Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 6, Hammond, Lake County, 23 June 1906 — Page 7

Satnrday, June 23, 1906

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE SEVEN

ant olumn Special sale of Railroad Watches for 30 days only. CHAS. ARKIN, 6-l-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. 1-6-tf. Carter's first class livery and unopen day and night. Amcalls answered promptly, 5-29-tf FOR RENT One or two rooms, modern conveniences, near business district. Call at Times Office. 6-7 tf WANTED-German speaking exsalesladies at Ruhstadt's 6,20,4t. LOST-A dark bay mare, 14 hands high weighs about 800 pounds. Saddle sore on back. When missed wore on left fore leg an interfering boot also one on the right hind leg Any information concerning same will be liberally rewarded by WestBolting and Supply Co. at Gibson Yards.-6-19-lw. FOR RENT-Very desirable room. Telephone 31 1.-6,22,tf. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Trustees of school, City of Hamwill receive bids until 6 p. m., July 12th, 1906, for the furnishing of coal for Hammond public schools. Bidding blanks furnished on appliby the Superintendent. Board reserves right to reject any or all bids. H. F. Meikle, Secy. 6, 19, 3w. UNCALLED-FOR LETTERS. The following letters remain nufor at the Hammond postoffice for the week ending June 18th, '06: Fred Barnes. Mr. Jan. Demski. Juzef Gani. Mr. Harry Forshall, (2). E. Flausberg. Mr. F. R. Finney. Mr. Harry Graves. Clinton G. Grigsley. Mr. Charles Carlon. Mr. F. B. Hathaway. J. E. Jolly. Everett J. Kinney. Mr. Geo. Mickus. Mr. Lewis Marison. Miss Nellie Nighmen. Herrn Erich Otto. Miss Edith Osborne. Mr. C. F. Peeler. Pastime Poultry Yards. P. F. Ryan. Mr. J. Rinker. Grant Reed. Miss Inez Reed. Mr. Chas. Reynolds. Miss A. Upton. M. Stephen B. Singleton. Mrs. Sullivan. Mr. Geo. Sies. Mr. W. D. Weighley. Mr. John Wilson. Alice Wilson. Wm. H. Gostlin, P. M Money to Loan In any amount on short notice, on real estate or personal property, by Stinson Bros, Attorneys at Law, Stenographer and notary in office. All inquiries strictly confidential. Suite 105, First National Bank Building, Hammond Ind. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & c. quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the cientific American. culation of any scientific journal. Terms $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. UNN & Co. 361 Broadway, New York 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

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THE ETERNAL FEMININE.

My Dear Martha: Mea Culpa! If I have tricked you into buying a small hat, I must blame the error on Dame Fashion's caprices and assure you we all went astray in the good company of her most exclusive shopkeepers. Now it is ordained that the soft, droopy hats are the proper mode for midwear, trimmed over and under the brim with clusters and wreaths of tiny flowers. I saw a very fetching leghorn trimmed well out onto the brim with a large bunch of pink roses and daisies. Underwas well filled with masses of tiny rosebuds and the crown was scarcely visible. Daisies are extenused; the yellow centers are cool looking but the black centers are quite striking. I saw an awfully smart costume at Newport where enis in full blast. The orwas in daisy design; the skirt shirred very full over cords which gave great fullness to the skirt and permitted a snug fit over the hips. The waist was surplice made of corded organdie and val inserting each strip about two inches wide. The elbow sleeves were of the same but were the tightest I've seen this season. The leghorn hat had great bunches of yellow and black eyed daisies, and these flowers were painton a parasol of white silk. Mabecome more and more flimsy and billowy, and the cording I spoke of is extensively used. One dream frock was Princess, and from top to toe consisted of German val insert ing puffed and joined with silk cord ing. Towards the bottom of the skirt the inserting graduated wide and the four last cords had frilled lace, while it finished with a fou inch flounce of lace. The large ha was made on the lingerie model o the lace and cording, and wired so a to roll off the face slightly to the left, displaying an enormous pink rose. Never was known such variety of material, color and shape as in this season's parasols, and it is ordained that they play an important part in the summer wardrobe. They either match the gown or a dominant tone in the hat, or they form the one conas regrads color. I noticed smart matron in white lace and crin hat, carrying a white parasol deco rated with painted chalk-blue pea cock feathers. They were the depth of the parasol, alternating, some run ning up to the stick, the others fallgracefully to the edge. Her long gloves were the exact hue Silk, satin, pongee, batist, lace and linen are made up simple and otherin every possible and impossible color and design. Embroidered sun shades are the present whim, and there is a perfect craze for initials and monograms. In some they are not only on the material but on the handle. Crystal, amber and tortoise shell handles are the moment the most popular, wh there are myriof designs in expensive polished wood to be to comfort the artistic soul hampered finanIf one is a clever needle woman one need not pine for effectparasols, for with little expense plain ones can be transformed by inmedallions of lace or emor if especially clever, an original design or monogram can be embroidered on the parasol at home. Embroidered batistes and linens are ultra smart but particularly deover shell-pink lining. Everything is attractive this year frocks, hats, accessories and womwhich is probably what we have said each succeeding season, for it is the bird of the moment and its glorious plumage of which we mur"You are the loveliest of all." Contentedly, JANE. Woman Killed by Electricity. Kaukauna, Wis., June 23.-Mrs. NoWatson was killed by electricity in the basement of her home. While in specting an incubator she grasped an electric light wire and her body to her waist and her arms were badly burned. In her stocking feet, and standing on a datnp floor, her body formed a short circuit which was fatal. Fatally Hurt at Base Ball. Pittsburg, June 23.-Edward P. Dil lon, a prominent train dispatcher of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad, is dead of cerebral hemorrhthe result of being hit with a pitched ball in a base ball game berailroad clerks and telegraphers. Death at a Graduation. Owatonna, Minn., June 23.-After spending four years in Pillsbury acadand graduating with honors. Miss Laura Kelly, of this city, became vioinsane while making an address at her class day exercises and died later. Not So Unusual Out There. Butte, Mont., June 23.-A state senator and several wealthy stockmen of this state have been arrested by federal officers on a charge of fencing public lands. Strike of 20,000 Kutais, June 23.-Twentv thousand miners a Chiaturi have struck for an

