Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 121, Hammond, Lake County, 8 November 1911 — Page 3

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"Wednesday. Nov. 8, 1911. THE TIMES.

EAST CHICAGO AND -

DID. HARBOR

. EAST CHICAGO. Pure Spring Water 10 cents per gallon at Nassau & Thompson. 3-5t The Christian Endeavor society of the Congregational church will entertain with an advertising party Thursday evening, Nov. 9, at the home of Mrs. V. P. Peterson, South Olcott avenue. Kast person who attends is expected to come dressed In such a way as to represent some familiar ad. If not po attired a fine will he administered. Miss I-rfra Weydert is chairman of the affair. Refreshments will he served, and and a charge of 15 cents will b charged as an admission fee. Mrs. H. T. James and children of Sharon. Pa., are here to spend some time with Mr. James. They will have engaged rooms for light housekeeping at 422S North Magoun avenue. Mr. James is employee! at the Ameircan Steel foundries. Mrs. II. k. Philips of i;os Beacon street entertained a company of Beacon street ladles at luncheon yesterday. The guests of honor were Mrs. Philip's daughter. Mrs. C. R. Dunlap and Mrs. J. r. Jones. The others present were Mesdames (Jwilym Jones. William Meade. J. O. Allen, John llartman, Geo. Reuss and J. J. Freeman. A very delightful time was enjoyed. The Tuesday Reading club opened the hall at 612 Chicago avenue with a meeting at which the general topic was the home. In view of the fact that It was the first time the new hall was used, it was given the tone of a housewarming. when Mrs. Charles Klohter, the president, was asked to light the fir in tHe big fireplace. A number of Interesting papesr were read and Miss Stone contributed a coupl of vocal numbers appropriate to the occasion. The pie social given at the residence of Mrs. A. A. Ross. In Forsyth avenue, was a great success. The hotise was crowded and the pie served pronounced most excellent. The crowds are skating at the Kast Chicago rink. 75t

GOUT Like Rheumatism, Once in the System Can Be Expelled by the Prompt Use of Sulphur in Solution. tfot the old fashioned disgusting eoses of a thick mixture of molasses and powdered sulphur, for the system cannot assimilate sulphur In that form There's a better way SCLFOSOU the new form of sulphur In solution the fortn anxiously desired for hundreds of years by the mldecai profession and bow first realized In SUX.F080L. SCT.F030t. is as soluble as sugar or alt, and it has brought so much joy and gladness to sufferers from Rheumatlm. 0ut, Eczema and stubborn skin troubles that the whole world should know of this wonderful remedy SUL.FOSOI, is the grat vitalizer of the blood, expeller of uric acid and other blood taints and conqueror of Gout and Rheumatism. Get it of your nearest druggist or write to the Sulfosol Company. 72 Trinity Place. New York, tor a free book on Gout, Rheumatism and Blood Diseases and the successful use of SULFOSOL. in their treatment. As a cleanser for the hair Sulfosol Soap Is supreme. 36 cents a cake at ail Druggists.

INDIANA HARBOR. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Little entertained a small company at dinner last evening. Rev. M. M. Iay and Mr. Isaac Mills will represent St. Alban's church at the convention of the Northern Imlian

1 Kpiscopal diocese in Michigan City jnext week. j Mr. Charles Wilcox is out of town j for a few days." I Last night was ladies night with the t Knights of Pythias. William Burke, jpre'ate of the lodt?e was chairman of I the committee which had the evening in charge and a very enjoyable time was had. The rriiitr nart nf . v.

evening was devoted to dancing. Mr. Freeman of the Inland. Mrs. Nelson Glegg and Mis-s Ethel Glegg kindly furnished the music. Mr. Freeman playing the violin while Mrs. and Miss Glegg releived each other at the piano. There were" about fifty present. Refreshments were served. St. Alhan's guild met yesterday afternoon at Mrs. Charles Rnwf.n-a hnm.

, in Fir street for a social time. A dejlightful afternoon was spent. Tt woa jdeclded to hold the next guild meeting

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is customary, owing to the diocesan convention which win tov. u

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of next week. Among those who will attend the convention from the guild are Mesdames M. M. Pay, Charles Kgi bert, A. Bedford. Frank Orth and A. K. ' Perkins. The Thursday meeting which will take place in the vestry hours, is a special called one to consider the vesting of girls for the choir. The

cnoir thus far has been solely one of men and boys, but It was found that some soprana voices were needed so it was decided to add the girls voices. At the meeting Thursday the business for the fiscal year will be closed. On Tuesday the week following, the election of officers for the ensuing year will tako place Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Thropp of Aldis avenue went into the city last night to attend the theatre. They saw "Every Woman." Mrs. Maud L. McOust of the South Bay hotel has left and has taken rooms at the Windermere for - the winter. There will be a meeting of the round Table club this afternoon at the Commercial club rooms. , The program promises to be especlallv tntArstlno-

lng devoted to the question of Civics. Mrs. Lundquist will give a paper on

lUP nistory or Indiana Harbor and a number of papers embraced within h

general topic will be read.

