose on me for life and I want to have something to say about it anyway." FITZIS THE BEST OF ALIENBOXERS Australian is the Only For eigner Who Ever Took the U. S. by Storm. New York, June 28. The star box ers of other nations who have in vaded the United States since the ring game began , in the hope of winning f ame, f orture and a title have been many. Few of these landed titles but many of them won fame and a fair siz ed fortune as ring fortunes were reck oned in their days. A majority of the foreign fistic lumi naries came from Great Britain. These stars ranged from the diminutive Jim my Wilde, the last invader from the British Isles, to heavyweights! includ ing .Jem Mace and Charlpv TvnHeii Mitchell it was who fought John L. Sullivan in Madison Square Garden. New York, and later was knocked out by Gentleman Jim Corbett in a couple rounds. Besides these men there were Freddie Welsh, Matt Wells, Bom bardier Wells, Jim Driscoll and others. Bob Fitzsimmons undoubtedly was the greatest fighter that ever decided to take the V. S. by storm. And Bob did that. Coming from Australia he won his way into the -hearts of ring fans and fought his way to the heavy weight title. His popularity remained undiminished after he lost the title. Peter Jackson, although a negro, mde friends when he came to fight Jeffries. He was a skilful sportsmanlike fighter. Young1 Griff o. was another foreign fight er to win fame and friends here. Be sides, these men there were Frank Sia vin, Dan Creedon, Bill Squires and sev eral others. CARPENTIER AND DEMPSEY BOTH HAVE A "WICKED" CROUCH & J. rS - - , r f 'd f A&ttr? - -r? Champ At 1 he 1 opUfriisFom, Jack Dempsey. left, and Georges Carpentier, in their cronching positions ready for an attack. Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier, who will clash for the world's heavyweight cham pionship Joly 2, have little in common, but they are alike in one respect at least. Both as sume a low crouch much of the time and get in their deadliest work from that position. Demp sey, crouched, begins boring in on his opponent and lays tLo foundation for his k. o. by throw ing pfle-driver blows into his enemy's middle and over his heart. Then Dempsey uses and drives a terrific left to the face. Carpentier leaps from Lis crouch to plant a knockout left to the head. INDIANS FATTEN ON THEBROWNS MaUs is Effective With Men on Bases; Boston, Beats Athletics. STANDING Of THE CLUBS. Club: Won. Lost. Pet. Cleveland 42 24 .63G NewYork .. '. 38 29 .567 "Washington 37 31 .536 Boston 32 30 .516 Detroit 33 35 .485 St. Louis ........ 28 36 .438 Chicago 26 35 .426 Philadelphia .. .. ...25 39 .391 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Boston 6; Philadelphia 5. Cleveland 4; St. Louis 2. No others scheduled. Equipment for Every Sport GOLF GOODS CLUBS SHOES BALLS We have 20 dozen $1.00 Golf Balls left that we are selling at $9.00 a dozen. . Myers Hardware & Sporting Goods Co. 18 East Trade St. MJAVlj' ManaSer Sporting Goods Department. Phone 903 TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Boston. Washington at New York. No others scheduled. r THIS TIME LAST YEAR. Bancroft, New York, got six sin gles out of six times up and accept ed 15 out of 16 chances against Philadelphia. After losing 18 successive games, the Athletics beat Washington. Jfolke knocked a home run for the Braves that beat Brooklyn after he had struck out three times. .lonos. Harvard flraf h9.umm camo to terms with the Athletics'. J SALLY LEAGUE. STANDING OF THE CLUBS: MADLS EFFECTIVE. Cleveland, June 28. Cleveland de feated St. Louis Monday, 4 to .2; Mails being more effective than Vangilder with men cri bases. Score by innings: St. Louis .. .. ..000 000 101 2 14 1 Cleveland 013 000 OOx 4 11 0 Vangilder and Collins; Mails and Nunamaker RALLIES WIN. Boston, June 28. Boston rallied in the eighth and ninth innings Monday and won from Philadelphia, 6 to 5. Score by innings: Philadelphia .. ..001 010 030 5 10 2 Boston 020 000 0226 10 4 Rommell and Perkins; Russell, K-irr and Walters. Piedmont League CLUB STANDINGS. TVon Lost Pet. Greensboro 32 30 .615 Raleigh . . 