Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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SHERMAN DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1922.
SHERMAN BEATS UACUE
LEADERS BY BIG SCORE, AH
. HANDS HIDING THE PHI1
yay. Hut first iMUcman. farin' in and
got the put out at the plate. Some
| more nice coaching on Glenn's part,
and this pluj was the turning point of
jibe fame for our Imi.tr took on all the
pep In the world after this play and
I hnmnu pal Mr Lofty Yeager to a fare
the well.
LIND, NEW RED SOX MOUNDSMAN, HOLDS
VISITORS TO SIX SCATTERED HITS-
WAS A GREAT DAY FOR
i I THE HOME TEAM.
Stock yards Pomltortmi In back on
the Ardmore <7uh for al«»ut the fourth
time. "Penili" has Ik'cii with Ardmore
this season and ban lieen on every club
in
At the Gent.
Indicative of the consummate artis-
try of •‘Without Limit," the 8-L pic-
ture released by Metro, and now ahow*
Theatre,
unexpected kind
it tlie offerings
looked at since Ferguson pitched his
no diff"game. 'Sweet Find." Sher-
man's new box artist «m using his
Sherman flarired an
of stick work agaim
of Lefty Yeager in Monday * Ardmore Uubraarlne delerery ami had tlicArd-
game. After batting the portable, lllore heavy hitter eating out of ids
twirler consistently for six innings, the hand.
Red Sox In the seventh opened up a
fusillade which sent him to the bench
and brought Bob Crowe, Sherman
east-off, to the mound to officiate the
rest of the way. Bob let his former
teammates down with two hits, one of
, v Which scored a ran started off of Yea-
ger, in the inning and a third ho werk-
» ed . The final score was 8 to 2.
* With Lind holding the league lead-
. ing Producers to six hits, Ida team-
* autea, led by Fortier and McCall.
Matted a dme early In the game for
safe btffc off Yeager's tu-- up, which
continued through the I ^
tier began his good work In {he first
when bin double scored Giles, who had
J forced Pee Woe Lewis, after hitting,
< and stealing.
{ Kelly started the fifth with a dou-
' ble and reached third when Ltud lifted
' a high‘one to Boggus in right w htch
a Ht square In the managers glove, only
J to fait by the wayaWe When the am
blinded him. Pec Wee came through
with a needed sifigle to right, enabling
i Kelly to score. Giles advanced them
a notch with his out. , Fortier laid one
down third base on the hit and run,
and Lewis started up from second,
but Lind failed to get off on the signal,
and while-Fortier easily beat out the
bunt, Lind was touched out by Yeager.
Fortier and Lewis then engineered a
double steal, Lewis sliding home un-
der the throw and Fortier taking sec-
ond.
McCall began tig work in the sixth
when he singled to enable McKay to
score after Mac had walked and gone
to second on Beaman's sacrifice.
Supine Gets Two-Bagger.
With one down, Giles started the
damagiug work of the seventh by look-
ing over four wide ones. Fortier got
on by his third lilt, and Giles and For-
tier came 'round when Pete Bupina
atme through wltt^a crash to center
good for two bags. Yeager tightened
long enough to fan McKay, but Sea-
wan was bla undoing. The eenterfield-
« picked a shoulder high one, smack-
ed It cleanly and gave it a ride to the
boards in Ms own territory, for a half-
way trip aronnd the bags, while 8u-
ptna completed bis trip. Boggus wig-
wagged the a. o. s. to Crowe and mo-
tioned Yeager to the bench. The change
Wade no difference to McCall, who did
not let Seaman expire on the b»js. A
single to left scored him.
Errors played a port in both of Ard-
My reward still holds good. A left
handed pitcher hasn't won a game
from our boys since Heck wr.s a pup,
for our lsiys sure do maul the fork
hand pitchers at Fair Park. Wish they
would pitch another left hander Tues-
day.