Mrs. Granger of Ivy street wn

Chicago for the day this morning. Mrs. Ed Miner of Kalamazoo arrived In Indiana Jfurbor Saturday to spend a few days with her mother, Mrs. E. V. Walton, who has been very HI but Is recovering rapidly. The crowds are skating at the East Chicago rink. 7.6t

The New York state boxing commission has refused to allow moving pictures to be taken of boxing bouts. Patsy Corrlgan. the Australian exmiddlewf lght. I , not dead as reported several months ago. He Is living m Oklahoma Citv.

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San Francisco, Nov. 8. It is beginning to appear after all that New York is not to be the pugilistic mecca this winter. For that matter, the congestion in that city has been relieved already. Sam Langford. Porky Flynn and a few others have left for Australia. Matt Wells has sailed for England, and Ad Wolgast and Freddie Welsh are coming west to keep a Thanksgiving date with Tom McCarey of Los Angeles. Various circumstances have conspired ot spoil the prospect In New York, to begin with, the deae public seemed to lose its appetite for the sport, once the exchange of uppercuts was made legal. While the makers of matches were doing business by stealth, as it were, and no one knew the moment a "show" would be raided, crowded houses greeted the Knockout Browns and the rest of them. But once the Frawley law became operative and the promoters took their exhibitions out of Koles ana corners and ran them in big Madison Square Garden, the public yawned and stayed at home. The middlemen the fellows who offer the purses were iiulck to see that they could not afford to give big money to the fighters, and that is why so

......v ui ie ring men Jiave left the ' other

east m disgust. It was all righf so long as moving pictures of bouts might be taken, for the picture concerns helped out on the purse end of things, but now that the boxing commisisoners have put

a man oti the jtaklng of pictures the promoters have to depend on gate receipts alone and these are not overlarge these times., Some Idea of the immense help the pictures were to the middlemen may be gauged from what has been told in regard to the Wells-Wolgast match. Wolgast wanted more money than the promoters felt they could gfve. A picture company came to the rescue with a bid of $.'5,000 for the privilege of snapshotting the bout. This enabled the promoters to meet Wolgast's terms. Then the picture concern, on the receipt of a hint that the commissioners were bout to squelch picture taking, withdrew its offer. Now Wells is on his way to England and Wolgast is coming to Los Angeles. Another thing that will help to put a damper on the' sport in New York Is the fact that the athletic commission has set its face' against the rollicking style of fisticuffs, known as. the flght-yourself-loose system. The commission, in fact, has ordered "clean breaks" in the future, and In order to make a success of this kind of ring work Ad Wolgast, Knockout Brown and many others would have

10 learn tnelr trade all over again. An-

thing. in' the meantime it ta

doubtful if the public would pay for the privilege of, watching these lads trying to remodel their methods so as to conform to the rules laid down by the commission."

DE 0R0 TAKES FIRST BLOCK INCUE MATCH Defeats Wheeler, 50 to 31, in Game for Three-Cushion Title at Recital Hall.

Alfredo De Oro. holder of the world's three-cushion title, defeated the challenger. George Wheeler, In the first block of the 150-point championship match at Recital hall last night, 50 to 31, In seventy-four innings. Some three hundred spectators were on hand to see the first title match in this city since the time when De Oro won the title from Tlouston, May 22, 1309. Wheeler won the bank and chose the black "ball, but failed to score on his first shot. The champion picked up two in his first Inning, then counted four In the second, and from this stags cut the pace for his opponent. De Oro showed excellent judge of distance, at no time taking much chance with the ivories and playing a safe game throughout. NinA In the forty-first Inningwas the champion's high count, witi four in the thirty-second and five in the sixty-first being his next best runs.

lowans, is colored, and. inasmuch as there are several players on the Boilermakers' squad who are from the south, there is considerable feeling aroused over the possibility of contesting with him. Some of the players have flatly announced that they will not contest against the negro, and It is feared that the Purdue eleven will be handicapped by the loss of their stars should the Iowa authorities refuse to remove Alexander.

Dr. Elliott Says. Pugilism Is Better Than Football. New York. Oct. 8. Pugilism is better and aviation Is the only sport worse than football, according to Dr. Charles W. Eliot's farewell remarks to reporters as the president emeritus of Harvard university sailed today for a trip around the world. Dr. Eliot sailed as representative organization the aims of which he is to explain to Asiatic countries. The matter of sports came up when an interviewer ventured to ask the distinguished educator what he thought of Harvard's defeat by Princeton. "I don take much Interest In football." he said. "Is there anything to your mind worse than football?" "Yes aviation. That's demoralizing to- the spectators. They don't go to gee the aeronaut in flight, but with the anticipation of seeing him fall and perhaps be killed."

moving down from the Arctic drove away the boat on which he expected to return. Johnson's boat arrived here today with news of. his plight. He will be unable to get back to Nome this winter. Johnson Is one of the most noted drivers In the north nrlvln. r.i o

- - - - - - - - ' . - , TWl. OH James Ramsay's team of Rih.pinn

wolves, he won the sweepstakes in 1910 and established the record of 74 hours 10 minutes and 20 seconds for the 412mile course.

