Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 60, Hammond, Lake County, 27 August 1910 — Page 3
THE TIMES.
Saturday, August 27, 1910.
gAfiT CJI(J,(JO ' two weeka and durlnf S.18 abaance Miss
pit at xn e jsievnouiat ciiurcu at woi
Wm. A. Hart man of East
has " accepted a position as instructor in Interior decorations and kindred subjects in the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. It is " understood that Mr.' Harttnan is one of the best in the country in his chosen profession, and has a reputation amongst fine art instructor that he may well be proud of. Leslie Cutler, of 4854 Ma?oun avenue, -while playing with some other boys yesterday, was thrown down and had his left leg broken below the knee, j At first young Cutler though his leg was only wrenched a little, but when Dr. Raleigh Hale made an examination j
he found the bone was fractured.
from tomorrow and Rev. Wm. Collins of Indiana Harbor wlU preach there the Sunday following.
Dancing at Bast Chicago Rink Saturday, Aug. 27th. AH come, Stirling's
orchestra. 26-2t Skating party at the Whiting Roller
Skating Rink Saturday, Aug. 27.- Ev-
verybody welcome. 25-3t
Exciting Incidents and the Victors in Kane County and Fox River Events
INDIANA HARBOR. Methodist Episcopal Church, Indiana Harbor.' Rev. H. P. Ivey, - the pastor, has
returned- from his ten days' vacation.
The services at the Methodist church ; and will preach morning and evening. ... . 1.1. 1 T" V- .ll..!.. ..V4.t.. . Ill V. ti
tomorrow will open as usual with a
goodfellowship meeting at 9 o'clock in the morning, which will be followed by Sunday school at 9:45. Preaching will take place at 11 o'clock. Rev. J. B. McNary having chosen for the subject of his sermon, "What Is Man." At 6:45 in the evening the Epworth League will. meet and Miss Carrie Ross will be the leader. The regular evening service will begin at 7:30 o'clock, when the pastor will speak on "What Is It to
The following subjects will be used
Morning: "Some Rules of Christian
Conduct."
Evening: ' "Money and Heaven's Law
of Exchange.
Any. one who have not yet turned
in their financial pledges for. the en
suing conference year, should do so on
this Sunday. . The new year starts
Sunday", Sept. 4th. The individual con
your hands before that time. Business j If "WfV
Live." Monday evening the of ficial j is business. Church business is also
board will meetin in the church at 8 o'clock. The regular Wednesday evening prayer meeting will be led by Brother D. J. Reid. Misses Rose and Mary and Frank Hoffman attended the entertainment given Thursday by the Toung Men's Shamrock club of Sacred Heart church,
Whiting. Dr. George T. McCollum of Chicago will occupy the pulpft. at the Congregational church tomorrow morning and evening. A week from tomorrow it is expected that the new pastor. Dr. Alexander Monroe, will be here and assume the duties of his new pastorate. Dr. Monroe, who comes from Mound City, 111., announced some time ago when he accepted this call that he would move here Sept. 1st. Little Elizabeth Wood, whose home is in Birmingham, Ala., but who is
spending: the summer here with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pickard of'Forsythe avenue, is quite sick with infant paralysis.
Mrs. W. J. Funkey, Jr., and the baby are spending the week-end in Chicago with Mrs. Funkey's narents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. P. Packer.
Mrs. G. G. Hochstedler, who has been the guest of her daughter, Mrs. J. B.
McNary, for the past week, returned to
her home in Indianapolis today.
Today Is the last pay day that the banks will remain open until C o'clock.
After today they will close promptly at 12 on Saturdays and will be open again from 6 to 8 in the evening on pay
days.
Rev. J. B. McNary will leave Wednesday for Coffee county, Kan., to spend
his vacation with his parents, who live there. Rev. McNary will be away
business. Please attend to your part ot
Regular monthly, official board meeting, Monday, A.ug. 29. Officers are requested to be present..-Matters of some Import' to be presented.
