Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 67, Hammond, Lake County, 8 September 1921 — Page 10

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THE TIMES. Thursday, SoptPmherS, 10121

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E. C. K. C. ITS ADD SEVENTH TO STRING

I0'"' A'tll TtRAINING

The peppery Tat Chlcnco now boast .ien straight Dabe Simon's hustling pri-le. -1 the St. Michaels of i.'.urv

K- C. C.'s '. !. tur'.fs. -s defeats'-v a 7 to

4 count Sunday and c

tilt from the Krlt-s. 14 f I'"1. In Sunday's fii'cst, t!. K. C. 1" tartl things itiovins In tbe first frar. nicking- "Jojr" Fah- rty, 'l-.ry's hn b for 4 runs. RskaUr p't- h,-.i good brand of ball. holding the- hoMli swatter to six blows. Crank Sl'crn .Ire.v the rif.h'oir ,i -r-V'.n.int Labor lav c .-. le 1 ! Q'leli'.ng the Erie si;: c ,'cr s !u ti lifsv

Mttlr.i: conte". Morgan' tr!;-16 to ,lo. p j

Joe F.iirman, local bantamweight, anil Mii'.got Smith of New York, sterling IIS pound i-rs who meet In one "f the feature hunts of Harry Hyam's hosing show atl-la st Chicago tomorrow nigh;, finished strenuous tralning

right tn the fourth itinln? was tho Jong- I

est hit e ver mails at O ra.ver Patk. I'

Ptrtvn sr.il Ta.guo also tripled In this fc-nine. j Kast r"hicago fans will ho glad to j i'-arn tht rV1ie n;,m. K. C. I. !niV.der vt h ' recently took unto Mra-If I a vi'e, will b" c;t vortir..; a round th'rd J base nga.n tifnt ?;:r.day. The absence t' l'lo-.m .-i i to". Hah! a has been 1 k-e;ily felt by the. F.ast t'hleaso Hm. ! r.-ii'Mi's in 'tired f r.ger Is mending nice- j ly and he, too. may be seen In aVTion i .s-.or. ! Score of Sunday's game: j St. .M! haol. 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 '

K. I" 4 1 2 ft 0 O 1 0 x 7 J latteries: Faherty an. I "Toots'" TaK!": liaifiar and Tom Tafru. Feore of Monday's ga me : i o o o o o f i a io

0 0 1 x 14 rt'.i. Marram .icd. Tagne. V. iv;;! flay

yesterday at the Arcade. Thy will d.. just enough work today to kep 1-v )snfd up and mate Hire of ktepins hiiiiw I-'"' '.lounds. th weight they nturt make at 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon . That tho little fellow? r In ehape to nut ur a srt-at flht was flmwn by

their iir.al boxing bouts yesttrday.

I!i:rman wei.t three rounds with Frar.k'.e Ke-nnard and on several oc-

ralin made his partner back up ' a.cainsi th ropes or fall Into clinches i b.t a result of hard rights landing- on j h:s jaw. Kurm&n 1a hlttir.gr with ' " t of power and his frlwndi expect .' S.'tii t f-nr.ivt at some stags of the

Jack Sharkey of New York who will trade punchea with Roy Mo. re o? Minneapolis, completed training: at Ferrvi'.tl's gym. II, boxed three rounds with Bud Pftr.psey and as many with Teddy Murphy. Terry Martin. New F.ng1nd bantamwelftht. who !!! meet Mike Pundaa of Rook Island in the 10 round opener, finished preliminary work a' the Arcnd. Iundee. who has beer, workingIn private, Ik also In shnpo. acccidinK to Manager Dick Curley. A"ith the f.jjhters on th: Kr.v.md ai in the best of condition, there is a larR demand for ticket,, at 13 N. Clark street. Pammy Wolfe will run a special train over the Pennsylvania. It will leave th Union station at 7 o'clock and return Immediately ftr the contest. Promoter Harry Hyatn will place 4-C00 seate at $4 each on sale tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock at the arena.

