Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 7, Hammond, Lake County, 25 June 1906 — Page 5
MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1906
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE FIVE
THE FOURTH OF JULY
is not far away but we expect to do business in our new building at 98 State Street by that time. We will have the LARGEST and most UP-TO-Drug Store in this part of the State. Remember 98 will be our new location just opour present location.
REAL ESTAT
TRANSFERS
SCORES AT BASE BALL
JOS. W. WEIS, The Druggist 101 State Street.
To reduce our stock we offer all trimmed and untrimmed hats
at
ONE-HALF PRICE. Our summer goods are all fresh and new and strictly the Best Styles. We solicit your inspection. Bloomhoff & Co.
CITIZENS GERMAN NATIONAL BAN HAMMOND IND.
Capital $100,000.
Your Bank account is not too large. "Neither is it too small for the
CITIZENS GERMAN NATIO
BANK
to handle. We solicit the same on the most liberal terms consistent with good Banking. 3 per cent interest paid on time certificates of deposits. Same issued from $1.00 up. Drafts to all parts of the World sold. C C SMITH Pres W D WEIS M D Vice Pres GEO M EDER Cashier E S EMERINE Ass't Cashier DIRECTORS
CHAS SMITH C H FRIEDRICH J C BECKER
WM D WEIS HERMAN SCHREIBER H M PLASTER
If you appreciate
Fine rinting
at prices as low as good workmanship and material will permit
Give us a
trial.
We are prepared to handle all classes of work in a prompt and satisfactory manner, and would be pleased to give estimates
The Lake County Times Phone 111 Hammond Building
A list of transfers of real estate furnished daily by the Lake County Title and Guaranty company. Abstractors offices at Crown Point, and Hammond, Ind. Malensy Such to Paul B. Lipinski, Lot 10 Block 1, Bell & Hoffman's Addition, Hammond, Indiana for $240.00 Elizabeth Hutfley to Paul Szilvasi, Lot 19, Block 14, S. W. 1-4 See.28East Chicago for 160.00 Peter W. Meyn to Margaret WarLot 38, Block 1, Hammond Heights 325.00 First National Bank to Geo. W. Bartlett. Lots 11 and 12, Block 4, Towle & Avery's Addition, Hammond. Indiana for 175.00 Edmund L. Wilson to Geo. W. WilPart N. E. 1-4 Section 21-35-7 for 1.00 Mary Behney to Grant Taylor, Part Lot 4, Railroad Addition, Crown Point, for 1.00 Peter W. Meyn to Theodor Kuschel Lots in Hammond Heights for 2,150.00 Elizabeth Doak to Eda Burge, Part S. W., S. E., 1-4 Section 5-34-8 for 425.00 Chas. D. Davidson to Patrick Quinn, 3 lots Davidson's Blvd.. Whiting, Indiana for 775.00 Besides the foregoing transfers there have been filed for record with the recorder of Lake county, Ind. 6 mortgages, 2 releases and 6 miscelinstruments.
Chicago, June 25.-Following are the base ball scores: League (Saturday): At Boston Brooklyn 2, Boston 3; at New York Philadelphia 0. New York 5; at Cincin3, Cincinnati 1; at PittsSt. Louis 0, Pittsburg 2. (SunAt Cincinnati-Pittsburg 3, Cincinnati 4, at Chicago-St Louis 7, Chicago 8. American (Saturday) At PhiladelBoston. 0, Philadelphia 8; at Washington-New York 3, Washington 2; at St. Louis-Cleveland 0, St. Loui 9; at Chicago-Detroit 2, Chicago 3 twelve innings (Sunday) At Chicago Detroit 3, Chicago 2; at St. LouisAssociation (Saturday): At Kansas
A Golden Opportunity
City-St waukee
at Toledo Louisvil
Paul 4, Kansas City 1; at Milpolis 8, Milwaukee 9;
Indianapolis 5, Toledo 9; at Rain. (Sunday) At Louis-
HAMMOND SHUTS OUT CHICAGO MAROON TEAM
Visitors Can Do Nothing With PitDonahue while Locals Take Hard Fall out of Quan. Score 10 to 0.
The Hammonds defeated the much
touted Chicago Maroons at Hubbards field yesterday by a score of 10 to 0.
Donohue's pitching was remarkable
feature of the game, the home team making 12 hits off Quans delivery while the visitors only secured five hits off Donahue.
Fowler unfortunately had one of
his fingers knocked out of joint and
was spiked by one of the Maroons while sliding to a base. Louis Sheralso had the misfortune to sprain his ankle.
