Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 1, Hammond, Lake County, 19 June 1911 — Page 3
Mondav, June 19, 1911.
THE TIMES.
THREE
AVIATORS KILLED AND EIVE ARE INJURED
Parts, Jan 19. Fifty aviators started from VIncennes early yesterday morning: In the greatest race through the air ever witnessed, and today three of them are known to be dead and at least five injured, one fatally. The eeroplanists took wing In a fitful wind that forced them to mount high above the clouds to escape the furious eddies which amounted almost to whirlwinds. While nearly 1.000,000 men and wdmen were watching:, two of the birdmen met with tragic deaths a moment after they had started. One burned to death high in the air and the other dashed against a tree, the motor of his machine crushing his skull. An hour later the death of a third aviator was witnessed in the clouds when benzine In the reservoir of his machine exploded and the aeroplane was consumed. The race calls for a flight to London and return, with stops at various places going and returning. At the closing of the register last night seven of the competitors had reached Liege, Belgium, a distance of 212 miles. All
tjie others had met with accidents or
had been stalled on the first lap of the flight. Th Head. CAPTAIN FRINCETAU Burned to death high in air after motor exploded. M. LK MARTIN Skull crushed by part of motor when machine was dashed against a tree after steering gear failed. M. LENDRON Burned to death among clouds when benzine reservoir exploded and fire consumed, aeroplane. The Injured. M.. Gaubert, a former lieutenant In the army, who was entered In the civilian rape under tho name of "Dalger." He was found lying senseless near his machine in a wheat field, four miles from Villars-Corterets. His Injuries are thought. to be mortal. M. Bllle, whose aeroplane struck the earth within a mile of the start and waa wrecked. Bille was Injured, but not seriously. Three other bird men fell, M. Lordlan, near Charleville; Oscar Morison, close to Gagny, and M. Morln at Chevron, within twenty-two miles of Liege. All were hurt, but not seriously.
STRANG
BREAKS
ARM
AS CAR LEAPS OFF KENOSHA TRACK
De Palma Captures 50-Mile Race, Five Others Failing to Fnish.
Kenosha, "Wis., June 19. Louis Strang, the veteran racer of the Case team., furnished the thrill for the Kenosha speed bugs at the opening of the auto races in the new motor drome yesterday afternoon. Fortunately Kenosha pulled off a meet wKhout a fatality and while Strang is In a. hospital suffering from a broken right arm and a dislocated ankle he Is not fatally hurt and may be back in the game In a few weeks. Strang was driving In the first race , on the card when his rear tires blew up" and his car went through the fence with a force that tore out forty feet of the fence. Strang was given an ovation when
he rode by the stand after the accident, sitting in a car smoking a cigarette. He was placed In an ambulance
and hurried to the hospital.
The fifty-mile class A race began with half a dozen starters. When it finished De Palma was driving alone, as all other entrants had been forced
out on account of tire trouble or broken clutches. De Palma drove a creditable race, making the half century In
57:43.
Bob Burman made the best mile of
the afternoon in the Blitzen Benx. It
was an exhibition, the time being 55 seconds. In the ten-mile open handicap De Palma covered one lap in 0:57. Six thousand people witnessed the meet. The entire Case team quit the races after the accident to Strang. In one race Knipper's car, going at top speed, struck a dog on the track and hurled It Into the grand stand.
SPOMTING NE
A
NORTHERN INDIANA LEAGUE
KEYS TO MEET DICK HYLAND New York, June 19. Two of the most rugged lightweights in the ring today are scheduled toe lash in this city tonight, when Bert Keys, who gave Knockout Brown such a hard battle at the Empire A. C, meets Fighting Dick Hyland, the sturdy Californlan, who knocked out Leach Cross in the forty-first round of a Marathon bout In Colma. The pair are to furnish the star bout of ten rounds at Uie Olympic A. C. tomorrow.
