Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 257, Hammond, Lake County, 19 April 1921 — Page 12

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THE TIMES T-' -i;.v . April 1!JJ1 "I,.1" " ..'i.jwian.'. , I ' o". 1. '. t v i-i the verdict over ' f -oi.i,, :i , f o;. ,j , f!fr, N. J. Batg :iuri,:y aid Johnny To-snr drew fir. ' i ' and I'.-irny Flush beat i : ' o ,T-y i : ..':!. r-u nOs. Gy I iot.p I FAMOUS FANS

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FOR

PROFITEERS

BATTLE SITEi.

OUR FIGHT DECISIONS

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NEW YORK, April 19, Tex Uickard did not announce yesterday the fxart site in Jersey City where Jack Pempsey ami Georges Carpcntlor will do battle for tho hi avy weight championship on July 2 next. The big promoter la busily engaged just now matching his wits against a coterie of New Jersey real estate manipulators, who have boosted values to such a height that Tex has taken in an extra reef on his well

Jnrk MeAnlilTe knooki-il out Srrnt orcrofcn In neronn round nt lJrtrolt.

Whltcy I'Ka-crrnlil drew nllh Jor Jnn- ' Pittsburgh

Knn in ten ronniin. I Cincinnati !;1ill- Shrvlin defcnted Hnriirf Atluir , Philadelphia In ton round nt llontnn. J ProoUlyn Knttlin Murray mid Johnny romirr i .St. Lhuim

XATHtAL LE.UU'K W. CHICAGO 3 Huston i New York 2

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drew In eight "innils nt I'hiliiullii:i. ' Panny l'runh t"tit Tommy t leiiry I" I right rniinih. lieoriee K. O. f'haney won on foul front "I'rpiier" Martin In nccond round nt Cwmilen, A. J. Onnny Kramer bort ' Joe 0'loniiell III ten ronnils, Hnttlinf-; ; Murrny drew with Johnny Ho.Mner. , Piumy Kruwh beat Tommy t'lejiry In,

Yenterday' llrmiU. Chicago, 7; Pittsburgh. 4. Cincinnati. 4; St. Pouis. 0. No other (.-amrs played. a.muhican I.KAiaii W. !

known b. r.. and sneaks through the, t-ti,t rounds. various sections of the Jersey village j r v I 1 Willl.-iinn nwnrdrrf 1 cc i I o ,i over with the fear that they wl'.l grub llarl l-i.reiir In ttvrlvr round,, at everything he has. I ll ii lucre.

TAD'S

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I New York Washington St. I .ou is ' Cleveland i I'etroit : Poston ' CHICAGO i Philadelphia I Yristerdny'a

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Pt. Ijoiii.s. 3; Chicago. 2. No other games played.

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MOR AX SCARPA) TH KM S TIKF. Silent Charley Harvey, after reading tlio returns of the Moran-Beckett fight, said: "Moran liked that fellow witn his smile. Beckett probably hit that red-headed lion on the chin with everything- behind it and instead of seeing Moran fall, watched him smile. It took the heart out of the fellow. It peenis now that Moran not only took the heart out of Beckett, but out of every other big fellow in F.urope. Charles Frapcis is still trying to pet Garpentier Into the ring, but the latter finds a grate at every turn. A writer In the London Globe has this to say: "Biff. bang. btft. and It would be all over," said Francois Descamps when visualizing: Carpentter'a possible meeting- with Frank Moran on the night the American knocked Beckett out in two rounds. "He was talking about what Georges would do to Frank. "Curiously nough, though. Carpentier was challenged there and then by Moran's manager, and Major Wilson at once offered to put tip a handsome purse and stage the tight. The Frenchman has not yet signed to meet Moran. "Just think. Here ia a man who believes he can walk up to another and beat hhn with three punches, and is ..n"ered a guarantee of $73,000 for doing it; yet he hangs back: "If one regards sport as an affair of nationalities, nobody can accuse me of prejudice, for both boxers concerned are foreigners. I look on it from the common sense standpoint, and. regarding the facts from all angles, come to the conclusion that Carpentier fears Moran would beat him. "I can say that, when negot latlocs for the match were first opened Descamps demanded a guarantee of $10,000 to cover Carpentler from possible loss In the event of Moran d"feating him be-fore he could meet Pempsey. As the cruiser-weight champion would not look at a purse vhich fell short of ills desire, the ofTer was increased, to his own figure. "I know the styles, capabilities and weaknesses of both boxers intimately, nut refrained from writing of those things before because I thought it might frighten the French champion out of a match which all sporting England desires.

"From the trend of events it would appear that Carpentler is equally wis.-, and so I need keep silent no longer, j It Is my fixed opinion that Moran ' would not take more than six. or at ' most eight, rounds to knock him out." : SIIADB TO HF.MtIV IV AT'STHAT.IV A letter from Australia which arriv- ; ed here recently informs us that Billy Shade has changed his mind about

corning home, and will reman, -.v.: .1 'he kangaroos and shepp for Quite u spell longer. Shade anil his manager have been trying to get passage to America for the raft two months, hut a stewards' strike held them up, and now B l!y has signe-d for five fights with the Stadium people at a good figure, and will stick. Francis Charles is to be his first opponent and Jimmy Clabby his second.

