Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 268, Hammond, Lake County, 2 May 1912 — Page 3

Thursday. May 2, 1912. THE TIMES. 3

EAST CHICAGO AND MB. HARBOR

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EAST CHICAGO. The Jewish Ladies' Aid society last night gave a surprise party on Miss Fannie Cohen of Magoun avenue. About thirty ladies Were present from Indiana Harbor, "Whiting, Hegewisch and East Chicago. The ladles presented Miss Cohen with a beautiful oil painting. They brought with them their own refreshments and cards were the order of the evening. Section C of the Congregational Ladies' Aid society gave a May party at the home of Mrs. C. Weydert, North j Baring avenue, yesterday afternoon. The house was beautifully decorated ;with potted ferns. The treasurer, Mrs. .Martin Peterson, read her report for the first quarter, making a splendid showing. Other reports showed that seven new members had been taken in .during the past month. The ladles -were entertained by music rendered by Mrs. Qua Jacobson. Miss Marie Johnson and Mrs. Alexander Monroe. Miss Laura "Weidert assisted her mother In entertaining. Quite a number of visitors were among the ninety who were present.

Next Tuesday night nine candidates will be initiated into the Odd Fellows' lodge. The Knights of Pythias of East Chicago will give an entertainment at Odd Fellows hall on Friday evening. The purpose is. to assist In the organization of a Pythian sisters' lodge. Good speakers, music and refreshments have been arranged for. At a meeting of the Daughters of Rebekahs to be held May 15th twentyfive candidates will be initiated. The work will be done by the East Chicago degree team. Refreshments will be served... Mrs. Will Leiferman of Chicago was the guest yesterday of her parents. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Monroe of Magoun avenue.

INDIANA HARBOR. Mrs. Frank Orth, Mrs. George Summers and Miss Blanche Huish are some of the club ladies who . went to Kent land today to attend the meeting of the tenth district Feehration, in session

there, today. The Married People's club will give a dancing party at K. of P. hall next Monday evening. The ladies of the Round Table club met at the home of Mrs. P. W. Dupes, on Fir street, Tuesday evening, and arranged for a social evening to take place a week from tomorrow night, at the home of Mrs. George H. Summers, on the lake front. Miss Mabel Wagner of Chicago is the guest of Miss Edna Landell of Ivy street. There was no meeting of the Commercial club last night owing to the

absence on business of a number of the

officers. The little S-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Kutledge of Drummond street Is quite sick with pneumonia.

Mr. and Mrs. David Kepple returned yesterday from Dayton, Pa., where they

went a week ago to attend to attend

the funeral of Mrs. Kepple's mother.

Miss Lottie Kepple, a sister of Mr. Kep

pie's, returned with them for a visit

here.

Ernest Walker of the firm of D. R.

Walker & Son left yesterday for a trip

east on business.

Guy Williams of Fir street met with

a serious accident Tuesday evening when one of D. R. Walker & Son's horses, which he was riding, slipped at

the corner of 136th and Fir streets, and

fell, breaking young Williams' leg. D.'

W. Dupes happened along In his auto

mobile and picked him up and took him to the office of Dr. Ansley, where his fractured bone was set, and he was

later taken to his home in the Ander son flats.

The regular meeting of the Young

Men's League was held In the M. E

church Tuesday evening.' Outside of the regular business, the officers for the ensuing six months were elected, as

follows: President F. C. McCrum. Vice president Gilbert Johnson. Secretary Le Roy. Bland. Treasurer A- W. Purdy. The League will consider the applica tion of any young man desirous of be coming a member.

SOX GIVE TIGERS

00SE0F DEFEAT

Fighting Crew of Callahan

Right Back in Winning Gait at Detroit.

MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS

AMERICAN mora

W. I j. CHICAGO 11 4 Boston 9 B Washington 8 B Cleveland . 7 6 Philadelphia 7 7 Detroit 6 10 St. Louis.. 5 9 New York.., . 3 10

Undismayed by the tough deal from

Mrs. Fortune which broke their win

ning streak Tuesday, the fighting crew o Callahan came back yesterday and started a new row of wins by twisting the Tiger's tall in the final game of the series. Score, 5 to 2.

Ty Cobb kicked the ball again yes

terday, but this was unintentional, for it kicked home the first run of the game and helped give the White Sox the Jump In the opening Inning. Jimmy Block also kicked, not the ball but himself, out of the game. This happened In the

sixth inning when the catcher objected to a decision so eloquently that the umpire chased him.

Joe Benz started out to do the tall

twisting and probably would have been

successful but for the banishment of Block. After getting a poor start in the first inning Benz settled to his work In earnest and held the enemy In check with the tenacity of a mulldog. But In the eighth the Tigers grew restless and got a couple of men on bases with one out.

