Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 10, Hammond, Lake County, 29 June 1911 — Page 3

Thursday, June 29, 1911.

THE TIMES. a

EAST CHICAGO AND BSD. HARBOR

TING NEWS

EAST CHICAGO. The Green Engineering- company will hut down their plant all of next week In order to give their mea a vacation. Superintendent J. S. Dewey explained last night that the reason of the shut down was not for lack of orders, but because the Fourth of July coming close to the center of the week always Interfered with the work a few days before and after the occasion, and as a number of the foremen were anxious for vacations, he decided the best plan was to shut down entirely and thus give all the men their vacations at the same time. The Ladles' Aid society of the Congregational church Is holding a picnic at Hobertsdale this afternoon and evening. William See, who has been the guest of his uncle. Judge Edward DeBrale for the past week or so, wiU leave for his home in Buffalo the last ot the week. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Freeman of Beacon street are entertaining Miss Kate Freeman of Chicago. Clarence Bourque of Escanaba, Mich., and George Bourque of Spaulding, Mich., are the guests of their cousin.

INDIANA HARBOR.

The "Woman's club of Indiana Harbor.

will meet at the home of Mrs. 'William Harding tomorrow evening. This meeting was to have taken place at the

South Bay hotel last Monday night, but owing to the heavy storm there was not a quorum present and the

meeting was adjourned to tomorrow

night. The program, which was to have' been given Monday night, will

be given tomorrow ni,?ht. All members

are urged to be present.

The ladies of the Church of Christ will give a supper from 5 to 8 o'clock

at Pythian hall this evening for the benefit of the parsonage building fund.

The supper will be of home cooking

and the price 25 cents, with ice cream

and cake extra.

The Associated Charities would like

to find work for deserving women who can and will do any household or other service. Jf you need such help phone Mrs. August Johnson, 431M or E. Jf.

Canine. 613J, East Chicago, or Mrs.

Fred Stephens, 556W, Indiana Harbor.

A patriotic service will be held in

the Church of Christ, 3717 Grapevine

street, next Sunday evening, beginning

at 7:45 o'clock. Addresses suitable for

CARDS BEAT CUBS

iii mm. M

Drop Another, but Hold to

Tie for Second Place Through Phils' Defeat.

WHITE SOX DRAW DOUBLE DEFEAT

Bad Baseball and Weak

Pitching Give Cleveland Two Victories.

Mrs. Nelson DeLor of Todd avenue. ; the occasion will be made by Prof. C. P.

George Bourque will leave for his Holway and Judge Barnett of Ham-

home Saturday owing to ill health. j mond.

As there is false rumors abroad that

the Welsh reunion will be held at Black Oak, permit me through the columns of your valuable paper to say that the place of meeting will be on the Calumet-river, near Clark road, and an extended Invitation is given to all the Welsh of the region and their friends. Bring your baskets well loaded and don't forget the date, July 4th. Take the lnterurban car for Clark road. J. ROBERTS.

HEDGES' PLEA TURNED DOWN

Miss Mary Peters of Laporte. Ind..

w-ho has been sick at the home of her sister. Mrs. Fred Saluski, on Grapevine street, for the past ten days, is somewhat improved and was able to be

up yesterday. Fred Peters, her broth

er, has also been laid up for a week, but was out yesterday for the first

time.

Articles of Incorporation.

Articles of Incorporation have been

filed In the offlc of the secretary of state for the following: The Idelite Club, Ft. Wayne; no capital stock; social; directors, W. C. D. CI. i-. i i ....... , . .

Cincinnati. O., June 29. In a decision 7"?"' " vuiireme ana handed down today the national base- V"enr ball commission declined to enforce the! T,ho for Association, Lafayette; request of President Hedges of tha St-t0.c'al; D capltal tock: Sectors. J. F. Louis American league club that the;atson- Lambert Bertha and J. W. Minneapolis team of the American as-i " sociation apply the earnings of Pitcher' The Burnettsville Elevator Company, Waddell to the payment of $1.22 J J Burnettsville; capital stock, $14,000; claimed to be due the St. Louia clu 1 Kra,n dealers; directors. J. C. Duffy, M. from Waddell. iK- Relt- J- D. Brown, C. M. Mertz and President Cantillon of the Mlnneapo-' Cloyd Loushry. lis club, in a statement, declared Wad-! Ga-rY- Hobart & Eastern Traction dell also was indebted to his club and ' Company' La county; capital stock, on that showing the commission d-i 125'000: to construct and operate a cided it would be unfair to ask that i traction line from Gary through Hobart club to pay the St. Louis claim before to Valparaiso; drectors, W.H. Clinton, his obligations with his own club had:-- z- Olson, A. J. Slth, J. H. Earle, E. been met. H- Guyer, J. C. Cavender and Grant The claim of Terre Haute against the , Crumpacker. St. Louis aNtlonals for $85, said to be J Hancock County Fish and Game Produe on the purchase price for the re-' tectlve Association, Hancock county; lease ot Player Earl Hennis, was de- j no capital stock; to restock with flsn cided in favor of St. Louis. The com-1 the streams of the county; directors, J. mission stated that the agreement forE. Dye, J. F. Reed, G. A. Carr, Henry

