Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 46, Hammond, Lake County, 11 August 1919 — Page 3

Monday. August 11. 1019.

THE TIMES.

Pate Thrco

FATHER TIME HAS FAILED TO HALT THESE VETERANS

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Upptr right Is Larry Doyle. Closeup i of Terry Turner. Jimmy Austin ia spcann? one and Slim Salle ia lobbing one over. The battinjr and fielding averages show that several of the old boys who have been starring for years and years are still defvine time and are coatinuinc their classy work.

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GARY JUST SLAUGHTERED

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ftM good for a couple of more runs, j romn f 3 Cronm and Moil crossed the plate on j i&0 3 4

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lng; into ine uu-ntr, causing mm to limp; the rest of the afternoon. With two j runners waiting to score Kennedy cam" j through with what looked like a long

Thompson, lb.

TfS-" 0 10 4 1 1 2 0 1 18 0

Totals S3 7 11 27

double to loft field but he slipped and j Gary

THAI'S AL

There ar a ha!f dozen priiri" teams around Hammond who are fiKhrinp to ret thfi first challf-npe to the Gary basta!I aggregation which was going to do such terrible things to Manager Nagel's husky outfit yesterday. Th.i probability is that any one. of the prairie ttams could heat Gary and they certainly w-culd If they played no better than they did in the awful rout at th" Hammond ball park. Hammond easily defeated Gary yesterday afternoon in a one-sided game that would have been de-void of features only for "Keekie" Moll who was the ftir ft the afternoon with four safe clouts in an equal number of times at bat. giving him a perfect average of 1,0'ifl for The day. Hammond served up the came In the econd inning. AValsh st:irtd with a single to right, , Wallace laid flown a bunt and Walsh beat the throw at second. Cronin -worked Ixverctt for a pass i'i'hng the bases with none down. Moll. rxt up. got his first hit. a line single to left, scoring Walsh with th firs' run of 'he game. Buckeye struck out on three fx bails and Thompson forced Wallace at the plate on a rap to Cook. With two flown JUiode cracked a safe cne in right

fell rounding first base and was an easy out trying to reach second on the hit. All told Hammond scored five runs In this inning on four hits, a base on balls and a fielder's choice. There was nothing further doing on either side, until the eighth when Hammond scord two more runs cn four clean blows. Moil started the inning with his fourth hit of th eday. Buckeye followed with a single to right and Moll scored on Thompson's safe drive to right center. Buckeye and Tommy, the two slowest men on the team. tried to amuse the fans with a double steal but Buckeye was an easy out at the plate. After Rhode went out. pitcher to first. Kennedy got his first extra base hit of the season, a long double to left, scoring Thompson. Kennedy was out at third on a close play when he tried to stretch the blow into a triple. The box score: Gary.

ab. f. h. K!m, 3b. 2 n 0 Conway, ej. 4 0 0 Cook. 2b. 3"0 Williams, rf. 4 0 0 Lundquist, lb. 4 0 2 Kopoko, cf. 3 0 0 Jennings, If. '4 n o Stokes. . 3 0 0 Leveret t. p. 3 o l

Hammond

0 0000000 00 5000002 -

Errors Kopo. Kennedy (2). Buckeye. Two-base hits Leverett, Lindrjuist. Kennedy. Double plays Blank to Thompson. Bases on balls Off Leverett, 3; off Buckeye. 3. Struck out By Leverctt. 1: by Buckeye, 12

GIRL

VISITORS

po. a. 2 4 2 3 2 3 1 0 in n (i o 3 2 3 1 0 2

Totals

3 23 15

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Rhode, rf. Kennedy, ss. RIank. 2b. . Walsh, rf. ...

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FINALLY SWIM

AND BOTH WIN

Misses Wylie and Durack of Australia Take Feature Events of C. A. A. Carnival.

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To order your winter top. You will have it when the cold and wet season sets in. We do painting and refinishing of cars or trucks, also repair and make tops and seat covers. We are builders of high grade truck bodies and cabs. Repair and remove dents from passenger car bodies and fenders. Motor repairing and general overhauling. Temme Springs for all cars. No waiting. No delays. Broken springs cr leaves replaced and repaired. J ohnson Shock Absorbers and Gabriel Snubbers in stock and installed. Firestone Tires. Let us preserve the finish and paint of your car by sirnonizing. Try our service. We will please you.

Champ

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Machinery Company Sheffield and Chicago Avenue. Phone 3200. ' Hammond.

The Australian mermaids, Wilhelmir.a Wylie and Fanny Durack, competed in the swimming events held in the Lincoln Tark lagoon jes'erday af

ternoon, both winning the events in which they started. Miss Wylie defeated Miss Helen Thompsen of the Milwaukee A. C, in the 100-yard breast stroke, and Miss Durack cartured the 400-yard free style swim by fifty fet from Miss Thelma Darby of Minneapolis. Miss Durack and Miss Wylie, who refused to swim on Saturday because they understood they were to compete in championship events or exhibitions, yesterday morning received a telegram from Fred W. Rpblen. secretary of the National A. A. V.. stating they must take part in competitive events, or the remainder of their American tour would be canceled. Then they decided to swim. The National A. A. U. senior women's high diving championship was annexed by Miss Betty Grimes of the Minneapolis A. C. and the four-oared crew of the Duluth Boat Club defeated the Lincoln Park Club by two lengths in the half-mile race. The breast stroke event was the feature race of the day and was not won by Miss Wylie until she touched the finish float. The Australian is a powerful swimmer, but in Miss Thompson she nearly met her equal. Another Interesting Raca. Nearly as interesting was the 400-yard race, in which Miss Darby pushed Miss Durack for the first 300 yards. At the end of the first 100 yards Miss Darby was only two yards behind. Miss Durack did this course in 1:1. Miss Durack led

by three yards at the end of 20i yards. which she covered in 2:53 3-5. At 300 yards Miss Darby was ten jards behind j As she started to swim her last con- j

tury Miss Darby was interfered with by one of the othrr lontcstants. Th" collision cost her a lot of ground. Miss Durack would hae won if the accident had not happened, hut not by such a large margin. Th Australian finished with a great burst of speed. She is by farhe best and strongest woman swimmer ever seen in local waters.