Yesterday's Reno Its. Chlcaa-o, 5; Detroit, 2. New York, 3; Philadelphia, 2. Washington, 2j Boston, 1. Cleveland-St. Louis, not seheduled. Games Today. Cleveland at Chicago. St. Louis at Detroit. New York at Philadelphia, noston at Washington.

NATIONAL LEAGIE.

CUBS PLAY LIKE

HIE OF OLD

Victory Over Pirates, 7 to 2,

Gained by Hitting and Miscues.

POINTERS FOR AUTO OWNERS How Tires Should be Wash-

ed to Preserve Rubber. At this season of the year when roads, In consequence of spring showers, are often muddy most motor cars .are coming In for their share of washing. Washing tires and washing a car are two different propositions. Water alone should be used to wash tires and as tittle of it as necessary. After every run the envelope should be wiped clean with a damp sponge or well-wrung cloth. A common mistake made by motorists !s to mix kerosene with water. This may be advisable when washing the body of a car to remove mud and rust, but It should never be done when washing tires, because kerosene eats the rubber. This fact can be readily

proven by Immersing a small piece of rubber In kerosene and allowing It to

toak. The rubber will soon swell and

lose Its elasticity. Kerosene Is rich in fatty properties which remain after the

evaporation of lle gases. Every time

a tire is washed with a kerosene mix

ture the rubber is deprived of more of Its strength. When washing tires it la best simply to dampen a sponge with clean water, ;are being taken that the sponge is not soaked and dripping. Then wipe the tires dry with a cloth or handful of waste. . .

BELOIT PLAYS

CHINESE TODAY Beloit, Wis., May 2. Beloit college

will meet the Chinese baseball aggre

gation, champions of Hawaii, this afternoon on College field. The Chinese

ball tossera have been touring the United States and Hawaii, and have

been making a good showing against college and university teams. Beloit

defeated the Japs of Waseda unlversi

ty last year, 8 to 2. Foulk, the only

veteran on the pitching staff, will be on duty for the state line team. Friday

afternoon the Knox college team is

booked to play Beloit here also. Be

loit will meet all the colleges In the

"Little Five."

JIM FLYNN IN

CHICAGO TODAY

Little Rock, Ark., May 2. Jim Flynn

and Promoter Jack Curley left early to

day for Chicago. The party will leave for Los Vegas tonight. Curley will go to the coast as soon as Flynn is estab

lished ln his training camp and will re

turn to Las Vtgas with Trainer Tommy

Ryan.

Pittsburg, Pa., May 2. Chicago's

Cubs displayed a bit of the old-time form yesterday, while the Pirates played a bunglesome game, and as a result the Cubs won by a score of 7 to 2 in a

weird sort of a contest that might have been desperately close if the home team hadn't made so many mistakes.

Lew Richie was slabbing for Chicago

and after he had shaken off the experience of first inning wildness he was excellent. That first inning, however, al

lowed the Pirates to get a two run lead

and It might have been a tough game

if the Pirates hadn't blown up In the

second and gave Chicago five runs.

From the first to the finish Lurid Lew

was master of the situation. Base hits

for the home team were scarce and runs were an absolute nonenity. Two bases on balls before Lew could tell where the home plate was, a wild pitch and a base hit by Hans Wagner gave

Pittsburg Its two runs.

W. I Pet. Cincinnati 11 3 .786 New York 9 3 .750 CHICAGO 6 7 .403 Boston 6 7 .402 Brooklyn 5 7 .417 Pittsburg; 5 8 .385 Philadelphia .'. 4 7 .304 St. Louis 5 9 .357

Co.; Stutz, Len Zengel, Ideal Motor Car Co.; Fiat, Teddy Tetzlaff. E. E. Hewlett; Mercedes, Ralph De Palma, Ralph De Palma; Case. Louis Pisbrow. J. I. Case T. M. Co.; Case, Harvey Herrick. J. I.