WHA T POVERS THA T BE DID TO FOOTBALL RULES FOR 1921

RUTH GETS 52d; NEEDS THREE TO BEAT RECORD

NEW YORK, Se-pt. S. Babe RalU haiutiwred out liln lirty-Becond home run of th" oraaon yla the fourth Innlnie of The conl Came Knlnitt Boston yesterday. Pcnnocls tiis pitching. There -vrnm one nun on ban. The BiimblnD need two more homrri to tie hl 1020 record. The wallop put Ruth twenty day ahead of his lOO record, when hi flfty-se cond unil flfty-lhird homer were lumped at I'hilndelphla off Itoinniel on September 27. He Kb twenty-live more gamo.H In which to lurpax hta world' record, of fifty-four home rum In a season.

PIRATES WILL PLAY WHITING

Harrison Park w ill be turned Into a battle ground instead of a baseball diamond next Sunday when the Ham

mond Pirates play the Whiting Dodgers. This Is the first rime in the challenge round since Whiting has disputed, the local club's undeniable claim to the Northern Indian-i Junior championship. The battle will nturt promptlv at 1 o'clock. For the lo.-ahs

Ecrg- will whiz with YouriR reo ins the probnbi-

'em pnt the ba"ers :vii-.c ;: nd for V.'im- !,;. "eries are Bodnny

and Burth. Tho bdttin order: R'ir--rt. If. Siaven, fa; Kuihel. 2h; Kal!na, lb; Fatten, cf. Ia.comhe, r:' Potts, rb: Young-, c. Berg. p.

PEERLESS FOUR ENTER BASEBALL-DOM The Peerless Four will entet Into the era of baseball next Saturday by playing the Hammond Tiger. Although tho Peerless aggregation enter the field at this late date they hop to finish with a perfect record. Manager Potts has assembled his g-antr of gtars and has turned them into perfect condition. Potts has secured Douftlas, a late catcher for a leading professional team In Texas. Marsee. a clouter of the pill, has won fame wl'.h the basehall team of Danville who won tho eouthcrn Illinois championship last year. Carnovltz. a ffreat star in his prime and still a pitcher of great famv: will be on the moumi for the entries. Potts, a Hammond ball player, wilt cover his Infield position. The games will be played at Morris park, first game at ten o'clock in the morning, the next at three in tho afternoon. Tha manager assures the ffins that a great treat will be in store for them.

!:. C. I" 0 1 2 5 J I'attrb'fl: F2i.n-er. No r.d Kir.iT. He- P. F rv...n Next Sun.ljy the K. (.'. thy St. Stanislaus team ; ;to at Sr-l 'Ai'l T'xchar s

NK.W YORK, Sept. g. College football, without any of the radical changes suggested at the close of last season by coaches and experts, will open its 1321 season In another fortnight. Practice has been started by college squads all over the country

been declared deal, or unnecessarily; roughing a man w ho made a forward j pass, may be detuned as unnecessary j roughness, for w hich the penalty U j losg of fifteen yards from thi spot j where the ball wa sput in play. j In Rule 4. Section 4, it is made clear i

and the first game in which a college! that in the event of a fair catch being team is involved wll be played at, made after trie expiration of time only Orono. Maine, September 17. when the I the kick shall be allowed and that

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

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(HY A S'.'AT FAN.i The Hea'er.a br.aebnll t-ir.i In Ki-tnn to Kcuta. Ind.. Su-.oay, St;.;, lit h. to

T;a- the faoi boa's tear; a n,- doubt, ai to -h .,r. ?catna bscis.J! club i. ult":d :'d.hL.:-5.t ,;:si- o-;t:, : ln.l'ar.a. la this r-art 'cmI-i fictitonsj w:i' he atrercthe addition of three old-time

p'.-.yers, Billy l.yr-!i, Ski

1'niverslty of Maine eleven meets the soldiers from Ft. McKinley. Only a few minor o.hang-e-s have ben made In tha official Intercollegiate rules. Suggestions were advanced last spring for restrictions on the forward pass and many other re- :. rms which would have necessitated radical changes In the rules were out-

i lined. r.no rules committee decided, however, that the day for rules tinkj erlng had passed and the changes they ! adopted clarify, rather than alter, the ; various rule? .