EAST CHICAGO AND: IND. HARBOR
EAST CHICAGO. Thomas Y. Richards of the Interstate mill left Saturday for a three weeks' vacation. While away Mr. Richards will visit Indianapolis, Muncie, Ind., and Flint and Muskegon, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. John O'Nell of Gary spent yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Groves of Chicago avenue. Mrs. George Schilling will entertain the Pinochle club at her home on Baring avenue Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. A. G. Schlieker and children returned from a two weeks' visit in the east Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. August Johnson and daughter, Marjorie, spent Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Johnson's mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Bronson, in Valparaiso. Herbert Daub was the guest of Chicago friends yesterday. Louise Cooper is visiting Mrs. Willis Blair at the Blair farm, near Valparaiso.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ladd of Detroit
arrived Saturday for a few days' visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ladd of 144th
street. Thomas McKenna and sister, Alice
left Saturday for Pittsburg, where Mr. McKenna will be married on Wednesday to Miss Pearl McKee of that city. Mr. MeKenna Is a son of Officer P. J. McKenna. Mrs. B. V. Kaufman, with her two grandchildren. Sina Evans and William Palmer, spent the week with her son, Frank Kaufman, at his home in Chicago. Mrs. G. A. Johnson Is tho guest of Chicago friends today. Mrs. F. M. HaRoa!l spent Saturday with her friend, Mrs. Harry Hildreth of Chicago.
NOTHING -3 OF GREATER IMPORTANCE TO YOIT THAN TO KEEP POSTED ON PASSING EVENTS IN YOT7R LOCALITY BY READING THB TIMES EACH EVB;NIN0.
INDIANA HARBOR. About twenty couples last Saturday night enjoyed what was probably one of the most delightful informal dancing parties yet given at the South Bay hotel. The ladies were gowned exquisitely in dainty summer costumes, and the scene was one of unusual brilliancy.. The affair was under the management of Messrs. Beverly Chew and Harry Ward. C. W. Lytle, manager of the Hub
bard Steel foundry, left last night on a
flying business trip for Canton, O., in the interests of his company.
The Sunday school of St. Alban's church will give a picnic tomorrow at Robertsdale. The picknickers will take
the 10:40 Lake Shore from the Harbor.
Ed. Gardner, who recently returned
from Lafayette, where he has been at
tending Purdue university, has taken a
position as timekeeper at the Gary mill
Mrs. Robert Black and son. Thomas,
returned Saturday night from a three weeks' visit with Mrs. Black's parents
in Pittsburg, Pa.
Mrs. A. G. Lundquist and children
will leave this evening or Ogema, Wis..
for a two weeks' visit with relatives
there.
Mrs. M. M. Day is spending a few
days with her husband, Rev. Day, pas
tor of St. Alban s church. Mrs. Day's
home Is in Valparaiso. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Lundquist attend
ed the wedding of Mr. Elmer Johnson
of Gary and Miss Mabel Anderson of Laporte at the bride's home Saturday. Mr. Johnson formerly worked in Indi
ana Harbor.
Mrs. M. Glass and Mrs. Battle will
leave today for Lake Wawasee. Ind., to
attend the state convention of Macra
bees. Mrs. Glass goes as a delegate
from the Indiana Harbor lodge.
Mrs. E. S. Browden of Vanli?rgeist
Pa., Is spending a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McClelian, 3410
Commonwealth avenue.
StandlOK Northern Indiana I.engue. v W. L. Pet. East Chicago 7 1 .875 Crown' Point 5 3 .633 Indiana Harbor 5 4 .555 Whiting 5 4 .555 Hammond 3 5 .2SS Gary 0 7 .000
Indiana Harbor, 5; Hammond. 2. Indiana Harbor and Whiting are fighting hard to take second place away from Crown Point. East Chicago still stands out pre-eminent and will continue to do so for several weeks, even should luck turn against them, and interest Is narrowing down for the time being to a survey of what is being done by the teams who are
striving to wrest second place from its
present holder and to the latter Itself.
Both Indiana Harbor and Whiting
advanced a notch by the playing yes
terday, Indiana Harbor winning over
Hammond and Whiting taking a game
from Crown Point. East Chicago just
nosed out Gary at Whiting with a score of 10 to 9 in favor of the leaders, and Gary, while cursing the luck that lost
the game by so narrow a margin, feel that they displayed considerable class
in coming so close to giving the "Al
most Invinclbles" the worst of it.
The Indiana Harbor team went to
Hammond aboard Manager Sternberg's launch and beat Hammond, 5 to 3. The game was protested, but even the
Hammond fans seemed to regard the
protest as a grandstand play, the cause
for complaint being unworthy a kick
from the captain, to say nothing of a
protest of the game as a whole. The protest was made on the umpire calling Staten out in what was nalnahlv
foolish attempt on the part of that
player to steal home when Kelly had
he ball. Rhode, who was at bat, is a
left hander and when Staten was com
ing for home he steeped back as the
ball was thrown by Kelly, giving the
catcher every opportunity to catch the
ball, which he did, and tagged his man
before Staten reached the home plate.
