Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 30, Hammond, Lake County, 23 July 1908 — Page 4
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THE TIMES. Thursday, July 23, 1903.'
Th Lake County Times CJCLUDUJa THE IOTTH CHICACO TIMES EDITION AICD THi? CART KTX7IIXQ TIMES EDITION. EVENINO NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.
-Entered as second class matter June 28. I0S, at the poitofflce at UamBObd. Indiana, under the Act of Congress. March 3. 1879."
MAI JT- OF"? CES-HAaiMONT, ' IND. TEi.ErnrojrBS HABTSTOITD, 111 113 WHTTTJrO, lit 'EAST CHICAGO, 111. IJTDIANA HARBOR. Ill GARV, 1ST SOI TH CHIC AGO, 310 SOUTH CHICAGO OFFtt H JMMi COMME11CIAL AVE, TELEPHONE 2.
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A CORDIAL WELCOME FOR HON. J. W. KERN. IT WILL BE MR- KERX'S first visit to Lake county since he became honored with the nomination for tlio vice presidency. And though many of the thousands of people in this corner of his state will not fret the opportunity to see him nor to hear him speak, they will join in the heartiest of welcomes and regret that he cannot stay longer. John YV. Kern is now a national figure. He may no longer be called a common citizen. Whether, when the ballots are counted in November, he shall have been elected or no, he will have become one of Indiana's noted men. lie is popular up and down the state and his welcome home at Indianapolis last week was a state incident, in which regardless of party affiliations all the people joined. The distinguished democrat does not come to Gary today in a political capacity. He is not to talk politics but merely to lend his presence to an unusual accasion- It will be his first visit to Gary and here he will doubtless wonder as others have done at the promising city built on the sand dunes. He will come in personal contact with a host of brainy men from Lake county and men who will make him prouder than ever, if that were possible that he is an Indiana man. The TIMES hopes that it usurps the perogatives of no one, at least in behalf of its large following in the Calumet region in extending a sincere and cordial welcome to Mr. Kern and an invitation to come again and come often. IT IS AN EPOCH-MAKING DAY FOR INDIANA.
THE PEOPLE OF THE CALUMET REGION do not yet fully appreciate the magnitude of the work which has been undertaken by the United States Steel company at Gary. It is a fact that the celebration today which is the mark the arrival of the first ore laden boat in the Gary harbor might also be considered the celebration of the beginning of the second of many stages in the development of Lake county as the greatest iron and steel producing ! center in the worldThe present plans for the mills at Gary contemplate the erection of 16 blast furnaces. The number of blast furnaces axe the measure of the capacity of a plant of this kind and indicate that the Indiana Steel company is to be one of the largest concerns of its kind in the world. But this is only a beginning. There are certain facts connected with the inception and growth of the project at Gary which, if known, are not generally appreciated. The Indiana Steel company owns seven miles of lake frontage along the shore of Lake Michigan from BufSngton to a point a mile or so west of Gary. It does not require very much insight into the affairs of this great corporation; neither does it require very much foresight as to what that corporation will do, in the face of this fact, to see that the wholesale purchase of land was not made simply because the United States Steel corporation wanted to own half a township. It was made because the United States Steel corporation intends to concentrate all of its middle western mills at Gary. This statement is made with a full realization of its import. It is supported not only by theory but by fact, as the developments of the next year or so will show. Indiana, realizing that millions of dollars will be invested in this state by the steel company if it is given fair and liberal treatment has passed laws regarding the reclaiming of submerged lands which have been greatly appreciated by the steel company officials. On the other hand the laws in Illinois, where the Illinois Steel company is located are hostile to that company. Only recently there was a judgment rendered in the Supreme court of that state against the Illinois Steel company by which it will be compelled to pay something like $5,000,000 for land which it had reclaimed from the bottom of the lake at great expense. If the people of Illinois only knew it, that decision and the hostility of Illinois towards some of its corporations will cost it ten millions of dollars for every million that it might hop;? to secure from the Illinois Steel company through this judgment. Most of the blast furnaces of the Illinois Steel company at South Chicago are of the Bessemer type which are now being altogether replaced by the furnaces which make steel by the open hearth process. In other words, the South Chicago plant of the United States Steel company is out of date' and must give way to such complete and up-to-date plants as the one at Gary. The future development of the iron and steel business, then, ia to be in a territory which is friendly to the -reat steel trust. The old and inefficient plants over the country are to be rebuilt at Gary along modern lines to meet the demand of the railroads which now insist that the steel which goes into rails be made by open hearth process. The sixteen blast furnaces, we repeat, are only a beginning. The master minds who have laid the plans for the great mills at Gary are looking a century or two into the future. A sixteen furnace plant will be considered a small one by the Garyites of the next generation. And in addition to the great development which is contemplated by the United States Steel corporation there will be scores of other concerns which will locate at Gary and utilize the product of these great mills. There manufactories will, in the aggregate, more than equal what is being done by the steel company and if the steel company is building one city these concerns will employ enough men to warrant the building of another. There is little wonder therefore that the people of Gary are jubilant over the complition of the first stage of this great undertaking. Little wonder that they are celebrating tho arrival of the first ore laden boat It is to be the everlasting credit of the members of the Commercial clnb that they appreciate the responsibilities which have been placed upon them and that on an occasion like that of today they havo enterprise and public spirit enough to make the event one never to be forgotten.
