Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 1, Hammond, Lake County, 18 June 1906 — Page 7
JUNE 18, 1906. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE SEVEN
Want Column
Tool and die makers wanted. $3 50 per day and steady work the year round. In a healthy farming town of 2,500 population, sixty miles from Chicago. In answering state age, habits and last place employed. AdHunt, Helm, Ferris & Co., Harvard, Ill. 6-6-10t WANTED-A bargain in a good second hand bicycle. Apply to Daily Tribune. tf Special sale of Railroad Watches for 30 days only. CHAS. ARKIN, 6-1-lmo 142 Hohman St. Wanted-Waiters at the Maine Restaurant. 4-10-tf Stout's coal leaves no whiskers on the stove lids Best that can be bought. Try it. No. 230 State street. Phone 1622 1-6-tf Geo. P. Stout leads in coal and wood. If you are not dealing with him you are the looser. No. 230 State street Phone 1622. l-6-tf. Carter's first class livery and unopen day and night. Ambulance calls answered promptly. 5-29-tf WANTED-Room and board in prifamily by a married couple. No children. Address C E E Tri-6-11-3t FOR RENT-One or two rooms, modern conveniences, near business district. Call at Tribune Office. 6-7 tf WANTED-Situation as houseApply at 282 Sibley street. References. First flat.-6,5,1t. WANTED-Laborers. Fitzhugh Luther, 150th and Columbia avenue. -6,15,3t. LOST OR STOLEN-Big buckskin with one eye gone. Finder return to F. Gobitz, 450 East State street. 6-12-tf LOST-A small black pocket book containing nearly $15. Will finder please leave it at The Tribune office and receive reward. 6-13-3t FOR SALE-Seven room residence on Indiana avenue; good basement hot and cold water, gas, electric lights, in fine condition. $2,500. 50 foot lot. Six room residence on Truman street, good basement, two story house, $1,750, lot 40 feet. E. D. Brandenburg, 106 First National Bank building.-6,14,1w. LOST-A mounted Elk's tooth fob. A reward will be given for its return to Summer's pharmacy. 6,14,3t. FOR Vacant SALE-Desirable business. Cheap. 44x100 feet. On Plummer avenue. G. A. Malcom, Blackhawk Street and Cherry Ave-Chicago.-6,13,1w. FOR SALE-Store,, and office tatypewriter tables, office desks, tables with heavy tops, cherry and walnut, all widths and lengths. From the Chicago U. S.. Post Office. Must be sold at once at the Hammond Furniture Co., 83 State Street. .Phone 2322. 6,10,lw. WANTED-At once, 25 men, steady work. Apply at yard of National Fire Proofing Co. 6-6 12t Hobart Ind. New Map of Lake County, Ind. Mr. J. T. Edwards of Crown Point, has nearly completed one of the most accurate and up-to-date maps ever published of Lake County, after two years of hard labor. Map will be completed in a few weeks. Send in your order to J. T. EDWARDS, Crown Point, Ind., Or R. L. MILLER, Hammond, Ind. BEST IN TOWN When You Are Hungry REMEMBER THE MAINE RESTAURANT AND LUNCH ROOM Meals at All Hours For Ladies and Gentlemen BEREOLOS BROS., 122 S. Hohman Street 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patenable. Communications strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the cientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 year; four months, $1. Sold by all new dealers. MUNN & Co. 361 Broadway, New York Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C.