Fowler's protest was made on the claim that Gaarde. the Harbor catcher had stepped in front of the plate without giving the batsman an opportunity to
strike at it. This, however, was not
he view taken of the play by the um
pire, nor by the audience.
Hammond scored first when Moll and
Fowler both crossed the plate in the fourth inning, while Indiana Harbor was compelled to wait until the eighth, but made up the delay by scoring four
runs in that inning.
In the fourth inning after two men
were out, Moll struck at the ball in
effectively three times, but on the last
strike the ball got away from the
catcher and bounded toward the grand
stand. Moll then stole second. Fowler followed with a two-bagger, bringing the runner home and later going to third base on a wild pitch. He scored
on Stallman's error of a ball batted by
Rhode. One more run was acquired in
the eighth inning.
In the first half of the eighth inning
Caffery for the Harbors led off with a clean single and stole second. O'Brien
was presented with a pass and Stall-
man sacrificed them to third and second respectively. Gaarde was given a
base on balls filling the bags. Dautell then placed a liner out of shortstop's reach, scoring Caffery and O'Brien and
tying the count. Fellers sent a screamer to the right field fence for a two-
bagger, bringing in Gaarde and Dau
tell. That ended the scoring for the
Harbor in this inning, but they garnered one more in the ninth, making
the final score 5 to 3.
Kelly as usual pitched a good game.
striking out nine men and allowing but six hits, which he kept fairly well scattered.
The score:
Indiana Harbor... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 5 Hammond 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2
Two base hits Hansen. Fowler, Fell
ers. Double plays Mool to Fowler (2); Fellers to Stallman to Dautell. Struck
out By Kelly. 3; by Desmond. 4. Bases
on balls Off Kelly, 4: off Desmond. 4. Umpire Clapper. Time 2:03.
Northern Indiana pennant race. The score: WHITING. r h p
McCann, If ;..2 2, 3
Grabow. 3b 1 1 3 Hora, ss 1 4 1 Lasser, cf 2 1 2 Klose, 2b 1 l i Girard, rf 1 1 0 Mollluer, lb 2 0 10 Kluth, c 1 0 7 Evans, p 1 1 0
a 0 1 7 1 1 0 0 1 1
Totals 12 11 27 12 CROWN POINT. r h p a Enright, lf-2b l 12 2 Smith, 2b-p 1 10 0 Eder, lb ...0 2 7 0 McCay, cf 0 1 2 1 Matson, ss 0 0 1 1 Schmidt, 3b 0 2 5 '3 Effel, c 0 0 7 0 Claussen, rf 0 0 2 0 Henning, p-lf 0 10 3 Gratwich, ss 0 0 1 0
Gary Works 3 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 9 Am. B. Co 1 1 o 0 0 0 0 2 2 6 Two base hits Diamon. Mullaly. Sacrifice hits Martin. Geoarheiran.
ond game by a score of 11 to 4 in fa- Tyrus the Great strode to the plate. A vor of the South Deering Centrals. The man was on third and one on second game was played at South Deering. and they, had to get home to tie the The South Deering team run in seven score. Ed Walsh, the mightiest of Chi-
Sacriflce fly Martin. Bases on balls runs in the first three innings and Kist- cago's twlrlers, was on the slab, huvOff Mullaly, 3; off Diamon, 4. Struck ' ler was put out of the box. Freyman ing been called to save the game.
out tsy Mullaly, 3; by Diamon, 9. Wild finished the game, allowing four more: -
runs. The score: Hammond . . ...0 1 South Deering... 2 3
Batteries Kistler. Freyman McShean; Quast and Maroney.
pucn Mullaly, 4. Double plays Cul-llson-Copeland-Geoghegan; Scott-Martin. Passed ball Shugrue. Umpire Reading.
SCHULTE'S STEAL
ES CUSS GAME
Poet Purloins Home in the Eighth, Beating Doom's Daisies, 4 to 3.
TIGER BATS SING SOX DEFEAT, 16
rCYCLOI'Ai BROWN
G0 10 ROUNDS JULY 4
-15
Stop and Read Every Word of this ad. Special tomorrow night only at the Family Theater, Indiana Harbor. Lectures and Views on the Historic BATTLE SHIP MAINE from the time she was dispatched to Havana Harbor, 1898, when she was wrecked, until the raising, April 1911. A lecture that no man, woman or child should fail to hear and see. Come and bring the entire family to the Family Theater. Always a geed, clean show. Our price is always 5c. Doors open at 6:30.