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

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" '. 'G. 1 ; 1. Apr;) 19. Unless ho ! - - ! : . -0 -vec'.is of his own '; !! '. 'o.' :C his own expense, io . . 1' o,:.' outfielder, v. Kl t '.. p. r:;i;i ,. ! 'o jdny baseball tins t .; !-.,n r-- f u"' -1 to ac company the ,'0: ot, M-eir rptlr.ir trainirg trip and 'i ' II" re-ug'.-.t relns'a'c--t : r 'I . ' ' - 01 ' pene.j and was ! 1 ' y j'r '-nr V.'.-e', he would -. g' Ivt-) t!::u for playtng nt - ; - J lo ler ' S'-r h:iH d - ! . do :' awl will remain on l:o :.:..:.!. i,:it. IT- r-r V .k declared today that 1 r t'i-v to buy or trade f'-r Robert. -n t ro olh-r -It:l 9 would be eor,-

RED DISCOUNT

BOOKLET" WATCH FOR IT IT WILL SAVE YOU MONEY

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THE weather leagues.

man Is leading both

lmilAMI.AM) IK IN Fiusro PASSES

Dreamland Kink, !n San lyfancisco, j on account of rain, where the bruisers once dealt iu cauii- 1

flower ears, is now a free market where housewives battle with stall owners over the price, of lemons. Quinces, cabbages and the like.

CANADA CAI.'S CHITirS. If a hold-up man weighs 300 pounds, would you say he was a high weigh robber?

"There are better Ash In the

than ever were caught." "Far better, because It's the biggest that we always hear got away." The average woman will spend, say fifty cents a day tho year around to keep herself In clothes, while an artist's model Igets fifty cents an hour to keep herself out of them. If Noah's name had been Mark Instead of Noah when the flood was at its h!ght, would you have apprised him of the fact, if you had been there, that he was a high-water Mark?

FIVE games were postponed Monday

A SISLEK triple and a "Baby Doil" 0-f a single by Jacobson gave the Browns a victory over the Vhlte Sox.

THE Brown-"White Sox affair wai something of a pitching' debate between Urban Shocker and Dickie Kerr.

LEFTY TYLER was wild but the

sea I Cubs bunched hits behind him off Zlnn

and Glazner and defeated the 1'lrates.

I.UQUE pitched one of the best games so far this season when he shut out the Cardinals with six scattered hits at Cincinnati.

M'ATJltlFFE, IN RING DEBUT, SCORES K. 0. PETROIT, April 13. .Talk :Aul'.ffe, Detroit heavyweight, won his first f..".'ht last night by knocking out Sergt. Norcross of Toledo In the ond round of their scheduled tenround bout. A left to the stomach, followed by a short right uppercut to the chin, did the trick. "vVhitey Fltzsrerall of Toledo and Joe Jawson of Milwaukee, lightweights, fought ten rounds to a draw.

ALEXA STIRLINGSHOWS BRITONS LONDON. April IP. Although Miss Alexa Stirling, American golf champion, lost her first two games player in England today, sh attraei-v! considerable, attenllon by her brilltruit playing.

Have Your Eyes Examined At the only Exclusive Optical Parlor in Lake County Glasses Scientifically Fitted. Satisfaction Guaranteed Hammond Optical Parlors Registered Optometrists 141 State street, phone Hammond 2598

THE SIMPLE LITTLE SECRET The Chiropractic secret of good bodily health is very simple so simple it may surprise you. First of all, the science of Chiropractic assumes that the Creator knew Mis business when He made man. Barring accidents, man does not need a crutch.. If he did the Creator would have furnished him with one. Similarly, man's internal machinery should not need drugs to make it run properly. Granted that the Creator knew His business, we must concede that the body of man is a finished product a complete machine. Then why doesn't it run properly? Wiry isn't every one healthy? Suppose you have an auto. You run it over rough, bumpy roads. You race the engine. You neglect to oil the bearings. You let the valves get choked up. You put low grade gasoline in the tank. In short, you pay no attention to the car, thinking it will run indefinitely, no matter how you abuse it. And one day the car refuses to run. hy? Npw, when the auto gets stalled, do you pour sassafras tea in the tank, put a seidletz powder in the radiator and bathe the carburetor with oil of cinnamon? You do not. You go to an expert mechanic. The car is all there, but the parts need adjusting. That's the mechanic's job. The Chiropractor is the expert mechanic of the bodily machine. He does not employ drugs. He simply adjusts the human machine and then lets it alone. Nature is the real curative agent. The Chiropractor isn't trying to get Nature's job away from her. He couldn't if he did try. This, then, is the Chiropractic secret of health; adjust the bodily machine and then let it alone. Result health. Now that you know the secret, you will want to go to a Chiropractor right away and have him adjust YOUR obdy to normal. You're not sick? Fine. But you want to STAY well,-don't you? See a Chiropractor NOW.

H. W. Eastwood, D. C, Chiropractor Room 109, Citizens Bank Building Hammond Office Hours: 2 to 5; 6 to 8 P. M.

In her first game, against R. H. D Montmorency, in a special w uiiiftl against men event, she lost, 4 and '' although receiving one stroke allowance at alternate holes. The ma'ch was played at Stokes Popes, which Course she never paw till yesterday. It is a long, severe course, with numerous cunning bunkers, swells, and water hazards.

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Griffith Bea:: Dyer SPECIAL TO THE TU'ES) GRIFFITH, Ind.. April 1P.-

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half of 'tho ninth. 1 1, cross bats at Dyer, May 1.

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