increase of wages.

The Deadly Monotony of Men's Attire By HENRY HOLIDAY, Famous English Artist

THE deadly gloom and monotony of men's dress-one of the

sumptuary laws regulated

but free men did not tolerate this, and there are now no longer any sharp distinctions between the dress of the different grades of society. John Stuart Mill declared that it was the chief aim of people to get out of one rank of society INTO THE CLASS ABOVE IT, and it follows, therefore, that each class endeavors to dress like the one above it. The aristocrat wears a top hat, a black tubular coat and light stovetrousers. The wealthy merchant or banker is compelled to dress EXACTLY THE SAME To introduce the smallest mark of individuality or to indicate by ne's dress one's calling in life would be to lose caste. There is a ridicunderstanding in society that a gentleman is a man who does not earn his own living and it is therefore incumbent on every one

"in society" to wear a dress which

do any work in it. In the same way the larger trader copies the merchant, and the smaller tradesman apes the man above him, AND SO ON RIGHT DOWN THE SCALE, until even the workingman turns out on Sunin the top hat, black coat and stovepipe trousers. If there were no classes no one would be afraid of losing caste, and consequently every one would consult his own comfort and convenin his dress.

WE CAN HOPE FOR NO RADICAL CHANGE IN OUR DRESS UNTIL WE HAVE ALTERED OUR SOCIAL SYSTEM. SO LONG AS THE GREED FOR PROFIT CONTINUES, SO LONG WILL OUR DRESS BE VULGAR.

The Menacing Future of Europe

By LORD AVEBURY (Sir THE enormous and wasteful means lower wages, higher and HARDER WORK.

millions an almost intolerable burden. Who that knows anyof the condition of the Russian serfs and artisans can wonder that they rise in revolution? They are OVERWORKED, UNDERAXD UNDERFED. Recent events, moreover, must leave bitter memories and furious feeling. The Russian armies have caused more misery to Russia than all the forces of Japan. Insurrection may be suppressed by force, but UNLESS THE CAUSES ARE REit will inevitably break out again. Bayonets are good as weapons, but not to sit on. The case of Germany is not so bad, but there also the sufferings and hard condition of the working classes, sufferings which cannot be reduced as long as the present expenditure is maintained, are leading to a rapid development of socialism. Socialism, I fear, would only AGGRAVATE THE EVIL, but it is the protest of the masses against their hard lot. Unless something is done the condition of the poor in Europe will grow worse and worse. It is no use shutting our eyes. Revolution may not come soon, not probably in my time, BUT COME IT WILL. AND WHEN IT DOES COME THERE WILL BE AN EXPLOSION SUCH AS THE WORLD HAS NEVER SEEN. If the monarchs of Europe are to retain their thrones and if we are to maintain peace, European statesmen must devise some means of fostering better feelings and DIMINISHING THE BURDENS which now press so heavily on the springs of industry and aggravate so terribly the unavoidable troubles of life.

