Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 19, Hammond, Lake County, 8 June 1912 — Page 3

June 8, 1D12.

THE TIMES.

KAUFMANN & WOLF, HAMMOND. IND.

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3E

OR

LEIFIELD VltlS HIS FIRST GAWE AS CUB

New York. June 8. Mr. Chance defied the laws of nature and "the statutes of baseball yesterday and got away with It. Against the fourth left-hander to

face the Cubs in as many days, he

pitched Lefty Llefield and Lefty won his first game as a Cub, 7 to 2. The presence of Leifleld In the batting. or

der gave Earl Ylnglins six left-handed hitters to deceive. He deceived them most of the time, but was so wild that

he didn't have a. chance to win.

Lelfield pitched wonderful ball after the first Inning. The Dodgers got four

hits, but only two of them were clean.

From the first round to the fini3h two measly infield singles were all that

Lefty allowed. He worked with his

usual Intelligence and had plenty of stuff to back his opinions. The rule was to see three Dodgers die in a row. An occasional base on balls and the two scratch hits before mentioned hardly served to break the monotony of Brooklyn's feeble attack. Lefty got

some good support from Sheckard, Tinker and Zimmerman, but he really didn't , need it. Only two or three Dodgers managed to hit the ball hard. It would have been a pretty battle If Tingling had possessed control. The clergyman's boy dealt out six passes and the thing that hurt him most was that he 'bunched them. He recovered his aim. In the fifth inning and had little trouble thereafter. Schulte got half the bases on balls and scored three of the seven runs. . ' When Tingling finally did manage to get the ball over to Frank, the latter pounded It on the nose for one of the longest triples ever made on these here grounds. Most of the excitement

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was crowded into the first and fourth acts. The fourth was full of human interest. Before its completion Bill Dahlen had been put off the field by Bill Klem and Tingling had passed remarks that were anything but proper from a minister's son. Klem threatened to exile him, also, but was good enough to keep him in so that Cap Tinker could assure a Cub victory with a very timely double. The bases were full of Cubs and two were out when Tingling began to kick. He thought Klem was handing him the worst of It on a pitch to Tinker. Bill called it a ball and it put the young

southpaw in a hale. He barked loudly and Klem walked right out to the box and told him to repeat the noise. Earl refused to do so and thus was saved from banishment. After Tinker had cleaned up the tases Bill Dahlen started yelping from the bench and was

canned for it. The crowd then took up

the strain, but Klem nad no authority

over it. He had to be content to make faces at two or three of the most pest

iferous bugs. The usually good-natured Mr. Sheck

ard beefed himself out of the battle, too, but this didn't happen until the ninth. Sheckard sent a single down the right "foul line and mistook It for a double. He was nipped at second; at least, so Mr. Bush said. Sheckard claimed that Hummel hadn't tagged him and he claimed it so annoylngly

that he got an early start to the clubhouse. Wilbur Good got the Job of left fielding and accumulated one put out. Jimmy .Archer was back behind1 the bat and caught Lelfleld gracefully. Jim's single in the third led to Tingling's undoing.

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JACK RESUMES WORK;

FLYNN IMPROVING-

East Las Vegas. X. M., June 8. It cost Champion Jack Johnson two days of work to fill a theatrical date in Santa Fe last night. He made the seventymile trip in his big racing auto. Johnson left at 10 o'clock yesterday morning and returned shortly after 2 o'clock this morning. With the legislature In session in San Fe, practically every one of the New Mexico senators attended the performance. When Johnson reached his training camp this afternoon he donned his road togs, and in company with Marty Cutler and George De Bray, ispent two hours running over . the mountain roads. "I'll get down to work In earnest again tomorrow," stated Johnson.

"As I am down to 222 pounds it won't

hurt if I miss an occasional afternoon in the gymnasium." That Jim Flynn's form is improv

ing as a result - of Tommy Ryan's

coaching was again proved this after

noon.

SENATORS PUT 3RD KIBOSH Ot! THE SOX

Washington put the third straight kibosh on the White Sox yesterday, winning a pitchers' battle between Aid. Frank Lange and Robert . B. Groom, 4 to 2. Incidentally It was the seventh

straight cop f0r '-the Senators. , Griffith's men reserved their ammunition until near the finish and devoted their early toil to keeping the locals from doing things. In that they were extremely clever. Up to the last half of the ninth Inning Callahan's kids were able to count only one run and that was made by their oattery. Block and Lre. , For six sessions it looked as If that bachelor tally would be sufficient to give the former Wausau alderman a

double-barreled victory, for he permitted only one htt to be made In those rounds. That arrived after two were gone. But in the seventh, Eddie Foster showed his lack of patriotism and

his value to, his team by. starting a

dash which carried, the Senators Into

the lead by one lap. Lange held them In the eighth, during which he lamed some of the muscles of his neck. He

showed the result in the ninth by emit ting two bases on balls and one ex

tremely wild pitch, which with one safe

hit, netted the enemy the two tallies by

which it triumphed.