the purchase price of Hennis was null : Snow, T. J. Morgan, W. L Carter, C. L. and void and directed that the player . Tindall, J. R. Moore, revert to Terre Haute. The latter club 1 Versailles Bank, Versailles; capital

also is required to refund to St. Louis stock, $32,000; Charles H. Wilson, presi-

the amount received by it in part payment for Hennis' release.

Standing of the Clubs. W. - L. Pet.

New York 40 23 .635

Philadelphia 38 25 .603

ChlcaKO 88 23 .603

Pittsburg 36 26 .581

St. Louis 35 2S .556 Cincinnati 28 35 .444 Brooklyn 22 40 .355

Boston 14 49 .222 Yesterday's Results. St. Louis, 7; Chicago, 1. New York, 3; Boston. 0. Brooklyn, 2; Philadelphia, 1. Pittsburg, 3; Cincinnati, 3 (nine Innings). Games Today. Chicago at Cincinnati. Pittsburg at St. Louis. Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. St. Louis, Mo., June 29-v Chicago lost ground heavily in the National league pennant scramble yesterday when St.

Louis won the final game from the Cubs, 7 to 1, but the victory of Brooklyn over Philadelphia preserved the tie

for second place.

Inability to hit Sallee's Milwaukee

avenue delivery was the chief cause of

the defeat of Chance's reconstructionlsts. They grabbed off seven hits," but so far apart that there would have

been nothing doing but whitewash on

.our side if Roger Bresnahan had not dropped the ball after tagging out at

ine piate me suit; tuny iTcuiieu lu us.

Artie Hofman wafe the only Cub who did not have any" trouble gauging the

cross fire curves which Sallee sent diagonally across the plate from the

sou'west corner most of the time. Ar

tie whaled out three clean ones while the other boys were getting four all

told.

Standing ot the Clubs.

Chicago Boston

St.

W. L. Fct. .44 21 .677 .41 21 .661 .34 26 .567 .SI 27 .834 .32 30 .516 .29 37 .439 .23 42 .354 .18 46 .25S

THE INTERESTING TIMES' AD ALWAYS DENOTES THE INTERESTING TOBK.

dent, and Frank M. Laws, cashier.

Boston and Big Store Company, Mar-

Ion; capital sotck, $150,000; retail mer

chants; directors, H. M. Miller, F. D.

Miller, Harry Goldthwaite, J. L Barley,

C. G. Barley and J. W. Stephenson.

to)

l if si

shoe POLISH

ALL SAINTS

AND ROYALS (By a Fan.) The All Saints of Hammond will play

the Hammond Royals next Sunday at

Klndel's grove. The batteries for the All Saints will be Walter Rippy, pitcher, and J. Rague, catcher. Ben James

will twirl for the Hammond Royals and

Walter Kundy will be behind the bat. James pitched for the All Saints the

first part of the year and about a month ago he went to Detroit and secured a

Job pitching for the Detroit Tigers,

winning seven games out of eight he pitched and his only hope is to beat his old team next Sunday. The game will be.for a side bet of $25 and will start at 1:30 sharp.

Yesterday's Results. Cleveland, 6; Chicago, 4.

Cleveland, 6; Chicago, S (second

game). Washington, 4; Philadelphia, 3. Philadelphia, 16j Washington, 9 (sec ond game). Detroit, 3; St. Louis, 2. New York at Boston (wet grounds). Games Today. Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit. Philadelphia at Washington. New York at Boston (two games).

Cleveland, O.. June 29. A lot of bad baseball and plenty of weak pitching

by the White Sox gave Cleveland two victories yesterday, the Naps clouting their way through the first contest of a double header, winning 6 to 4, and being handed the second contest by a count of 6 to 3. The wrong pitcher was sent to the slab for the Sox at the start of each contest, Olmstead getting a whaling in the first, and Scott giving the home club a commanding lead in the one round he slabbed in the second game.

j Baker and Lange finished up each game

ana It looked as if either one of them might have pitched to victory had they started the games. What luck went with the afternoon pa8timlng always was against the Sox. The Naps made startling fielding plays at critical times when the Sox were In the midst of rallies. The umpire's close decisions at critical times went against the Sox, and their gallant struggles in each game counted for nothing.