REAL ESTATE
TRANSFERS A list of transfers of real estate furnished daily by the Lake County Title and Guaranty Company. Abstractors Mammond and Crown Point, Ind. Elisha T. Davis to Frederick W. AlLots 31 and 32 in First Addition, Gary, Ind., for $1,500.00 Geo. H. Lewis to James H. Jaqua, Lot 12 Block 3, Towle & Young's 2nd Add., Hammond, Ind., for 5.00 James H. Jaqua to Edward E. Beck, lot 12 Block 3 Towle & Young's Second Addition, Hammond, Ind., for 550.00 Dwight F. Cameron to Solomon Friedman, Lots 40 to 45 Block 1, Lots 13 to 16 Block 2, Walsh's 2nd East Chicago, Ind. for 1,000.00 Dwight F. Cameron to Sam Friedman Lots 31 to 36 Block 1, Lots 9 to 12 Block 2, Walsh's Second, East Chicago, Ind. 1,000.0 East Chicago Co., to Karl Henslek, Lot 5 Block 56, Indiana Harbor, for 200.00 Henry H. Cragg to Carrie R. Cragg, Lot 8 Eddy First Add, Crown Point, Ind., for 1,000.00 Maria Hartman to John Welmer, Lot on North Main St. Crown Point, Ind., Whiting Land Co. to Wm. C. Gardinier, Lot 29 Block 9, Central Park Add., Whiting, Ind. for 300.00 Nicholas Scherer to John Maas, Lots 7 and 8 Block 22, in Schererville, Ind. for 300.00 Clara B. Halfner to Frank H. Halfner, Part S. E. 1-4 of Section 3 Township 35 Range 8, for 6,000 Beside the foregoing transfers there have been filed for record in the Recorder's Office of Lake Co., Ind. 2 mortgages, 3 Releases and 3 Miscelinstruments. Notice of Administration. In the matter of the Estate of No. 226 Anna Goetz, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of said Es tate, by the Judge of Lake Superior Court. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. JACOB LOESCH Administrator Dated, June 6, 1906. ter List The following letters remain called for at the Hammond P. O. the week ending June 11, 1906. R. C. Boatman Joseph Bonner Elder Wm. Hammersley L. Lesser Fred Kulog Erick Lindquist E. A. Menier Mrs. Gertrude Mendanhall John A. McAleese Herrn Johan Mayer Mary L. Miller Mrs. S. W. Suman. PRESS THE BUTTON You simply press the button (as in the picture) and the pen fills in a "flash." Writes the instant it touches the paper Eagle $1 50 Flash No. 25 with 14 karat solid gold pen point - finest vulcanized rubber and fully guaranteed. Eagle "Flash" No. 25 with gold bands, $2.50 Eagle "Flash" No. 26 large size $3.00 with gold bands, $4.00 Sold by Stationers and Other Stores Ask YOUR DEALER. If he doesn't sell you the Eagle "FLASH" Fountain Pens then end the retail price direct to us Each pen absolutely guaranteed. Eagle Pencil Co. Manufacturers 377 Broadway, New York CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS Safe. Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist for CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbo Take no other. Refuse dangerous substitutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Particulars, Testmonials and "Relief for Ladies," in letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by all Druggists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 100 Madison Square, PHILA., P Mention this pap
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Social Tea Biscuit Just the thing to offer with an afternoon cup of tea-or chocolate or coffee. In fact, they're good to eat most any time just for the pleasure of it. Sweet and slightly flavored with vanilla. STATEHOOD SETTLED What the People of Oklahoma Owe to the Tireless Energy of Senator Beveridge. A SOURCE OF GRATIFICATION Adoption by the Senate of the Conference Report on the Statehood Bill a Great and Historic Victory for the Senior Senator From Indiana. [Washington Correspondence.] So far as the United States senate is concerned, the hard-fought, longcontroversy concerning the statehood of Oklahoma and Indian Terand New Mexico and Arizona, has been settled by the adoption of the conference report on the statehood bill. This result, which is the equivaof the passage of the statehood bill, was a great victory for Senator Beveridge of Indiana, whose name, during all the years of consideration of the subject matter of statehood for the four territories has been so conspicuously and honorably connected as its leader, and whose untiring efforts during all this time, even when there was hardly a forlorn hope for the ac complishment of statehood, never ceased. By the terms of the conference reOklahoma and Indian Territory are to be admitted to the Union as one state under the name of Oklahoma. When the bill passed the house some months ago, it contained the provision for the admission of New Mexico and Arizona as one state under certain terms and eventualities, but the senate rejected all provisions made for New Mexico and Arizona Territories, and the part of the bill accepted by the conference report remains in