31 21 .596 Winston-Salem -.. .. 26 27 .491 Durham '. .v.... ...... . 25 26 .490 High Point .. . . .. 22 29 .431 Danville .. .. ..V. .. 19 32 .373 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Danville 2; Raleigh 7. Durham 6-2; Grensboro 8-1. High Point 9;, Winston-Salem 12. TODAY'S GAMES Winston-Salem at High Point. Raleigh at Danville. Greensboro -at Durham. BENTLEY MAKES RECORD. Baltnore, June 27. Jack Bentley, first baseman and picther on the Bal timore Orioles,, has established what is believed to be a baseball record. Bentley has knocked eight homers in the last week. Monday afternoon he registered three consecutive circuit drives. VIRGINIA LEAGUE. Norfolk 4; Richmond 5. Newport News 3; Portsmouth Rocky Mount 20; Petersburg 0. Suffolk 3; Wilson 0. , STOOACr IATTVDV 55 -a "standard 51 ; USLbattery : ' for ' c roses Cm lliave W IXHMU North & South Carolina Battery Co. Distributors 12 W. First St. Phone 4515 Won Lost Pet. Columbia .... ...... .39 18 .684 Greenville .. .. .. .. 37 23 .617 Charleston .. .. .. .. 34 26 ; . 567 Augusta 27 27 .500 Charlotte . 22 . 37 .373 Spartanburg .. .. -. ; 17. . 44 .279 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Charleston 3; Charlotte 2. Spartanburg . 3; ' Greenville 6. Columbia-Augusta, rain. TODAY'S GAMES CHARLOTTE at Charleston. Augusta at Columbia. Greenville at Spartanburg. Ring Battles of Jack And Georges Jack Dempsey knocked out Bill Bren nan in the 12th round of -their bout at Madison Square Garden, December' 14, 1920, in his most recent contest. ' The champion's showing that night against Brennan, a good second-rate boxer, was far from reassuring. The champion appeared to have suffered from the long lack of action. He was much slower than in previous bouts. Brennan hit him and appear ed to hurt him and Dempsey left th,e ring after the fight bleeding from an injured ear. ' , The bout, however, wad slow through most of the rounds. Motion pictures were made and many believe that there in lay the reason for Brennaa's unex pectedly good showing. Dempsey throughout, failed to show his usual aggressiveness., Brennan ap parently had no fear of the champion, and took the initiatve in several of the rounds, often standing toe to toe with Dempsey slugging. However, Demp sey managed to wear down the chal lenger in the later rounds and in the 12th, a lett to the body and a right to the head sent Brennan to the convas in a neutral corner. " It was the only knockdown of the unsatisfactory bout. The early months of 1914, the close of which 'was destined to see Carapn tier a soldier in a real fight, "brought the Frenchman his first defeat ' since he had lost to Billy Papke in 1912. Joe J eannette, the American negro heavyweight and one ' of the' game's hardest hitters, 5 was, the victor over the Frenchman in a slashing 15-round bout. Many spectators thought that Carpentier should have been awarded the decision. In spite of that, Carpentier's hitting power shown in "that, battle convinced Americans ' that here was a real top notch heavyweight. Twice, he sent Jeannette to the canvas with crashing blows to the head. Jeannette Las since declared that the blow. with which Carpentier floored" him early in the bout was the hardest that ever con nected with his anatomy. C