Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 132, Hammond, Lake County, 10 November 1913 — Page 3

PAGE THREE TMJESUDfi V Our Second SemiAnnual inuiEsmn v

THE TIMES.

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THE PRETTY HOUSE DRESS ILLUSTRATED Is neat model with stvlish V neck front; round collar. The waist buttons to the side and the shaped trimming band, collar, pocket and cuffs are trimmed with contrasting and harmonizing color piping. The Skirt has the regulation waist line and pleated panel back. This model also comes with a deep trimming of harmonizing solid color Chambray on collar, front and cuffs. Light and dark color Percales In new and effective Btripes, checks, figures 0 and dots. Price Tuesday only O I

HERE'S A STYLE THAT WILL SURELY PLEASE

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A specially attractive square neck model with a scalloped visible front opening trimmed with a solid or bias contrasting color banding. The band effect is also carried out on the neck and cuffs. Fast color Percales In light and dark blue and black stripes; blue black and lavender cLecka; navy and cadet figures;

also plain blue Price Tuesday , This square

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yet undeniably attractive. The wide bias band effect is carried out on the neck, cuffs, belt and box plait down the center of waist. This model has the visible front closing to the side, and the skirt has the plaited panel back. Fast color percales and black and white shepherd checks, nurses' stripes, navy and white stripes; blue, black and lavender pin checks and stripes, small blue and black checks, nursery Q f and fancy stripes. Price

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See Them in Our Windows

KAUFMANN tcWOLF Hammond. Ind.

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RITCHINS am F01CR0SS STARS JX 10 ROUNDS TONIGHT New York Has Never Seen ; Joe Mandot, Southern Light

Willie in Action; Betting Even. New York, Nov. 10. Willie Ritchie of California and Leach Cross of the Bowery will meet tonight at Madison l Square Garden in & ten-round bout.! The men are to -weigh in at 135 pounds' at 9 p. m. and enter the ring one hour later. Kach has posted )1,000 to guarantee weight and appearance. They will box : for 65 per cent of the receipts. William Joh will referee the bout. The kidney punch and hitting In the breakaway will be barred under the rules: of tha state athletic commission. j The betting Is at even money, a.1- j though Cross is not regarded as the i best o the lightweight challengers, i Leach, however, makes up In craft ' what he lacks in skill and has a dead- ; ly punch when he manages to land. ! This will be Ritchie's first appearonce In a local ring. He Is five years 1 jounce;- than Cross and half an inch taller. Cross has figured in soma 200 battles since 1906, while Ritchie participated in less than twenty-five rogular scraps for money. "I weighed Just 133 today after light work," he said, "and at that I am Just about right. I feel strong as I could wish to be, and if Cross can beat me I will have no excuses. "Did you notice I said 133 V Willie continued. "Well, that's correct. A lot of these fellows seem to think I'm a white hope in weight. But I want to tell you that about 133 ringside is natural for me. It's my best weight." Both Cross and Ritche practically finished training yesterday and will weigh In tonight an hour before the bout. Kach is almost certain to make the weight of 135. Ritchie will fight Harlem Tommy Murphy at San Francisco December 15. This match was clinched when Harry Foley, manager of the lightweight champion, telegraphed to James W. Coffroth at San Francisco, formally accepting an offer for the bout. The match was made without regartl to the outcome of Ritchie's battle with Leach Cross here tonight. ABE TOb A TIMES READEBI

