Hammond Times, Volume 4, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 13 January 1910 — Page 3

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Thursday, Jan. 13, 1910.

THE TIMES.

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EAST CHICAGO

Mr. and Mrs. M. C Frysinger have ben entertaining 1 Mr. Frysinger's brother and the latter's wife, Mr. and Mm. D. F. Frysinger of Van Wert, O.

Their guests spent from Saturday until Monday with them. D. F. Fryslngrer la the head of the Van Wert Manufacturing company, which manufactures men's working apparel, such as overalls, blouses, canvas gloves, etc., and which are sold extensively In this section as well as In the eastern part of the country, Mr. and Mrs. Frysinger left Chicago on Monday for New Mexico, where they will remain for some time for the benefit of Mr. Frysinger's health, which has been greatly Impaired during the past year. Polo The tie game with Indiana Harbor will be played off at East Chicago Saturday. A sensational game is expected. lS-3t Oliver Sheets of Wren, O., was in the Harbor Tuesday as the guest of M. C. Fryslnger. his nephew. Mr. Sheets came to Chicago last week, bringing with him his H-year-old son, who has recently bee nstricken with hip disease. Ir. Oscar Sheets an older son, who is located at Carthage, S. Da., Joined his father in Chicago, and made arrangements to place the boy in the Presbyterian hospital where he was operated upon immediately. He is doing very nicely, but will be obliged to remain in the. hospital for quite a while. Little Gwendolin, daughter of Dr. and ilrs. C. C. Robinson, is very sick scarlet fever. All savings accounts opened and all deposits made at the FIRST NATIONAL

BANK on or before Jan. 15, 1910, will draw Interest at , 3 per . cent from Jan. 1. 6-St The Harbor branch of the South Shore Interurban was out of commission this morning on account of the snow storm, and the high school kids, who ride to East Chicago on the line, '.took possession of the empty - cars while they stood Idle in the Harbor and held high carnival in them all morning. 1 The East Chicago Teamsters union will hold a meeting in Moss' hall, East Chicago, tomorrow night. The meeting is an important one, and the presence of all members is demanded. Mrs. John Fenton, who has been visiting relatives in Muncie, Ind., for the past couple of weeks is expected home today. The annual meeting of the Congregational church will take place this evening at the residence of E. T7 Da

vis, on Magoun avenue. All the officers

INDIANA HARBOR. Polo The tie game with Indiana Harbor will be played off at East Chicago Saturday. A sensational game is expected. 13-3t Human hair goods positively guaranteed to be sanitary and ilean in every respect. Natural wavy hair sanitary braids 24 inches long $2.75, 28 inches long $4.50, 30 inches long $6.25. Bertha Blumenthal, 1907 One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street, Indiana Har-

Scenes from "A Great CatcL" in Wriicb Cul Joe Tinker Will Appear in Vaudeville,

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Prof. Easton skates five miles back

wards against five local boys forward at Lewis' fink Friday night. 13-2t

ST. JOHNMrs. Peter Portz had the misfortune to sL'p on the icy ground while hanging out washing, and as a result has her right hand badly sprained. A physician attended her and it will be some time before she will be able to se the injured member. John Miller, Jr., and daughter, Miss Matilda, spent Wednesday in Hammond. , , Herman Glade of Bemis transacted business here today. Hubert Doctor was a Dyer business visitor Tuesday.

Miss Lizzie Schaefer of Crown Point is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. N. Maginot this week. C. Flepho of Hanover Prairie was a St. John business visitor today, Mrs. John Miller, Jr., was the guest of relatives in Lowell Wednesday.

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BASEBALL NOTES.