Highest Permanent Wealth Of a Nation Is Its Literature By WHITELAW REID, United States Ambassador to Great Britain

HE highest PERMANENT WEALTH of a nation is in its

T

enduring literature. This and this only is now ''the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome." What

does any dispassionate and competent critic say today was the highest glory of the Victorian era? I do not deprecate its wars or its ever widening empire or its efforts for the well being of all its people or its great extensions of the suffrage. But the highest glory of the Victorian age, ONLY EXCEPTING ITS CONSTANT EFFORTS TO PRESERVE PEACE, the glory by which it will be chiefly refar on in summers that we shall not see and throughout the generations of men, is surely the Victorian literature.

Peace Claims

Eternal Rocks of Truth By Congressman BARTHOLDT of St. Louis EVERY argument I have heard advanced in the intellectual combats of the last ten years to support, excuse or justify the BARBARISM OF WAR has been successfully refuted, while our claims stand like eternal ROCKS OF TRUTH and can neither be shaken nor submerged unless our opponents make the damaging admission that our whole civilization

and the system of government which today obtains in enlightened countries are a sham and a lie. IN WHATEVER SPOT WE TOUCH THE INARMOR OF OUR OPPONENTS IT IS VULNERABLE AND PENETRABLE BY THE FORCE OF REASON. The second Hague conference is to be transformed into an international congress having autonomous and periodical meetings, and this congress is to ap-

point a permanent council to codify CONTINUITY of the influence

the dress of the different classes, looks as though its owner could not John Lubbock) of England military expenditure of Europe prices of the necessaries of life It makes life a heavier and for Are Like international law and to INSURE of the congress.

BARILLAS BACK IN MEXICO

Man Who Was Going to Bounce Ca brera Does Not Seem to Make Great Progress. City of Mexico, June 23.-General Manuel Lizandro Barillas, ex -president of Guatemala, and one of the leaders of the revolution, is in this city, said to be ill, but it is expected he will shortly depart for the United States, whence he may proceed to join the revolutionist forces operating in southGuatemala under General Toledo. His physicians will not permit him to be seen. It is said that President Cabrera has closed all avenues wherethe true state of affair in that country might become known. Jew Denounce Russ Horrors. Berlin, June 23.-At a largely atmeeting of the Jews held here resolutions expressing horror at the "criminal barbarities of the Russian authorities, who incite massacres in orto suppress the movement for freein Russia," were adopted. The resolutions further expressed the hope that the entire Jewish world will ento cheek these "impious murby unanimous protest and the reof any financial assistance to Russia." High Guns at Indianapolis. Indianapolis, June 23.-In the clo.events of the seventh grand American handicap the amateur champion- ship was won by Guy Ward, of nut Log, Tenn., and the professional title went to Walter Huff, of Macon, Ga. Each race was of 150 targets. The amateur championship was won by a score of 144 and the professional by 145. Wabash Excursions FROM CHICAGO $14.40 TORONTO and Return. On sale daily. $20.00 MONTREAL and Return. On sale daily. $21.00 $22.50 $21.00 CONCORD and Retnrn On sale June 15 to 30, and July 18; Aug. 8 & 22; Sept. 5 and 19. PORTLAND, Me., and Returu Selling dates same as to Concord. RUTLAND, Vt., and Return. Selling dates same as to Concord. Proportionate rates to many other points in Canada and New England For complete details as to stop-overs, etc. address F. H. TRISTRAM, Assistant General Passenger Agent, 97 Adams St., CHICAGO. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed by the Clerk of the Lake Circuit Court in a case wherein Vermont Savings Bank is plaintiff and Janus 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 com plainant Wm. F. Bridge for taxes, together 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 and 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 Comity of Lake and State of Indiana. If such rents and profits of said parcel of ground will not sell for 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 prorealized 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: lst 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 of 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 case the said James N. Young shall pay the said lien of the said Bridge to the Clerk of said court on or before the l6th 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 appraisement laws 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 complainants and 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. 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.

Notice of Administration, In the matter of the Estate of No. Anna Goetz, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrstor of said Es tate, by the Judge of the Lake Superior Court. Said Estate is supposed to be solvent. JACOB LOESCH Administrator. Dated, June 6, 1906.