Totals 2 8 27 11 6 Crown Point 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 "Whiting 5 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 Two base hits Henninpr, Evans. Three base hits Enright, Klose. Double plays Schmidt, unassisted; Grabow to Molliter, Struck out By Henning, 2; by Smith, 4; by Evans, 1; Passed balls EITel, 1; Kluth, 1. Hit by pitcher Molliter. Umpires White and Mann. Time of game 2 hours. Attendance
600.
Kant Chlciuto. 10 Gary, 9. East Chicago, June 19. East Chicago kept in the lead In the Northern Indiana league by defeating Gary here yesterday in a slugging match, 10 to 9. The tallenders hit Eldridge hard, but his team mates backed him up with some fine successive hitting in the first and fifth Innings. Score: EAST CHICAGO.
r Gorman. 2b 2 Beach, ss 2 Enders. cf 1 Ullman, If l Pederson, lb 0 Strachan. c 0 Kempf, 3b 2 Eldredge, p 1 Hascall, rf 1
P 1 3 0 1 13 8 1 0 0
Hugh Jennings' Slugging
Crew Cut Down One Time Lead of 13 to 1.
Standing or the f'lulm. W. I
Chicago 35
New York...... 34 Philadelphia . .' 32 Pittsburg 30 St. Louis. 29 Cincinnati 25 Brooklyn 20 Boston 13
1 21 24 23
30 34 42
Pet. .04S .618 .571 .5R6 .537 .455 .370 .236
Standing of the Club.
New York.
t hicnfco . Cleveland
Yeaterday'n Remitta. Chirapro, 4; Philadelphia, 3. New York, 5; St. Iuis, 4. Brooklyn. 3; Cincinnati. 1. Boston-Pittsburg, not scheduled.
Totals 10 17 27 12 3 GARr. r h p a e Coughlin, Sb 0 2 0 2 0 Mellum, cf 1 2 3 0 0 Dennis, c....... ... 0 2 7 2 1 Clause, rf 1 0 2 0 0 Newman, lb .2 2 7 0 0 Schuth. ss 1 3 3 1 1 Wagner, 2b 2 2 1 3 0 Velner, p-lf 1 1 l o 0 Painter, p 1 0 0 10 Novak, p 0 JO 0 0 0
Game Tod nr. Brooklyn at Pittsburg. Frank Militant Schulte stole home in the last half of the eighth Inning yesterday, depositing on the plate the run that won the final game of the series with Philadelphia, 4 to 3. He did more than that, for his wild dash for the pan
converted a frantic, volcanic combat into a session of eruptive rowdyism on the part of the visitors and provoked a protest if the game by Manager Dooin. There was a stack of other things in that desperate battle, but its issue hung and still hangs on Schulte's theft of the ultimate goal. The great Sunday crowd saw a real pitchers' contest between. King Cole and Bill Burns for seven innings, during which daring base running by Sherwood Magee produced one tally for the enemy and a timely bunt by Tinker, which resulted in a wild throw, manufactured two dizzy runs for the home boys. Then the crowd raw both pitchers blow in the eighth, In the first half of which Philadelphia banged Itself Into the lead again with two runs, and in the last half of which the Cubs drove their jinx Bill Burns off the slab.
St.
W. U Pet. 38 18 .679 33 18 .647 28 22 .560 28 25 .528 'J5 23 .B21 24 34 .414 24 34 .414 20 33 .377 16 39 .291
and been
George matched
Yeiter1nj-n Reiult. Detroit, 16; Chicago, 15. Cleveland. 10; St. Louis, 7. No other games scheduled. GnniM Today. Chicago at Detroit. Washington at Philadelphia, Boston at New York.
GRAYS LOSE SECOND.
The Hammond Grays last their sec-
Detroit, Mich., June 19.- There are rare days In baseball that stand out
prominently In after years and this was one of those days for the Detroit fans. They saw their haughty Tigers overcome a lead of twelve runs and thrash the struggling White Sox by a score of 16 to 15 In nine innings of pastiming that thrilled the most conservative from the first to the last and cast a gloom over the Chicago team that wa appalling.