The Athletics have sold Gus Heitling, who was with Kansas City during the past season, to the St. Louis Browns. Hans Wagner is at the head of his own basket-ball - team and is playing to big crowds all through Pennsylvania. . The corner stone of the big grandstand at the new White Sox baseball park in Chicago will be laid on March 17. ; President Fogel has gone to Southern Pines, N. C, to make arrangements for the Quakers' sprln gtraining. "Cy" Young, Hans Wagner and Larry Lajole have all entered fancy birds in the poultry exhibitio nat Youngstown Ohio. ' Harry Lord has Just signed with the Boston Americans and will be captain of the Red Sox again during the cominb season..

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PLAY BALL

Northern Indiana Towns Plan Saturday-Sunday Baseball Circuit.

Billy Lauder, former third htmiTi

of the church and the various societies I ot the Giants, has made an application

wnicn Deiong to it will be present to rr the position of baseball coach for

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WABASH BASEBALL CANDIDATES START Twenty-Five- Men Answer First Call for Practice.

SOX AND CUB HEADS FRIENDLY TO SEMI-PROS.

Prof. Easton xwards against- B I I 1 -rward at Lewis' rink FrVftl I 1 B 13-2t Amongst the local who attended the banquet given by the B. P. O. E. No. 4 of Chicago last night were August Johnson, C. L. Kirk, Mayor A. G. Schlieker, George W. Lewis and Mose Silverman. The R G. Howells have moved into their new home on One Hundred and Forty-fourth street and Magoun avenue. They formerly lived in the Buckley house, on Magoun avenue, between One Hundred and Forty-second and One Hudred ad Forty-third streets. Miss Dorothy Eschebach is reported to be getting along nicely after an operation for appendicitis at St. Margaret's hospital. Sam Adler of Chicago was a busi

ness visitor in East Chicago yesterday. John D. Williams says he has given up the idea of applying for a job as a brakeman on the Terminal. The basketball game last night at the Lewis' rink between East Chicago and Indiana Harbor teams resulted in a victory for the former team by a score of 31 to 17. There was a large crowd prsent to enjoy the sport. Miss Jennie Evans of Milwaukee, Wis., is visiting at the home of Mr. and I .rs. E. T. Davis of Magoun avenue. Mr A. H. W Johnson paid a short visit to friends in Valparaiso yesterday Mrs. A. H. Lawrence left for her home in Terre Haute, Ind., yesterday after a few weeks' visit with her par

ents. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pickard of Forsythe avenue j

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sbell will not be with the i South Bend, Ind., Jan. 18

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, Frank Is

Chicago White Sox during the coming

season. "Izzy" intends to manage his Wlchlfa team. Catcher Ossle Schreck, who made Rube Waddell famous, is said to be tagged for release by Irhe Columbus, O., baseball club. If Manager McAleer can put through a trade with Comiskey, Pitcher Doc White will wear a Washington uniform during the coming season. Manager Bill Clymer of the WilkesBarre team has1 called off his suit at law In which he made the claim that ball players were slaves. Umpire 'Silk" O'Loughlin has organized .n indoor baseball team, every member of which is an umpire and a resident of Rochester, N. T. It 's rumored that a deal is on be-

twefcii Cincinnati and Pittsburg which will result in Vic Willis going to the Reds and Bob Spade to the Pirates. Roger Bresnahan and his Cardinals had the best baseball patronage at St. Louis last season, but now that Jack

O'Connor Is to lead the Browns Roger

will have to go some. O'Connor is one of the most popular playersthat ever wore a St. Louis uniform. Portland, Ore., and Mobile, Ala., clubs are after "Big Ed" Chappelle, the former Boston pitcher.

The Philadelphia haseball park, re

cently sold by John I. Rogers and A. J. Reach to Mrs. hCarles P. Taft of Cin

cinnati for -, $267,000, was bought by

Reach and Rogers in 1888 for the sum

of $70,000

The Fast Chicago Teamsters' union will meet tomorrow night at Moss' hall. This will be a very Important meeting and all members are expected to be present. Mrs. H. M. Johnson was the guest yesterday of Mrs. G. A. Johnson of Chicago avenue.