The veteran; negro, who has done lit tle fighting for several years, is now a resident of .Hoboken, N. J. He has done considerable work with Carpentier while the' Frenchman has been train ing at Manhasset. . . One afternoon re cently Carpentied, while sparring with the negro, unleashed his right With its full - power and once . again Jeannette hit the canvas, stunned but not knock ed out. "Can that boy hit?" was Jeannette's question as he slowly rose to his feet, while Carpentier apologized. ;: "Ah'Il - say he can hit. What -that-right lands on mM go down.- " And that includes-Mistah Dempsey;' , PIRATES WIN BY HITTING FREELY Beat Cubs 10 to 3, While Phillies Defeat Giants With Ease. LATE FIGHT DOPE Carpentier DEMPSEY Working ! . Atlantic City, N. J., June 28. -Jack Dempsey today is, within 48 hours from the end of his training grind. The champion is scheduled to do his last boxing in public this afternoon and to After the secret workout with the heavyweights yesterday Demp sey probably will dox wnn me iigmer men in camp in the two final sessions with the gloves. The champion ana nis nanaiers niu no explanation to offer today for the secret ' workout late yesterday after nnnn wben he toiled for 55 minutes at top speed with no spectators watch ing him. Dempsey jworKea out in xne stuffy old hangar a quarter of a mile v.anr rf his ramn after announcement was made that he would take a day off. "Tart sHmnlv felt, he wanted to work and he decided to. do it on a minutes notice," said Teddy Hayes, trainer cf the champion. Perhaps the reason the titleholder decided to work in secret was to satis fy himself that he had not gone stale or slowed up in his boxing or foot work. Some noted trainers ana ar.a letes have been rather strong- in their criticism that thev believed Dempsey was too finely drawn, that he had over trained and was on the verge of going stale. But the champion, in his work out yesterday, satisfied those privileged to watch that he is at the top of his form and in no danger of going stalo. Dempsey had not finished arivins; nowerful riehts and lefts into the heavy felt stuffed bag before he broke out into profuse perspiration. He start ed his practice with three rounds of minohine the lisrht baer and then he waded into the heavy swinging target. He worked for nearly an nour wim only intervals of 30 seconds between three-minute rounds, eroiner two each with Eddie O'Hare and Larry Wil liams. The champion set a furious pace frnm th start. Ha hattered Williams with less consideration than the vet eran sparring mate desired. Several of his blows to the body forced Williams to grunt with pain and retreat. Secretly CARPENTIER . .....uv-v, a ., June 0s t young man in a blue sweater ta trousers stood inside thp ."a gra- Carpentier's training carcm tort wore no hat, and his hair hy Hs to the head, was hardly di.'-, I i v bicycle, "How's Georges tcX"0 i III illie lllUUh YOU. the at the gate said. "I am verv hnw tiro vnn9" ell a,; The youth realized thPn . talking to the challenger himself . aw, gee wniz, Georges " C" mournfully, "You ain't as good i! as you were," and Georges thr v his shoulders and laughed ac x esteraay tne tonsorial artist nr v hasset visited the camp with. h fe pers and when he went back t snop on iviannasset hill he carri 5 challenger's hair with him. tll( -Tnis," ne said, "is my S0Uvpn. H All members of the camp were 7' the challenger todav hptpa. s:yit almost bald pate and addressed hi ter the manner of the m' t' road, "Gee whiz, Georges." m After the mornine mn was prescribed for the Frenchman was said to hft wnrli. . ldn' h- noon with C!harla T.D" i.UyJ)efot! bantamweight champion, but thi port was not confirmed by his SOUTHERN LEAGUE STANDING OF THE CLrBS "XIU. on I ,nBf KINGSPORT MANAGER GETS TWO PITCHERS STANDING OF THE CLIMBS Club Won Ij03C Pet. Pittsburgh 43 21 .672 New York 40 25 .615 Boston .. 