AMERICAN YACHTS !

CAPTURE PRIZES Kiel, Germany, June 29. The Ameri

can yacht Mibelot won the fifth international yacht race yesterday and captured the Emperor William cup offered

for the winner of the series of sonder class competitions. The American yatcht Beaver was second and won the

Prince Henry cup. The time of Bibelot was 2:18:01 and of Beaver 2:18:08. Bibelot is owned by Harry Tayne Whit

ney of the New York Yacht club and R. W. Emmons of the Eastern Yacht club. It won three of the five races. Beaver and the American yacht Cima each taking one.

The German yachts Tilly XIV., Wan-

see and Seehund III. were badly beaten, following the three Americans to

the finish in every race except the third, in which Seehund was third and Cima fourth. Owing to the weather the crusing race from Eokernfoerde to Kiel, a distance of forty-six miles, was an exciting one. Several boats arrived here with spars or bowsprit missing. Emperor William's Meteor made the fastest time, but was beaten on time allowance by TJordstern, his majesty's old Meteor, now owned by Prof. C. Harries of Kiel, and by the English boat Waterwitch. Boston, Mass., June 29. In appreciation of the treatment accorded the American sonder yachtsmen at Kiel F. Lewis Clark of Spokane, Wash., com

modore of the Eastern Yacht club, has cabled tne following message to Admiral Baran,don of the Kaiserlicher Yacht club at Kiel: i "The Eastern Yacht club requests you to express to his majesty, the emperor, and to his royal highness. Prince Henry, and the Kaiserlicher Yacht club their hearty appreciation of the courteous and sportsmanlike treatment ac- , corded the American yachtsmen."

Store.

i Watch Tomorrow's Paper for Fourth of July Sale.

J. J. COHEN. Manager Towla Opera House Block Hammond,

PEOM

The one best shoe polish. Quick, brilliant, lasting.

trk F. f. daixft rn ijj

FOURTH OF

JULY

GAME

The Wabash Colts lost their first

game this season to the Roby Athletics

last Sunday at the latter's grounds in South Chicago. The Colts have lost but one game out of the last seven , played. On July 4 they will cross bats

with the All Saints' aggregation at Klndel's groce. Game will start at 1:30 p. m. sharp. Everybody is welcome to attend. The batteries for the

Colts will be Frisk and Walton.

Secrets of

Good Advertising

Concentration All Important I

. N

An eight-inch advertisement in one newspaper will bring much bigger results than a two-inch advertisement in four newspapers. Don't skip around from one newspaper to another.Success in advertising comes from hammering away at the same crowd. Pick out the newspaper which has the kind of readers you want for customers, and then stick. W you want to make an advertisement hit all you need to do is to talk to the reader of the newspaper as you talk across the counter the counter to a customer. Simply talk. That's all. Be sincere about it., Let your words ring true. The people will listen: They like it. The fact that your advertisement appears continuously in a reputable newspaper stimulates public confidence. Your shop advances step by step in the estimation of thousands of people who may be months in getting around to make their first purchase. V Originality may be good, but an advertisement that sells goods, even if copied, is better.

LA VENDORS-

WANT

GAME

DOYLE GETS $833 FROM COLONELS Jimmy Doyle, the Cub third baseman, has won his fight before the national commission for $833.33, a third of the purchase price paid by the Chicago club to the Louisville club. Doyle had a clause In his contract guaranteeing him a third of the money paid for him if he was sold. The Cubs paid $2,500 for him. The commission held that in justice to Doyle it could not Invalidate

the clause In his contract. There was a condition in the contract that Doyle must be kept as late as June 1 by the Chicago club in order to get part of the purchase money. Doyle has made good at third base and probably will be there June 1 next year.

HARVARD AND YALEAWAIT GUNj Red Top, Conn.; June 29. A few raclng starts in front of quarters for the Harvard crews constituted the work of the Harvard squad last night. The boats were on the river for about half an hour. All the men are in fine condition. This afternoon will come the race between the freshmen fours and the gentlemen's eights. The latter crew has not been picked, but will be taken from the following whose names have been sent down from Cambridge: Elliot Farley. James Lawrence, Samuel

Wolcott, Charles Morgan, Roger Derby. James Ayer, Peter Wiggins, George Tappan and Ernest Smith. The freshman four will row: Walker, bow; Wentworth, No. 2; Morgan, No. 3; E. D. Curtis, stroke; and Roosevelt, coxswain. Two substitute crews, one from each camp, met on the river last night and had four impromptu brushes, all of them won by Yale. Harvard then challenged Yale and the two crews will race for half a mile at 10:30 this morning.