SlFl'TV HI" I.E CHANGED. One of the principal changes provides that In the event of the scoring f a safety the side which has made

ncrihtm '. !t 'c:;all put the ball In play by scriin-f.-it'-.e the j tnS from first down at any place on ri by thai i:s thirty-yard line. After a touchHammond i back the ball still will be put In play

lev:! r,n the twemy-j-ara line. !

as the thj bst

as soon as the kick baa been

,n I Mi.c Thompson, all three well! in uie- .s. .heetion ft. a auOdSTialo known Ka.:.mond buys who play real ha been made. Dlvlfion A prTid.!S bill. Tie catenas club has played! tht h' offenses of tripping, ta-ckllng remarkabla baseball this year having! 0,11 of bounds or throwing: the player played twenty games and" only lost" f the ground after the ball is dead, four which shows that the boys arc! r ftR' ether unnecessary roughness playing high class baseball. I sh" h" pensi-jed fifteen yards from The Kout. team Is r.eited as being a! th- spot of th foul. Division P. pro-ha-d bunch to beat but we are satis- I v''is that unnecessary running into

or dlvinf 1ntr rir thr.-u-lny nnp!f

rsinst a player obviously out of pliy

will

f:-l that Hammond's eiit.:Es

. t.r.o- home with the bacon. Ec uttriRS line-up will he as f -1 1 aw s : Haynes. p; Hess, c; Lynch, lb; North, ..-. Love, 2b; Meyers, 3b; Jens., rf ; Thoripscn, If: Kennedy, cf. At 'hi- time wo do not know the Kout's ilr.eup but we arc pa'isnn that. .Tl.in.n.-.nd'a boys are going t "

r.cst a r- al baseball team . TK .. will

on.y b-, tv. o more ga.i ono with 2v- one Orovo Valparaiso, I-J., and

hr-r bfforo or afr--r th ball

the period shall end ball is dead after th

made . l.KOAI.IZFNG THE TOSS. Rule 6. Section 13, has been changed so that th,. ball Is declared dead rTien a forward pass becomes an lu-egai pass, so that tho rule covers both incompleted and illegal pns-s. A custom which has governed the tos? for a goal or kick off at th b-gitinlng of a game has been legalized by a chango In Ilula 7. Section 1. This now provides that the referee s-hall toss a coin and designate which of tho two captains shall call and that once the choice has ben made it is irrevocable In Rule 9, Section E. nn addition h been made providing for a penalty of fiv yards if more than one man or the attacking side la in motion at the moment the ball is put into play, the penalty to be measured from the spot where the ball was put In play. Kule 14. Section 7. now reads that If at the kickoff. the ball goes out of the bounds before It cross's that goal line it shall be brought back. In Kule 17. Section 3. ba"lng to do with the forward pass tho word "ball" has been substituted for "pass." a technical revision. A few other changts of little consequence from the spectators standpoint also have

baa been mad.

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ri all rma'.r.!r:: Kctiis will leav :': i'tn c-r n er c f liiy .-'. r e .

to Ointher for 5 runs In the first t Innings, his wlldness and errors Aiding them. However he tightened up and in the next i innings r.ply one man i. ached first base. The Nationals score 4 runs in the third aril 6th ln-

t!,is 5f,jn, hings but could not tl. Scire: nd ( ne with j K '-'. CyrlmM 131 ftoo ooo 5 7 earnestly National OCX 003 000 4 8 ha: p. itena.-i i Next Sunday the National Jrs. play

NATIONAL JUNIORS M CHAMPiONSHiP

the Whiting Arrow the Standard Oil dlamc

n Whiting on nd at 1 o'clock.