Orters, whose inability to find a
ball previous to the inning caused
much bantering, surprised the na
tives by striking a home run. Hammond R H P A E Enright, c. f. 2 1 2 0 0 McMahan, 2 b. 0 2 1 3 2 Eder, c. 0 1 7 1 0 Fowler l b. 1 0 11 0 0 Arter, 3 b. 1 1 2 1 1 Clark, 1. f. 2 1 2 0 0 Donahue, p. 2 3 1 12 0 White, s. s. 0 0 0 1 0 Sheerer, r. f. 2 3 1 0 0 Totals 10 12 27 18 3 Maroons R H P A E Clority, s. s. 0 1 3 2 0 Heinz, l b. 0 0 7 0 1 Mann, 3 b. 0 0 2 1 1 McFarland, 1. f. 0 0 0 0 0 Cure, c. f. 0 1 3 0 0 Ehrloff, c. 0 2 9 0 0 Laskill, r. f. 0 0 0 0 0 Prindeville, 2 b. 0 1 0 1 0 Quan, p. 0 0 0 11 0 Totals 0 5 24 15 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Hammond, 0 0 2 4 1 0 3 0 10 Maroon, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Home Runs, Arter; Two-Base Hits
Eder, Donahue 2; Stolen Bases, Fow
ler 2, Christy, Cure; Struck Out By
Donahue 6, Quan 5; Base On Balls
Fowler 2, Clark; Umpire, Gus Barget Attendance 500; Time of Game 1.50
A FISH HOOK.
ville-Columbus 2, Louisville 1-five
innings, catch train; at Toledo-Indian-
apolis 2, Toledo 1; at Kansas City St. Paul 6, Kansas City 1; (second game) St. Paul 13, Kansas City 7; at
Milwaukee-Minneapolis 2, Milwaukee 10.
Western (Saturday): At Des Moines Denver 11, Des Moines 4; at Lincoln Pueblo 8, Lincoln 3; at Omaha
Sioux City 3, Omaha 4; (second game) Sioux City 6, Omaha 6-ten innings,
atch train. (Sunday) At Omaha
Denver 2, Omaha 6; at Sioux City Lincoln 1, Sioux City 2; at Des Moines
-Pueblo 3, Des Monies 9; (second ame Pueblo 3, Des Moines 9.
PEPYS AND EVELYN.
A chance for everyone to own a Home
The Hammond Realty Company will help you
WE are putting on the market seventy-five choice resilots in East Lawn and McHie's Subdivision and will sell you your choice of any of these lots (now unsold) at the unusually moderate price of $200 each, and what is more, we will loan to every person paying cash for his lot 75 per cent of the money required to build his home, at 6 per cent interest. All will be treated alike. First come first served. Do not neglect this opportunity. It may never be offered again.
Difference In Methods of These Two
Famous Diarists. Pepys' narrative is always dramatic himself being the center of the play-
while Evelyn is historical, pathetic or
didactic, as the mood seizes him. Pepys
gives us the comedy of his time, as Plautus and Terence gave us the comof theirs. Evelyn, on the other
hand, has something of Livy in his
composition and not a little of Cicero. Compare, for instance, their treatment of the great fire, and you may measure the distance between them. Thus it is
that Pepys' account begins: "Some of our maids, sitting up late last night to get things ready against our feast to
day, Jane called us up about 3 in the
morning to tell us of a great fire they saw in the city. So I rose and slipped
on my nightgown and went to her win
dow." And now turn to Evelyn and see the temper in which he views the destruction of the city. "The clouds
of smoke were dismal and reached up
on computation near fifty miles in
length," he writes the day after the fire. "Thus I left it this afternoon burning, a resemblance of Sodom or the last day. It forcibly called to my mind that passage, 'Non enim hic hastabilem civitatem, the ruins resembling the picture of Troy. Lonwas, but it is no more!" Pepys sets the scene before you like a man; Evelyn reflects upon the tragelike a writer, ingenious in reference and quick with allusion. We need not discuss which is the better method, but it may surely be said that the world will produce another hundred Evelyns before it fashions a fitting rival for Pepys.-London Spectator.
For information and particulars call at our office HAMMOND REALTY COMPANY Hammond Building or our Agents
GOSTLIN, MEYN & COMPANY 92 State Street
ANCIENT BELLS.
The
the
One You Should Buy and
Test You Should Try. The most common flaw is the temper of the hook. Some hooks are brittle and break easily. There are other hooks still that bend, and bend so easithat they "straighten" on every big fish, and yet other hooks that bend, but bend so hard that a big fish never flexes them, and they only straighten and come away when the full tension of the line is laid upon them if caught on a tough snag or tree bough. These last are the hooks to buy-if you can find them-and the hard breaking hooks classifies next in merit. Tests by
the eye are quite useless, as so many lead can
hooks carry exactly the same tints in ease. If
blue or black. Test the hook instead by the hand, catching the point in a firm bit of wood and trying it out both by the hard, firm pull and by the jerk. Watch particularly in this trial for weakness at the foot of the barb, where the wire is apt to be attenuated overand the whole point give way on a strong fish, especially if hooked in bone or very hard gristle. What vasty depths of angling profanity, in spirit if not in word, have been stirred in boat and on bank when the pointless hook comes away from the hard played fish must be left to memory.-Outing Magazine.
