Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 2, Hammond, Lake County, 20 June 1911 — Page 3

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Tuesday, June 20, 1911. THE TIMES. E. D. BARKER M. GURLEY tfflue Csitamniefl Rejjioii

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Gary Laundry Company Telephone -144 5 ill AY8. 8nd M2ss.-St. Gar, Indiana

fee

Laundry

Go.

ma Phone 103 3481 Michigan Avenua Indiana Harbor, Indiana .

;C We return everything but the dirt. . C We have invested in our individual plants thousands of dollars in capital, energy and talent. C We are heavily taxed to support the city, its schools, its churches and its other institutions. C Our employes work a stated and reasonable number of hours and under the most improved sanitary conditions obtainable. Their health and welfare is the first consideration. A visit to any one of these four up-to-date steam laundries will show you that here is the "spirit of the times." Congenial and remunerative employment is given a large number of skilled assistants, who live and spend their wages in Gary, Hammond and Indiana Harbor. ,C Why do you send your laundry out of town? Spend your money in the community.where you live. What does Chicago and other outside places do for your city? Do they pay your taxes? iC We are helping to keep this great industrial wheel going. $L Won't you help? . ,G We take a pride in the work we turn out. - We believe in progress and in the golden rule. k C Steam laundry methods are as far ahead of the hand methods as the electric railway, is ahead of the jinrikisha. C There are no institutions in Lake County kept clearer than our laundries. C We do not polish over and above the dirt, but we return every thing to you but the dirt. C We want you to think this over and give us an opportunity to show you how nicely we can launder your linen with the most modern machinery methods. C Make a change now. Telephone for one of our drivers to call for your laundry. ,

Laundry Phone 82 181 Sibley St. - Hammond

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THE HUNT FOR BUSINESS

Provincialism is a business crime in this day and generation. The man who goes after business off the street, on which his place is located, is the man who wins. The most successful men in the Calumet region are the business men who would not think of doing biismess without advertising in THE TIMES. They go after business and get it. Their field is wide. The circulation of THE TIMES is over Iwo times larger than all the other papers, jlaily and weekly, in all the cities and towns of the Calumet region put together.

NEWS

BATTLING NELSON I

10 BOX 1

$ READY

FOUR DATS

Who said Battling Nelson was a dead one? We want to know the names of the parties who have been accusing the Daring Dane of Hegewtsch of being through as a fighter. Bat yesterday furnished plenty of evidence that he, at least, still thinks he la one of the llvest lightweight propositions in the game, and if he goes through with the battle plans he has outlined he will convince thousands of boxing fans that he is the Durable One yet and the greatest marvel the fight '.fame has known. The labors of Hercules haven't much on the task Nelson has undertaken for the first week in July. Bat, owing to the failure of the Vancouver, Wash.,

SOX AGAIN PREY

OF TIGERS, 8 TO 5

CUBS

READY FOR PIRATES'

ES

Jennings' Pets Make Meal Morning of Practice Fol

of Young, Getting Six Runs in Three Rounds.

Standing of the Cluba.

W. Detroit '. 34 New York 28 Boston 29 fhlcnun , 23 Cleveland 24 Washington 20 St. Louis 16

18 23 25 24 34 34 39

lowed by Afternoon of Needed Rest.

Seefeld struck out eighteen men, winning his own game, combined with the

battery of George Kohl and 1 Erie- j wein. The Cook Cubs would like to -.rrange games with any team in Lake county between the ages of 16 and 17 j years. Hammond Royals preferred. For games address or call on G. Kohl, 92 i

Doty street, Hammond.

LAUNDRY

Phone 83

15Sh and Madison St. y Gary, Indiana

Pet. .654

.54) .537 ..MO , .370 .370 .201

For a Good Evening's Entertainment Go to the West Side PALM GARDEN 100 West State Street ADMISSION FREE Music. Moving Pictures Every Evening

Athletic club, found himself without a

match for July 4, on which date he was to box "Bud" Anderson twenty rounds, but, according to a wire to the

writer last night, lost little time In ar

ranging suitable substitutes. He is to box six boys in four days. Some task. July 1, at the Maple Leaf A. C. of Vancouver, B. C, the Dane meets four boys in the same ring, being scheduled to go four rounds with each. His opponents are not champions, nor have they had their pictures in the papers recently, but four fighters are' four fighters, and any one who undertakes to whip this number at one "sitting" surely does not believe he is en route to Hasbenville. The Toys who are to tackle the Dane in the bargain day affair are Joe Bailey, Driver Miller, Jim Smith and Young Nelson. Bat denies the latter is any relation of his, which precludes the

Idea of a family affair.