Sunday school at the usual hour, 10 I o'clock. - Only pneao're week until the j
big "home-coming ' day. Every of
ficer, teacher 'and scholar should be present Sunday and;, fiear the definite plans for home-c6ming day announced.
Wa Pou interact
We pay 3 per cent interest n Time Certificates of Deposit and on Savings Accounts. We solicit your business, no matter how large or small it may be. E. Chicago Bank Oldest Bank in East Chicago
Mrs. Frank Holem has returned from
a week s, visit with her parents in
Marlon, Ind. Miss Mary Mylott filled Mrs. Holem's place as cashier at the
Gem theater during her absence
Mrs. J. McNally and Mrs. A. Davis
o" Grapevine street will leave sunaay
for a month's visit with relatives in Parkersburg, W. Va. At the Methodist church tomorrow Rev. E. O. Bradshaw, the- pastor, will speak in the morning on the "Eternal Life," and in the evening, at 7:30, his subject will be "Jesus, Martha, Mary and Lazarus." Rev. "H. P. Ivey -returned yesterday from Frankfort, ,Ind., where he has been visiting for .the past ten days.
Mrs. Ivey and the children will remain there with Mrs. Ivey's mother for an
other week. All the fans are on edge for tomor
row's baseball game between Lowell
and Indiana Harbor. This will proba
bly be one of the hardest games Indi
ana Harbor will have, as the Lowell
club is one of the fastest bunches of
ball players in northern Indiana.
Mrs. D. W. Kepple and daughter, Leila, of 3607 Fir street left last
night for Dayton, Pa., to visit her parents. Mr. Kepple will Join them in two weeks, and after a short visit at
Dayton the family will then . go to
Shelocta, Pa., for a visit with Mr. Kep-
ple's parents. Mrs. Kepple and the
baby will be gone a month and Mr.
Kepple two -weeks. In Shelocta they
will attend a reunion of Mr. Keu-
ple's family.
Arthur Fish, Clint Garber, Elmer
Willouhby and Henry Grantman went to Chicago last night to see Madam
Sherry at the Colonial theater. '
Mrs. Oscar Georg spent yesterday
with friends in Chicago.
Dancing at East Chicago Rink Saturday, Aug. 27th. All come, Stirling's
orchestra, 36-2t
I
II
I
5 "WVV - xt?
f 5 K ) ,
t& s 'S;
x'-:oc :??: ..wl
1.
- - V"V - - ' , ; '- ' - M -' t
v. . . . . " i
Illinois Jewelry Store First Class Jewelry Store watch repairing a specialty i:yes tested free by a doctor of optics SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 3331 Mich. Ave., Ind. Han, Ind.
JVto&Tczr CZ4JQ n TZrsnvz?zzi&JSMn?6bzntt&
SPORTING
MfkTir.5 m
THREE HOME RUNS
GiyEGUBS - GAME
Twice Schulte Knocks Ball
Into Bleachers and Tinker Covers Circuit Once.
Standing of the Clubs. W. U Chicago 77 35 Pittsburg 63 43 New York'.., 53 47 Philadelphia ...57 56 Cincinnati 57 58 Brooklyn 44 69 St. Louis 44 70 Boston ..42 74 Yesterday's Resnlts. Chicago, 3; New York, 1. Pittsburg, 4; Brooklyn. 2.
Cincinnati, 8; Philadelphia,
Pet
.68.8
.613 .573
.504 .496 .389 .386 .362
SOX GAME IS OFF; PLAY TWO TODAY
Rain in Morning Causes Mr. Farrell to Announce Postponement. t
Standing of the Clubs.