34 29 .540 St. Louis .. .. .. 34 32 .515 Brooklyn .. .. .. .. 32 34 .485 Chicago ... .. .. .. 28 33 .459 Cincinnati .. .. .. .. 26 38 .40G Philadelphia .... 18 44 .290 YESTERDAY'S1 RESULTS. Philadelphia 12; New York 8. Brooklyn .5; Boston 2. Chicago 3; Pittsburgh 10. St. Louis 2; Cincinnati 5. TODAY'S GAMES. New York at Philadelphia. Pittsburgh at Chicago. . Cincinnati at St. Louis. Only three scheduled. PmATES HIT FREELY. Chicago, June 27. Pittsburgh hit Vaughn and Jones freely today and easily defeated Chicago 10 to 3. Score by innings: Pittsburgh . . 013 000 22210 15 2 Chicago .. .. ..101 100 000 3 11 1 Morrison and, Schmidt, Skiff; Vaughn, Jones " and O'Farrell, Daly. , HOME RUN DAY. Philadelphia, June 28. Seven home runs,: five of them, by. the Phillies, featured Monday's 12 to 8 victory for the locals over . New York. Score by. innings: " New York 011 000 510 8 13 0 Philadelphia 241 021 02x 12 19 1 Douglas and E. Smith; Hubbell and Bruggy. ; FIVE FOR GRIMES. Brooklyn, June 28. Grimes, of Brooklyn,1 won his fifth consecutive game Monday when the Superbas de feated Boston, 5 to 2. Brooklyn bat ted Scott out of the ' box in the fifth inning. Score by innings: Boston .. .. ... .001 000-100 2 12 . 1 Brooklyn- 000 140 OOx 5 11 o Scott, Fillingim and Gibson; Grimes and Miller. Taylor. REDS WIN AT LAST. St. .Louis, June 28. Cincinnati broke its losing' streak Monday, scoring five runs ; in the second inning after two were out and defeating St.?-Loui3-5 to 2. ; Score by innings: 'r Cincinnati .. .. ..050 000:000 5 7 .2 St. Louis . . .. . .000 110 0002 7 5 Rixey arid Wingo; Walter, Riverie, Sherdell and Dilhoefer. HOW THEY BAT R H 0 2 Harry Ireland, manager of the Kings port team in the Blue Ridge League, was In Charlotte today. He is serir-L-ing for pitchers and got a coup -. Doc Ellis of Charlotte being turne'' over to him under an pional agreement, and Joyrer. cf Danville, being secured from Herb Murphy, of Danville. Ire lan is one of the most popular men who ever played ball in a Charlotte uni form. He is going good n) - with his Kingsport outfit hi th Blue Ridge.' DRIVE ON GAMBLING IN MINOR LEAGUES Rock Island, Ills., June 2. M- H. Sexton, president tf the national Asso ciation of Minor Leagues, tol y announ ced a " nation wide campaign against baseball pools wi I other forms of gamb ling based on the gam had been start ed. In a communio -.lion addressed to 400 officers of major and minor league clubs and baseball writers, Mr. Sexton ask ed "immedia' co-operative action in the interests of clean sports, respect for inw, protection of the youth and perpe tuation of basebal: '. Memphis , . 4S New Orleans .. .... 42 Little Rock .. .. ..39 Birmingham .... 39 Atlanta .-. ... .. Mobile . . ...... Nashville . . . . . , Chattanooga . . 34 33 29 19 22 30 28 31 34 41 44 50 Pet YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. Nashville 7-2; Atlanta 6-1. Mobile 3; Little Rock 5. Chattanooga 5; Memphis 10. TODAY'S GAMES. Memphis at Atlanta. ' Birmingham at Mobile. Little Rock at New Orleans. Chattanooga at Nashville. TWO FOR NASHYILLE. Nashville, June 28. Nashville wo: both games of a doubleheader froi Atlanta Monday afternoon 7 to and 2 to 1. Payne relieved Wade in the fifth and pitched beautiful ball, xie started ana nnisnea tne second game which went eight innings. Score, first game: Atlanta 220 100 001-6 10 Nashville 114 000 Olx 7 13 S Suggs and Schmidt; Wade, I'ayjt and Jonnard. Score, second game: Atlanta . ; . . ... .000 000 101 1 Nashville .. ..001 000 01-2 Si Bedgood and Schmidt; Payne si JonEard. NO MORE FINING FOR SALLY PLAYERS No more fines in the Sally is the word that comes from President Walsh. He has notified Felix Hayman that hereafter - obstreperous ball players are to be sent from park. ! The fine sys tem has worked very poorly in the Sally this yar. There is a suspicion that few of them stick. Hereafter, ac ording to the dope, the offenders will not be given a chance to pay but will have to get out of the park. That is expected to get results. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Toledo 8: Louisville 9. -Columbus 7; Indianapolis 8. St. Paul 1; Kansas City 9. Minneapolis 10; Milwaukee 5. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Jersey City 8; Toronto 11. Newark 5; Buffalo 6. Baltimore 10; Rochester 19. Reading 9-8; Syracuse 10-6. C05D3 FROM BEHIND. Chattanooga, June 28. Memphis made it three out of four from Chat tanooga Monday afternoon, winning 2 to 5 after overcoming a four-run lead Score by innings: Memphis 000 003 07-10 U f Chattanoopa . . . .020 200 01 5 11 4 (Called end 8th to catch train.) Mohart and Hungling; Morris and Neiderkom. EVEN SERIES. Mobile, June 27. Mobile evemd tb? series with Little Rock today by n ting Hengeveld, who was wild at times. and winning. 8 to 5. Srnrn hv inninGrs: Little Rock 000 020 012-5 11 I Mobile . 020 300 30x-8 13 Hengeveld and Land; Wells and Schulte. EARLE LIKELY TO UMPIRE IN SALLY Bay Earle, Blue RM$e umpire, in Charlotte today. Earle is lokomg for d job in the Sally, ana im - 1,0 v.o nHii trot it. FrtS dent Walsh notified Earle to see : he could get his release from rre- Earle, was awaiting a wire from vu toaay. Urban . . . . Midkiff . Knowlson ' . . Paschal O'Connell . Williams . . Kennedy Kirke .. -. ..41 Carroll ..'..v.. 21 Kingston 1 . . . . 6 Webber .. .. .. ,5 Gheen ...L. ..16 Wilson . '. . .". 18 Gatchel . . ... 7 Milner . .... 3 Higgins . . .. .. 1 GAB 1 3 6 15 3 5 60 214 57 203 56 206 43 114 151 57 2 6 0 2 46 73 31 66. 31 66 14 35' 23 44; 6 10; TB SB PO 2 : 0 .667 21 11 37 38 10 10 0 0 3 2 1, 0 1 b 10 0 3 0 97 13 93': 9 89 0 57 14 63 4 11' . 0 5 1 -400 .400 .341 .332 321 .308 ,225 .191 .191 "2- 0. .182 2-0 .081 7 1 .172 0 0 3 0 0 0 .100 .100 .000 KID LEWIS A CHAMP. London June 28. (By the Associated Press.) Ted "Kid" Lewis, Monday night defeated Jack Bloomfield on points in. a twenty-round bout fpr the middleweight championship of Eng land. , Te(f "Kid- Lewis was former welter weight champion of the world. He won the title i by defeating Jack Britton at Dayton, Ohio, in June, 1917, but the title - reverted to Britton in 1919 when Britton knocked Lewis out in nine rounds. Lewis, is an Englishman. FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE. . At Orlando; 5; Daytona 3. ' - Others : ram. - " Magneto, Generator, Starter Repairing This establishment with its fine shop facilities ?J skilled workmen, is particularly well prepared to m1 any repairs on MAGNETO, -GENERATOR AND STAL ER EQUIPMENT. y Phones 3121 and 2992 GARRETT SERVICE STATION Incorporated. r p 327 E. Trade St Charlotte, N. AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTORS Ea,t, Philadelphia Diamond Grid Batteries, Westinghouse, Htdorff Connecticut, Sims-Huff, Brings A : Stratton, Eiseman, Spui - . Delco Remy, Klaxon, .Sartn .TsS$t Blubs New shipments of golf clubs have just been received. All styf We are prepared to satisfy discriminating golfers. Carolina Sporting Goods Co. KVJffiKXTHKNCr FOR THE OUTDOOR MAJN m-' il 1 1 1 1 C " 5i West Fourth Street. tJust Off Tryon)
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 28, 1921, edition 1
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