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.ONE CENT Other Newspaper in Calumet Region. PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT AM.
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THIS DATE IX HISTORY. July 23. 1401 Bagdad sacked by the Tartars. 1779 Minnlsink eetlements in Orange county. New York, attacked by Indians. 1794 Vicomte Alexandre de Beuharnais. first husband of Empress Josephine, died on the guillotine. 1S10 -Xiil 1 for the union of Upper and Lower Canada received the sanction of Qufen Victoria. I SS5 General Ulysses S. Grant died. Born 'April 27, 1822. 1892 .Election in Manitoba favored provincial prohibition. 1S97 Dinghy tariff law went into efect. 1905 United States naval squadron arrived at Annapolis with the remains of Admiral John Paul Jones.
THIS IS MY 51ST BIRTHDAY". Albert Shaw. Dr. Albert Shaw, the well known publicist and editor of the American Monthly Review of Reviews, was born at Shandon, O.. July 23, 1S57. lie was trained for college by a tutor and was graduated from the Iowa college in 1679. In 1SS1 ho entered Johns Hopkins university as a post-graduate. vVhile there lie wrote a book called "Iearia; a Chapter in the History of Communism," which gave to him his doctor's degree. .After leaving Johns Hopkins Ir. Shaw made a thorough study of industrial and agricultural developments and became an ardent stule:it of municipal government and of the problems of city life. After several years of travel and study in Europe lie gave a series of lectures at Johns Hopkins, Michigan and other universities. In 1X90 he was elected professor of international law and political institutions at Cornell university, and was at the same time invited to establish In New York, as editor and manager, a magazine to be known as the American Review of Reviews. The following year he gave up his professorship in order to devote his entire time to his editorial work. Dr. Shaw is the author of a number of ivorks on municipal government and other subjects that have attracted attention both in America and Europe. RANDOM THINGS AND FLINGS We are actually bragging about it. The sheath gown has not appeared In any of the Calumet region cities. YVe leara now that the stout man is more intelligent tbtin the thin man. Oh, very well, we skinny ones will have to take the back seat. Take Warning, Ladles. Mr. Michael O'Leary of Kansas City objected to his wife wearing a Merry Widow hat. "If ye want a flower garden go out to the parks and look at the display, but don't deck yerself in a hat that makes ye look like my daughter." She ordered one and It was delivered. She tried It on. She is now in the hospital with a broken thigh and a badly bruised body. When a Mrs. Newlywed gets her first grocery bill It's a sure sign that she wonders where she got It into her head that housekeeping; wasn't going to cost much. That low rumbling noise you hear by putting your ear to the ground la the glad noise made all over the state at the news that the Conn barrel is to be opened up. Oh, joy! THE TIME TO UK KIND IS NOW, THE PAST WAS A MINUTE AGO. THE FTTITIE IS TO COME. TIIE PRESENT IS THE ONLY SURE CHANCE. Every Lake county man is proud of Gary today Gary Is surely the epochmaking city of Indiana. Of course, there's no law against saying automo-be-el, only it is the wrong accent. For Little Girls to Ponder. The girl who was considered the belle of the occasion at the Owl danco by the boys was not dressed in a way to make her particularly noticeable did not talk and laugh loud enough to attract attention, and did not tag after any of the young men. She wa a little girl who can talk, and dance, and make herself agreeable to the co! lego boys, who have picked up enough Greek to figure out the names of several fraternities, and