I Case T. M. Co. ; Mercedes, Spencer Wish-

Pet, art. Spencer Wishart; National, Howard 733jWHcox, National Motor Veh. Co.; Na.643 , tional, Don Herr, National Motor Ve.015 hide Co.; Lexington, Harry Knight, 338 Lexington Motor Car Co.; Simplex, Bert SOOtDingley, Bert IMngley; White, Win .375 BarndoUar. White Motor Co.; Cutting, 3B7 Bob Burman,' Clarke Carter Auto Co.;

231 1 Firestone-Columbus. L.- Fraver. Colum

bus Buggy Co.;' Marquetle Buick, Billy Liesaw, Will Thomsonr Schacht, Bill Endicott, Schacht Motor Car Co.; Knox, Ralph Mulford,, Ralph Mulford; Mercer, Hughie Hughes, Mercer Auto Co.; Lozier, Joe Horan, Lr. W. H. Chambers; McFarlan, Mel Marquette, Speed Motors Co.; Opel, Opel Auto Import Co.; Lozler, Joe Matson, O.' Applegate; Continental, F. N.' Martindale; Stutz, Charley Merz, Ideal Motor Car Co.; National, National Motor Vehicle Co. Relief- drivers Stutz, Billy Knipper; Fiat, Caleb Bragg; Case, Eddie Hearne; Firestone-Columbus, Eddie Rickenbacher. -

(I

COPPER" BEAT

Yesterday's Results. Chicago, 7 Pittsburg, 2. Brooklyn, 111 Boston, 8. New York, 11 J Philadelphia, 4. Cincinnati, 8 St. Louis, 5. Games Today. Chlcaa-o nt Plttsbura;. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Philadelphia at New York. Brooklyn at Boston.

He. came in fourth. When the flag fell Jaeger jumped off In front, closely followed by White Star, Kempion and Sweeper II. Both the latter are American bred. White Star was beaten at the Bushes, and Maher, seeing the opening, drove Sweeper II. in front. Stalling off his threatening challenger, the outsider Jaeger. Sweeper won handsomely by a

length. A half a length separated second and third horses. The time for the race was 1:38 2-5. The betting was 6 to 1 against Sweeper II., 100 to 1 against Jaeger, and 9 to 2against Hall Cross, with White Star at evens. C. Bower Ismay, owner of Hall Cross, ia a brother of J. Bruce Ismay. The victory will make Sweeper II. favorite In betting for the Derby.

Philadelphia, Pa., May 2. Al Kubiak, the Michigan giant, who at one time aspired to bring back the pugilistic crown to the white race, will in a few weeks pound- a beat In some section of this city in a policeman's uniform. The heavyweight "fighter was one of sixty policemen sworn In today by Director of Public Safety Porter. "I want to go to work," . said Kubiak. "You know it is hard to get a job these 'days, and when this one was offered I took It."

CALENDAR OF SPORTS FOR THE WEEK.

DANIELS AND BARADA DRAW St. Joseph, Mo., May 2. Freddie Daniels and" Jake Barada, lightweights, went fifteen slashing rounds to a draw last night.

Chicago GirlrVms Fame m Athletics.

GAME III

wins FIRST U. S. LEAGUE

A CLEAN PAPER. FIT FOR YOUR .CHILDREN TO READ IS THE TUCKS,

PAL MOORE EASY

FOR JACK BRITTON

San Francisco, Cal., May 2. Pal Moore of Philadelphia proved a plaything in the hands of Jack Britton in their lightweight battle and Britton scored an easy Victory after twenty

rounds of fighting.

ARB YOU READING THE TIMES t

s

Secrets of Good Advertising

Concentration OH Important

- An eight-inch advertisement in one newspaper wtU 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. 'If 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 v be months in getting around to make their first purchase. , Originality may be good, but an advertisement that sells goods, even if copied, is better.

ENGLISH RACE TO

AtU HORSE

Duryea's Sweeper II., with

Maher Up, Takes 2,000 Guineas Stake-

Newmarket, England, May 2. The

Two Thousand Guineas stake, the first

big classic of the season, was run yesterday and Won by an American. H. B. Luryea's Sweeper II., ridden by Danny Maher, the American jockey, finished

in front or Jaeger. Hall Cross was third. There were fourteen starters. White Star, which was a warm favor-

Large Crowd Sees Cincinnati

Team Lose the Opening Battle, to 4.

9 JzFssz i ; Y:T

UNITKD STATES LEAGUE. W. U Pet. J Chicago 1 0 1.000 Pittsburg 1 0 1.000 Richmond 1 .0 1.000 Reading 0 0 .000 New York.... 0 0 .000 Washington . .0 0 .000 Cleveland 0 0 .000 Cincinnati 0 0 .000

st ' I

WORLD'S CHAMP IN

POLE VAULT MARK

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Results Yesterday. Chicago, 5; Cincinnati, 4. New York, 10; Reading. 10. Pittsburg, 11; Cleveland, 7. Richmond, 2; Washington, 0. Cincinnati, 0., May 2. Before a

crowd that packed the new United States league ball park. Chicago defeated Cincinnati in the opening game of the United States league yesterday afternoon. The score was 6 to 4. Cincinnati scored four runs in the fifth inning and had the contest sewed up until the eighth, when , by scoring three

runs the Chicago aggregation knotted the count at -four. McDonough's single, a wild, pitch by Taylor, and Melnke's clean wallop to center with two out brought In the winning run for Chicago in the ninth. The locals made a determined effort to win out in the ninth and would have done so had Babel not run into a hit made by Manager Barton, which kept Chapman from scoring. Badel would have reacjied third base, which would have meant certain victory with only one man out. McGuire twirled fine ball after the fifth. He got fast support. Cincinnati also fielded well. The same teams play tomorrow.

