Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 11, 1921 Page: 4 of 6
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WEDNESDAY, MAY II. 1921
TRICK BALL NOT
IN USE HEYDLER
TELLS SKEPTICS
• Ing the pellets.
Both are willing to open a ball if
it 1h necessary, to convince the
skeptic*.
MOGULS BELIEVE
BASEBALL MADE
'•teem after publicity was given to J^JWANIS TAKES
high commissioner to keep it clean
LEAD IN CLUBS’
MANY THINK EXTRAORDINARY
NUMBER OF HOME RUNS DUE
TO TRICK PELLET.
BASEBALL GAMES TODAY.
Southwestern League.
HAPULPA at Pittsburg.
Muskogee at Parsons.
Bartlesville at Coffeyvllle.
Miami at independence.
crookedness.
iwipp qpj pp'rirsjLj IsindiB was appointed baseballs
lot. jLLLL I 1UW and attempt to counteract the effect
_ of the publicity given crooked play
APPOINTMENT OF JUDGE LAND- ing.
IS AS HIGH COMMISSIONER
SAVES GAME KEEPING
BLACK EYE.
from center field and Miller was
placed in the -center field position.
The players, according to the bat-
ANNUAL AFFAIR ‘uZ.'-Z.r, a w,„ac„.
______ Bri-coe, If;' Bradley ss; Scott, rf;
DEFEATED Underwood, 1b; Howard, lb; Shu-
KANSAS MAKES
IT TWO FROM
SAPULPA TEAM
ROTARIANS ARE
National.
St. I-oulg at New York, clear.
Cincinnati at Brooklyn, clear.
Chicago at Philadelphia, clear,
rittbsurgh at Boston, cloudy.
By HBNRY L. FARR Kid.
(United Press Staff Correspondent.)
NEW YORK. May 11.—One hund
red and five home runs in the major
leagues in one month of slug cam
paigning ha* revived the trick hail
rumors of last year. ,
The 1920 season was thought to
bn the peak of long clouting, but
this new season promises t0 sur-
pass all marks.
Babe Ruth is two weeks ahead cloudy,
of his 1920 schedule and he has, Boston at Chicago, cloudy,
camping at his heels, a new Nation- Washington at Cleveland, clear.
al League King in George Kelly -
land several other near kings Southwestern Standing.
The known integrity of the Judg> AFTER HARD FfOUGHT CON- mard, p; Kinley, c.
his high standing in the public mind
has had a desired effect, according to
leading moguls. They point to the
large attendance records ascomplet
TEST BETWEEN ORGANIZA-
TIONS.
Rotary;—Masters, 2b; Boulton, c;
Holmes, p; Welch, .1b; Barton, cf;
.— , Hughes, lb; Pickett, ss; Thorpe,
In the annual baseball game be- lf and Foster> rf-
i tween tbc Kiwanis and (Rotary
6-2 SCORE TAKES LAST OF
COFFEYVILLE SERIES AWAY
FROM RAJAHS: TO PITTS-
BURG NOW.
CHICAGO May 11.- -Baeeball mag- proof of thig statemeniL
nates have succeeded In retaining Babe Ruth king of swat continue I . “ , „ .....~~~ ,...... * T" w»Trui^ __
.■ I.k , .W » , ... . . . . , ^ clubs at League Park yesterday WATCHING THE SCORE BOARD.
tRe faith of the American public Ini to be a drawing card. On severe ' v.. ,______ ......
the gauwe through giving Judge
K. M. Landis supreme (lower over
the sport.
This was shown today when fig
ures for attendance at the major
American.
New York at Detroit, clear.
Philadelphia at SL Louis, partly I league games throughout the coun-
try so far thfcc season were made
public Imre by the national com-
mission through the United Press
The average attendanee at games
so fur this year has been 4,000 and
around both circuits.
When eight homers
in one day, the fails perhaps should Pittsburg
be Justified in thinking that a lively Bartlesville
ball is in use.
Last year the
which set the pace in slugging, was Muskogee
charged with adopting a bull built SAPULPA
to fly over the fence. It was made Coffeyville
known, however, that the balls used
In the two major leagues were made
In the same factory anil were dif-
ferent only In the
occasions 30.0000 New York mad
fans Jammed the stands to see Rutl
kiss the apple for four base play.
WHO'LL WIN
PITTSBURGH. Pa. May 11. -
Harry Greb, prominent light heavy-
weight: a |W|«M|
“Carpentier is by far the best
Tiqun—
W.
L
Pet; 5.000 over that of last year.
Un-
Independence
.....10
5
.667 official
figures show the
major
Pittsburg ....
........9
6
.600 j leagues
are averaging about
22,000
Bartlesville
.....10
7
.588 persons
for seven games a
week
Miami .....
........9
8
.529 Nearly
3.000 more fans are
watch-
Parsons .....