Johnny Thompson Knockout Brown have
to fight ten rounds in the semi-open air areng- of the National A. C. at Gary on Fourth of July afternoon. All tietails for the battle were closed late Saturday night. Manager Sam Sax of the Gary club met Nate Lewis, Brown's manager, and Thompson, and terms were agreed upon quickly. There was a little dispute over the weight, Lewis wanting Thompson to do 154 six hours before". This Johnny" balked on and they finally agreed to make 160 at the ringside. Each party to the agreement posted a forfeit of 200. Thompson' will start training today at his. home in Sycamore. He will dc only road work fora week, then will get a couple of fast boxers out from
Chicago to help him. Lewis is hiring a big corps of trainers for Brown, who will prepare for the mill at O'Connell's. The foundations for the Gary arena already have been laid and Promoter Sax will start a force of thirty carpenters to worS today. He wants to rush the building through to completion. The arena will be constructed so as to give 5,000 people a good view of the ring. , Special trains will be run from Chicago on all roads leading Into Gary. Three preliminaries will precede the main bout.
RED SOX SIGN COLLEGE STAR Boston, June 19. The Boston Americans have signed Jim 'Donahue, cap
tain of the Manhattan college team of New York. Donahue is an infielder. He Is said to be one of the best college players developed in years. He will j report to the Red Sox tomorrow.
By a ferocious attack the Sox scored
seven runs in the first inning, throw- KRAMER TWO
ing rue rigers into cnaos. iney counted three more In the fourth and a like number in the fifth while the great Detroit team had counted only one tal'". Then that wonderful spirit oj Hugh Jennings began to show Itself. The uphill fight began and, led by the might Tyrus Cobb and Sam Crawford, the Tigers, dribbled In one run after another until the last half of the ninth inning began with them only two runs behind. Some one singled after one was out. The next man lofted a freak double along the left field foul line and
MILE CHAMP
Newark, N. J., June 19. Frank Kramer today nosed out Jackie Clarke in the two-mile bicycle championship. The time was 3:54. Clarke won the onemile handicap from scratch In 1:55'.. The five mile motor paced race went to Floyd McFarland in 7:41 3-5.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Iflvea to a hum of human affalra and Interest wholly new trend", new phae every day.
Totals 9 14 24 9 2 East Chicago 3 1 0 0 5 1 0 0 10 Gary 3 0 3 0 2 0 0 1 0 9 Two base hits Dennis, KempT, Eldredge. Three base hits Mellum, Schuth (2). Struck out By Eldredge, 6; by Painter, 4; by Novak, 6. Bases on balls Off Eldredge, 1; off Painter, 4; off Velner. 1; off Novak, 1. Time 2:00. Umpire Long.
GARY WORKS TEAM BEATSJRIDGE NINE Big Bunch of Excited Fans Witness an Exciting Game.
Ml:! ting, 12j Crown I'olnt, 2. Crown Point. Ind., June 19. Whiting 'came andjsaw and conquered yesterday and did It in such thorough manner that the oil city ball swakers
had a few conquers to spare. Nearly everybody on the Crown Point team, with the exception of Smith, McCay and Schmidt, helped In the distribution; of the conquers, but the big score can be laid principally to the hard hitting Whitingltes, who landed on Henning for enough runs to give them the highest score in the season's games in the Northern Indiana league. Smith was called to the rescue in the third and the Crown Point team braced up enough to end the run getting of the Whiting team for the balance of the game. One Matson, a raw recruit on the Crown Point team, put up an exhibition of Infantile ball playing and was a poor example for some of his fellow players to follow. Schmidt, Crown Point's new third baseman, played a good game and pulled off the only
spectacular features In the listless contest. The Crown Point team will have to take a decided brace unto itself to keep in the race for the pennant and hold Its interest with the balls fans at the county seat. The locals played a star game In the beginning of the season and it will be necessary for them to regain their old
A crowd of two thousand excited baseball fans saw the Gary Works team defeat the American Bridge Co. team yesterday afternoon. The result might have been different had not the American Bridge boys lost
their catcher by a broken finger In the
second inning.
Mullaly played a good game for the American Bridge team, having no less
than four clean hits to his credit. Diamon was hit freely in the eighth
and ninth innings, the American Bridge boys having no less than seven bingles
off his delivery in these two innings.
The present lineup of the Gary
Works team shows no Improvement over the past. If we are to Judge by
this performance.
Crane' and Scott carried off the hon
ors for the Gary Works team. Cope
land plays a much better game in left
field and is out of place at short.
The score: GARY WORKS.
ab. r.
