Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 8, Hammond, Lake County, 27 June 1911 — Page 3

Tuesday, June 27, 1011.

THE TIMES. 3

E. D. BARKER N. CURLEY

Co Oo

Gary Laundry Company Telephone 144

II 51b Ave. and Mass. St. Gary, Indiana

Caumef

Laundry

Co.

,CWe 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 tTnder 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? ,C We are helping to keep this great industrial wheel going. ,C yfon't you help? ,C We take a pride in the work we turn out. We believe in progress and in the golden rule. ,C Steam laundry methods are as far ahead of the hand methods as the electric railwav 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

INC.

Phone 103 3431 Michigan Avenua Indiana Harbor, Indiana -

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 business without advertising in THE TIMES. They go after business and get it. Their field is wide. The circulation of THE TIMES is over.lwo times larger than all the other papers, daily.and weekly, in all the cities and towns of the Calumet region put together.

MING NEWS

NORTHERN INDIANA LEAGUE

STANDING OF CLUBS.

W. L.

East Chicago ....7 2

Crown Point 5 3

Whiting a 4

Indiana Harbor 5 4 Hammond '....3 5 Gary 0 7

Pet.

.778

.663 .555 .555

SLUGGING TIGERS BAT JUT VICTORY Overcome Early Lead of the White Sox and Earn 6 to 3 Verdict.

Standing of the Cluba.

W. L, Pet. Detroit 43 20 .683' Philadelphia 39 20 .661! New York 34 24 .5S6 Cntoaeo 30 25 Boston 32 29 .525 Cleveland 27 37 .415 Washington 20 41 .328 St. Louis 16 43 .262

Yratertlay'a HcKiiltn. Detroit, 6; Chicago. 3. Philadelphia, 3; Boston, 2. New York, 3; Washington, 1. Cleveland at St. Louis (rain). Gn-on Today. Detroit at Chicago. Washington at New York.

Philadelphia at Boston. Cleveland at St. Louis. That slugging White Sox quartet, Mclntyre, Lord, Callahan and Bodie, tried hard enough to beat the Detroit Timers again yesterday, but they got no help, even the prospective shower deserting them, and their efforts died, the Tigers batting their way to the front in the last half of the battle and finally winning by a count of 6 to 3. Mclntyre's single. Lord's sacrifice, and Bodie's fence busting triple pro

duced a run for the Sox in the opening round. Matty's single. Lord's sacrifice and Callahan's home run added two more in the third, and those two vicious

attacks sum up the offensive play of

the home team. From the fourth inning until the end they were limited to a couple of scattered hits and one base c balls. Detroit banged one run home in the fourth, when Cobb and Crawford had turns with the bat. This same invincible pair started the winning rally tn the seventh, four runs being .the result. Another was driven home in trie following inning, which clinched the victory. GLIDDEN CUP TO CHALMERS

Xew York, June 27.- By a ruling of

the supreme court of Xew York state today the Chalmers Motor company of Detroit retains permanent possession of 1910 Glldden tour honors. The court refused to interfere with the decision of the contest board of the American Automobile Association, which found for the Chalmers car No. a, driven by

"Bill" Bulger, after the referee's decision giving the chief trophy of the tour to the Premier Xo. 1 had been rescinded by the conest board on the Chalmer's protest that the Premier car did not comply with the stock car specifications certified at the time of entry.

SGHULTE LEAVES BACHELOR RANKS

Star Right Fielder of Cubs Finds Time to Marry Miss Mabel Kirby.

to allow Frank to etand the "jollying"!

of his team mates at the depot alone. Mrs. Schulte will Join the club at St. Louis today.

Schulte began the attack on Dan Cupid two years ago, when he met Miss Kirby, who was present at a box party at Cub park, but It was only a month ago that Miss Kirby yielded her heart. "Wildfire" went alone to the office of the county clerk yesterday morning, gave his age as 28 and that of the bride as 29, -paid the usual fee, and secured a marriage license. J. X. Bailey, an old friend of the groom, acted as best man, and Mrs. D. Dobson was bridesmaid at the wedding. Only the immediate family were

present. The bride wore a coral satin

3 ,5, gown with an over net of silver lace, i

UU i ret TloHcnn wa efwnrt in a tlmnla

frock of Irish lace over white satin.

PASTOR O. K'S SUNDAY BALL

Sacramento, Cal., June 27. After reciting "Casey at the Bat," the Rev. Franklin Baker, pastor of the First Unitarian church here, last night spoke to a large congregation in defense of Sunday baseball. lie declared the 115,000,000 spent for baseball last season was better expended than the same sum would have been in foreign missions, and that the game is "America's mental shower bath."

Phone S3 15 tli and Madison St. Gary, Indiana

Cuts Riglit Fielder and His Bride.

