Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 32, Hammond, Lake County, 9 September 1911 — Page 3
September 9, 1011. THE TIMES. a chances, indicates the possession of a versatility which would be worth much TINY MASCOTS OF BIG LEAGUE TEAMS PLAN PLAYING CAREERS AT TENDER AGE EAST CHICAGO money, if not more, on the stage if he could cultivate histrionic ability. wurphyIasThade IfJ GO WITH raiRY -AND1 MB. HAEBOR
EAST CHICAGO. Services at the Methodist church will begin tomorrow with a goodfellowshlp meeting at 9 o'clock, followed by Sunday school at 9:45. Public worship will be at 11 o'clock and J. G. Merrill of Hammond will preach the sermon. The Junior League will meet at 2:30 o'clock and the Epworth at 6:30 with Miss Carrie Ross as leader, and th subject will be "Christian Athletes." For the evening sermon Rev. J. B. McNary has chosen "Christian Homes the Bul
wark of Our Civilization." At 7:30 Monday! evening the official board will meet, Wednesday evening prayer meeting,' Thursday eveing teachers meeting at 7 o'clock and on Friday evening of each week, the building committee will meetThe subject of Dr. Alexander Monroe's sermon tomorrow morning will be "Sources of Power." In , the evening the 'services will be of an educational nature In deference to the beginning of the school years, and the pastor's subject will be "Formula of Modern Education Three H." Mr. Kva Lloyd will be the soloist. Calumet chapter of the D. A. R. meets this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. John D. Jones, 1111 Beacon street. This is the first meeting after the summer vacation. Mayor A. G. Schlieker spent yester
day in Southern Illinois on eprsonal
business. It Is expected that, the game tomor
row between Kast Chicago and Crown
Point at Hammond will be a fight from the call of time till the last man Is declared out. A big crowd will undoubtedly be on hand to see the battle. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stirling spent a few days in Elkhart the early part of the week Visiting their daughter, Mrs. James Warner. An automobile trip to South Bedn was one of the features of their visit.
business Thursday, the hostess, assisted by Mrs. W. R. Dobbie, served refreshments. Wolf Marcovich and M. Rosenthal were business visitors to Chicago yesterday. , The Gary team will be at the Harbor for a game tomorrow and the Harbors will have to win if they expect to stay in the face for the pennant. It will be a hard-fought contest and should draw a large crowd. -
Cards have been received from the
automobile party sonsisting of Ir.
and Mrs. C. C. Robinson, Dr. F. E.
Stephens and Miss 'Silk, who motored
to New York city, indicating that they
are on their way home. The cards did not state, however, when they expected
to arrive. Euclid and Chicago avenues have been closed to traffic from 139th street to Kennedy avenue on account of the
work being done on the Calumet-Ken-
'0
IIHII 0
Villi FOR CUBS, 3-2
Quick Thinking by Artie Scores Saier from First on Single in Eleventh.
team has been operated on for a float
ing-cartilage in his left leg at St. Luke's hospital and will be confined
there for two weeks.
Standing of the Club.
W. .76
New York
Chicago 75 Pittsburg 73
nedy company's sewer, which Is being Philadelphia 68 built. " Ist- Lou's 64
Mrs. C. F. Runnclls. of Block avenue Cincinnati 57
spent Thursday in Chicago the guest J Brooklyn oo
of friends. -t The Woman's club of Indiana Harbor will open the season with a meeting Monday evening at the home of Mrs. W. C. Harding. 3509 Grapevine street. The Family theater will have the famous picture film, "The Prodigal Son" on tomorrow afternoon and evening. Mayflower Camp, No. 309, Royal Neighbors of America, will give an ice cream social in K. of P. hall, Friday eveing. Sept. 15th. Everybody is invited, j
Boston 33
L. 46 40 54 57 61 6S 74 93
Pet. .626 .5S1 .544 .512
.456 , .403 ;
.262
SOX. ON WARPAfH.
CRUSH TIGERS, 9-3
Matty Mclntyre Leads the Slaughter, Poling Five Swats for Eight Bases.
Boston Crack Given Tough
Battle; Racine Pastors : Try to Stop Bout-
Yenterda y' Results.
Chicago, 3; Cincinnati, 2 (eleven
innings).
New York, 3; Brooklyn, 2.
PIttsburg-St. Louis wet grounds.
Philadelphia-Boston cold weather.
Gamea Today.
Cincinnati at Chicago. Brooklyn at New York. Pittsburg at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Boston (two games.)
Just before darkness put an end to
yesterday's pastime at the west side ball park the Cubs did the unexpected ftnrt vnn annthpr ormtest from th
grand circuit meeting at Charter Oak Reds- ArtIe Hofman's brains were pltPaI, rr ' esterda'- Postponed ted agaln those of Senor MarEans, the
account oc a I ,i,,j rnm r,iha fn-
RACES CALLED OFF.
Hartford.. Conn., Sept. 9. The Nut
meg handicap, the closing event of the
Standing of the Clubs. W. L. Philadelphia S3 44 Detroit 77 63 Cleveland 68 60
New York 69 61 Boston 63 67 CblenRo 62 CO Washington 54 76 St. Louis 38 90
Pet. .653 .597 .531 .531 .485 .481 .415 .297
until this afternoon
wet track.
INDIANA HARBOR. First United Presbyterian Church, In diana Harbor.
Regular services will be held next !
Sabtath afternoon, Sept 10, in the Baptist church on Fir street, near 135th treet. Bible school at 2 p. m. Public worship and sermon at 3 p. m., by the pastor, A. J. Crooks. Theme t "The First Message of Jesus." Strangers are cordially invited to attend all these services. "Come thou with us, and. we will do thee1 good; fbr the Lord hath spoken good concerning Israel."
BaptUt Chnr-h, Indiana Harbor. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. 7" rnlng service at 11 a. m. Subject: "ii akkuk's Doctrine of God." vening service at 7:45 p. m. Evening service at 7:45 p. m. Subject: "Homesick for God."
TOM M'MAHON WINS
FROM FITZGERALD
Philadelphia. Pa., Sept 9. Jack FItz
gerald fought a great bout against
Tom McMahon Of Spring Valley, 111.,
who outweighed him, and only lost out by a hair line at the Mantau A. C. last
night.
HURT IN RIOT;
SUES BALL CLUB
t., sUt. 9. T le baball clu
few brief seconds in the dusky eleventh
and Artie came out victor, giving th
Cubs the game, 3 to 2.
Artie acomplished his "scoop", from
the coaching lines. Victor Saier was on first base, there were two out, and Tom Needham was at bat. It looked
like it Would all be over in a minute and the umpire would have to declare the battle a draw at 2 all. Vic started
to steal second. Second Baseman Egan of the Reds ran to cover the bag, and Needham cleverly pushed a single right through the vacant spot, and the ball hounded on out to the Spanish gentleman in right field.
Racine. Wis., Sept. 0. Eddie Murphy, the highly touted lightweight from Boston, met a tough one here last night in Jack McHenry of Lima, Ohio. Mur
phy, over-confident of victory, found McHenry a puzzle and In the bout of
ten rounds there was but a slight advantage for Murphy at the end. .Up to the third round Murphy had al the best of it and Eddie Santry, the
referee, wanted to stop the bout, fear
ing McHenry was being punished too severely.
McHenry refused to stop fighting and
came back strong. He was a puzzle to
Murphy until the tenth round, when
the Lima boy, after a game fight,- seem
ed to weaken, but he fought back well
until the gdng. After the bout Murphy stated that McHenry was one of the best , men he ever met. . Had they not agreed to clean breaks Murphy probably would have ' won easily. The" -opening bouts between Billy Koutz and Mattie Poulson and Joe Casper and Mike Hecht, all of Racine, were tame. Early in the evening there seemed to be some doubt as to whether the bout would be pulled off. Racine ministers demanded that Mayor Goodland issue an order stopping the fight. This the mayor refused to do and the ministers, than appealed by telegram to the governor,' who wired the sheriff to see that the law was not violated. The
sheriff, with six deputies and twelve police officers, sat at the ringside and
watched the bouts.
It was announced at the ringside that Doc Message and Frank Budar, of the
Drexel club, planned to stage a ten
round battle between Hugo Kelly and Billy Papke here the first Friday in
October. The promoters will confer
with Papke and Silvie Ferrerti, Kelly's
manager, in Chicago. : HERRICK TO BOX
STEVE M'GINLEY
, "fcl., x .... 4
The Lincoln
Lincoln, Neb.
Western league baball club has been PITCHER UNDER KNIFE
suea lor iu,uw aamages Dy itaipn A.
Hanson, who was injured by an em
ploye of the club during a riot follow
ing a decision of Umpire McKee on August 12 in a re with Denver. Mc
Kee had been attacked by spectators, with cushions and was being escorted
from the park by an employe of the
club named Bly. Hanson was following
with the mob in his rear. Some one
hit Bly with a missile and, thinking
Hanson the man, Bly struck him with
a club.
New York. Sept. 9. Pitcher George
Bell of the Brooklyn National league
Yesterday's Results. Chicago, 9; Detroit, 3. Philadelphia, 4; Boston, 1. Cleveland, 2; St. Louis, 1. New York, 2; Washington, 1. Games Today. Chicago at Detroit. St. Louis at Cleveland. Boston at Philadelphia. " New York at Washington.
Detroit, Mich., Sept. 9. For one or
two of the things Cleveland has been
doing to them the White Sox got even
yesterday at the expense of Detroit by
whipping the Tigers, 9 to 3, in the
first of a two game series here.
Led by Matty Mclntyre, Comiskey's
men pounded three Detroit pitchers for sixteen safe hits and had the game always in hand after the second inning. Mclntyre, who would rather get a base hit off a Tiger pitcher than eat a squape meal any day, got five swats for a total of eight bases yesterday after
noon, and last night was wishing the I Jack Herrick, Fred Gilniore's middle
game had lasted fifteen innings so lis t weight, is to fight Steve McKinley, the
could have gone to bat two or three more times. The former Tiger outfielder started hsl sticking with a three bagger, then bit . off a couple of singles, came bai k with a double the fourth time up, and wound up with a one bagger in the eighth round. This, for a man who re
cently struck out four times in
JJonHne, 111., scrapper, ten rounds at Indianapolis next Monday night. Her
rick was to have fought Jack Dillon,
but the latter has a bad arm. Herrick is promised a match with Dillon two
weeks later if he whips McGinley.
t
aJerry (YkCarty
" 4
V
1 , ..Kfl. i
9
Jerry McCarthy, maacot for the Boston American League baseball team, and Heinle Wexler, the CleY eland team's mascot, are great favorites with the players. Jerry is twelve . and. Heinle ten. The picture was taken at a game between Boston and Cleveland. They are deep in a discussion ol Joe Jackson's hitting. Little; Heinle ver that Jackson Is better than Ty Cobb or anyone else.
It you smoke a LaVendor once you
five will always call for them.
KANKAKEE .!
DRIVERS THROWN Kankakee, 111., Sept 9. The Kanka
kee district fair races ended yesterday. The feature was the 2:21trot; which went six heats, the winners of
two heats each. Prodigal Strong -and Shandonwood, going alone the sixth heat, the former winning. In the first
heat of the 2:20 pace Country Ladd's sulky wheel came off, throwing - the
driver. Cooper, who was run over by Billy Shandonwood, whose driver, Myers, was also thrown, both horses running away. Summaries: 2:21 Trot Purse $400: Prodigal Strong (Murphy). 1 1 2 3 2 1 Shandonwood (Creasey ) . . . .2 4 113 2 Acorn Wilkes (Warner) 3 2 3 2 1 Miss Bingo (Baker). 4 3 4 4 4' Time 2:24Vi. 2:24s, 2:23U. 2:23,Vi,
2:23. 2:27. 2:20 Pace Purse $400: Mandy Lee (Grace) 3 112 1 Edna Crouch (Blake) 1 2 2 3 3 Senator B. (Creasey) ...2 3 5 1 2 Billy S. (Warren). 4 4 4 5 4 Billy Shandonwood (Myers).. 5 5 3 4 5 Country Ladd (Cooper) 6 dr Time 2:19U,x2:19'ir 2:17, 2:19. 2:20. v 2:16" Trot Purse $400: Lady Perline (Van AUtine) 1 1 1
Recreation (Harris) ............ 2 4 2 Oddie G. (A. Baker) 3 3 3 Charley Worth (J. F. Baker)... 4' 2 4 Time 2:20. 2:22'4, 2:18.
AMERICAlfNAGS WIN. Derby, England, Sept-v 9. Blarney Stofie, owned by James R. Keene, won the" Elvaston Nursery plate of 200 sovereigns,' a handicap for two years olds, here yesterday. The Gold. Crest filly was second and H. P. Whitney's Melba gelding third. Sixteen ; horses ran the distance, which was five furlongs straight. The Perveril of the Peak plate, a 'handicap of 1.000 sovereigns for three year olds and upward, run qver the straight mile course, was won
by H. P. Whitney's Whisk Broom.
OHIO MARKSMEN LEAD Seagirt, NV J., Sept. 9. At the conclusion of firing yesterday at the 600yard target, the end of the second three stages of shooting for the Dryden trophy, the feature of the annual
Seagirt shooting tournament, the Ohio state team was ahead with a total score of 731 out of a. possible 800. New York stood third but three points behind Ohio, with a score of 728,
WINS 2 HEATS; DIES. Sterling, 111., Sept. 9. Colonel Thompson, with a record of 2:121,4, owned by W; S. Sweet of this city, dropped dead
atr'the end of the third heat in the 2:12 pace at Morrison yesterday. Colonel Thompson had won two straight heats.
Try a LaVendor cigur It'sgroed!
The Methodist services at Pythian hall tomorrow will be at the usual hours. Rev. R. B. Seaman of Roches-
ter, Ind., the acting pastor will preach in the morning on "A Vision of the . King and His Kingdom," and in the
evening his subject will be 'The Rela- VALPARAISO RESULTS.
tain Toward Thope Who Are Without." The Ladies' Aid society of the M. E. church held its monthly meeting Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank Rigsrle, on Grapevine street. Officers for the ensuing year were elected, as follows: President B. C. Lukens. Vice president Mrs. William Collins. Treasurer Mrs. James Spittle. Reading secretary Mrs. D. W. Dupes. Corresponding secretary Mrs. W.' R. Dobbie. The ladies decided to give a turkey supper Thanksgiving evening stead of a bazaar, as previously decided on. The supper will be held in the basement of the new church. At the close of
Valparaiso, Ind., Sept. 9 Twelve
thousand people attended the last day
of the Porter tf-ouDty fair. The track
was heavy. Summaries:
2:21 trot Won by Tex: Nellie Rob
ertson, second; Dolly Royal, third. Best
time 2:24 U-
-72:24 pace Won by Frank Medium
S. W. Bennett Jr., second; Laura Faye,
third. Best time, 2:23
2:16 pace Won by Lucile R.; Sappo,
second; Boby, third, pest time. 2:15?
Running race, mile Won by Oneena Gas; Cherokee Lass, second;
Minnehaha, third. Time, :54.
Are you growing old too rapidly if so
see Dr. Ruckel about it.
Specializing the Famous TRIMORE COLLARS & CUFFS
15c
2 ' FOR
25c
Specializing the Famous ELfERY DRESS SHIRTS
1.00
AND UP
The Park Addition -. -" ' ' - is Indiana Harbor's exclusive resiT dential section. Streets are being paved, cement sidewalks-are laid, sewer, water, gas and electricity are in. Shade trees are planted. No saloons permitted. Dwellings must cost from $2,000 to $2,500. , We have some choice residences, steam and furnace heated, on very easy payments, All residence lots 35 feet wide. j Citizens Trust & Savings Bank 3405 Michigan Ave. Phone 155 Indiana Harbor, Ind. -- - ' '
Yourself and Friends are Cordially Invited TO ATTEND THEX Opening newr Men's, Kept Monday, Sept. 11, 1911
Tiie White Store J. J. COHEN, Manager TOWLE OPERA HOUSE BLK. HAMMOND
Specializing the Famous TRIANGLE 50c NECKWEAR all colors and shapes 29c or 100
Specializing the Famous WHITk STORE SPECIAL COAT SHIRTS ' plain and colors 69c for 165
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