Pennsylvania Line Schedule in effect Sunday, Nov. 26, '05 Lv Hamd Ar Chi Lv Chi Ar Hamd x 5 50 a m 6 45 a m s 11 35 p m 12 32 a m

6 26 " 7 35 " 5 25 am 6 26 " 6 41 " 7 45 " 5 30 " 6 41 " x 8 00 " 9 00 " 6 00 " 6 59 " s10 11 " 11 10 " 8 05 " 9 01 " x12 38 p m 1 35 p m 8 50 " 10 11 " 3 31 " 4 30 " 11 20 " 12 38 p m x 4 48 " 6 05 " 3 50 p m 4 48 " 5 32 " 6 30 " 4 15 " 5 32 " 5 32 " 7 00 " 4 30 " 5 32 " x 7 00 " 8 00 " 5 40 " 6 42 " 6 15 " 7 17 " Daily

x Daily except Sunday s Sunday only WABASH RAILR0AD. East Bound. No. 14 Local points to Detroit, Hammond 11 48 a. m. No. 6 Through train Buffalo & New York, Hammond 3:48 p.m No. 12 Through train Buffalo & New York, Boston, Hammond 11:48 p. m. West Bonud. No. 5 to Chicago, Ills., Hammond 6:16 a. m. No. 9 to Chicago, St. Louis & KanCity, Hammond 9:34 a. m. No. 1 to Chicago, Hammond. 3:03 p. m. No. 13 to Chicago St. Louis & KanCity 8: 40 p. m. Trains No. 6 and 5 are through trains to Toledo. O. and Pittsburg, Pa., with chair cars and sleeper. All trains daily. For any information 'phone 2761, or write F. H. Tristram, Ast. Gen. Pasgr Agt. 97 Adams street, ChicaIll. Fred N. Hickok, Agent, Hammond. Personally Conducted Four Week's Eastern Tour. A personally conducted party in a special train of Pullman Sleepers, ina dining car, will leave Chi cago via 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, QueWhite Mountains, Portland, Me., Old Orchard, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, BalWashington, Pittsburg and Toledo. Rates very reasonable. For com plete 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 Cantral 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 Dowagiac 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. Lega! 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 has been made to appear that "The Citiz ens German National Bank of Hamin 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. Thcmas, 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-tj CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS afe. Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist for HICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous substitutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Particulars, Testimonials and "Relief for Ladies," in letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by all Druggists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 2100 Madison Square, PHILA., PA.

Beware of Counterfeits.

Time Table

ERIE RAILROAD. N 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 iNo 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 Cbicago Accomodation 8:45 am xNo 21 Chciago " 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, Travelling Passenger Agent Marion Ohio. MICHIGAN CENTRAL. The Niagara Falls Route. Time card in effect June 17 1906: Trains East. No. 2, Detroit and Local Ex. 7:58 a. m. No. 42, Grand Rapids Spl. Ex. 1:54 p. m. No. 60, Resort Spl. Friday and Saturday only 2:37 p. m. No. 22, Kalamazoo Acc'm. Ex, 3:55 p. m. No. 44, Grand Rapids Exp. D 7:40 p. m. No. 6, Detroit Express, D 10:47 p. m. No. 36, Atlantic Express, D 12: 49 a. m. No. 14 due at 3:47 p. m. will stop for passengers for Kalamazoo or points east thereof. No. 10 due at 11:10 a. m. will stop for passengers for Buffalo or points east thereof when advance notice is given. Trains West. No. 41, Grand Rapids and Chicago Exp. D 6:20 a. m. No. 37, Pacific Express D. 6:40 a. m. No. 63, Resort Spl Monday only 9:22 a. m. No. 27, Chicago Acc'm Ex. 9:55 a. m. No. 43, Gd. Rapids & Chgo. Exp. 11:53 a. m.

No. 9, Mich & Chicago Exp. D

2:06 No. 45, Gd. Rapids & Chgo. 4 aged in the No. 5. Detroit & Chgo it was carried soon a large No. 47, Kal. & Chgo. Exp. red. Peter 7: spectators. No. 49, Kal. & Chgo Exp. Su ed where only 9:13 the pisNo. 61, Resort Spl. Sunday only with 9:35 p. When

D.-Daily. I. E. Dickinson, Agent. MONON Time Table Effective June 3d, 1906. SOUTH No. 35 f12 08 am No 5 9 19 am No 33 12 50 pm No 39 3 55 pm No 3 9 50 pm NORTH no 4 6 10 am No 36 f6 47 am No 40 936 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. 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, 1006, inclusive. Good only on Sunday special excursions. Special excursion to Mexico City, Mexico, June 24th to July 6th; one fare plus $2.00 for round trip. Good returning until Sept. 15th, 1906. Special excursion to Boston, Mass., June 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 17, one fare plus $1.00 for round trip; good returning until July 15, 1906. To Bippus, Ind. east, Chicago, Ill, west, and and all intermediate points and return, every Sunday at one fare for round trip, good going and reonly on data of sale. Bag. gage cannot be checked on Sunday extickets. For additional information call at Erie ticket office or write A. M. De Weese, assistant agent Erie Railroad Co., Hammond. Ind.