Another of Chicago's athletic girls

scored a hit when, in a recent basket

ball contest between the Sargent School of Athletics of Cambridge,

Mass., and the Radcliffe college team, Miss Clara Louise Hotz, who plays left forward for the Sargent team, was acclaimed the champion basketball player in New England.

THURSDAY.

Three-I baseball league opens its season, with Decatur at Davenport, Danville at Dubuque, Peoria at Quincy and Bloomington at Springfield. FRIDAY. Nebraska-Kansas dual track meet at Lawrence, Kan. Frank Klaus vs. Jack Dillon, 10 rounds, ot New York. Carl Morris vs. Luther McCarthy, 10 rounds, at Springfield, Mo. Bobby Wilson vs. Billy Ryan, 10 rounds, at Utlca. N. Y. SATURDAY. Annual Marathon run of the Missouri Athletic club, St. Louis. University of PennsylvaniaNaval academy boat races at Annapolis. Princeton interscholastic tennis tournament at Princeton unlversiAnnual spring track and field meet at Yale university. Pacific coast conference athletic meet at Berkeley, Cal. Illinois-Wisconsin dual track and field meet at Madison, Wis. Pennsylvania-Cornell dual track and field meet at Ithaca, N. Y. Missouri-Illlnois-Iowa track and field meet at Keokuk, Ia. Missouri state interscholastic athletic meet at. University of Missouri. First hydro-aeroplane meet in America, on the Hudson river, New York City.

SPORTING NOTES. Stockton. 111., May 2. "Knockout" Brown of Chicago- defeated "Battling" Stlngejc.last night, knocking him out in the sixth round. - South . Norwalk, Conn., May . 2. "Knockout".. Brown of New York had the better pf Al Ketchel in ten rounds before, the Twin City Athletic club last night.', ' Atlanta, Ga.. May 2. The Tony Ca-poni-DIck Gilbert fight was called off In the .third round as a "frameup" last night. , '" " St.;L0uis, Mo., May 2. Adolph Eaton won a scheduled eight-round bout from Leo Kelly when Kelly fouled him in the fourth .round last night.

Philadelphia, Pa., May 2. Johnny Willetts had a shade over Charlie Turner in their six-round bout at the Douglas A. C. last night. Nashville, Tenn., May 2. "Young Jack". Johnson, formerly of Boston, won the decision over Nat Dewey in an eight-round contest last night. Cleveland, O., May 2. Patsy Brannlgan and Cal Delaney fought twelve rounds to a draw last night. Kid Grave and Kid Alberts boxed ten rounds to a draw.

" New York, May 2. Bob Moha of Milwaukee had the better of seven of ten rounds he fought against Bill McKinnon of Boston last night. Two rounds were even and McKinnon took honors in one, the second.

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Walter Dray, who established a

world's indoor pole vaulting record of

12 fett 6 inches in the Central A. A.

U. track championships on April 6, must be considered one of the greatest

'.vaulters in the country.

AUTO ENTRIES CLOSED

Field of 26 Will Start in

International Sweepstakes Race.

Indianapolis, May 2. Entries to the second annual 500-mile international sweepstakes race to be run at the Indianapolis motor speedway next Memorial day, closed at midnight last night. The list of starters totals twenty-six, among them being many ot the fastest cars engaged in automobile racing. The field was limited to thirty starters and it is probable that two or three other entries will be received by mail. These will be accepted If they bear a postmark showing that they were mailed before midnight. The entries follow: Stutz, Gil Anderson, Ideal Motor Car

EDaimce oim ffltue Waitleri Now in ill His Spring Glory QSpsiBnal! ipenDnndgij fi 113)112 Seasom LASSEN'S PAVILION The most unique and the most popular dancing floor and pleasure resort of its kind in the State of Indiana. New improvements made, floor and grounds elec trie lighted, auto and carriage road direct to Pavilion. Boats will meet all Trains on Monon. Superb Orchestra Refreshments Come Early and Stay Late. LASSEN'S! LASSEN'S! LASSEN'S! Everybody Knows the Flace.