the high school boys, who are breaking Into their first dress suits. Emporia (Kan.) Gazette "I may drink too much, hat I don't smoke elKnrettes," said n lady on the witness stand recently, "and I know what Is required f a lady." This, you might cnll the differentiation of vices. Come to Indiana, Nora. A brunette with "liquid brown eyes," Mrs. Nora Chalfant of St. Louis, Mo., wishes a divorce from her husband, "who doesn't care." It seems that for some inexplicable reason he wouldn't k'ss her when she wanted him to. His miserable excuse was that kissing Is silly. There are plenty of men In Lake county who can fatten np their "batting;" averages without playing nny baseball themselves. Xo Kirk Coming from Jackson. Another rose-tinted, magnolla-scen-
Elbert
S A ; - " -
Chairman of the Executive Committee Board of Directors United States
Steel Corporation. ed Sabbath has settled over Joyous Jackson and finds Its citizenship attuno with the spirit of the holy day. All H well with us and we are at peace with all mankind. The "reds" and tho "blues" have declared an armistice for the day our baseball club has crowned itself with a merry widow lia'o tr'mmed in pennant cloth good men are announcing themselves for city offices William Jennings Bryan Is going to be the next president of the United States our cup of joy is full and as we serenely loiter over the rolls and coffee, the tintinnabulous sounds that aro wafted in the ambient air aro a gentle but sweolly solemn reminder that it is time to start for church and offer thanks for the privilege of being permitted to enjoy real life In a sure enough good city. Jackson (Miss.) Clarion Lcdger. A HAMMOND MAN' HAS A WIFE WHOM HE SAYS CAN'T BE BEAT. WONDER IF HE MEANS THAT HE TRIED IT AND GOT FOOLED. As long as the Gary ladies don t start talking "federations" and "suffragettes," wo shan't care how deep they dabble in politics. IN POLITICS Indianapolis colored republicans are coming to the front and in line for W. H. Taft. the lead being taken by the Touissart Republican club, one of the strongest colored clubs in the city, which has adopted resolutions indorsing Taft and Sherman, expressing renewed confidence in the republican party and pledging its members to do all in their power to bring about the election of the republican ticket. Hon. James E. Watson of P.ushvlll-. republican nominee for governor of Indiana, and Hon. Charles W. Miller, republican nominee for congress for the thirteenth district, will be the principal speakers at the twelfth annual picnic of the Pioneer Farmers' association, which will be held at South Clear Lake, about nine mll;s northwest of South Bend, Thursday, August 13. William P. Hearst will attend the Indiana state convention of the Independence party In this city August 25, and the leaders of the party in this stat" are saying that C. G. Conn of Elkhart will be the nominee for governor. Whether Hearst is expected to bring this about by his presence at the con ventlon or whether it has been fixe already, thoy do not say, but they ar,; all counting Conn as the nominee. Conn was a candidate before the recent democratic state convention for the nomination for governor and was one of the candidates defeated by Thomas R. Marshall. He Is a band Instrument manufacturer at Elkhart an is reputed to be a milionaire several times over. He is in California at present, but R. M. Isherwood, who Is In charge of the Independence party state headquarters, at the English hotel, said today that ho expected him to return about August 15, and that ho wonld probably attend the state convention on the 25th. Dullness fa picking np. People s are coming hack to town. Should you not keep your "rooms and 4 houses to rent" before the pnb s He? advertise on page 7 In our s want "ads."