S VL fflf and gray chambray. only $1 neck model is simple Weight, Writes Views on Gotham Battle. BY JOB MANDOT. LIshtwetarM boxer, wko ha (ought both Ritchie aad Cross, and is ! Mw training la Chicago. Without the slightest shadow of a doubt the RltchIe-Cros quarrel which takes place in New York tonight will be a hard fought battle from start to finish. The reason for this prediction lies chiefly in the fact that Leach Cross is one of the contestants. Whenever a fighter steps into the ring with Leach it means worry, anxiety and trouble from the opening gong until he returns to his dressing room at the end of the match. Fighters are as a rule poor hands at picking winners from among others ; in the profession because they are apt i to be prejudiced in favor of the man i whose style most nearly approaches j their own. For this reason I shall not attempt to pick the winner of the Ritchie-Cross battle In advance, but will briefly point out a few of the characteristics of each man's work and leave the reader to do his own picking. I have fought both men, and of the two Leach Cross gave me the hardest battle, for when Ritchie boxed with me It was largely a case of me "beat ing hi mto it," 'and I found that I could reach him almost at will with my left, and by good feinting was able to- connect quite often with my right and was never worried during the bout. With Leaches it was different. There was Cross all doubled up in front of me and Cross looks dangerous in the ring. I knew I had to be Just as careful in the last second of a round as I did In the first. I fought htm differently than I did Ritchie, using nothing but a left hook and a left Jab, and found that by holding my right in a threatening position but never letting it go I was able to keep him guessing. He was waiting for me to start with my right, and while he was waiting I piled up a good lead and floored him in the fifth round with my left. Of course he defeated me in the end.

QDime USsry (Wanlly TTaffesflfer, R!nuemH$sn U U WnDmem's (HJooiise Accesses zrjirilJh 11.75

A Entirely machine made, of guaranteed fast color percales, that have a combination of style, comfort and practicability with that perfection of detail not approached by any I other make. The especially designed atractive features, such as the deep hem, neat

button holes, extra wide

shrunk tape, perfect fit at every

which make these garments unequalled and ccst no more. The

offered; styles are newer and of

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ Etemtiiric Brand! Besti

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Every House Dress in This Advertisement is an exact reproduction of the original in this sale. In addition to these we have dozen of other styles, all fresh and new direct, from the maker.

but he has since admitted that I "outguessed him during the first eight rounds. SPORTING NOTES. Ithaca, N. Y., Nov. 10. Cornell won the annual cross country race with Pennsylvania Saturday by a score of 20 to 34. Los Angeles, Cal.. Nov. 10. Teddy Tetzlaff, holder of the world's automobile road racing record, has been sued for divorce. Northwestern university defeated the University of Chicago Saturday afternoon in the three and a half mile cross country run. Northwestern scored 62 points and Chicago 74. Bloomlngton, Ind., Nov. 10. Illinois won the annual cross country run from Indiana Saturday by the score of 21 to 34. Mason of Illinois finished first in the fast time of 20:47 2-5. William Fisher, 11 years old. of 1224 De Tamble street, Chicago, sustained a fracture of his right lyeg in a game of football in a vacant lot next to his home on Saturday. Stanford University, Cal., Nov. 10. Stanford won from the University of California Saturday, 13 to 8, in the twenty-third annual football game between the two universities and their eighth rugby contest. Ann Arbor, Mich.. Nov. 10. In the game between the Michigan freshmen and Alma college yesterday. Right Knd Huebel and Right Tackle Cerney of the freshmen each broke an ankle. The freshmen won, 47 to 0. Ames, Iowa, Nov. 10. Busenbark of the Cornell college football team was carried off the field with a broken left leg Saturday during the game with Ames. In a combination tackle Tiernan of Ames was hurt. The fibula bone was snapped oft Just above the ankle, and the player was taken to the hospital. Ames won, 14 to 0. New York, Nov. 10. A city ordinance designed to prevent ticket scandals at future world series baseball games here will be introduced in the board of aldermen at the Instance of the district attorney's office as a result of an investigation by the county authorities of the success of speculators in obtaining tickets to the GiantsAthletics games at the Polo grounds last month. Detroit. Mich., Nov. 10. Henry Schwesinger, left end of the Western high school football team, , will lose one foot, and Bennett Frenc hof Ann Arbor probably will die as the result of a rear end collision between two sections of an interurban train which was carrying the football team and a number of girl rooters from Ypsllantl to Detroit last night. The accident occurred near Wayne at a switch. Morgantown, W. "Va., Nov. 10. Near the close of the last quarter of the football- game between Washington