These quartet of bouts is to serve as;

sort of a training campaign for a sixround tilt with one Ned Whitman at North Bend, Wash., July 3. The following day the Dane tackles Pete McVeagh at Fort Lawton, Wash., in a ten round engagement. In commenting on his plan of battle Nelson says: "Let those who think I am a hasbeen wait until they read the papers after Independence day before passing judgment, then change their minds." ' Yes, let's wait and see what the good old Dane can do

Yesterday's Resul. Detroit, 8: Chicago, 5. Philadelphia, 6; Washington, 2. Boston, 6; New York, 3. Game Today. Chicago at Boston. Cleveland at Detroit. Washington at Philadelphia. Boston at New York. Detroit, Mich., June 20. Once more the vicious Tigers licked the weary White Sox, taking a hurry u,p game from them yesterday afternoon at Bennett park, 8 to 5. Immediately after

the game the Chicago athletes were "autoed"' to their hotel, where quick changes were made. At 5:30 p. m. they were an route for St. Louis. Manager Duffy tried Jenlnngs' scheme of using all his reserve power to come from behind and win yesterday's game, but the reserve wasn't quite equal to the task, though it threatened near the finish. Young Cy Young started to pitch and was hammered for two runs In the second and four in the third. Lange relieved him, and tts usual pitched great ball, but got into messy places by his fielding, wlldness and support. Jesse Baker, the Puget Sound southpaw, finished the final two rounds, blanking the Tigers and giving only one hit.

M'MAHON TRIMS FRANK MAN TELL

Newcastle, Pa., June 20. Tom lieMahon, the burly middleweight from Spring Valley, 111., outpointed Frank Manteil in a thrilling ten round bout here last night. The contest was crowded full of action and the opinion of the crowd was that McMahon would have be-n given the decision had one been rendered.

Standing: of the Cluba. W. L. Pet. CkloaEO 85 19 .04 S New York 34 21 .618 Pittsburg 31 23 .574 Philadelphia, 32 24 .571 St. Louis 29 25 .537 Cincinnati 25 30 .435 Brooklyn 20 35 .364 Boston 13 42 .236 Yeaterday'a Reaulta. Pittsburg, 3; Boston, 0. No other games scheduled. Gam en Today. Pittsburg at Chicago. New York at Boston. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Manager Chance had his crippled Cubs cavorting about the west side ball lot yesterday morning. and in the afternoon gave them a well deserved rest

as well as a much needed one. With one grueling series completed and another stretch of hard games ahead, the short vacation was mighty welcome to the r-thletes. With his regular lineup' shot to pieces and his pitchers going at a pace that Is anything but satisfactory, the

P. L. is working might and main to hang on to the lead which has been gained by some of the best baseball ever played by a crippled squad. Chance figures if the team in its present state can keep on top until the cripples return there will not be anything to the race but the Cubs. Fred Clarke and his Pirate crew will be entertained on the west side for the next three days, and a repetition of the Philadelphia series is expected. Pittsburg is not out of the race by any means, but more thai anything else at the present time Dreyfuss' bunch is anxious to keep ahead of St. Louis, which is pushing the ex-champions to the limit.

CEDAR LAKE JRS. WIN Klassville, Ind., June 20. In a game

ftiatiiT-cnl Hv tVn Katf nf i KKav . ..m t

and the fielding of RosenbEfum Cedar Lake Juniors defeated Klassville in the first game of the season in the Southern Lake County League. Score, 11 to 0.

popular decision. Murphy's manager has been after Packey ever since.

BURMAN HEEDS MOTHER'S WISH

MANDOT WHIPS JOE COSTER

three rounds Hyland set such a merry pace that Keyes nearly succumbed trying to keep step. In the first round Keyes closed Hyland's left eye with a terrific right. In the third he opened the puffed glim with another hard right. Keyes took a hard beating ahout the kidneys. In the eighth round Keyes landed a left on Hyland's right

eye, but that was his last enort.