CALENDAR OP SPORTS

FOR THE WEEK.

Her Reply. Young Sister "What Is diplomacy, Edith?" Edith "It's th power that let's me see Boh Winters kissing all his pretty cousins, without showing "the jealousy that's almost eating me up."

THURSDAY. " , Frankie Neil vs. Toung Britt, 15 rounds, at Baltimore. FRIDAY. Opening of western intercollegiate basket-ball season. SATURDAY. Annual meeting of Western Golf association in Chicago. Opening of annual show of the Automobile Trade association of - Pennsylvania dual swimming meet at Philadelphia.

Business

men of northern Indiana cities have given their backing to the organization of an interurban baseball league, which will be composed of clubs rep

resenting South Bend, Mishawaka, Elkhart, Goshen, Laporte, Michigan City, Hammond and Gary.

The plan Is to play only Saturday

and Sunday games, except on holidays, when contests will also be scheduled. All the cities in the proposel league

are connected by interurban lines and because of this fact the expenses will

be kept at a minumum. The players in the majority will be composed of amateurs.

A second Saturday-Sunday league is

now in process of forr-v .ion with clubs

at Bremen, Plymouth, Nappanee, Argos, Bourbon and Walkerton. The men behind the Plymouth club will also support horse racing. They have or

ganized as association with the following officers: President, Harry Humrlchouser; vice president, L. M. Lauer; secretary, Dr. Edward Danforth, and treasurer, William H. Vangllder.

JOY MILLER'S FATHER FEARS SON IS DEAD

Starts Search for Michigan

Athlete, Claiming Boy Is Deranged.

Those hard night coughs of the children!

What shall you give them? Just what your mother gave you, and just what her

Ask your doctor if he endorses Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral has been the only cough Cherry Pectoral for the coughs and colds c medicine for seventy years. Once in the children. Do as he says. mw? family, it stays. Keep it on hand.

StopCough

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THE SQUEEZE PLAY.

KELLY. AGREES TO FIGHT KETCHEL FRISCO POLICE BAR RICKARD

Crawfordsvile, Ind., Jan. 13. Twenty- ' five candidates for the Wabash college

baseball team and . the track and field team answered the first call of Coach

Jesse C. Harper for men yesterday. The

men will begin indoor work at once.

Coach Harper will devote much of his time for the next few weeks with the

baseball candidates for the pitchers'

box. Winnie, subtwirler last year;

Puckett, one of the regulars last year,

and Myers, a freshman ,are the most

promising candidates for the box.

Outlook for the track and field team

is not . so bright as , for the baseball

team. Shirley Deming, captain last year,

has quit college to go Into business in Mississippi and his place on the track

team will be hard to fill. He was the

state's leading short distance runner.

Among the old baseball men In col

lege this year who will try for the nine'

are Bowers, catcher; Starbusk, first

base; Herron, second; Lambert, shoTt;

Gissler, third base, and Captain Bridge,

outfield. Graduate Manager Harry El-

ler has his baseball schedule practical

ly completed.

1- S"o-

) Dr. E. D. Boyd

PAINLESS DENTISTRY 275 92d St., South Chicago, 111. Ortr Continental Sboe Cm. Phone South Chicago No. 4242.

ALL, WORK GUARANTEED

Detroit, Mich., Jan. 13. Joy Miller,

deposed captain of the University of

Michigan football team, has been missing for eight days and his father fears

that the boy has become mentally de

ranged through injuries received in

football games and by his recent dis grace by the university faculty. Joy left home Jan. 4 with his suit case, ostenstibly to return to the uni verslty. ' He never arrived there. Aft

er two days his father began a telegraphic search for. him. It ha been without success. He has began to fear his son Is dead. Interviewed yesterday regard the mater Mr. Miller said: "I am fully aware of the fact that Joy is and has been laboring under a mental disadvantage. His lapse of

memory and dazed condition dates baok to last September, directly after he participated in his first football game this season, which was a scrub game on the D. A. C. grounds. He never was himself after his injuries healed. "When he returned from Philadelphia he spent the following Sunday with us in Detroit. I asked him what sort of treatment had had received in the game with Pennsylvania. He said It was the roughest he had ever been through."