over hips, line even stitching,

point, are some of the features made by specialists

larger variety than ever before. uuesaay Only and Jefferson college and West Virginia university on West Virginia's field Saturday, the north stand, on which 800 persons, Including 300 women, were seated, collapsed under the weight, throwing the occupants in a heap. None was hurt seriously, but many suffered cuts and bruises. W. , 0 T OA A Ob. j nuiK -t ii v. . Braintree, Mass., Nov. 10. Three hours after Harry Allen, 17 years old, half back for the Braintree high school football eleven, bad scored the only touchdown for his team in a game with Thayer academy he became unconscious. A physician who worked over the boy for two hours bringing him back to consciousness found a ,. . . . - t. . . . i slight concussion of the brain and a: strained ligament of the neck. He said Allen was in a critical condition, but might recover. PUGILISTIC NOTES. Jack Heinen and Jess Willard were matched to box ten rounds before the club offering the best inducements. Eddie Clabby, the Hammond lightweight, will leave today for Buffalo, where he will meet " Kid" Kansas over the ten-round route on Thursday. Manager Larney Lichtenstein wil' leave for the scene of battle on Wed nesday.

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John Wagner, the Racine promoter, ; this system of betting Is an assured will be in Chicago today to close a fact, and with the advancement of match between "Kid" Williams of Bal- I racing in Kentucky it seems probable timore and "Young" Sinnet of Rock Is- ' that in the near future all the betting land. Wagner already has Williams' -will be done in the mutuel boxes, set of articles and little difficulty will Eastern racing will terminate Wcdnesbe experienced to affix Sinnet's signa- day and a number of wners have shlpture to the documents. The bout will ped their charges to Jamestown, Juarez be staged the latter part of the month, i and Charleston. The Jamestown track St. Joe (Mo.) promoters have match- opens Thursday, while Juarez's big ed "SDlke" Kelly and Billv Walters to : bell will toll Thanksgiving day. Ten

clash in the main bout of the next show, to be held on Thanksgiving day. The weight will be 145 pounds at 3 o'clock. ' J Tony Caponl, the Italian middleweight, and Gus Christie of Milwaukee have been matched to box ten rounds at Indianapolis on November 19. The weight will be 160 pounds at 3 o'clock. Promoters in Denver are angling for a ten-round bout between Steve

Ketchel of Chicago and Joe Mandot of h09pltal of a buliet wound received in New Orleans. Ketchel's consent has target practice in his company's armbeen secured, but Mandot is doubtful i ory Saturday. The bullet was fired by about meeting the sturdy Chlcagoan. n,ora.i Schmidt, another member of

FORMER MAROON STAR MARRIES Rock Island, I1U Nov. 10. James R. Lightbody, the former Chicago university athlete who set world's records as a member of the American Olympic team abroad, was married here last night to Miss Mabel Payne,

2ed by $1 greatest dress value ever Special for this sale at daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Payne. The ceremony was performed by Dr. W. S. Marquis, pastor of the Broadway Presbyterian church, at the home of the bride. There were forty guests. Mr. and Mrs. Lightbody will be at home at 6156 Vincennes avenue, Chicago, after January 1. ! SOX AND GIANTS VARY PROGRAM; PLAY TIE GAME Los Angeles, Nov. 10. Messrs. McGraw and Callahan, only living rivals of the Ringling brothers, staged a second exhibition on the town ball lot, , , . , . carried away, what money had been left over from Saturday, and passed a resolution to the effect that Los Angeles had been "played." The score was: Sox, 7: Giants, 7. Game called at the end of the ninth inning on account of hunger. Score: Giants 0 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 7 White Sox 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 3 0 7 PIMLICO PARI MUTUELS THRIVE Baltimore. Md.. Nov. 10. Nearlv n . million dollars have been bet in. the pari-mutuels in the seven days at Pimlico. That racing will thrive under j carloads of horses will leave here on Thursday for Juarez. RIFLE SHOT KILLS MILITIA MAN Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 10. Sergeant Harry E. Hoey of Company E. First Wisconsin infantry, one of WlffCon' sin's best national guard marksmen, winner of trophies at Camp Perry in naional shoots, died last night at a the state rifle team, whose arm was Jostled by a companion when he was ' firing on the range. Hoey was in the j scoring pit when shot. I WABASH WINS IN BLIZZARD Wabash, Ind., Nov. 10. In a blinding snowstorm which covered the field