Pet,

.017 .617 .607 .574 .550 .452 .356 .230

in-

GARY FIGURES IN BASEBALL DOPE Another City Is Also Being Considered by League Magnates.

IRAN

EAST CHICAGO TEAM

LOSES

The East Chicago Mercuries were defeated by the Hammond Royals last Sunday by the score of 9 to 5. The Mercuries poled out thirteen hits, while Ed Flack held the Royals to eight hits.

Standing of the Cluba. W. L.

Chicago 37 23 New York 37 23 Philadelphia 37 24 Pittsburg 35 26 St. Louis .33 27 Cincinnati 28 34 Brooklyn 21 38 Boston 14 47 ' Vf.'r(lnT' Kcttnltn. Chieago-St. Louis (no game). Cincinnati, 6; Pittsburg, 3 (ten nings). Philadelphia, 5; Boston, 0. New York at Brooklyn (rain).

flame Today. Chicago at St. Louis (two games) . Cincinnati at Pittsburg. New York at Brooklyn (two games), Boston at Philadelphia.

Frank M. Schulte, the last bachelor

member of Chicago's "500 club," plan

ned to convert the Cubs' Invasion of St.

Louis and Cincinnati into a honeymoon trip by his marriage yesterday after

noon to Miss Mabel M. Kirby, 4157 In

diana avenue. The ceremony was per

formed at 4 o'clock at the bride's home by the Rev. Walter H. MacPherson.

The groom left with the Cubs for St.

Louis at 10:15 o'clock last night, but the bride at the last minute decided

South Bend, Ind., June 27. That

Grand Rapids Is about to lose its berth

In the Central league has become more certain dally since the league officials, headed by the president. Dr. Frank R.

Carson, of this city, took charge of the club and Its chaotic affairs. Two more applications for the franchise have been received at league headquarters here. Dr. Carson is said to regard both favorably. One is from Newark, which is now in the Ohio State league, while the other is being kept a sec-t pending investigation. Gary, Ind., at present without league baseball, and Springfield, 111., have also been mentioned for the vacant place in the Central league in the event Grand Rapids is dropped. - Regarding Newark, which is now at the head of the cities bidding for the Grand Rapids franchise, Dr. Carson believes it would add strength to the Central circuit. The city is only twenty-four miles from Zanesville and has a population of 25,000, althought the baseball going public is much larger there In proportion than in many of the Central league cities. Owner A. A. Grant of Evansville was sent to the Ohio city to investigate the situation there by President Carson.

WAST AND

ARE UNDER 133 LBS. WITH BOUT IN WEEK

San Francisco. June 27. With but

one week in which to prepare for their July Fourth battle. Ad Wolgast and Owen Moran have settled down to the hardest kind of work. Each boy realizes that he is about to engage in the most important ring engagement of his carter and nothing is being left undone to insure the most perfect physi

cal condition. Each boy has engaged a small army of handlers and their respective training camps recall forceful reminders of the preparations for the Johnson-Jeffries affair of a year ago. The most important acquisition to the Moran camp is "Mysterious Billy"

Smith, who has taken active charge of the Britisher's ring work, and will be one of his chief handlers when he enters the ring on Independence day. Incidentally, Smith will endeavor to condition himself to take on some of the four-rounders in his class around San Francisco. Another shining light in the Moran camp is Anton Lagrace, Wolgast's opponent of several months ago. At the conclusion of today's work Moran tipped the beam at 130 pounds, three pounds below the lightweight limit. Wolgast put In a hard day's work at the Seal Rock gymnasium. Wolgast announced his weight as 132 pounds.

SEND IX TOUR TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION TO THIS TIME KOIt A MOJfTHL

ST. LOUTS POLICE TO ALLOW RING BOUTS St. Louis, Mo., June 27. "Unless the committee from the Mozart Gesangverein misrepresented to me its ar-

" ' '

'.:J!EfeN 4

arrangements for its firsM l scheduled for the Coliseum for the aft- I r '' J ernoon of July 4. the police will not I & V v. interfere with the show," Chief of Po- I f JL T.-Jf V J lice Young was quoted as saying today. K " t 7ffc a The committee promised no admission j ' '' -Jf tickets would be sold and no members I , ' '- "" XSW elected to the verein on the-day of the j . i ' M bouts, which will be limited to six - jL- ' M rounds without decisions. Gov. Hadley j j i M A recently announced no boxing bouts !' 1 " & A shall be fought without his special . & 4 4. - i W permit. The features at the Coliseum I ?f ' t ff

will be sparring contests between club Ivl ffM I momhors inplndlnsr Harrv Trendall. W'l'c. - rti? M

Everett Gray. Marion Woodson, Peter $?$; V' ff Sturholz and others. ' J SEND THE TIMES TO YOUR gT'lS FRIEND, 300 LETTERS FROM HOME iiACH YEAP