, . W. Im Pet
Philadelphia .-80 35 .696 Boston 69 48 .590 New York! 66 50 .569 Detroit ' 65 51 .560 Washington 51 66 .436 Cleveland 50 65 .435
Chicago 45 C8 .398 St. .Louis......... 35 78 .310
tLGAST AGREES 10
BOX PACe SEPT. 30 Champ Posts Forfeit For Go at 133 Pounds Seven Hours Before Bout.
few years ago a caddie, was runnerup to Smith. The youngster from Philadelphia has been the sensation of the season in professional ranks, and will attrack attention again the country over next week when ho goes to Chicago to play in the western open championship. Smith will probably not go to the western tourney next week,
in which case he will not have another
oportunity to meet McDermott this sea son, unless in a special match.
1.
Dr. E. D. Boyd PAINLESS DENTISTRY 275 92d St.. South Chicago, III. Orer Continental Shoe Co. Phone South Chicago No. 4242.
ALL, work: GUARANTEED
Boston-St. Louis game not scheduled. Three dynamic home runs of high voltage, two of them by Frank Wildfire Schulte and the other by Joseph Faversham Tinker, blasted another clean cut victory over New York out of the bedrock of yesterday's magnificently pitch
ed battle between Mordecal Peter Cen
tennial Brown and Louis Stuyvesant Van Winkle Drucke. The score was 3
to 1, making It one of the blasts superfluous.
Two blows from Schulte's bludgeon
were all that Brownie needed to bring
home the bacon, and he would have re
quired only one of those if J. Evers
had not blown a chance to retire Brid
well at the opening of the seventh In
ning. It is not often In these days of
pitching supremacy that it falls to the
lot of one hero to deliver two home runs in one game. Still less often do they come with the bases empty and yet spell victory. And Schulte came
within a few feet of making it three straight home runs, for the blow he landed on his first attempt drove the
ball almost over the screen In the deepest corner of right field.
Michigan Central New York Central Niagara Falls Route
'EWYORKS
(entral
LINES
Low Round-trip Fares New York, $26.85 8 i Boston, $28.52 Similarly low fares to all Eastern Summer Resorts, including Thousand Islands, Saratoga, The Adirondacks, Canadian Resorts, White Mountains, Poland Springs and entire Atlantic Coast. Liberal Btop-oTer jrivUeges and option of boat trip between Detroit and Buffalo and on Hudson River between Afbany and New York. Tickets on sale daily to Sept. 30; good returning within 30 days. For particulars consult Ticket AgentsMichigan Central
WHITE BOXES 4 MEN.
Charley White, the Chicago feather
weight, who fights Frankie Conley In
Milwaukee next Friday night, put in
the hardest day of his training yesterday at O'Cbnnell's gymnasium. He box.ed eight spirited rounds two with Danny Goodman, two with Johnny Dugan and four rounds with two heavier
opponents. He Is in. excellent condition, but will not let up on his preparation until Tuesday or Wednesday. Message and Krone Will conduct a special train to Milwaukee, leaving over
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
at 6 o'clock. Three hundred tickets are
already on sale in Chicago.
JOHN MADDEN TO
RACE ABROAD
Yesterday's Results. Philadelphia. 6; St. Louis, 0. Boston, 3; Cleveland, 0. Chicago-New York, wet grounds. Washington-Detroit, wet grounds. Games Today. Chicago at New York, (two games). Cleveland at Boston.
St. Louis at Philadelphia. Detroit at Washington (two games). New York, Aug. 27. The Sox didn't lose today. The game was called off for two reasons. Mr. Farrell knew it was going to rain some more and he knew that a Saturday double header should be more attractive than single games on Friday and Saturday. It rained most of the morning, but the battle was not postponed until the sun had come out. It is necessary to play twice today to clean up the schedule for the Sox will not visit New York any more this year. Edward Walsh will work the first game of the double header because he
wants to get an early start for his home in Meriden, where he will visit
Sunday. He would have pitched yesterday and gone home last night if it had been possible. Therefore the post
ponement didn t make any hit with him. Doc White Is likely to be used in
the second.