.......8
8
.500^ Ing the
.474 I year, it
minors play daily than last
Muskogeei ...
..s.. .9
10
was estimated.
SAPULPA ...
........6
12
.331 Telegrams to the national
head-
Coffevvllle
........5
10
.133 quarters
here from magnates
and
managers all over
were unanimous in
the min try
declaring tha
KILLS DAUGHTER AND SELF.
BARNES. 'Ivans, May 10—L. D. j rr£d*l for ,h" increased popularity
color of the xpance, former president of a local °f U*e Ram® goes to Judge Iandls'
stitches and the names on the horse hinik. shot and killed his 15-yenr- announced determination and ef
hide. old invalid daughter and then com- forts to keep the sport clean
This year the National league Is mitted suicide late Monday. Spence
charged w ith putting out a t rick |la<j been
ball to help make some Babe Ruths months.
In the older circuit. _
"That talk is foolish. The hul
in ill
‘It is through your efforts to
health for several »the game of irregularities that
we are getting good crowds.” one
massage from a baseball leader tc
Landis read * J
of bribery
WOMAN DIES IN FIRE.
is exactly of the same composition CHICAGO. May 10.—An unidentl- After the revelation
as It ha-< been for years,” President f|e(i woman was burned to death' twl scandal in the gamp last winter
Hevdler raid. in a fire which destroyed the "Huen t-ase hall leaders feared it might
His statement Is confirmed by an imtol’ here todav. Six were carried hill the popularity of the sport with
official of the company niauufactur unconscious front the smoke. the public the Hanse racing fell in
afternoon the Kiwanis team won Yesterday's hero: Babe Ruth,
by a score of 18 to 13. [ He knocked his ninth homer aud
The game was replete with rut off two tuns with brilliant
thrilling plays and a few errors, catches in the Held, the Yanks
Some of the players had not heen beating the Tigers, 2 to 1.
out to indulge in the great national! Hornsby's four hits out °f four
game since the annual event a times up—two singles and a
year ago and so were not quite I double and a triple and his apectac-l
rounded into form. Whalt was j ular fielding helped the Cards beat
_ . . . lacking In flneese was more than the Giants, 7 to 6.
opponent the champion has ever__. . ... . „ . , „
, made up in enthusiasm, however,, Schultz and Young got homers,
met, but he doe8 not Impress me ... ...... .... , ., .
’ , both on the field aud In the grand- Alexander returned to the game
as ,ID* atur y enoug to Wlt stand, and the game was a hard after being out since the opening
' !'Uf °. mpsey. fought one until the finish. day and the Cubs beat the Phils,
lave seen tie rtiu man in ,u tioi Th,, Rotary Club started off in 6 to 2. Dutch Reuther turned the
il" l'l'‘ *01 ° Wlt' PI"PSP> the lead by running in three scores, tables on the Reds, the Brooklyns
e < amp on a 011 ' opp e l jfantiBrs, who later wa.s injured, beating his old teammates, 6 to 2.
l-renc man w t in tnee rounc s. | wag the first batsman up and Bagby and Caldwell were batted.
Carpenters on y ciame s 0 ; lind out a hit. Th‘- Rotarians. Mow- from the box and Washington whin-
ever, were not able to score in the P*d the Indians, 9 to 7.
next Inning, while the Kiwanis Boston celebrated Maranville day,1
players brought In one score in the and the Rabbit celebrated it also,
first and second innings. Each handed for the Pirates, 5 to 2.
- side made a score in the third and Faber’s fine pitching ‘enabled the
ATTELL HEARING SATURDAY, the Rotarians made two more in While Sox to beat the Red Sox.
NEW YORK, May 11.—Abe At the fourth and the Kiwanis three in 4 to 1. «/J f
tell, former feather weight chanv the same inning, evening up the
pion, named in the indictments in score, with a <5 to 6 count.
connection with the 1919 world' By hard playing the Kiwanis team HE KNOWS HE’S SUED
series scandal, will have a hear finally drew ahead of their oppon- MUSKOGEE. Okla., May 11.—L. D.
ing In a writ of habeas corpus ents. The game was called at the Martin. Muskogee, had to file a di-
here Saturday. end of the seventh inning. When vorce against himself l$e's the
After surrendering here yesterday Masters was injured in the second county clerk here. His wife alleges
be was released in $1,000 bail. inning 'Barton was brought in incompatiability.
Sapulpa dropped the final game
with Coffeyvllle by a 6 to 2 score
in the Kansas town yesterday after-
noon. The Coffeyvilllans fell on
Hickey hard in the opening innings
of the game and garnered enough
hits in three innings to win (lie
game
The batsmen from Sapulpa were
only able to get four hits off Pitcher
Green, performing for Coffeyville,
and squeezed their two runs 'torn
them Each team was credited
with one error. Hodge caught for
Sapulpa and Clanton for Coffey-
vllle.