Ihe league except Mexla and Corel- .
and mated he hadn't missed a |MjI‘oclnd» 1>uvk‘s Vable' a
rani)
mcttl all year,
Baseball Calendar
TK XAS-OKLAHOMA LEAGUE.
Monday's Results.
Corsicana 12, Greenville 8.
Bhermail 8, Ardmore 2.
Itonliam M, Cleburne 1.
____ sculptress, was < nniinissictfcMl
!th make the figure of the God «f
! Cl a lice presiding over the gambling
house iu which a part of the action of
this picture transpires.
The figure, known us The Dicer, It
a life-size model In clay, and is repre-
sented in r. aemi-kneeliug iwsture in
Faith," to the scaffold,
If all the penalties Inflicted-on hu-
manity through miscarriage of justice
hy circumstantial evidence could be
is the fact nubmlM red it would keep a tabulating
well- machine buay for a century running
Off n number a second. *
~ Without”glancing further barlwthan
yesterday over the court calendars of
*hhe world und summing np verdicts
obtained, and Judgment rendered sole-
ly on grounds of circumstantial evi-
dence. are you not appalled!!!
annuals Boy Graduate*.
J. J. Bcarborough retained to Bher-
man Monday from a three weeks visit
in Richmond. Va., and Washington, D.
C. While in the latter city he attend,
ed the graduation exerclaea of his son,
Walter Scarborough, formerly of 8her.
man, from a Washington City H{gh
School among a class of 243 students.
Mr. Scarborough algo told of seeing
fofmrr President Woodrow Wilson en-
tering a theatre In Washington and of
a great (ovation given him. He visited
Mount ^Vernon, George Washington's
home, on' the way home. He states that
his son, Walter, will remain in Wash-
ington, where other members of the
family are residing at present
HALL A HARE
INSURANCE
PUm 40. Commercial Nttwn
mr
<ih*
Monday was one day t|ini (be club
got good pitching and of course there
is fftihlng wrong with one hitting, for
the puye uie getting front 10 la 14 hits
Fee- ps*. day, and with good pitching we
oiiglifto never loo#* a game.
Pole Kat was hitting in regular Big
league form. Just as soon as the
Scouts get out of town our gang goes
(o playing hall like real ball players.
I hope that when the next scout hits
town thnt nb one will tip onr boys off,
for they just can't play hall w'ten one
of those hawks is in the stand.
"Bwect Lind" would have liad a
shut out only for an error by Lewis
and Giles which gave Ardmore their
two runs.
Larry Beamon, who all the slmrlte
say can’t hit a left handed pitcher,
whacked Yeager for a double and sin-
gle. He hit his double over Jones'
head in deep center which was
mighty wallop. Well all 1 can say is
this, that Larry hits better off left
handers than he does right handers.
Iu fact the way Larry is going now
he would hit most any old thing—his
mother-in-law, if he had one.
. Pee Wee Lewla is getting his two
hits per day regular now and is fast
climbing Into the 300 class and s will
be over that mark by next Sunday,
when the next averages come <out.
Pete Bupina got a two base hit in
the pinch with two men on ami salted
the old game away.
Pole Kat broke Pee Wee Is>wis?
favorite bat and of eourae Kat struck
out after he got another bat. P.-e Wee
saya he can hit with any old bat. They
all look alike to him.'
Faria 6,
Mexla 5.
“"I
Standing
\ !
Club-
F.
W.
U
Pet.
Ardmore ..
...... 15
10
5
.667
Paris .........
14
8
6
.571
Mexla .......
........ 13
6
.538
Sherman .
......... 15
7
8
.467
Bonham ...
.......... 15
7
8
.467
Corsicana
....... 13
6
7
.362
Greenville
.......... 14
6
8
.429
Cleburne .
_________ 15
6
9
.400
| the act of throwing'dice held In hU
extended hand. It is before this altar
iu the temple of chance Hint Clement
i'Palter, the proprietor of-the gambling
'house, makes his daily genuflection tta
a ceremony and a rite iu the curious
and in
When Giles
Tiuesdale's offerings, in succession.