H. Gary
IWlJUfW J. ".-A""" UP AND DOWN IN INDIANA OLD PAPER IS SOLD. The Crawfordsville Review was sold today at a receiver's sale by Ren P. Carpenter. An agent for the bondholders bid the paper in at $1,500. They will discontinue the paper. IIULP STARS GET OUT. Al Beckerich of South Bend, Ind., a vaudeville manager, left Goshen after occupying the Irwin threater one week. The performers assert they received no pay, and several of them are stranded. Benefit performances are being given to help them out of town. HEIRS AFTER THE FARM. Alleging that Mrs. Sarah Cheatham of Shelbyville, aged 80 years, was mentally incompetent to dispose of her farm, which consisted of 156 acres and was valued at $12,000 to $14,000, George R. Wagoner and fifty-seven other heirs of the deceased have brought suit for the possession of the property, which is located near Flatrock. AFTER "RED LIGHT" RESORTS. A petition is to be submitted to Governor Hanly is being circulated by citizens of Park Place, Anderson, calling his attention to an alleged neglect on the part of the police of that city in abating a nuisance on East Ninth street, which is declared by the police to ba a disgrace to any city. The citizens are compelled to pass down East Ninth street and through the Panhandle tunnel to reach their homes on the east side of White river. NEW HATE ESTABLISHED. The Indiana railroad commission yesterday entere.l an order establishing a joint rate of 9 cents on each 100 pounds of Portland cement shipped from Stroh, on the Wabash lines, to Frances on the Indianapolis Southern. The order was entered after evidence had been heard on a petition filed by the Paddock & Rush Lumber company. FINED FOR STABBING DOG. Albert Booker, colored, was fined 1 cent and costs, amounting to $15.01 all told, yesterday, for stabbing a dog. Tho charge was cruelty to an animal and Justice Alamanzor Hutchinson exacted the penalty. Malcolm Moore, who owns the dog and lives with his parents upon North New Jersey street, Indianapolis, said that the dog didn't do a thing to the colored man. Rut Booker said the og jumped at him. FAIR WILL BR GOOD. "It is evident that the only limit to the number of attractions wo will have is the amount of space available on the midway," was the conclusion announced last night by Chairman C. A. Tevebaugh of Indianapolis, after an enthusiastic meeting of those who are to gh'e the international interdenominational county fair during the week of August 17 to 22 SUES FOR STOLEN HORSE. William Willets of near Attica has brought suit against Robert Green for $1,000. Ho alleges Unit Green stole two of his horses worth $500 nnd says that lie lias expend.' d another $500 in trying to recover the animals. BAR ASSOCIATION BANQUETS. An abundance of wit and oratory from representative legal lights of Indiana was an adjunct to the material feast spread for the members of the State Bar association at the Country club last night. The banquet was given as the finale of the twelfth annual meeeting of the association, which has been in progress for two days. DIES ON STATE HOUSE I. AWN. By shooting himself in the right temple so that the bullet passed through his head and came out just below the left ear, an unknown young man, probably 22 to 25 years of age, committed suicide shortly after last midnight under a small tree in the southwest corner of the state house lawn in Indianapolis. WELL KNOWN WOMAN" DEAD. Mrs. Maud Russell Pfleger. 33 years of age. wife of William J. Pfleger, president of the Central Labor union and a leader in labor circles, succumbed to tuberculosis of several years standing last night at 10:45 o'clock, at her home, 231 North Arsenal avenue, Indianapoli3.
PORTING MOTE!
THURSDAY. Continuation of the Olympic g times In lunation. FKIUW. Olympic Marathon race, from Windsor to the stadium. S Philadelphia cricketers vs. Royal Artillery at YA'oolrlch (two days). Western (nnadn rowing re 9 gatta begins at Winnipeg (two days). 4 SATURDAY. Western tennis championships at Chicago. Annual regatta of the St. I. on It Power lioat association. Continuation of the Olympic games in London. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. NATIONAL LEAGUE. V. L. I'ct. Pittsburg 02 .13 New York 4 9 S3 Chicago 4S 3." Philadelphia 4 :'." C12 '.S3 Cincinnati 4o Boston 3S lirooklyn 3 42 4 .' 1 54 r.i 7 i 4 r.2 i 370 ' St. !uis 3') A M I : II I C A N I K . I E. W. 51 49 4!) 40 41 3: L. ?,4 37 ST 3S 41 47 r.o Pet. .G'O .570 ..-,33 ,54 .500 .4 53 Detroit St. Louis . . . Chicago . . . . '"l.'vi iand . . . Philadelphia Boston Washington New York . . AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. w L PC I .01 : -?-' , ..-)0. .409 .4 5 1 I Tndianapolis Co Ileitis vi i 1. 55 Toledo 51 Columbus 51 Minneapolis 47 Milwaukee 46 Kansas City 44 St. Paul 30 "s 41 42 4'S 4ij .31 CENTRAL LEAGUE.