Sapulpa goes to Pittsburg today
for the opening game of a series
there. Score of yesterday's game
by innings;
Sapulpa ......100 001 000—2 4 1
Coffeyvllle ... 123 000 00x-#i 11 1
score a one punch knockout in the
first few seconds. A body crusher
and a lightning left to the jaw
will finish Carpentier." ,
DOES A DOG THINK?
ROSTON. May 9.—IK>e„ a .log
think? John Chassion, whose dog
was killed by an automobile ..ays
he does. R. J. Donahue, driver, who
was sued for $1000 when he nib
over the dog. said the aninvtl e'thor
was not thinking or deliharntely
committed suicide. The dog , chose
the middle of the street to examine
his person for certain athletic and
hungry pests.
Herald Want Ada get result*.
the MERRY JOURNEYS or
MRIJANE^H
W$T
m
M
SS.
Sat
m
GP'GEL.
I
i n
"Do you know what in the very nicest ffn'ng in the world
to eat f" asked the wise old turtle
What the Wise Old Turtle told Mary Jane
A VERY wise old turtle lived in
Jl\ the pond at the edge of the wood,
near Mary Jane’s house. This turtle’s
name was Dotty Dots.
One day, when Mary was minding
her little brother, Bobbie, Dotty
waddled up to her, cocked his head
on one side, and said: “Do you know
what is the very nicest thing in all
the world to eat?”
Mary Jane said No, she didn’t.
There were so many nice things to eat.
So Dotty said. “Well, you ought
to know, for it’s named after youl
It’s Mary Jane Syrup, and it’s per-
fectly delicious on waffles, or pan-
cakes, or spread on bread. It is just
what Bobbie and you need.”
Mary Jane and Bobbie ran home
and told their mother what Dotty
Dots said, and their mother said, “Is
that so? Well, we’ll get some right
away and see.”
That very night they had Mary
Jane Syrup for supper. It was so
sweet and pure and delicately-flavored
that Mary Jane’s mother made up
her mind that !they never would be
without it in the house again.
And they never were. *
LOOK FOR the next atory about "Mary Ja.
and the Big Wolf.”
FREE
from can of Mary Jane Syrup. Write Com Product* Relining Company, Argo, Illinois.
Your Grocer’s Best
Customers
come back for more Mary Jane
Syrup after trying it. You too
will always want Mary Jane
—it has a delicious sorghum fla-
vor and is great for pancakes,
hot biscuits and corn bread.
Costs you less than most
syrups. Get a can today at
your grocer’s.
MARY JANE SYRUP
WITH THAT DELICIOUS SORCHUM FI AVno
WALLACE-McVAY BROKERAGE CO.
Local Sale* Representative
* E'1 1 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
\
THE U. S. ROYAL CORD
A famous tiro—and a famous tread.
Acknowledged among motorists and
dealers alike as the world's foremost
example of Cord tire building. Al-
ways delivering the same repeated
economy, tire after tire, and season
after season.
Tiro stripe around the sidewall is
registered as a trade-mark in the U. S.
Patent Ofbce.
Ctj
Jlow you can measure
tire value in 1921
* Any V S T>r*
II « RIHYSflll
ft# II - monsy '•
worth ’’
/'"\FTEN it’s surprising the number
of different tire views that come
out in a chance talk at the curb or in
the leisure of a friend’s garage.
Almost every day you come
across the man human enough
to believe he can outguess
the cut-price tag on “job-
lots,” “discontinued lines” and
“surplus stocks.”
His opposite is the hard-
pan car owner who sticks
year in and year out to a
standard brand as the only
rational economy.
Many will remember the scarcity
of U. S. Tires last year.
A hardship at the time, but a bene-
fit now. There are no U. S. Tires to be
worked off—no accumulations—no
forced selling of any U. S. brand — no
shipping of tires from one part of the
country to another to "find a market.’1
There are 92 U.S. Factory Branches.
Each one gets its share of U. S. Tires.
There is a broad, constant, even dis-
tribution of U. S. Tires always going
on from these Branches to the dealer.
Buy a U. S. Tire anywhere ^
—in a community of500people
or even less—and you get a
fresh, live tire of current
production—with all the orig-
inal service and mileage the
factory put into it.
The owner of a medium or
light-weight car stands on
equal ground with every other
car owner.
Any United States Tire is a uni-
versal full money’s worth—backed up
with a leadership policy of equal
quality, buying convenience and price
for everybody.
\\
"Tho different
tire views that
come out in e
chenne talk. "
United States Ures
United States Rubber Company
O. H. EDEN, EDEN TIRE SERVICE, SAPULPA.
C. B. COX, BUICK CO., SAPULPA.
1
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 11, 1921, newspaper, May 11, 1921; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1520850/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.