Lind’s hits were kept perfectly scat-
tered. »<;
The Box Score.
Ardmore—
AB R H PO A
Glopp, if ------------ 3 0 0 0 0
Trnesdale, at ........ 3
toggus. rf -................ 3
Young, lb ...... 4
Jones, cf ..........4
Behrens, s ... 4
0 0
0 2
Mokes, 3b
Pembertoa
Yeager,
Crowe,
•Jlillard
2
0
0 10
0 3
1 1
1 0
0 take him out. Why, the best of them
make errors.
Totals ....... 33 2
♦Batted tot Pemberton in 6th.
Sherman—
1'V AB
0 muse errors. I remember I made s«V-
0 eral errors when I was in the meat
0 T 1 yra>i sluing meat on
S i U "°4 wt’othsTT one was when'l
0 0 10 ftyugbl l knew saftfething about poli-
• O' O ' Q*tm—W don't ride a guy when he
JsunkeH an error for it lakes a smart
1 man to make an error.
— vr ---ur
6 24 13 *-
Lewis, ss _
Giles, 2b ...
Ffertler, 3b
8urflna, rf-lf
McKay, lb
Seaman, cf .....
Higginbotham, if
Kelly, c...........
itoCatl, rf
H Pt) A B
2 13 1
r*r—-
34
8 13 27 12 3
Innings— R H H
au ......— 100 021 40*—8 13 3
tore 001 010 000-2 0 1
mmary—
a-hase hits—Boggus, Fortier. 8u-
Beifcari, Kent TMve-base httk
— Behrens, Giles. Sacrifice hits —
Otopp, Beaman. Doable plays-Lewte,
GUes and McKay; Yeager. Behrens
and Young.. Innings pite^pd—By Yea-
ftcr. 0 2-3, With II hilts and 8 runs;
j Crowe 1 1-8 with 2 hits and 0 runs.
1 Btruelf out—By Und 2, Yeager 4,
Crowe L Bases on ball*—Off Lind 2;
off Yeager A Losing pitcher—Yeager.
Stolen bases—Lewla, Giles, Fortier.
Time of game—1 hour and forty-five
miqutee. Umpire—Spencer.
FOLOWING THEL GAME.
By JOHN ARNOLD.
Ffahs who mliaed Monday's game
II* misted a treat for the Red Box
showed a reversal of form and came
back with a bang. They played like
Big Leaguers and made Ardmore look
like a hunch of amateurs.
But, remember the Sox got about the
leanest pitching that the fans have
MHBli
Where They Hay Tuesday.
Paris at Mexia.
Greenville at Corsicana.
Roubam at Cleburne.
Ardmore at Sherman. ,
TEXAS LEAGUE
Monday’s Results.
Dallas at Wichita Falls, train delay.
Fort Worth U, Shreveport 2.
San AutOnio 7, Beaumont 6.
Galveston l), Houston 6.
■ . Standing
Club—
P.
w.
L.
ret.
Fort Worth
11
10
1
.909
Galveston ..........
10
8
2
.800
Dallas ...........------
10
6
4
.600
Ilea n mont ............
9
4
5
.444
8a n Antonio ......
10
4
6
.400
Houston .....(.........
9
3
6
.333
ShreveiKirt .........!
11
3
8
.273
Wichita Falls ....
10
2
8
.200
i Where They Play Tuesday.
Dallas at Wichita Falls.
Fort Worth at Shreveport.
Beanmont at San Antonio.
Houston at Galveston.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday’s Results.
Philadelphia 5, Chicago 2.
8t. Louis 5-3, Boston 4-4.
Detroit 8. Washington 2.
Three scheduled.
Club—
Standing
P. W.
L.
Pet.
St. Louis ...
......... 81
48
.33
.593
New York
......... 82'
47
35
.573
Detroit ____
........ 81
42
.39
.519
Chicago ......
------ 79
41
.38
.519
Washington
........ 78
37
41
.474
Cleveland ...
_______ 80
36
44
.450
Boston .......