W. U Pet. . Evansville 4 ft 37 .570 Grand Rapids 47 3S .353, Da vi on 43 37 .549 1 South Rend 46 40 .535 terre Haute 44 39 .53o Zanesville 42 S9 .519 Fort Wavne 42 4 2 .500 Wheeling 20 63 .211
RESULTS YESTERDAY. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Chicago. 2; Boston, 2 eleven innings, train time). Cincinnati, 1; Philadelphia, 2. Pittsburg. 2; Brooklyn. 1. AMERICAN LEAGUE. New York-Chicago, called in the second, rain. Washington. 0; Detroit, 6. Boston. 2; St. Louis, 4. Philadelphia, 3; Cleveland, 4 (twelve Innings I . AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Louisville. 5; St. Paul. 2. Columbus. 0; Milwaukee, 3. Indianapolis. 3: Minneapolis. 7. Toledo-Kansas City, wet grounds. RAIN STOPS GAME. New York, July 22. The White Sox and the Highlanders were prevented from finishing out their skirmish at the hilltop grounds today by an 111tlmed showed of rain. The weather man turned on the water spout Just long enough to wet things up good and in a few minutes again the sun was shining. Umpire Evans had already called off the game when the sun came back and announced two for tomorrow. Moxfe Manuel and Joe Lake had been selected to do the pitching for their teams In today's game. The contest started off just a few inches ahead of an on-coming storm and only one round could be played before the rain began to fall In copious quantities. One hit had been made off each in the opening inning. Isbell got the hit for the Sox and Moriarity made good for the locals. GAME GOES TWELVE INNINGS. It's a mean shame that a train schedule butted in on the Cubs and Doves at the West Side yesterday. With the score 2 all. and the champs about to arise In their wrath and finish out the twelfth Inning. Umpire Klem called the whole thing off, as both teams had to catch the rattlers for the east. Up to this oratorical point there had been thrills and the reverse for the assembled ones. Those Cubs looked about all In when the Squabs put a run across in the tenth, two out and Pitcher Pat Flaherty running along as smoothly as a limited express. Artie's chances were not especially worth laying large wagers on. But he picked out a slow shoot and ripped It to deep right center, as shimmering a triple as one ever wants to see. Zlm showed no hesitation in coming In with the squaring count. Elaborate opportunities were wasted by both sides In the eleventh and the I loves had a fruitless bang at the Knowing that there was only a brief spell before the train left. Umpire Klem received the signal for the throttle, and delivered himself of a few, well chosen remarks. CALLS OFF NELS0N-GANS BOUT. Salt Lake. Utah, July 22. Owing to failure to secure advantageous railroad rates between this city and Ely, Nov., the proposed bout between Battling Nelson and Joe Oans, scheduled for Labor Day at Ely, has been called off by Tex Rlckard, who was engineering the deal to bring together the grand fighters. Rlckard sueeeded In getting up his forfeit to stage the match, but fresh opposition later confronted him In the form of Inadequate railroad accommodations, and rather than risk a total loss on thi venture through a small house Rlckard tonight declared the bout off. Nelson was at Ely a few days ago arringing for his training quarters and the contest seemed assured. MANY CARS HAVE ACCIDENT. Bethlehem. N. H., July 22. With many serious accidents to cars In the didder, tour today. Donor Charles Glidden and Chairman Hower being thrown out of their car, Frank H. Yerger's side-swiping a high bridge and A. M. Armon's going Into a ditch and breaking a wheel, not a single clean score machine was touched by penal-
ties. There rtlll figure in the tie tha F'lerce, Peerless and Chicago mixed team and five roadstere. and the run, will end tomorrow at Saratog.i Springs, N. Y. The big six-cylinder Pierce used as the chairman's car and pacemaker had its experience about sixty-one mllea from the start, near Hanover, when In passing a .young and frightened pair of horses it ran too near a deep ditch the roadway yielded and the machine slid down. The low speed at which It wa3 running prevented a more serious affair, for it was moving at a speed of eight miles an hoiir. The weight of the party and the ca forced the ground away. slipping dour. and stopping parallel to the road, on angle of about' rr, degrees. Chain. i:tn 1 lower was thrown out ar:d down about eighteen feet, leu was not injure. 1. Mr. GMdden jumped and when l.e struck tho ground rolled over several times to get out of the way of t he oar.