The postponement was a big surprise
to the Sox and broke up a long stretch
of good weather for them. It was the
first time they have been excused since June the second, which is far in the
past. Everybody knows they had
enough bad days before that, however.
Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 27. A fight between Packey Mc-Farland and Ad
Wolgast for Sept. 30 is causing a world of trouble today for everybody concerned. Wolgast yesterday " posted a' check for $500 as a forfeit that he would fight McFarland and give Packey his demand to weigh, in at 133 pounds seven hours before the time for the bout. Wolgast's forfeit was posted with Eddy, a local matchmaker. ' McFarland has said that he would fight at this figure and a guarantee of 25 per cent of the gate receipts. The signing of Wolgast started something at once. Eddy began a search for Mc
Farland by telephone to sfgn the articles. Wolgast admitted that the forfeit was posted, and then his friends
hurriedly reached Tom Jones and Jones
started to pull wires to call off Wol
gast's proposition. Th result was that Wolgast left last night at 9 o'clock for Chicago to meet Jones, who will try to have the fight prevented. The race is now between Eddy and Jones,
Eddy to sign McFarland and Jones to
get the forfeit returned.
Manager Jones declared last night
that he would not permit Wolgast to fight under any such conditions. The champion reached Chicago about mid
night and at once went Into a confer
ence with Jones. The bout is improb
able unless McFarland agrees to break
his contract with Hugh Mclntorh for
a tour of Australia.
The latest recruit to the foreign brigade of horsemen is John E. Madden, For the first time in his career his racing colors will be seen on the English and French turf next season. He will send over a small but select string of racers, but he does not expect to cut a wide swatk until 1912. Then he will start some youngsters born in France, the progeny of Plaudit, which will introduce him to European turf circles as a breeder. He will not, however, abandon the American turf and will still maintain his breeding farm at Hamburg Place, Kentucky.
If you are a judg LaVendor Cigar.
e of quality try a
WHITE MATCHED
WITH WOLGAST
Larney Lichtenstein, manager of Frankie White, has arranged three fights for his lightweight protege, in
cluding a match with Ad Wolgast
which probably will be decided before
a Fond du Lac, Wis., club Sept. 14. Articles for the match with the lightweight champion will be signed today, accorSing to Lichtenstein. White also is matched to box Jack Redmond in
Milwaukee Sept. 9 and has a bout scheduled in Peoria tbe first week in September.
185 ATHLETICS ENTER
BIG flET SUNDAY
again, while the newcomers will have
considerable advantage. The diving
tackle is expected to be a hard habit
to stop. Marquette was successful last year in the use of the forward pass.
which the new restrictions are expected to largely prevent being tried.
INDIANA GOLF .
TITLE UP TODAY
Logansport, Ind., Aug. .27. Will Did
die of Highland club, Indianapolis, and
Burr Sweezey, a young player from the Marlon Country club, will play for
the olf championship, of Indiana to
day. . Diddle yesterday afternoon de
feated Dave Baxter of Highland, hold
er of the state championship. He beat
Baxter 4 up and 3 to go. He defeated
Newton Cox of Terre Haute in the
morning round, 4 and 3. Cox formerly
was state champion. Snyder of Highland and Baker of Terre Haute meet
In the finals today for the president's cup.
FAY D. RAILSBACK TO
COACH NORMAL TEAM
Olney, 111., Aug. -'27. Fay D. Rails-
back of Minier, 111., a former star tackle on the University of Illinois team.
has been secured as football coach at the Eastern Illinois State Normal
school.
CALENDAR OP SPORTS FOR THE WEEK. - SATURDAY. Annual cruise of Western Power Boat association, from Chicago to Peoria, Men's amateur championship of Pacific Coast Golf association starts at Del Monte, Cal. Ohio state .tennis championship tournament at Cincinnati. Ohio river motor boat regatta at Cincinnati. , ' Opening of the International polo matches at the Meadow Brook club.
