OCR Text |
Show Ih CAfUNERS SLAUGHTERED j OF HELEJIA Ig In yesterda: s c;ame with the Vigi- lantes. the Cannera liad an awful pl.imp, compared with the pame of the c!ay before when ii required fourteen ?ot innings or hart) ilgbtiiiK and the el score was 7 to 0 Yesterday the Helena Hel-ena boys won the game in the second Po1 ilU'ing when they made eleven runs. Ii w&t an awful slamming. The . score of eleven is the greatest yet made in a league game In the inter-mountain inter-mountain countrj in a single Inning Balllnger stepped upon the mound I fcr the Cannera, apparently in good i fcrm There was no score in The first I two innings and it looked as ttiough ' Balllnger was going through with his "K reula." old time pitching; To he sure q, there were hits in that inning but QfJ they cid not count runs In the sec-Tpgt sec-Tpgt end half of the inning. Ogdon came m npar sroring but Ames held a light A rein, well backed up by his teim jjj and the Canners were blanked jjqjj. But that awful second " Every Vigilante that came up to the plate M' bit like a Trojan and they all had a C' ti rn at its before the end. "Dad ' j riv Gimlin was not at home and it seem-brir seem-brir ed that there was no one to heed the i Jac bfgnal of distress given by Balllnger 'be in the early etages of the slaughter-the slaughter-the irfg He signaled that he eould not str stop the hitting but he was held in flee the bo?: until at last Galgano wfta oon called to the rescue, and he could and hardly throw a ball into the grand-to grand-to stand as he has had a bad arm for F sometime past He was absolutely & 1 helpless before the hard fighting men J q from Helena. He gave the visitors 0j tliee hits for runs and Ballinger had j 3au already given five bits for runs i Couch was called and he made good. He was a little wild in the first few j balls but settled down and held the i I. U . U ... : 11,. It ' isnuis n. liner: i mi;, uiic ill nil hei fc urtli and two in the seventh inning 0,1 After the second Inning the game was he' tight and good ball was played The I game closed with fourteen hits for pli the visitors and twelve for the homo Co team m With none dov n and Vicilantes on go second and ihird touch was called Pi to the mound before he had had an opportunity to warm up The visitors ro etarte to bat over again on Coucb. di' Qttigtey, the first man to go up. v prouno.ing to Risberg 'Swede" pegged -yi to the plate to cut off Rader and of Seabocgh bungled the throw LussI tii lad doubled and Clark singled, put-in put-in ting a total of ten over, before Wells tij Rrounued to Dowling and a double pr Play retired Clark and Wells Lussi, ih eleventh counter fame across on 2j the play The terrible proceedings were slopped when Crittenden filed cut to Wilis. The Vigilantes scored 5 - one !n the fourth and two in the sev-E sev-E enth totaling 14. H .Although the Canners pulled down w a dozen knocks for fourteen bases. 51 Rex Ames kept them so well scatter D ed that the Tanner vere lucky to Pi pf ere at all Thp one misplay bv the n igilautes, and that bv Ames himself. 1 helped to put tlaedel across In the second Three singles in succession o in the seventh led to the other counter count-er for the Gimlin men As evidence j p of the support given Ames Risberc I r racked onp for three baes with one do wd n the eighth and Rills singled without a count for the Cannera. HELENA, d AB. R. H PO A rJ. i fiascnbach, If. . . . 1 2 2 0 0; j Rad'-r. ss 5 1 1 2 3 0 I McNeil. 3b 5 1 1 3 3 ' Quigley. 2b. 5 3 1 1 4 0 I.UFSi, cf. 5 2 2 3 n Oj , r lark. 3b 5 2 3 13 1 0 Wells, rf 5 2 2 0 n n Crittenden, e 1 1 n 3 0 0 |