GESMAN AUTO IN PRUSSL. Eydtkur.nen. East Pru.i.i. July 22.The German cir in the New York to Paris motor r;o-e rr.ss.-.l ti..- frontier at S:22 this evering. The American ear. which left M-scow ;t 3 o'clock yesterday niori.ing. is about 550 miles bfliind the German. The p,uer mada 420 miles todav. EXPECT MANY CHICAGO BOATS. Muskegc..,. Mi.-h.. July 22. The White Lake Yacht (lib has made arrangements to oil re for tweniv 1-e-ats on the annual cruise of th- Chicago clubs from t'hieago to White like Saturday. A ball will be tendere. visiting yachtsmen iri the clubhouse Monday evening. WELCH TO REFEREE BOUT. San KrunrlFco. Cai.. July 22. Jack Welch will In ail proi.-iHli jy be chosen referee of the Ketchl-K el ly fight July 31. Several nam. s. including that of James J. Jeffries, have been under consideration, but Welch has the call, as both the fighters and their managers favor him. GLOOM IN AMERICAN CAMP. lyondon, July 22 Comparative gloom pervades the American i amp tonight. The athletes from over the seas had strongly cherished hopes of repeating yesterday's grand record making a clean sweep in the track events, but a dark horse in the person of the South African youth, R. E. Walker, upset the calculations. Walker broke the tape In what Is considered the most Important event in the Olympic games, the 100-meter dash, a short two feet in front of J. A. Rector, the University of Virginia crack, thereby putting an end to the astonishing succession of American triumphs, which had begun to sade Britons. Shoulder and shoulder, Walker Rector and the Canadian star, Kerr, rani down the straight, with Cartmell, the Pennsylvania sprinter close behind. At the half way mark. Walker forged slightly ahead, but at the tape less than a yard separated the first thred men, with the Canadian only inches behind the Virginian, in third rlace. The American team did remarkably well at the stadium today, but success had elated them to the point where they were satisfied with nothing less than everything in sight. A world's record, by C. J. Bacon, of the IrishAmerican A. C, in the 400-meters hurdling, which he won in 55 seconds; an Olympic record of 24 feet Ctj inches by F. C. Irons, of the Chicago A. A., in tho running broad jump; and the victory of G. S. Dole, of Yale, in the featherweight wrestling, out of Bcvcn finals, should be a satisfactory day's performance. S0MMER, CATCHER, DEAD. Cleveland. July 22. J. A. Sommers, 42 years old. veteran major league catcher, died of paresis at his home hero today. Sommer for a time caught Amos Rusie. He played with Indianapolis and Boston. A widow and two children survife. MISCELLANEOUS BALL GAMES. At Winona Lake, Ind. Winona Laka Reds, 11; New Paris, 2. At Rensselaer, Ind. Wheatfield, 4; Rensselaer, 1. At Muscatine, Ia. Muscatine, 2; Davenport, 0. At Centralia. 111. Centralia Whita Sox. 4; Mount Vernon Merchants, 3. At Platteville, 111. Flatterville, 8; Galena, 1. At Folsomville, Ind. Folsomvllle, 3; Newberry Stars, 8. At Jasper, Ind. Jasper Heralds, 14 Dubolse, 0. At Boonville, Ind. Boonvllle, 7; Mad! sonvllle, 5. At Elkhorn, Wis. Elkhorn, 2; Whitewater, 0. UMPIRE IN ROW. Wausan, Wis., July 22. A fist fight between Manager Ferguson of Wausau and Umpire. Bush broke up today's game in the first half of the second Inning. Kernan had gone to first through being hit. He started for second when Catcher Erh kson dropped a ball, but the throw bear Kernan, and he ran out of th" line and slid past second. Before he had crawled back to the base Buemlller touched him with the ball, but Bush called him safe. Buemlller made a kick and was ordered out of the game. Ferguson, who was on the bench, went on to the field and make vigorous protest, and after a short, heated talk Bush attempted to hit Ferguson. The latter retalllated, and they went at it. Bush got th worst of It, his rose being blooded. Both were arrested and fined $10 each. In the municipal court. Manager Pickett of Green Bay refused to continue the game without an, umpire. A CHALLENGE. The Nelson Colts of Hegewlsch would like to arrange games with all 11 and 13 year old teams. Address Harry Nelson, 13400 Ontario avenue Hegewlsch,
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