Memphis. Tenn., June 20. After taking the nine count in the second round of an eight round bout here last night

before the Southern A. C, Joe Coster,

the eastern boxer fought gamely 42 FAN IN TEN INNINGS through to the end but lost the deci- J

1

FUn Mich., June 20. Because of the request of his aged mother that he take no chances with his life and desecrate the Sabbath driving his record breaking "Blitzen" Benz on Sunday, Bob Burman, speed king, whose home is here, canceled his engagement and will not drive in the races here, as scheduled, on June 25. Burman's announcement caused a postponement of the meeting until the latter part of July, when the speed king will drive at the fair grounds.

PIRATES PROTEST BOSTON DEFEAT

sion to Joe Mandot of New Orleans.

Coster's lip was split in the first round, his eye partly closed in the third and he suffered a second knockdown in the sixth. Only in the fifth and last rounds did Coster live up to the reputation that made him enter the ring a hot favorite. Mandot finished without a scratch, He forced the fight most of the way, although Coster rarely ever backed up.

KANE SIDESTEPS BILLY WAGNER

Toledo, O., June 20. Forty-two

strikeouts in a ten inning game was the record established yesterday in a contest between the Melvin semi-pros of Toledo and Oak Harbor, played at Oak Harbor and won by the Melvins. 2 to 1. Luebke of the Melvins and Kolath of the. Oak Harbor team each struck out twenty-one batsmen. Kolath is a former Vniveristy of Michigan twirler, who last fall received a trial with the Toledo American Association team.

Pittsburg. Pa., June

-The Pitts

burg club has protested the game won by Boston, 8 to 7. Thursday on the ground fhat a decision rendered by the field umpire should have been made by the umpire-in-chief behind the bat. It also leaked out that waivers are to be asked on First Baseman Hunter, the "$10,000 beauty." It is believed with the passing of Hunter will come a change long advocated by followers of the game that of placing Wagner at first base.

Qulncy, 111., June 20. Jimmy Kane's refusal to meet Billy Wagner of Chicago in the ring at the North Side Boat club last night caused considerable disappointment. The match had been planned for last night, but Kane notified Promoter Fred Smith that he would not fight Wagner.

COOK'S CUBS REORGANIZE 4 The Cook Cubs of Hammond reorganized and played their first game with the Hegewisch Stars, whom they defeated by the score of 10 to 4. A.

M'FARLAND TO FIGHT MURPHY IN MILWAUKEE

Milwaukee, Wis., June 20. Packey McFarland, the Chicago wizard, and Tommy Murphy, the pride of Harlem, have been signed by the Badger Athletic club for a ten round bout in Milwaukee on June 30. The boys have agreed to fight at 133 pounds at 3 o'clock. The bout is sure to pVove a big attraction and McFarland will draw his Chicago cohorts to the city in big numbers. The two boys, who are reputed to be as clever as the cleverest in the business, have met before, and on that occasion McFarland was accorded the

HYLAND WHIPS BERT KEYES New York, June 20. Fighting Dick Hyland, the California lightweight, dealt a severe trouncing to Bert Keyes, the local boxer, at the Olympic A. C. last night. Hyland's aggressiveness entitled him to the honors. In the last

WOMEN SEE FIGHT ' Albany, N. Y., June 20. Knockout Brown knocked out Bant Dorsey with a terrific left swing in the fourth round of their fight in an open air arena on the outskirts of the capital last night. The local man was outfought all the way and beaten from the start. A nunvber of women and a few state solons saw the bout.

Cincinnati, O., June 20. One hundred and twenty-two golfers will start today in the qualifying round of the annual Ohio State championship tournament. J. K. Bole, who was defeated in the semi-finals in the tourney at Pittsburg last week and who won the championship of Ohio last year, will defend his title.

Por Sale Cheap ELECTRICAL MANDOLIN ORCHESTRELLE FINEST BUILT. Only a few In the United States like it. Instrument has a History. It cost $3,500, but don't let this deter prospective purchasers from Inspecting it. A BARGAIN! See JOHN JAKUSH, 3601 Parish Avenue. Indiana Harbor, Ind. Phone, Ind. Harb. 731.