The White Sox were desperate in their last half and tried to rally in

the old way, but fell short. In this ef

fort they were blocked by one of the breaks which used to happen in .their facor Instead of against them, .ping

Bodle, who resigned from the Aggra

vating Order of Cloud Busters and hit

'em all on the ground, tried to bust a

wheel off Kddle Foster, but said wheel

diverted the blow to McBride and rob

bed us of at least one runThere was additional gloom about the park before the scrap, for the early mail brought the news that Ed Walsh had drawn a five-day suspenelon for what he stopped to tell Umpire Silk O'Loughlin after being ordered out of Thursday's game. Shortly afterward word was received from Rollie Zeider's quarters that the first sacker would be unable to play Indefinitely. A badly wrenched shoulder is the cause. Zelden got It in the. last inning of Thursday's game while trying to tag Gandll on a throw to catch the runner napping on first. A slight dislocation and some strained ligaments were the result, and although Zeider was able to stick through that ninth Inning it is uncertain when he can resume operations. . Manager Callahan gave Fournier a

MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS

AMERICAN LEAGUE.

W. L. Prt. CHICAGO SO IT .638 Boatoa 27 18 .600 WmUartoa 25 21 .M3 Detroit 25 22 .532 Philadelphia 21 10 .S20 Cleveland 22 21 .512 ?Sn , York 14 27 .341 j St. Louis.. ...13 32 .289

Yesterday's Results. WuUattoa, 4; ChlcsLn-a, 2. ' JJew York, 7; Cleveland, 0. Detroit, 4 1 Boston, 3. Philadelphia, 9; St. Louis, 4. Gamea Today. Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. rrv York at Cleveland. Boston at Detroit. NATIOJTAL l.EAGVE.

W. New York. ............ .-.33 Cincinnati 24 CHICAGO 23 PMtafeurn- ' . .... 21 St. Louis . 21

Philadelphia 17 Brooklyn ..13 Boston 13

Yesterday's Results. ChJcnn-o, 7 1 Brooklyn, 2. New York, 7 Cincinnati, . Philadelphia, B St. Louis, 4. Pittsburg, 4 Boston, 0. , Gamea Today. Chieaa-o at Brooklyn. Pittsburg at Boston. Cincinnati at New York. St. Lonla at Philadelphia.

I. T 19 18 19 26 21 28 31

Pet. .S25

.578

541

.825

.447 .447

.333 .205 8

fying him of his suspension for having upbraided Umpire Silk O'Loughlin too strenuously Thursday afternoon when the arbitrator called a balk on Walsh. This fighting spirit, characteristic of the Sox sine Callahan assumed command, hasn't helped the south aide cause to any material degree. "Cal" has engaged in no fewer than six heated arguments with the umpires over questionable decisions and has drawn one suspension, this a three-day sentence. Black bu me was laid off for an indeterminate period only a. few days aero. Now Walah Is the victim. Ag

gressive tactics and a general tendency to juggle his pitchers is getting

to be a chronic habit with the Sox man ager.

Last season Roger Bresnahan btiroed up his staff In much the same manner.

compelling the hurlers to work either

on the slab or in warming up each, aft

ernoon. By mid-season tne rast mov

ing Cardinals bumped Into all sorts of

trouble and rapidly parted company

with the exalted position they had at talned through the extraordinary ef forts of their pitchers.

The La Vendor Cigar Is a home protect. Nona batter.

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GILL JOINS SOX. Bloomlngton. Ind., June S. Andy GUI, captain of the Indiana University 1911 baseball nine has been notified to report . in Chicago" next Wednesday to Manager Callahan of the White Sox. Gill has played short stop at Indiana for the last three years. It Is said that ha was recommended by Mike Meyers of Chicago, who umpired all the conference games played by Indiana this season. . James M. Sheldon, football coach at Indiana, also recommended Gill. Gill was captain of last season's football eleven and' also starred in track athletics.

chance at first basing and the Boston discard justified the choice by taking care of his Job in tip-top shape. Block donned the mask and mitt and found his broken finger quite fully recovered. With Fournier and Block in the game and Lange on the slab Manager Callahan had what he believes to be his strongest hitting combination in action.

WALSH DRAWS SUSPENSION Another member of the White Sox machine has. been awarded "time off'' at the instance of President B. B. Johnson of the American league. This time the mailed fish of the league papa has fallen upon "Big Ed" Walsh and the spitball king will do penance for five days. Arriving at Comiskey park yesterday Walsh received a message' noti-

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