Sporting Briefs

Duffy Lewis of the Boston Red Sox. and Miss Eleanor Keene of Boston, were married at San Rafael, Cal., recently. Charley Carr will sell his interest in

the Utlca (N. Y.) team and devote all his attention to the management of the Kansas City Blues. "Stuffy" Mclnnis expects to have his injured arm-In shape soon and will Join a basket-ball team in his home city of Gloucester, Mass., ; ' W. H. Watklns, Owner of the Indianapolis - American association team has purchased the. Evansvllle franchise In the Central league. . The Brooklyn team has secured waivers on Harry Lumley and will send him back to Binghamton. Harry will manage the Bingoes next season. Johnny Evers, Tom Needb,am, Heine Zimmerman, Lou Richie and Jimmy Doyle of the Chicago Cubs made a trip from Chicago to Troy, N. Y., in a touring car.

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the season, following the death w of Bruce Adams, whose back was broken in a game at Alexandria, Ind., last Sun-daJ'-Adams was a star player when he attended school " here, and regret over his death caused the academy's action.

FAMOUS DOG TEAM DRIVERMAROONED Nome, Alaska, Nov. S. John Johnson, the famous dog team driver, is marooned on the Siberian coast. He crossed over early in the fall to get Siberian dogs to" enter in next year's all-Alaska sweepstakes race. The ice

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Terre Haute, Ind.. Nov. S. Indiana hunters and fishermen will organize a state asociation at Indianapolis Thursday. It will be composed of representatives from county and district associations. The hunters and fishermen are at odds with the state game commissioners, -who, they say. is working against their interests. President Myers of the Marion county association says the commisisoner is favoring the farmers, but in justice to the hunters who support the department with their license money he should favor them.

JOE KETCHEL AND FITZPATRICK DRAW South Bend. Ind., Nov. 8. .Toe Ketchel and Dick Fltzpatrick' fought ten rounds to a draw here last night. The former made an excellent showing asrainst the veteran fl Till i IT1 AIC f wn t

Wheeler mad- his high run of three that ne is a comer. Keteliel used his

in i ne iwemy-eigntn inning and got a

cluster of two each in the twelfth and fourteenth. His style of play was careless and at no time seriously, threatened De Oro's advantage on th string.

leit to good advantage, but did not seem to be able to get enough steam with his punches to make his opponent suffer.

ABANDON C- A. C.

RELIABILITY The team reliability match between trade and amateur members of the Chicago Automobile club has been called off and the affair will not take place this season. The run was scheduled to go to Waukesha, Wis., and return tomorrow and Friday, but at a meeting of the C. A. C. contest committee held yesterday noon It was decided to aban

don the tour. The reasons nrivnno

for the calling off of the match were

the lateness of the season and lack of sufficient entries to assure the success

of the affair. Chairman J. T. Brown,, Thomas Jefferson Hay, Allan S. Ray j and C. G. Sinsabaugh found ten entries

filed when the contest committee met!

and they decided that number was not'

enough for the match.

i

CONTRACT LET FOR NEW STAND

Minneapolis, Nov. 8. Mike and Joe Cantillon, owners of the Minneapolis American association baseball club, today signed a contract for plans for a new $30,000 steel, concrete and tile, rectangular grand stand to take the place of the old one at Nicolette park.

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Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 8. There Is a' possibility that the game scheduled for a Saturday between Purdue and rowa i a may have to be called off unless the authorities of the two colleges can i come to some agreement relative to the playing of a negro on the Iowa eleven.) Alexander, the star right tackle of the A

DEATH CAUSES BAN I ATFAIRMOUNT ' Fairmount, Ind., Nov. 8. Fairmount Academy, a school conducted here by the Friends church, today decided to abandon football for the remainder of : j ? CALENDAR OF SPORTS A

FOR THE WEEK.

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WEDNESDAY. Annual bench show of the San Antonio Kennel club, San Antonio, Texas. THURSDAY, Annual field trials of the National Beagle Club of America at Shadwell. Va. Opening of annual autumn srolf A

tournament otf the Country club of Lakewood, N. J. Track meet of the Maricopa Automobile club at Phoenix, Ariz. Track meet of the San Antonio Automobile club, San Antonio, Texas. FRIDAY. p Players of the New York National league team sail for Cuba on barnstorming tour. Battling Nelson vs. Tommy Moore, ten rounds, at Buffalo. SATURDAY. Close of the autumn race meeting of the Iatonia Jockey club. Harvard-Carlisle Indians football contest at Cambridge. Mass. Yale-Brown football contest at New Haven. Princeton - Dartmouth football contest at Princeton, N. J. Pennsylvania - Lafayette football contest at Philadelphia. Army-Bucknell football contest at West Point. Navy-West Virginia football contest at Annapolis. Cornell - Michigan football contest, at Ithaca, N. Y. Chicago - Northwestern football contest at Chicago. "n Illinois - Indiana football con-

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