John Bailey and W. A. Gorman, students at the Unlversl'y of Chicago, who have charge of arrangemtnts, have arranged with off .rials of the Pennsylvania railroad whereby th tri: can be nal f'-r $95 . This will Include berth, mee.ls and a twelve hour stopover fit. Washington.

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f.-it.i. a prize, the !; cl.aiT' p ior. h i.p at slake., J; s. an 1 the E. C. Mastin the most thriving t : veteran of bae-ball -v eoo'-e at the end of the

to 5 . Dick (Shovel) Robinson wns mour.d for the Ilarboilte a? d a wonderful game striking out and being very stingy v. ::h h

a 1 1 the Maslers fsecur n th) other hand t!

f ine! o u.se thvo pi', h.ra. Moldra-skl and Jaybo. but th rot 5,:r-p the on-ruh!n.r H who we r -,ut to win tee hip. Ti-.o Mas or s or--d ti with the aid of errors :oi i t ' lntorni.nsrled. Tho I'.irliri the aid of the Ptar hut !n- of and Dwarf score 3 runs ;. ti. 4th Innings. Then In the Si w-Jth the Masters leadi-ig " t went on a rampage. A walk, by tho versatile Dwarf. II

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n the

ch-d j ' r.ie:i

i :h hl.i hits, i

6 hits, la-iters w-r-rs. 'i'.iasuic. t they ,.,u'd a tt rit-s . o iolpiood U.-;i runs i i t ; , r : o i ; t s o-- ri'c:i w . '

CENTRAL A. C. WIN

AND LOSE ONE!

Indiana Harbor was not left without a hail game Funday In the absence of the Aristos, as the Nationals and Central A. ('. more than satisfied the bugs, with an airtight ball game on the part of the inching staff of both teams. The Central Infield yielded a littl In the seventh Inning, giving the Nationals two runs., while the Centrals ended i h e r;e. Monday the Central boys traveled to the. Standard Steel grounds and had a sterling game of ball with a sterling club, the Liberty A. A. Too much canrod be said for the real sports men"; in way in which this club acts in all times, of a game. Nevertheless the score ended 3 to 1 In Central's favor, but in behalf of the Central A. C. the nunsger wishes them good luck In future games.

! Tho Central A. C have an open date ; Sept. 1 1. W'e would like tH hear from I tho Whiting Dodgers or some team 1 about 20 or 22. Call John Benloh, i

East Chicago 25 between 8:30 and 9.

The Giants went over to Quaker-

town and walloped the Phillies twice.

thereby gaining a full game on Pitts

burgh. Th'y now are but half a

game behind the Pirates. Nhf and

Douglas were the winning pitchers.

Grimes' error on Groh's bounder j started the Hods on the winning road i

over the Cubs in the tenth.

Hi PACKARD ii 1 X ill!

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TJje Browns went on rampage aga!n6t Russell ofTthe White Sox.

a batting and Hodge

Cleveland deefated the Detroit Ti ST-

ers In a fre-for-ail slugging nlatch.

Babe P.uth's 52nd homer helped th Yankees in the doubl victory over

pitched fine ball.

Willie Jackson-Hartley

Match Made by Rickard j

NEW YORK. Sept. -. Tex Rickard yesterday completed . rrangemen t s for a fifteen round mitch between Willie Jackson, the Bronx light weight, and Pete Hartley at Madison Squaro Garden on tjje night of Sept. 30. It is likely another fifteen round bout will be on the same card with Jachson and Hartley. Gene Tunnev, the heavyweight hcxer. and Mike burke, the west side boxer, are mentioned as the two ca n d 1 1 a t e e .