BASEMENT Special Sale Remnants of every Description and Character. MAIN FLOOR Special Sale Silks, Dress Goods, Hosiery Underwear and Shoes SECOND FLOOR Special Sale of Waists, Skirts and Wash Suits Carpets and Lace Curtains.

The Lavendors would like to arrange

a game with any team, for July 2nd.

Call Whiting 821 after 6 o'clock and ask for Smith.

POLLOCK ELECTED

BADGER CAPTAIN Highland, N. Y., June 29. Charles

M. Pollock of Fargo, N. D., a Junior, ! was elected captain of the 1912 Wiscon-

sin varsity eight at a banquet held I since the big race. The election of Pol

lock came as a surprise, as it was his

first year in the shell. He rowed No.

6, and although a new man, pulled one of the strongest oars in the boat. Prospects for next season look bright, for j only two men will be lost through I graduation. Captain Kraatz and Stroke

Hare. The entire freshman eight, in which there is some great varsity material, will return next fall. The varsi

ty oarsmen left for New York, where

they will sojourn for a few days. The

freshmen left for Chicago, where they will be entertained at the C. A. A. clubhouse by K. C. Woods, father of the

Oak Park freshman who rowed In the

varsity race.

TOO BAD TO BE CALLED A GAME Logansport, Ind., June 29. Called upon to punish Charles Sellers, manager of the Logansport team in the Northern Indiana league. Judge Gilford threw out of court the complaint of the Rev. E. C. Richardson, who alleged a baseball' game had been played between the Logansport and flumlngton teams nearer to his church or Sunday than the Indiana laws perm'.t. The court accepted the testimony of three witnesses that the exhibition was so bad it could not be considorea a baseball game.

"PUT UP COIN," CONLEY TELLS J. COULON Harry Gilmore, Jr., Frankie Conley's new manager, showed up again last night with that $1,000 certified check he wants to bet that his Kenosha fighter can beat Johnny Coulon in a bantamweight championship argument.

Harry wants to know why Coulon does not appear with some money instead of talking about $5,000 side bets and forty-five round bouts. "I would like to see the color of his

coin," said Gilmore. "A $1,000 side bet is a pretty nifty one for a champion to pick up if he thinks he can't be beaten. I don't care when Johnny wants to fight, but I would like to sign up with him right away. We will wait until late in September for him, if Johnny wants to rest until that time, but we can sign articles and post our money right now. Money talks, and I have yet to see Coulon produce any. If he thinks Conley is soft in twentyrounds, here is a great chance for.him." Gilmore called off prospective matches with Patsy Brannigan and Joe Mandot this week in order to save his man for a Coulon clash. Conley is a bantam, anyway, and would have to give away weight to cither Brannigan or Mandot.

SAYS WIFE PREFERRED DOG. Because Adolph Schneidenltch's wlf showed more affection for their dog than she did for him, Schneldenbach of Indianapolis drove her out of the house. Mrs. Schneldenbach then brought suit for divorce, alleging that her husband was cruel to her. "Judge, would you have a wife llko that?" Schneldenbach asked Judge Weir, of superior court. The court did not answer, but trlel to hide a smile. He took the case under advisement.

THERE ARE MORE THAN THREE TIMES MORE TIMES CIRCULATED EVERY DAY THAN ALL THE OTHER DAILY PAPERS IN LAKE COUNTY PUT TOGETHER.

Cut Players, No. 12 Davy Skean, Utility Infieldcr. There will not be a No. IS in this series.

CALENDAR OK SPORTS , FOR THE WEEK.

OVERALL SAYS

HE'S THROUGH Orvie Overall is through with base

ball, according to a telegram received

last night from the former star of the Cubs, who is at his mine at Angel's

Camp, Cal. If he stands by the statement he wired last night he'll not figure in any trade as planned by Chance and Murphy. His answer to the rumor

that he would return to the game fol

lows: "I may visit in the east during

the summer, but nothing doing in the baseball line."

THURSDAY,

, Opening of six days' j meet at Detroit, Mich.

Annual Yale-Harvard boat races on the Thames river. New LonJL. A

National track and field championships of the A. A. U. at Pittsburg. Pacific states tennis championship (doubles) at Long Beach, Cal. " - SATURDAY. National track and field championships of the A. A.' U. at Pittsburg. Aviation contest for the Gordon Bennett international trophy, in England. " Central state tennis championship tournament opens at St. Louis. Opening of seven-day meeting of the Niagara Pacing association at Fort Erie. Championship of the Canadian Wheelmen's association at Waterloo, Ont. Championship tournament of the Royal Canadian Golf association opons at Ottawa. Opening of Maritime Harness Pacing circuit meeting at St. John, N. B.

THE DAILY.

TIMES, 60.000

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