Copeland, ss 4 Martin, lb 2 Kelly, 3b 3 Jones, If 4 Burgwald, 2b 4 Scott, rf 2 Crane, cf .' 4 Wilkins, c... 4 Diamon, p 3
P. 0 9 0 0 3 2 0 12 1
Butterick Patterns 10c and 15c No Higher
il
J. J. COHEN, Manager Towls Opera House Block Hammond, Indiana
Butterick Patterns. 10c and 15c No Higher
TUBDAY
FECIAL
iASEMENT
Boys' 25c Caps Silk lined, n cloth, all colors I U Boys' 19c Hose Fast black, heavy seamless, all sizes to 9, Q per pair 3l 25c and 5Cc Sample Collars Embroidered and plain, all heights and the Lord Byron, f" at- OC Women's 35c Vests and DrawersPlain and fancy ribbed, f lace trimmed I oC
25c Infants' Shoes Black patent vamp with colored tops, n all leathery pair UC
fc Ginghams Full standard Apron
Gingham, checks, cut off the piece, yard
Child's 19c Drawers Muslin, Child's
Drawers, all sizes, with tucked ruffle
1.00 Muslin Petticoats Lace and
embroidered flounce, extremely
deep, made very full, at
4ic
hild's 9c and imely
69c
15c Hair Ribbon Pure silk, 4 to 6 Inches wide, all the wanted Q colors, yard.......... Jw 15c Percales Full yard wide, extra heavy quality, cut off the 3 piece, yard 5C 25c Embroidered Belts Pretty embroidered Belts, with pearl Q buckle J C 5c Card Safety Pins All Bizes, extra good quality, dozen 4 card I U
Ladies' 3.C0 Oxfords and 2-Strap Pumps On stage lasts and high and low heels, in patent leather and dull leather, n 4A Per pair Z. I J Ladies' 2.75 Shoes In patent leather and vici kid, high heel and low
heel; button or lace, sizes 3 to 7, per pair
Eoys' Baseball Oxfords With elk soles, the shoe that will wear, sizes 11 to 2 and 2'2 to 5. regu- Qfifi lar 1.50 value, per pair jOi Children's 75c Shoes In vici kid,
wedge heel, sizes 3 to 8, per pair
MAIN FLOOR 1
Children's 1.75 2 and 3 Strap Pumps All sizes 11 to 2, I Of) per pair J
1.95
53c
15c Linen Toweling Bleached, IS
Inches wide, with red border
8ic
20c Embroidery and 5 to 12 inches wide, per yard
Insections
15c Dress Lawns 27 inches wide.
fine sheer quality, all the
I new effects, yard
72c
Child's Parasols Large size with
extra ruffle and strong frame
19c
Women's 75c Silk Hose Also lisle,
black and colors, Tuesday
38c
Men's 1.C0 Unicn Suits Ribbed
and open mesh, all sizes, each
50c
Women's 50c Union Suits Fine
derby ribbed, lace edge on drawer, all sizes
19c
Totals 30
AMERICAN
9 8 27
BRIDGE CO.
ab. r. h. p. Moore, lf-c 5 1 1 0 2 Copeland, lb 4 2 1 9 Cullison, ss 4 1 3 3 Mullaly, p 5 0 4 2 Branum, 2b 1 0 0 0 Van Slyke, 2b 4 0 0' 0 Cavanaugh, cf 2 10 2 Goeghegan, 3b. 3 0 0 2 Barrett, rf 4 1 3 2 Shuscrue, c 0 0 0 1 Thompson, If 4 0 0 0
V
1 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
95c
1.50 Embroidery Waists Ladies' Hand Embroidered Waists, coral,
Copenhagen and navy on white lawn
1.25 Muslin Gowns Lace and embroidered trimmed, slipover and button in front,
special U2U
5Cc.Tea Aprons Hand embroidered with hemstitched OCrt ruffle, each d0t 75c Corsets- In white batiste a splendid style.... Owv
SECOND FLOOR
lipover 50c
Child's Dresses That new slipover
style, all colors and stripes
2.00 Muslin Petticoats Lace and embroidered flounce, cambrie and muslin -JJlf 3c Brussels Stair Carpets Rever
sible and fast color, yard
2.C0 Velcet Rugs 27x54, pretty and
desirable patterns, each
39c !tty and 95c
1.00 Curtains 2 yards long, figured and plain Swiss, ija ruffled all around ittjC 35c Drapery Goods 50 styles and
patterns, light and dark, per yard
Child's 25c Embroidery Drawers
With embroidery edging; are fine
muslin, all sizes, pair
1.00 Combination Skirt Corset Cov
er and skirt, lace trimmed, all sizes.
19c
1 5c et Cov-
59c
time form to become a factor in the
Totals . 38 6 11 24 15 6 1