........ 79
35
44
.413
Philadelphia
...... 74
31
4.3
.419
Where
They Pla;
Y Tuesday.
Fans. I sat behind the players'
bench and it is worth the money to
^ . . b,“!lr "ls»y Glenn" coach the lioys.
Mores runs and but for these wlsplays The bases were full and one out and
Und would have had a ahut-mrt game. Heggs Young, a dangerous hitter at
Yeager .cured in the third op Boggus' (he bat and the infield thawed in. hut
double after Bving on Lewi, misplay, oD-rm told Pt* Wee to get l«ck an.T
PU5 ^ f°r •- 1- «*o“ed
hobbled on Ctopps and bl ck ntJ(1 BubK(| hlt th<> r|gbt
hia hand and Pee Wefe got his man at
i the plate. If he had stayed in close
[two funs would have scored for Pee
j Wee never would have gotten close to
E the drive. That's real head work and
0 it wins if yon play it straight through,
GUes booted a couple and a few of
J thd grand stand managers boUowed |o
Chicago at Washington.
St. Louis at New York.
Detroit at Philadelphia.
Cleveland at Boston.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday's Results.
Cincinnati L Philadelphia 7.
New York 19-4, Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 4. Boston 0.
St. Louis 4, -Brooklyn L
Club— P. W. L.
New York ............71 46 25
8t. Louis -------.... 79 47 32
Chicago ------------ 76 41 35
Brooklyn .... ...... 78 40 38
Cincinnati „..L..... 78 39 39
Pttrsbtffgji ..... 77
riilladelphi,
Bostbn
Where They Hay Tuesday.
Boston at Pittsburgh.
Brooklyn at ' Cincinnati.
New York at Chicago.
Philadelphia at St. Louis.
aa Important part in moulding the des-
tinies cf tb v characters in the story.
Roulette wheels and gambling para-
.467!Plemalla oi all description occupy ttrj
', at which stand all manner of
men in evening dress engaged in play-
ing the games of chance. It is to this
scene that Marlowe and Kmbcr enter
following the drunken party at which
they both, in a moment of mad intoxi-
cation, decide to get married; and it
is In this seen that Marlowe loses at
play and then forges the check that
brings so much trouble to him and ills
wife.
“Without Limit" was adapted and
directed by George D. Baker from
Calvin Johnston's feature story in the
Saturday Evening Post, and presents
Anna Q. Nilsson in the featured role,
with an all-star supporting east, In-
cluding Robert Frazer, Thomas W.
Ross, Robert Schable, Frank Currier
and Charles Lane.
V At the Washington.
Circiimstawtlal evidence has been
the bane Of the law ever since Nero
fiddled and Rome burned to the
ground - tv ' -
The early Christians were thrown
to the Is'asts a|id made torches of,
with circumstantial evidence as the
excuse.
Nathan Halo
cumstantial eri
Aadre.
Circumstantial evidence has broken
many* Innocent hearts. Add is the
backbone of "The Lying Truth," the
photodrnmn at the Washington thea-
tre Tomorrow gqij Thursday.
The French Bastile was the great-
est monument evpg erected to clrpnm-
stantial evidence. It was filled with
innocent victims of a despotjc^ mon-
archy.
Henry the Eighth made circumstan-
tial evidence an excuse for beheading
his wires. He also mnde it the ex-
eusri for sending Thomas More, the
man whose treatise "Asserto Defenso-
ruin Septpm Saeramentorum" made
the royal autocrat a "Defender of the
Buy It In Sherman
•• S' •
Help Fight the Boll Weevil—
MHke Grayson Prosperous.
was Ihe victim of eir-
Jenoe; so was Major
fi£'"
.500
•46S
,380
.3ll
10*
They are GOODf
■ Pole Kat is fast climbing up to the
400 mark with his bat, since the sec-
^nd half started. Kat is slanting that
old agate for a row of Mexican shan-
tler every day. Stay in there Kat, you
will he in the Big Show next year.