substanthe same shape as when the bill originally passed the house some months ago. A compromise between the senate and the house concerning Arizona and New Mexico was devised by the conference committee after many spirited sessions and keen controversies. By this compromise, it was provided that at the fall elections of 1906 the voters of these two territories shall decide, first, whether they want to come into the Union as one state under the name of Arizona, and secondly, the voters of each territory should decide by mavote that the people of each territory, respectively, so desired. Should a majority of the votes cast in either territory be in the negative upon these propositions, then all furproceedings looking to the adof New Mexico and Arizona to statehood, under the name of Arizowill be suspended. In passing upon this proposition, the voters at the same time will have the opportuto select delegates to the consticonvention, should it be dethat the two territories deadmission to statehood as the state of Arizona. Regardless, howof the result of the voting upon this proposition in New Mexico and Arizona, it should have no effect whatupon the admission of Oklahoma and Indian Territory to statehood unthe provisions of the bill, as amended by the conference report. It must be a source of great gratifito Senator Beveridge that the has finally accepted the confer ence report, containing substantially all the features originally conceived
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by him when the statehood question, more than four years ago, first arose in the senate. It may be said with absolute truth that the senator is the father, politically, of the new state of Oklahoma. He first conceived the idea of a state composed of Oklahoma and Indian Territory, and from the time that his proposition found tangiform as a bill for the consideration of the senate, up to the present hour, a contest of statesmen, involving the keenest minds and most scrutinizing search into the histories of these terfor light upon the proposition pro and con has been waged. This political battle in the senate, continthrough the past four years, has been historic and unprecedented, and culminates in a signal victory for the senator. When the Beveridge bill was origintroduced, it was vigorously and acrimoniously opposed by the peoof all the territories themselves, but the senator remained firm, confiin his belief that deliberation, study and information would in time educate the people of those territories to his view. Too much credit and praise cannot be given to Senator Beveridge for his untiring efforts and unfaltering faith in the ultimate achievement of statefor Oklahoma, as originally conby him and embodied in his original bill, and no man stands highin the measure of public confiintegrity, singleness of purpose and disinterested motive and tireless energy in achieving their best interthan does Senator Beveridge among the people of Oklahoma and Indian Territory, and over the nation at large, in all parts of which this great contest for a new state and a new star in the flag has been so constantly watched. No man has ever been recognized as a more tireless leader, abler debater or more consciinvestigator of a matter comto his charge than Senator Beveridge, to whose personal attenand steady faith the result must primarily be accredited. NO DISCRIMIMATION IN RATES San Francisco Cannot Have Cheap Building Material Freight Because It's Against the Law. San Francisco, June 18.-There will be no reductions on freight rates on building material to San Francisco, and builders and property owners who have been hoping for some reduction in the rail rate on structural steel and other materials from the east will be destined to a serious disappointment. It is explained that reductions in rates cannot be made to San Francisco without making them applicable to all other Pacific coast terminals. For this reason the Southern Pacific and Santa Fe and connections are prevented from doing all they would like to do in the way of reduced rates to stimulate the rebuilding of San Francisco. Base Ball for Charity. San Francisco, June 17.-A picked base ball team from the San Francisco police and lire departments will leave here in a few days for the east to play department teams in all the principal cities for the benefit of widows and orof the two departments in this city, many of whom lost their all in the recent fire. President Could Not Attend. Sayville. L. I., June 18.-President Roosevelt has notified John E. Roosethat he is unable to attend the funeral of his uncle, Robert B. Roosevelt, which took place at Lotus Lake this morning. The president official duties as the season for his absence.