KEWANEE PLAYER ILL Kewanee, 111., Jan. 13. Charles Lewis, the first man to sign with Kewanee's

Central association team for the com

ing season, became seriously ill Immedi

ately after signing his contract today.

Relatives from Hibblng. Mln., have been

summoned.

Hugo Kelly, through his manager, Silvie Ferretti, agreed last night to fight Champion Stanley Ketchel eight rounds at Memphis in the near future. The fight will take place before Tommy Ryan's club and it Is expected that all of the details of the match will be worked out today at a meeting between Ryan and Ferretti. Ryan returned yesterday from a visit to Grand Rapids, where he had a talk with Ketchel and got the chaim-pion's promise to take on Kelly in the south. Ketchel aslo stated that he woul dgo in for the short fight game and take o nail comers at Memphis, Pittsburg and Philadelphia. He is especially anxious to try conclusions with Kelly, Klaus and Papke. The weight and the division of the money are the only things which have not been agreed upon by Kelly and

Ketchel and it is not expected that there will be any hitch on either score. The champion from Michigan and the

local 158-pound man met once in the

past, the go resulting in a jig-time

victory for Ketchel. Kelly, however, always has claimed that he was badly injured by a fall against the slightly

padded ring and believes he will be able

to outpoint the champion in another

attempt.

Reports from California tend more

and more to support the belief that Jimmy Coffroth and Gleason will be the men to pull off the Jeffries-Johnson fleht July 4. instead of Rickard and

Gleason. John L. Hergst, who twenty years ago was known to the sporting world as "Toung Mitchell," one of the best middleweights of hlh time, announced yesterday that Rickard could not get a permit to stage a fight in San Francisco. Hergst is now chairman of the police committee of the board of supervisors of the coast metropolis. There has been a strong suspicion ever since the articles were signed that Coffroth was in on the deal and the barring of Rickard by the San Fran

cisco authorities tends to support this

belief. Coffroth himself has thrown

strong hints that he will be the man behind the -fight when it comes off ,in letters to Chicago friends. In fact. It is believed that when he returns from

Europe he will have the signature of

Jem Driecoll. the English featherweight

chamipion, for a fight with Abie Attell

for a part of a three-days' fight tour

ney, which will be climaxed by the

heavyweight mill.

MILLER STILL

WANTS FIGHT

I am going to meet Chairman

Herrmann of the national commis

sion Thursday and we will discuss the status of the semi-pro clubs. ; I

can say now that I believe that the

local teams are a benefit to base

ball, and I think they are deserting of some sort of protection.

BY CHARLES XV. MTRPHY. - I do not care to say whether I am

in favor of taking the local semi-

pro clU'bs into organized baseball

until I have heard the opinions of

the other major league presidents. I can say, however, that I think the

semi-pros fill a certain need in base-.

ball and I am very friendly to them.

KILLIAN SIGNS

TW0 MEN La Crosse, Wis., Jan. 13. "FlghUng

Joe" Klllian, manager of the Winona

Grabbers" of the Minnesota-Wisconsin

league, announces he has signed Clapper and Koeplng, catcher and second

baseman, who starred with the Super

ior team last year. Klllian has ths

101 Ranch Owner Believes Pull Off Bout. J. C. Miller of Bliss, Okla,, one of the owners of the 101 ranch, says if the plans backed by him and others of that state are successful there will be a special session of "the Oklahoma legislature soon, at which permission will be ... obtained so the 'Jeffries-Johnson fight may take place there next July.