Ezra Glenn will pitch Tuesday and
all I hope is that the gang makes a
few runs for him. If they do its good
t ight to Ardmore. I think the boys
try too haixl when Jssy is pitching, for
they wonid rather win a game for Issy
than get a raise In their pay for Issy
is ihe. most pppular player on the club
with the Imys. Well gang go up there
Tuesday just like you didn’t care and
a’.am them Ardmore pitchers all over
the lot. Issy will do the rest.
fyillette 7$-
Itcre Is a good one; A kid came up
to me and said. “John I would rather
read your stuff in The Democrat, than
read the funny paper.” Well Just tell
the Editor of this paper that. See.
Hush up little “Roiitln Ear.” D^n’t
yon cry, you will lie producing songs
In the sweet by and bye.
Manager Higginbotham took him-
self out of the game and sent pitcher
McCall to right field and all Mack
done was to get a double and single
off Mr Yeager in two times at bat.
Catcher Kelley broke up the aqueeue
flay on Behrens and Wokes. with
Woke* at the bat and Behrens on
third. Kelley cdlled for a pitch out
And got the fleet-footed Behrens be-
twtx-lr third and home. Practically the
Whole team took part In the play. Me-.
4*
with 3
genuine
Gillette I
In all the world there*e <no
•have like a Gillette ehave
The only way to get a
Gillette shave is with
a Gillette Razor
Here1
s a genuine
Gillette for $1—the
“Brownie” with 3 fine
Gillette blades
u\
WALK A FLIGHT
AND SAVE
feme np where prices are down—
where y„u can find all the latest
dories--plus the best that can be
■ad In quality, without the ground
floor price.
Upstairs Shoe Store
Maf \1 flnns4imaa^d^ -, . _
»*♦ sv* ocarDruugn.
AUSTIN COLLEGE
Y.M. C. A.
Swimming Pool
NOW OPEN
If you want a cool, clean swim,
come to the College Swimming
Pool. Water changed every
week.
OPEN FROM 7:30 A. M. T
10:00 P. M.
We reserVe the morning, 7:30
to 12 o’clock noon, for Ladies
Only.
15c.
FULLER & McELROY, Mgn.
Protect tKe battles
T ULY and August are oftema dan-
J gerous time for babies. The
heat exhausts their little bodies;
the first hot weather after wean-
ing is a real crisis.
It is extremely important that baby’s
niillr be fresh and pure. It does little
good to sterilize bottle and nipple if the
milk itself gets stale.. And that can easily
happen if milk gets warm; in unchilled
milk bacteria multiply rapidly.
The cheapest protection you can buy for
baby this summer is ice—enough to keep
the refrigerator cold.
>\ %r
SHERMAN ICE CO.
Phones 90 sad 91
MEMBER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OP ICE INDOSXSfli J
- 163 W* Wmtdngm Stmt. CSir^t, IBtmt, J
Daily Lessons
hi Domestic Economy
EAJ- economy oonsista o^^pending your money
where you’ll-get the greatest satisfaction and service
J1" ' ^ C, J'; ’« _
it is possible to get for the amount you spend.
It consists of weighing and choosing the things you would
like to buy—selecting the ones that will give you the most
enjoyment—then seeing that you get full dollar for dollar
value. , -.4 -N
Every day, simply by reading the advertisements in this
paper, you can take a lesson in household economics.
The advertisements teach efficiency in buying. They
show th^ best markets. They lighten your housework
by telling ybu about the newest conveniences and labqr-
saving devices. They give you a line on a thousand and
■ '
one things that will help you materially.
'' ^, , . .-if!-. -T V " 1; ' ' “v ...
_ .... 1 ' f ' • W*'
If you want a real leswon in economics—every day—read
V‘
the advertisements.
-OSJJTR SAMCTY RAZOSCO. I
f
.14.9. A.
'
:iSL.
• . ..l-' -
AV '
y
mM
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 216, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 11, 1922, newspaper, July 11, 1922; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth719939/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .