Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 95, Hammond, Lake County, 9 October 1911 — Page 3

Mondav. Oct. 9, 1911.

THE TIMES.

EAST

CHICAGO AND HARBOR'

SPOTTING NE

?nt I

EAST CHICAGO.

Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Bloomberg spe

the week end in Hobart. the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stuart and Mr. arid Mrs. Will lewis, who are living there temporarily while Messrs. Stuart and Lewis are completing the work on a contract they tjave there. Mrs. Charles Fichter left Friday for Aurora. Jnd.. where she will spend three weeks with her mother and sisters. Louis Hascall raa taken to Mercy hospital in Chicago, last week suffering from a general breakdown. John O'N'eil of Gary spent Saturday and Sunday with friends in Kast Chicago. Mrs. O'Neil. who is visiting relatives in Fulton, 111., is expected home Tuesday. The East Chicago Tea and Coffee store, is moving from Chicago avenue to Sam Cohen's new building, on Forsythe avenue. Mr. and Mrs. August Johnson and daughter Marjory spent yesterday in Valparaiso. Mr. Johnson returned this . morning, but Mrs. Johnson and Marjory will remain there for the wedding of Mr. Ralph Bronson, Mrs. Johnson's brother, and Miss Anna Fish, which

takes place Wednesday afternoon at the home of Miss Fish. George Standish spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives in Milwaukee. Mrs. Howard Stephens and children ''of Hammond were the guests yesterday of Mrs. Stephen's mother, Mrs. Herman Reuss. Mack Foland drove to Hobart and LajSorte yesterday in his automobile. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Johnson, Mrs. Frank,' Hesse and Mrs. Stella Alyea drove to Gary yesterday in Mrs. Alyea's automobile. Bert Burch spent Sunday wittf his family In Plymouth. s The Ladies' Social . Union of the Methodist church will meet at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth -Williams of Olcott avenue, near 148th street, Wednesday afternoon. Those who were active In the management of the charity ball given Friday night by the Kastern Star are congratulating themselves on the success of the occasion. The event was well attended and everybody had a splendid time. The managers state that Its tickets were taken In at the door, and more tickets were Bold whose owners failed to appear. They estimate that at least 950 will be made when all the receipts are yufted up. Mrs. J. G. Allan was chairman of the entertaini merit.

CNDIANA HARBOR The Woman's club of Indiana Harbor, will hold its regular meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. Henry Barker, corner of Fir and Michigan avenue. Mrs. J. Foster Moore of Chicago was the guest of her mother, Mrs. F. M.

Mascall of Dnimmond street, yesterday. O. A. Tevander and Miss Alice Smith of Chicago were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Lundquist yesterday. In the afternoon the party drove to Gary in Mr. Tevandcr's auto and called in mutual friends. ' Joseph Parerucki leaves today for Virginia to visit his father, who is very sick. Mr. Parerickl is a mail carrier and is on a two months' leave of absence, his place being filled while he is away by E. C, Dowdell of Valparaiso, who is first on the list of substitutes. The Woman's Home Missionary society of the Methodist church will meet at the home of Mrs. Schall tomorrow afternoon. Postmaster A. G. Lundquist is in receipt of a general order which purposes placing mall boxes at all the depots. In accordance with the order

boxes will be placed at the following epots as soon as possible: Lake Shore

one, B. & O. one. C., I. & S. one and Pennsylvania two.

NORTHERN INDIANA LEAGUE

Burres, p-cf..

1 0

Standing of the Club.

Totals 0 6 24 8 1

Crown Point ..2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 'Gary 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I Two-base hit J. Bergwald. Double plays Rahn to Burke; Anderson to , Rahn to Newman. Struck out By i Smith, 4; by Anderson, 12; by Burres, 1. Bases on balls Off Smith. 3; off Ander- ; son, 3; off Burres, 2. . Umpire White. 'Time 1:45.

VAGNER'S ERROR GIVESJGUBS GAME Miscue by Honus Allows Vic Saier to Score Winning Tally in Eleventh.

Standing of the Club.

W. L. Pet. Crown Point 15 8 . .632 Indiana Harbor 15 10 .600 East Chicago 14 10 .5S3 Whiting 10 10 .524 Hammond 9 14 .391 Gary 5 17 .227

HOWARD GOING - TO THE COAST Bloomington, 111., Oct. 9. Del Howard, late manager of the Louisville team, reached his home in Kenney today en route to Los Angeles, where he will spend the winter. Howard says he may manage a Pacific Coast league team next season.

CHINESE TEAM WILL TOUR U. S; San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 9. Word received here from the Orient states that a Chinese baseball team will come to this country next spring. The team, which is now in -the Philippine Islands, will sail from Honolulu on March 1. It will be in charge of Bill Settely, the old-time Pacific coast umpire. It is

Settely's plan to have the Chinese team

meet the big league teams In the south

during their training season. After

that he will take the slant-eyed play

ers around the country to meet .the big college teams. Also it Is planned to

arrange teams.

games with minor

league

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AUTO RACES TODAY.

Philadelphia, Pa., Oct. 9. Wet and dangerous spots In the Fairmount

park automobile course dried out yes

terday and it will require little work to put it in shape for the postponed

race today.

FOOTBALL NOTES.

frawfordsville, Ind., Oct. 9. Wabash

college's next game will be played in Craw-fordsville next Friday with her

old-time rival, Depnuw. The Method

lsts and the Presbyterians have been meeting in athletic contests for many

years with the Presbyterians invariab

ly coming off victorious. Wabash has almost an unbroken string of 'lctories

over Depauw and Coach Harper's men expect to keep up the pace in Friday's clash. Depauw, too, seems to be stronger than usual. Notre Pame, Ind,, Oct, 9. Coach Marks was well pleased with the showing his men made against Ohio Northern on Saturday. They exhibited all the speed that he expected from them and though they, lacked unity, still they give evidence' that all will be in fine running order by mid-season.

The

Parti

Atldiiion

is Indiana Harbor's exclusive residential 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. Citizens Trust & Savings Bank 3405 Michigan Ave. Phone 155 Indiana Harbor, Ind.

Sups r ii i

EAST CHICAGO BEATS HAMMOND The Kt Chicago Camp of Modern Woodmen of America defeated the

Hammond Camp In a game of baseball played yesterday at the old Hubbard ball park on the north side, by the score of 10 to 3. This was the last of a series of three games played by thefce tearqs, in which East Chicago won' two and Hammond one. The winners are to be banqueted in the near future by the losers at the Hammond lodgerooms. On the occasion of the supper a badger and bulldog fight will be one of the features. The lineup of yesterday's game is as follows: Kast Chicago Jumpsey, c; Jones, p;

Whittlicb, ss; Reiland, lb; Dooley. Loom is, 3b;, Haight, cf; Koiken, Cherry, If. Hammond Schultz, c; Freyman Buser. ss; Scratch, lb; Bradshay, I'rbans, 3b; Thompson, rf; Yonkey, Henning, If. Umpires Raftet Martin.

2b;

rf; . p; 2b; cf: and

W. u Pet. New York.... 9S . 51 .638 Chicago t i .so Pittsburgh -S5 6S .556 Philadelphia 79 71 .527 St. LouU.. 74 73 .503 Cincinnati i.... 6S 82 .460 Brooklyn 61 85 .418 Boston ....42 107 .282

YeMerdny'pi Rexultn. Chicago, 3; Pittsburgh, 2 (eleven innings). St. LouisS; Cincinnati. 0. Game Today. Pittsburgh at Chicago. St. Louis at Cincinnati. - New York at Brooklyn. Boston at Philadelphia. When darkness was about to stop the Cubs and Pirates in a bully extra inning struggle yesterday at the west side, Hans Wagner messed a ground ball and let Chicago win the game. It was in the last half of the eleventh Inning with the score tied and the sun down, so another inning would have been quite out of the question. Vic Saier was on second base and one man was out. Tom Needham rolled one

straight at the .big German and he

pawed it in the dirt, then kicked it into left field, and Saier sprinted home with the run that made the Cubs victors, 3 to 2.

The "Day Letter" and the "Night Letter" increase the efficiency of your business day and multiply the power- of your own personality. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.

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(Special to The Times.) Indiana Harbor, Oct. 9. Indiana Harbor closed the season yesterday in a blaze Of glory and fusillade of swat

ting, winning over Whiting with a score of 10 to 4. j Manager Helin of Whiting pitted! Helgeson, the former Harbor player, against his ex-team mates and for four, innings the youngster held them with-' out a hit and with only thirteen men facing him. In the fifth intvirig, how- f ever. O'Brien started the swatfest with ' a nice hit into center which by daring base running he converted into a wo- ( bagger. Dautell brought him home with a hit to right and Bradshaw fol-j lowed him with a hit into the same ter- j ritory, but Dautell over-run second and McCann got the ball to the bag before the former could recover. There being already two out, s this closed the round. j However, it seemed sufficient to convince the balance of the team that Helgeson was not Invincible and from that time-on the hits came fast and furious. In the sixth inning- the Harbors made four hits oft Helgeson, six in the seventh aniKwo In the eighth, ! making a total for the day of fifteen. Bradshaw was wild in the fourth inning, allowing the Grays to score twice without a hit. He hit to men, passed to and this, coupled with an error by Meinke on a ball which, if he had fielded, would have resulted in an easy double play, permitted two runs to count for Whiting. While Helgeson's undoing was gall, and wormwood to Whiting, it brought twofold joy to the heart of Matt Sternberg. It meant not only defeat to Whiting, but vindicated Matt in his course in letting Helgeson out after he. lost a game for the ftarbor not