XliSSING 11
MARQUETTE OPPOSES
NEW GRIDIRON RULES Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 27. Coach Juneau of Marquette university and his assistants, Clark of Fordham and Foley of Marquette, are outspoken in their criticism of the new football rules. They believe thenew rules will result In the pushing to the rear of many of the present stars of the grid
iron who will have to learn all over
jjsgl it.
Doing basnets without adVerbting in thi paper like trying to unlock your bam doof with your wife' hatpin. You'va got th wrong AdVorffj&tg u the lay to the horn of plenty-. W want to put yot at the big end of thtf horn. Our ad. rate ll your puro. CV fcjicity bringl the mojey to your dood
fOoprrifftit, MOT. by W. K.
Chicago will enter a large number of athletes in the Chicago Irish-American A. A. track and field games to be held at the Sox Park, West Thirty-fifth
street and Shields avenue, Sunday aft
ernoon, with the hope of keeping the
famous "Big Four" Flanagan, Mc-1 Grath, Sheridan and Sheppard from taking the honors back to New York with, them. More than 300 entries have been received for the games, with 185 athletes named to compete. Although the entry list is closed, Handicapper Herbert will be unable to present it until today. The Chicago Irish-American A. A. will have a team of fifty-seven athletes in the games, while Martin Delaney of the Chicago Athletic association will enter his full team numbering close to
thirty-five. The Illinois A. C. and several other Chicago athletic clubs also will enter large teams. Eastern athletes did not reach Chicago yesterday, but Flanagan wired that he would arrive in Chicago tomorrow morning and that Sheppard, McGrath and Sheridan would be here early Sunday morning.
Cnf if in You no longer needwerr yourJ J t ill self out with the weakening ft sf mf tn &4r heatPan intensely hot titchIlllUl Ik en. You can cook in comfort. Here is a stove that gives no outside heat. All its heat is concentrated at the burners. An intense blue flame (hotter than either white or red) is thrown upwards but not'around. All tha heat is utilized in cooking none in outside heating.
qK-S
iqvq
OAK PARK RIVALS BATTLE ON SLAB The feature of the baseball game between the Spaldings and River Forests this afternoon will be the pitching duel between Skillen, -once of Dart mouth, and Lange, who has won eleven of thirteen games for the suburbanites.
Both live in Oak Park and have rival
followings.
You will say that a Lavendor cigar
cannot be beat, if you try one-
SMITH LEADS PRO GOLFERS New York, Aug. 2". There was a red hot finish yesterday afternoon at the Deal club links in the annual Metro
politan open golf championship that gave Alex Smith. New York, the title
by 301 strokes to 303 for John J. Mc
Dermott, Merchantsville, N. J. It was substantially the national open cham
pionship of last June fought over
aKain. in which, McDermott. only a
entirely removes the discomfort of cooking. Apply a match and immediately the stove is ready. Instantly an intense heat is projected upwards against the pot, pan, kettle or boiler, and yet there is no surrounding heat no smell no smoke.
Why? Because The New Perfection
Oil Cook-Stove is scientifically and practically perfect. You cannot use too much wick -it is automatically controlled. You get the maximum heat no smoke. The burner is simple. Ono wipe with a cloth cleans it consequently there is no smell. The New Perfection OU Cook-Stove is wonderful for year-round use, but especially in summer. Its heat operates upward to pan, pot, or kettle, but not beyond or around. It is useless for heating a room. It has a Cabinet Tp with shelf for keeping plates and food hot. It has long turquoise-blue enamel Chimneys. The nickel finish, with tho bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove ornamental and attractive. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burner ; the 2 and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet. Ery dwlor evrrwlire? If not at yonra, wrft. for lMacripUre Circular to the neaieat agency oi Uia
'M Craflenary rlete: Be emrelf P yon set this stove ace H that the nimMlAta n
ft
New Perfection.
Standard Oil Company (Incorporated)