Well Known to the Egyptians Before the Jewish Exodus. Bells were well known to the Egypbefore the time of the Jewish exIn the description of Aaron's sacerdotal robe mention is made of the fact that upon the hem of the garment
there were bells of gold alternating with pomegranates of blue, of purple and of scarlet: "A golden bell and a pomegranate, a golden bell and a pomeupon the hem of the robe round about. And it shall be upon Aaron to minister, and his sound shall be heard when he goeth into the holy place before the Lord and when he cometh out, that he die not." Hand bells were in common use all over the ancient world. The earliest use of bells in churches was for the purpose of frightening away the evil spirits which were believed to infest earth and air, and the earliest curfew was rung at nightfall to rid the neigh
borhood of the village or town and church of demons. Most old churches of Europe have a small door on the north side, and at certain points in the service this door was opened and a bell was rung to give notice to the dev
il, if he chanced to be present, that he might make his exit before the elevaBy the command of Pope John IX, church bells were rung as a protecagainst thunder and lightning. The monument of Porena, the Etruking, was decorated with pinnaeach surmounted with a bell, which tinkled in the breeze. The army of Clothaire raided the siege of Sens on account of a panic occasioned among the men by a sudden chime from the bells of St. Stephen's church.
For Ice Cream and Cold Drinks . MORELLI & CO. IS THE
HEADQUARTERS
Ice cream for partys and picnics at moderate prices. Bricks a specialty Phone 2031. 258 So. Hohman
F. B. VIRDEN, Pres
Chicago
W. S. PIERCE, Prin.
usiness College
HAMMOND Thorough courses In Shorthand, Touch Typewriting, Bookkeepand English. Special attention given to Advanced Stenography. Uniform rates of tuition. Methods open tor investigation at all times. For particulars address CHICAGO BUSINESS COLLEGE,
HOHMAN BLOCK, HAMMOND, IND
Phone 2622
Don't
Fail to see the handsome perfect fitting stylish suits for summer wear at astolow prices. $10.00 up
Gostlin ,
Mey
Co.
Don't
Neglect buying a straw hat while we're showing the very latest in split or rough braids. $1.00 up
Metals. Mercury, of course, is fluid at all ortemperatures. Of the metals which we commonly regard as solid,
be made to flow with great by hydraulic pressure it is
forced into a cylinder with a hole in the side of it it will, when the cylinder is full, flow out of the hole in a solid, barlike stream. The harder metals, as gold and silver, obviously undergo slight fluxion movements in the process of coining, as iron is not perfectly rigid. In drawing out a bar of it into wire the change of form compels the particles of the metal to slide or shear over each other, lust as in the flow of
a liquid. So great are the pressures that can be applied by modem mechanical science that even steel can be compelled to change its shape without
changes imply
on
fracture, and all such fluxion in the metal.
Forget to see our Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Shoes, everything that's new and correct including correct prices.
THE MODEL
Mens and Boys Outfitters.
"Real Estate in all Its Branches" Spring has como. The coal trust is on the bum. The prospects for Hammond were never so bright Now is the time to buy yourself a home. We have houses and lots to suit the taste and purse of anyone Come now before the prices begin to climb. They are low now, but are bound to go up. We have a few bargains left but they will soon be gone. Don't delay. We List here a few of our Bargains New 7 room house with bath; brick foundation, pavement and brick sewer paid for. 50x150 ft lot, Calumet Ave., $2500 6 room house, full 7 ft basement, cement floor, bath, hot and cold water, gas for light and 50 ft lot, cement sidewalk, fine lawn, Summer street, $2100.00 25 ft lot on State street across from Carter's livery barn, at a very reasonable figure, $2,300. 9 room house, 50 ft lot, Murray street, $1400 4 room cottage, 50 ft lot, paved street, E. Sibley, $1100 6 room cottage, brick foundation, 37 1/2 ft lot, LaSalle St., $1,000 42 ft lot on State and State Line streets at a bargain. Fine two flat building 50 ft lot on Ogden street, $3600. New 8 room house on Manilla avenue, $2400 Michigan avenue, 8 rooms, $2100 4 room cottage, brick foundation, $700 5 room cottage, Chicago avenue, $1000, easy payments 9 room house, 50 ft lot, Sheffield Avenue, $2500.00 8 room house, 50 ft lot, Sheffield Avenue. $2000.00 4 room cottage, Oak street, north of Hoffman, 25 ft lot on easy
payments, $750.00 7 room cottage on Truman near Oakley, 35 ft lot, $1400.00.
The above are but a few of the bargains we offer, if you wish look into anything in the real estate line, not listed above, call on or write us. We can suit you.
Gostlin, Meyn & Co., "Real Estat
Hammond, Ind