One ride in the new Pack-ardSingle-Six will tellyou more of its comfort and power than anything we eouldpossiblysayin print YOU CAN SAFELY EXPECT FROM THE PACKARD SINGLE-SIX A YEARLY AVERAGE OF 17 MILES OR BETTER TO TIIE GALLON OF GASOLINE, 2,000 X4TLES OR BETTER TO THE GALLON OF OIL, AND 15,000 MILES OR, BETTER I ROM TIRES The Packard Single-Six Touring is now $2975, feO.b. Detroit

Oil

PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY Y

DETROIT

Gary Motor Car Distribute !s 308-10 W. 5th Ave. Phone 4S85 Gary, Ind.

1 hl-keyr; J nd an 1 liming 1. h y a single i n s-n'S

threo-taso hit and an error mi b scors real 6 to 5 In th- N.tf 1 .r.al vor. Score: Nat Ion a! s n r, j e 2 0 " ' :-.

12. C. Msaters.. l"j ; ,; . r :-; Then In th afternoon the N.-.Monl Jrs. want cut of their class :,-. j. laved tho a! 11. C. Cyclcr.i.-H. a !e.lni averaging 21 year?. The (ycl-.ne.s

Amaizo Corn Oil Best for Salads and Cooking Bny in five gallon caii9 and save money. American Maize Products Co. Phone Hammond 2S3. xfoby, Ind.

MAROON SPECIAL TO TIGER GAME Wl'h Chicago scheduled l1 meet

on Oct. 22 on the Tigers'

gridiron In the first of a home and home series of fo.tbnll Rames, (Students and alumni of the Maroon institution are making arrangements to at!nJ the struggle on a special train.

'ho 1 Princeton

East Chicago Cyclones Jrs. Win a Double Bill

The strong K. C Cj-elones Jr. traveled to North Hammond and defeated the strong North Side A. C. Jr. i to the tune of 4-1. Istck the E. C. j hurlnr had 17 strikeouts. Score: J F. C. Cyclones .. .101 MO mo i 12 lj North S. A. C. ..100 oon 0o' i Monday the strong East Chicago) Cyclone Jr. traveled o Indiana Hsr-j bor and defeated the Indiana Harbor! National Jr. by a close margin of S-4. This makes the Cyclone Jrs. 11th vie- ! tory. The score: K. C. Cyclones. . .101 002 010 5 j 3;

Indiana H. N. 10 000 ROD 1 IS S In this game Istok tho Cyclone pitcher had IS strikeouts making his Tth straight victory.

MAROONS WIN AGAIN. The West Hammond Maroon Jr. bat the Vnkr.own A. C. of Kat Chicago by the rir of 16-P. John Cern and Pete Kamer cli-1 tho pitching and Smr.ley Jazz did the receiving. Any t'-.arr-.s from 1T-X9 wlshim? to play the Maroon Jr. call 31J2 between -9 and ask fi.r Miller.

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for thirty-one scenarios READ THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS for the Details

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Style 10) including ten selections (five 85c records) your own choice CABLE'S 151 State Street Phone 3360, Hammond

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"J" HE lowly and uncultured Tartars when books fell into their possession ate them to acquire the knowledge contained therein. They doubtless suffered indigestion. At least, they weren't overlooking any bet. There are mistakes both of commission and omission. Better, by far, to be satisfied that you have done your best and endure indigestion, than overlook real opportunities and feel the pangs of unavailing regret

The advertisements you will find in this newspaper are business mines of opportunity. They tell you of values you might never know, if they were not there to guide you.

FiVura-

Do you read and digest this advertising?

tively speaking,. some folks "eat it up." They are the wise shoppers the economical buyers the ones who are strictly up to date on the opportunities for saving money or spending it most judiciously. Read the advertisements. Read them to know what's what in the shopping district. Read them to save steps to save money-- to save disappointments, Read them because they place before your eyes a moving panorama of business progress. Read them to keep yourself informed. Read Them Regularly ItPays!.

i i it till tn An

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