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IHEY MAY BE BATHING GIRLS, BUT WHEN LED TO WATER ALL THEY DO IS DRINK

After it was over the referee called it j en innings and then was forced to "no contest." jthe game tossed away by Foster, ni'1

Kt in -.he lone run by a wild heave.

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TAGGING ALL THE BASES By JACK VEIOCK I. N. S. Sports Editor

ALL McGraw has to do to lose a ball game is to release one of his players to some other club. Davey Robertson, w h went from the Giants to the Cubs, smacked out a home run with one on ahead of him and licked the Giants. 2 to 0.

MRS. H. M. JOHNSON WINS. Mrs. K. Ml Johnson wen the lS-ho'. match on Ladies' Day at the Hamnv:, Country Club, getting low rcss as v as low not. The sc ire: Mrs. Johnson 112 Mrs. Der Hi Miss Doming ll' Mrs. Austin Mrs. Ams 1 Miss Kussell l?-

WITH the injunction still working. Carl Mays flipped the Yankees to another victory, Cle eland suffering. NOTHING to worry about the Braves taking three straight from th" Cards. SHAW carried Cicotte along for e!ev-

HAMMOND WINS MATCH. The Hammond Country Club eolf to-; defeated the Pottowattamie Club 1 1 Sntjrday at go',f by i score of 7 to -the Nassau system of scoring be:: used. About 15 went ovr. A dir.n and a dance wis given in their honor return match will be plaved next n'.or in Hammond.

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To the uniniatcd, heatinfj: plants all look alike the difference is one of scientific Construction ai

proper installation. Does your heating system keet your honie as nanii as you would like to have it ? ricttcr have it attended to NOW. J. A. LaMERE HEATING AND SANITARY ENGINEER 307 Sibley Street. Phone 290 Hammond.

COLTS DEFEAT PEERLESS. The Hudson Colts easily defeated the fast. Peerless of Kast Chicago Sunday by 0-3 score in a hard pitcher's battle

1 Mears of the Colts having the best of

1t all the way with 16 strikeouts to

Simons, the Teerless star's 12. While the Colts got ten hits to the Teerless' j six. The feature was the timely hitting j of Creasbaum coming though with hit s j on three ocasions when they counted runs. The. batting honors being divided' between Creasbaum and "Skinny" Hudson w ith three hits apiece. The Hudson j part of the lineup scored seven of the j nine runs for the Colts. With three apiece for "Fat" and "Skinny" and on

for "Miggs." The Colts travel to Griffith next Sun-, AT BENTON HARBOR Richie Mitchell

vs. Sailor Freeedman, no decision 6): Tommy Holderson beat Sair.tny Ford (Si: Walter Dolan knocked out Dick Jost (3); Dummy Jordan bett Al Lance (4). BEXTOV HARBOR. Mich.. Aug. 11 A score of fists flying in ail directiors instead of the four schedulfd to be pro-

This bathing girl thinks water is for drinking only. Her suit's nerer even been wet. The bathir.p jrirls whose habitat is Los Angrles or thereabouts in California are "seeinc New York." Perhaps some people vould put it the other way and insist that if there was any seeinp to he done New York was being fhown some sights. Everybody is wondering, however, where trey got the official name of bathing ?trls, for the nearest any one of them has been to the Aater was when this daring maid in her one-half yard suit ventured out into Palisades prrk and took a drink at one of the public fountains. This interesting troupe of girls attract considerable attention even in blase New York, for they motor about in open tp.xicabs in their gorgeous bathing suits and have even paraded through the parks arrayed like mermaids from their California coasts. The photographer who has haunted their footstens was on the spot when thjs young miss decided to see what water was like. He claims she's the first one who has evinced any interest whatever in it.

ROUGHHOUSE END OF I ' ox,n

'how in free for all fight. The'

day to take the fast town team on and ;

expect to bringr home the bacon, ay in the manager of the Griffith teem pleas call up 112S-M. Hammond, and leave his phono number and address as we

would like to talk with him.

a few things over

THE Reds are out in front now by five and one-half games margin, their win ojrer the Phillies in 13 innings being responsible.

ixth round. It ended tne bout, be- j

cnuse John .1 Merlmj,'. prosecuting attorney cf Berrien county, immediately ordered the boxers out of the ring. 'T"p to the time the ring became congested with Mitchell and Freedman followers it was a contest in which the Milwaukee boy gave every promise of winning. Mitchell's cleverness stood him in good stead, while Freedman fought in a way not at. nil creditable. He was warned several times for foul tac-

pelled by Richie Mitchell of Milwaukee I ti-. for which be should have been disand Sailor Freedman of Chicago brok'-' qualified. But h wasn't, and the result UO the winrltip of Floyd I i'.zsimmons' ' . o fiit uniVi tunatc oiling of the shrw.

ANNOUNCEMENT

The "Arrow Head"

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in Burnham, 111. IS OPEN AS USUAL Serving the Same CHICKEN DINNER at 81.50 FROG LEGS SI .50

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FISH

1.25

The three above are six course dinners prepared carefully by an able French chef, under the management of Mr. W. Piccolo. Dancing, High Class Cabaret and Opera Singing.

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