"Governor Haskell is favorable to the proposition." he said, '"but is being hounded by the reform element of Oklahoma, which is nagging him to refuse the permit, and so far they are sucessful, but a movement Is on foot whereby a special session of the legislature will be called, and at this session we hope

to get the coveted permit for the fight. We believe we can turn the trick." . Miller is at the Auditorium hotel on his way to Washington.

COULON HEADS

jiqitj pjjjj SOUTH larest start toward a new team of any

1

Champion Goes to New Or- ROSS STOPS DUGAN

leans for Kitson Bout.

New Castle, Pa., Jan. 13. Tony Ross

Johnny Coulon, bantamweight cham- last night knocked out Tommy Dugan

pion of the world, will leave this morn- In the third round or a scheduled tweiva

ing, accompanied by his father, E. E. j round go. Dugan was outclassed irom

Coulon, and his brother eGorge, fori the start and was given the sleep wax

New Orleans. The little champion is lop while trying to hang on to Ross

scheduled to hook up with George Kit

son before the Royal Athletic club next TTTTfpTjr TTTT PTft H '1" VT? 3

Following his bout at New Orleans.

Coulon will turn his steps northward Bert Keyes has started training ana

and Btop off at Memphis, where he ex- wants to meet any lightweight in the

Tiects to cinch a date before Tommy game.

Rvan's new club. New York City will A -fittsDurg promoter is xrymg io

be his destination after leaving the! sign Sam Langford and Sandy Fergu-

Tennessee metropolis. son to meet on Jan. ine jasi umo

Sam and Sandy met handy was taKen

CTTNTIAV P AT T I with a strange maiaay wnicn loonea OUJNJJiil 13 A till srrniMhinir like a cross between frozen

FOR .NEW U JCii&OJCj X feet and downright laziness.

They must have lots of money to toss

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XeW Jersey I Auanaim wmrn iimj idii xl

Joe urim ana rai lveeie. London followers of the boxing game believe that Tom Thomas is the bloke

Trenton, N. J.. Jan. 13

is likely to see legalized Sunday base

ball during the coming season for the A.. 4 m rt in -manv var. Tlflfiphfll rt -

thusiasts claim to have secured almost to Slv Stanley Ketchel his solid support for a bill introduced in Governor arner has pv

the legislature last year and now be

fore the senate. The bill is not compul sory, but must be approved by the aid

ermen of each city or town before it

becomps operative.

FLORIDA DOG

WINS DERBY

put over the

Governor Hughes Jolt" on boxing in

Michigan. Jack McGuigan of Philadelphia says he has a new heavyweight and when he gets started he will never stop until he becomes champion. Jack doesn't like to start the new one In cold weather, bo wait until the 1st of May.

PITCHER HARRY STALEY DEAD Springfield, III., Jan. 13. Harry Staley of this city, one of the leading pitchers with the Boston Nationals when that team won th eWorld's cham. Dionshio in 1892 .died yesterday in a

sanitarium at Battle Creek.

Memphis, Tenn., Jan. 13. Millionaire,

a pointer owned by A. M. Masters of Jacksonville, 111., won the derby of the Eastern Field Trial club at Paul J. Rainey's preserves in Tippah county. Miss, today. Rhodanlde was second and Summit Rex, owned by Gustav Pabst of Milwaukee;, third.

ROSE POLY, 46; DEPAUW, 17 Terre Haute, Ind., Jan. 13. Rose Poly defeated the De Pauw basket-bal five

. J here last night by the Bcore of 46 to 17.

BIG BOWLING TOURNAMENTS LISTED FOR 1910 Jan. 15-22 Middle States Bowling association at St. Louis.' Feb. 11-16 International Bowling association, at St. Paul. Feb. 26-March 4 American Bowling Congress, at Detroit. . "March 7-21 Canadian Bowling asso. elation, at Toronto. March 2031 Western Bowling Congress,' at San Francisco. April 9-30 National competitions, at .Baltimore.

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