Mark Mark-
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SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed bv the Clerk of the Lake Circuit Court in a case wherein Vermont Savings Bank
is plaintiff and James N. Young and others are defendants, requiring me to sell the following described parcel of ground for the purpose of making from such sale the sum of $266.74 for the satisfaction of a lien therein declared to exist against said parcel in favor of the cross complainant Wm. F Bridge for taxes, togrether with interest on said sum and costs. I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on Saturday the 30th. day of June 1906. between the hours of ten o'clock a. m. and four o'clock p. m. of said date, at the door of the Court House in Crown Point in said County, the rents ami profits for a term not exceeding seven years by the year, of the West half of Block A in Dyers' Addition to the City of Hammond in the County of Lake and state of Indiana. If such rents and profits of said parcel of ground will not sell for a sum sufficient to realize the sum of $266.74 with interest and costs I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said parcel of ground, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to realize the said sum with interest and costs. If the proceeds realized from such sale shall be more than sufficient to realize the said sum with interest and costs I am directed by the said decree to apply such surplus as follows, in the order given : 1st To a lien of the cross complainant Ernest G. Schreiber in the sum of $1030.03 and inand costs. 2nd To a lien of the plaintiff in the sum of $730.00 and interest and costs. 3rd To a lien or Frederick A. Morgan as sole administrator cum testamento annexo de bonis non of the estate of William Treutler, deceased, in the sum of $439.65. 4th Any balance to the defendant James N. Young. Such sale shall be made without relief of vaand appraisement laws and without right of redemption, and upon payment of the purchase money a deed of the Sheriff of Lake County shall forthwith be issued to the purIn tase the said James N. Young shall pay the said lien of the said Bridge to the Clerk of said court on or before the 16th day of June, 1906, then said parcel of ground shall be sold for the saof said liens of the cross complainant Schreiber and the plaintiff and the cross comMorgan as administrator, which may remain unpaid, and the proceeds shall be apin the order herein indicated: such sale to be made as hereinabove provided, but with the relief granted by the valuation and appraiselaws of the State of Indiana and with the statutory right of redemption accorded in the foreclosure of mortgages. Under said decree, such sale, whether to satany one or more of the above liens, shall operate to foreclose all rights of the plaintiff and the above named defendants and cross comand the defendants Mary G. Young, Ella M. Hayes, Mary Schreiber aad the Board of Commissioners of said County of Lake. CHARLES J. DAUGHERTY. Sheriff Lake County. Chester B. Masslich, H. S. Barr. Plaintiff's Attorneys. Legal Notice. No. 8199. Treasury Department, Office of Comptroller of the Currency, Washington D. C., May 2, 1906. Wereas, by satisfactory evidence presented to the undersigned, it lias been made to appear that "The CitizGerman National Bank of Ham mond," in the City of Hammond in the County of Lake of Indiana, has complied with all the provisions of the Statutes of the United States, required to be complied with before an association shall be authorized to commence the business of Banking. Now therefore, I, Thomas, P. Kane, Deputy and Acting Comptroller of the Currency do hereby certify that "The Citizens German National Bank of Hammond, in the County of Lake and State of Indiana, is authorized to commence the business of Banking as provided in Section fifty one hundred and sixty nine of the Revised Statutes of the United States. In testimony whereof witness my hand and Seal of office this second day of May, 1906, T. R. Kane Deputy and Acting Comptroller of the Currency. (Seal) 5-5-tf Notice. Trains Nos 27 and 28 between Ham mond and Chicago, commonly known as the Butcher Run, will not be dis continued Juna 1st as formerly an nounced. This train will continue to run on schedule as heretofore. Yours truly, A M D EWEESE Asst Agt, Erie R R Personally Conducted Four Week's Eastern Tour. A personally conducted party in a special train of Pullman Sleepers, in cluding a dining car, will leave Chivia the Wabash, July 5th, for a few weeks' tour of the East, covering the following route: Detroit, Toronto, Niagara Falls, Kingston, St. Lawrence River, ThouIslands, Montreal, Ottawa, Que bec, White Mountains, Portland, Me., Old Orchard, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Bal timore, Washington, Pittsburg and Toledo. Rates very reasonable. For complete itinerary of the trip, with rates and other details address, F. H. TRISTRAN, Ass't General Passenger Agent, 97 Adams St., Chicago. Michigan Central Excursions. The Michigan Central on Friand Saturday of each week until September 29th will sell week-end return tickets to St. Joseph, Benton Harbor, New Buffalo, Three Oaks, Harbor, New Buffalo, Three Oaks, Buchanan and Niles, Michigan at $2.00 for round trip. To Dowaglac and return, $2.75. To Lawton and return, $3.00. Good for return unMonday after date of sale. I. E. Dickinson, 6,9,6t, Ticket Agent.
Time Ta
ble
ERIE RAILROAD. IN EFFECT June 25, 1905. At HAMMOND, IND GOING EAST xNo 24 Huntington Acmdatlon 8.10 am No 4 New York and Boston Vestibuled Limited 11.53 am xNo 14 Wells Fargo Express 4.20 pm No 26 Rochester Ac'modation 4.35 pm No 10 Chauauqua and Buffalo Limited 5:50 pm No 8 New York Express 10:25 pm i No 102 Bass Lake Special 9:00 am xNo 28 Chi to Hammond only 6:55 pm GOING WEST xNo 27 Chicago Accomodation 5:45 am No 7 Chicago Express 6:12 am No 9 Chicago Limited 7:00 am No 25 Chicago Accomodation 8:45 am xNo 21 Chicago " 3:50 pm No 3 Chicago Vestibuled Limited 4:40 pm yNo 13 Wells Fargo Express 9:40 pm i No 101 Chicago Special 8:50 pm Daily x-Daily except Sunday y--Daily except Monday i--Sunday only A. M. DeWeese, Ticket Agent. C. L. Enos, Travellng Passenger Agent Marion Ohio. MICHIGAN CENTRAL 'The Nigara Falls Route" Time card in effect Sept. 24th, 1905, TRAINS EAST. o 2 Detroit & Local 7:58 am No 42 St. Joe & Gd. Rapida Ex.l:54 pm No 22 Kalamazoo Acc 3:55 pm No 44 St. Joe & Gd. Rapids Ex6:09 pm No 6 Detroit Night Ex Dl0:47pm No 36 Atlantic Express D 12:49 am TRAINS WEST. No 4l Gd. Rapida & Chi Ex D 6:20 am No 37 Pacinc Express D 6:40 am No 15 Kalamazoo Acc 9:55 am No 43 Gd. Kapids & Chi Ex.11:53 am No 11 Detroit & St. Joe Ex D 2:06 pm No 45 Chi & Gd. Rayids Ex 4:08 pm No 5 Chicago & Local 5:12 pm No 47 Kal. & Chi. Express 6:55 pm No 49 Chicago Express S 9.13 pm S-Sunday only D-Daily
No 14, due 3:47, will stop at Hammond for passengers for Detroit and points east thereof. Others daily except Sunday
ONON Time Table Effective June 3d, 1906. SOUTH No 35 f12 08 am No 5 9 19 No 33 12 No 39 3 No 3 9 5 NORTH No. 4 6 10 am No 36 f6 47 am No 40 9 36 am No 32 11 11 am No 38 s4 39 pm No 6 5 02 pm No 30 x7 49 pm S Denotes Sunday only. X Daily except Sunday. F Flag stop only. J. C. DOWNING, Agent. Pennsylvania Lin Schedule in effect Sunday, Nov. 26, '05 Lv Hamd Ar Chi Lv Chi Ar Hamd x 5 50 am 6 45 am s11 35 pm 12 32 am 6 26 " 7 35 5 25 am 6 26 6 41 6 59 9 01 6 41 " 7 45 " x 8 00 " 9 00 " s10 11 " 11 10 " 5 30 00 " 8 05 x 12 38 pm 1 35 pm 8 50 " 10 11 3 31 4 30 11 20 " 12 38 p x 4 48 5 32 " 6 05 6 30 7 00 8 00 3 50 pm 4 48 " " " 4 15 5 32 5 32 6 42 7 17 5 32 4 30 5 40 6 15 x 7 00 Dail x Daily except Sunday s Sunday only Excursions Erie Railroad. $13 35 from Hammond to ChautauLake and return. Tickets on sale July 6th and July 27th. Return limit 30 days from date of sale. One dollar excursion to Bass Lake. Ind., commencing June 24th and every Sunday following until Sept, 23d, 1906, inclusive. Good only on Sunday special excursions. Special eiccrsion to Mexico City, Mexico, June 24th to July 6th; on plus $2.00 for round trip. Good returning until Sept. 15th, 1906. Special excuriion to Boston, Ma June 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 17, one fare $1.00 for round trip; good retu until July 15, 1906. To Bippus, lad. east, Chicago, west, and and all intermediate p return, every Sunday at one for round trip, good going and turning only on data of sale. gage cannot be checked on Sunday cursion tickets. For additional informatio Erie ticket office or write assistant agent Erie Co., Hammond, Ind. Money to Loan
In any amount on short notice, on real estate or personal property, b Stinson Bros. Attorneys at Law, and notary in office. All inquiries strictly confidential. Suite 105, First National Bank Building, Hammond Ind.
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