many weeks ago, being instantly snap

ped up ny Whiting. Whiting has been laying for a chance to "show up" the

Harbors ever since the former acquired

their present pitcher, and had- Helge

son been the means or defeating the

Harbor team under the circumstances, Matt's life would have been one continuous round of listening to "I told you so" from those who 6Mi not approve of his haste in unloading the Terrible

Dane on'the Oil city's standard bear

ers in tie baseball neia.

SOX GLifilB NOTCH Ifj Film CONTEST Slip Into First Division byBeating Naps in Farewell Game by 10 to 4

Standing of the Cluba.

W. U Pet. Philadelphia ...101 50 .669 Detroit S9 65 .523 Cleveland , 80 73 .523 Chleatro 7T 74 -5WK) Boston ..18 75 -509S New York 1 . 76 76 .500 Washington 4 ' 90 .416 St Louis 45 107 .296

"terday'i Result. Chicago, 10; Cleveland, 4. St. Louis, 17; Detroit, 2 (first game)

St. Louis, 5; Detroit, 0 (second

game).

In the last Jump of ; the American

league marathon yesterday the White

Sox by winning an uphill game from

Cleveland slipped into fourth position at the wire 'by a margin so close as to require four figures of decimals to determine It, but in the realm of baseball as indisputable as if it were a mile. The final score of the race was 10 to 4. Doc White and Rollie Zeider played leading roles in the uphill act. White went to the slab with one man out in the first inning, after the ill-mannered visitors had scored three runs off Joe Benz. and shut off the steady stream of tallies that was crossing the pan.

WABASH BEATS OLD

GOLD AND BLACK 3-0

SCORN

UCHDOWS

GTI

HARD TASK AT NEW

S A

FOOTBALL

Lafayette, Ind., Oct. 9. "Yea, Wabash!" It was the same old triumphant yell of the "Little Giant" rooters which marked the close of the anntlal gridiron battle on Stuart field Saturday afternoon. For the fifth straight

year, the old gold and -black colors hang at half-mast and the scarlet floats from the top. The score was Wabash, 3; Purdue, 0. . Wabash scored three points in the

last quarter on a drop kick by Quarter! tent

Back Lambert, who scored from the twenty-two yard line. The Boilermakers had a shade the better of .the argument in the early stages of the game, but as it progressed the Little O-lants gained strength, and in the final quarter the visitors plainly had . Purdue on the run. Many substitutes were made in the Purdue lineup in an effort to stem the tide of defeat, but it was all in vain. The Wabash goal was in danger but once, and then Hanna of Purdue tried for a goal from placement and failed. The two teams-seemed to be very evenly matched up to the middle of the last

quarter.

That it is going to be extremely difficult to score touchdowns by straight football was emphasized by Saturday's

game. The return of Chicago to the.

position of a contender for the "Big Eight" championship, was another feature of the contest, while a general evening up of strength, between the socalled big schools and the smaller colleges was also indicated. In the west. In games where there was anything like an even match, field goals and fumbles played an Important part in the results. Chicago paved the way for the defeat of Indiana by

j registering two place kicks through the

accuracy of iscruby in the nrst nail oi the contest at Marshall field. After these goals had been booted, the Indi

ana defense crumbled to a certain ex-

and two touchdowns were regis

tered on fluke plays, one coming after an Intercepted forward pass and the other resulting from a fumble which gave the Maroons the ball In the shadow of the Hoosier goal. Indiana's one touchdown came from a blocked kick which gave Fleming a free path to the line. The Minnesota team again failed to show any wonderful offensive strength, being held to a single touchdown for the second time In two weeks. The Gophers, no doubt, met a formidable foe in South Dakota, but Judging from the

The score: INDIANA

Meinke, ss

Kerns, rf . . . .

Black. 3b...

Coleman, If. O'Brien, cf..

Bryant, c . . ; Dautell, lb..

Bradshaw, p

Total

Andrews, If.. McCann, rf . . .

Lasser, cf . . . . Hora, ss Hussey, 2b.., Weiss, lb

Grabow, 3b.. Williams, c.

Helgeson, p.