back seams reinforced by

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Ask to see this Style

Smart,' stylish model with the popular directoire collar, center plait opening, regulation waist line, plaited panel back on skirt. Contrasting solid color Chambray ornaments the pretty collar, pocket and cuffs. Hair-line stripe in blue, black and lavender; fancy checks In light and dark blue; nursery stripes, A f yale blue chambray. Price We have only mentioned a few of the many beautiful styles to be found here at this sale. We advise you to come early as the best models will be picked up first. Sizes from 34 to 46, also 16 and 18 years; made of the very best

qualities of chambray, percale and gingham

See Them in Our Windows & M. Stamps ivith all Purchases

KAUFMANN & WOLF Hammond, Ind.

before the end of the second quarter, the W. A. A. football team won from the Maxwell Briscoe eleven here yesterday afternoon, 46 to 0. Forward passes and end runs characterized the game, line plays being Impossible because of the muddy grounds. WESTERN ELEVENS DEFEATJHE EAST Comparative Scores Argument for Open Game in This Section. Harvard's scant victory over Princeton, 3 to 0, which gave the Crimson eleven a firmer hold on the 1913 eastern championship, and the defeat of Cornell, 1 to 0, by Michigan were the features of Saturday's football games which went a long way to demonstrate the superiority of western football over the brand played in the east. The Crimson eleven was forced to play all the football it knew to defeat the sons of Old Nassau, who must be given credit for playing one of the greatest "uphill struggles in the history of the gridiron game at Princeton. Reports of this struggle plainly indicated that the Tigers had the better of the play in the first two periods and that the second half was about evenly fought. ; Had it not been for Brickley's field goal in the second quarter, the game would have resulted In a scoreless tie, and Princeton would have been given credit for outplaying its opponents under the conditions. Harvard, with its heavier team, should have played rings around the Tigers. The Crimson had the advantage of pounds in weight, which should have enabled Harvard to make ground by the use ARE YOU A

THIS CHICK MODEL This new chick model has the stylish Hobespiere collar, deep set in front, trimmed with solid color percale, with small pearl buttons. Plain color percales also used on' collar and cujffs. White grounds in neat stripes, gingham effects in check, fancy light-colored stripes, dark plaids in navy and H cadet. Price Tuesday; h

-esc $1 of old football tactics. The result demonstrated that Harvard possibly does n9t possess the vaunted strength it has been credited with. The comparatively easy man ner with which the Cambridge eleven has won all Its games this year led critics to believe the team was unbeatable, but the manner In which the scrappy Tigers tore holes in the Crimson forward wall and stopped the onslaughts of the powerful Harvard back i field demonstrated that the Crimson is not going to have such an easy time . winning from Yale after all. SHEA BREAKS ANKLE. Princeton, N. J., Nov. 10. The injury which necessitated the removal of Ed Shea from the right end of the Princeton line in Saturday's game with Harvard has turned out to be a broken ankle. He will be out of the game for the remainder of the season. The . other Pinretos players came through the contest unscathed. Coaches declined to say whether Lamberton, 1 who replaced Shea in the Harvard game ,or J. S. Baker, will be given the first call for the vacated position. Baker toqk Lamberton's place late in j the game. J Coach Andrews said the varsity : players would have no hard scrimmage ' this week, because of the condition of the field and the proximity of the Yale game. The fourteen players who went to Atlantic City last night are not expected in Princeton until Tuesday. Knew What Tommy Nu wd. "It's enough to make a ftllcv sora," remarked Tommy "Yesterday was pa and ma's wooden wedding and nearly all the neighbors sent shingles." As for language reforms, we personally are of the opinion that ther are too many commas in tha EngllsA language. Chicago News. TIMES READER?.