HARBOR.

r

.10

WHITING.

r .1 .1 , .1 ..1 . .0 . .0 . .0 , .0

h p a e 2 2 3 1 2 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 2 0 1 3 10 0 2 10 2 0 2 6 0 1 12 3 0 15 27 11 4 h p a e 0,1 0 0 11 1 2 2 0 0 0 113 1 12 5 0 2 15 1 0 10 10 0 3 0 2 0 14 0 8 24 15 5 3 5 1 10 0 0 0 2 4

CATHOLIC CHURCH TO STAGE FIGHTS Milwaukee. Wis., Oct. 9. Sheriff Arnold will allow one club in Milwaukee to stage fights this year, having notified the Cathedral A. C, an organization of athletic members of St. John's Cathedjal Catholic parish, that it wilt be allowed to put on a card of bouts in its- gymnasium October 31. The club has promised to keep within the law. Maurice Sayers will probably appear in the ten-round windup. Home talent will be given first chance in the shows this winter. Arnold believes there will be no brutality in fights held under the direction of a church organization, s

Total 4 Indiana Harbor.. 0 0 0 0 1 Whiting 0 0 0 2 0

Two-base hits O'Brien, Coleman. Double plays Hussey to Weiss. Struck out By Bradshaw. 7; by Helgeson, 2. Bases on balls Off Bradshaw, 4; ofT Helgeson, 2. Umpire Boland.

1VJ1

ONEY

CROWN

POINT, r ..... .0 1

Pease, If............ Lindberg, ss

J. Bergwald, 2b 1 Almquist. lb 0 Schmidt. 3b 0 A. Bergwald, rf 0 Henning, cf.... 1 Hudson, c. 0 Smith, p..... 0

h 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

a 0 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 4

Totals ....3 3 27 10 1 ' GARY. ' r h p a e Matt, ss 0 1 1 2 1 Merz. 2b. . .0 0 2 1 0 Burke, 3b 0 1 2 0 0 Newman, ih. ...... t 0 3 4 0 0 Anderson, cf-p 0 0 0 2 0 Doran, rf 0 0 1 0 0 Kelbe, If .6 0 0 0 0 Rahn. c .'0 1 14 2 0

M pan h hnrrnwH at the TkWtnt

9 Rate, in less time and with less

'trouble without publicity, at our office than at any place in tbe city. THIS MEANS simply what it says, and if you have or have not had experience along this line

WE ARE READY to back up our statements.

AND PROVE IT TO YOU

$5 to $150 advanced on Furniture, Pianos. Horses, Wagons, etc., WITHOUT REMOVAL. Just tell us HOW MUCH YOU WANT. Hammond Loan Co, 569 Hohman Street, Over Model Clothiers. Second Floor. Phone 257

FOOTBALL CHALLENGE The Young Ironsides of Indiana Harbor willplay any team in the Calumet region averaging ninety pounds. Communicate with Manager H. Zimmerman, 3427 Michigan avenue, Indiana Harbor.

a field goal. - In the east both Yale and Harvard had their troubles, the Blue defeating Syracuse, 12 to 0, but being able to gather but one touchdown. The other six points came from two field goals by Captain Howe. Harvard was pushed to the limit by Holy Cross, one field

goal from near the center of the field

and a touchdown by Potter being the sum total of the Crimson's scoring. Holy Cross, on Vhe other hand, forced the Cambridge team to defend its goal on two or three occasions. ' . Michigan demonstrated that , Yost's hopes for another football steam roller were well founded. Case simply was mowed down by the big Wolverine

squad, but little of the so-called new football played a part in the triumph, of the Ann Arborltes. Indeed, the mastery of the forward pass. Judging from the games to date, is a thing to be hoped for in the future. Most of the attempts made throughout the country resulted in fizzles. . Chicago was able to negotiate the toss with any degree of accuracy but three or four times, and one of Indiana's attemps resulted in Sauer's 100-yard dash for a touchdown.

WAUKEGAN CO. "WINS.

Waukegan. 111., . Qct. 9. Waukegan.

form shown bv Dr. Williams' northern!

giants in past- years, Minnesota should I '" th baseball championship of Lake

have registered a bigger total against f county

the Coyotes. The Purdue-Wabash game was another proof of the difficulty of scoring touchdowns where a fumble or some other fluke does not figure. The Boilermakers were defeated by the Little Giants, 3 to 0, neither side being able to score until the battle was well advanced, when Wabash registered on

yesterday by defeating High

land Park, 7 to 2, in the third game of a series. Waukegan won the first game, 4 to 3, and Highland Park evened up the count by taking the second, S to 3.

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