Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 41, Hammond, Lake County, 4 August 1906 — Page 5

Sntmdav, August 4, 190G.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE FIVE

JOS. W. WEIS, R. Ph.

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98 State Street. Phone No. 1.

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YOU

Will Miss It!

If you try to g- long

m

LiiProPer kind f

Always Dear iu hjiuu that the beat is the cheapest in the end. We eell the beit coa that money can fcay,

bnt we charge no more for it than yoa will hate to pay for an iuftrsor article BecKman, liictt CD, Co. COAL. - FEED. - BUILDIND MATERIAL TELEPHONE 40. ' " 34C INDIANA AVE.

Vi V?? VS-

t' :& m i Ml

as

CITIZEflS

BANK

GERMAN NATIONAL

HAMMOND IN'D. Capita $100,000.

account is not too large. "Neither is it

Your Bank too small for the

CITIZEHS GZnr.iru ESATIOHAL BAHK to handle. We solicit the same on the most liberal terms consistent wit.i good Banking. 3 per cent interest paid on time certificates of deposits. , Same issued from $1.00 up. Drafts to allparts of the World sold.

O O SMITH Pres GFO M EDER Cashier

W D WEIS M D Vice Pros 12 S EMERINE Asa't Oa.hier

DIRECTORS

CHAS SMITH C H 'FRIEDRICH J C BECKER

WM D WEIS HERMAN SCHREIBER H M PLASTER

G. W. HUNTER

ge

iomooue xzara

Best Eqipped Repair Shop in the State. Compressed Air FREE. Bowser Gasoline System

Phone 122 91 S. HOHM AN STREET

Huehn Block. HAMOMND. IND.

You

til! Like the lay we Loan Money

t

3

On Furniture, Pianos, Horses, Wagons, Etc., without moving them from your possession. There is no publicity whatever. Wc do not inquire of your friends or neighbors. Our rates are the lowest And rebate is given if paid before time contracted. You repay in small weekly or monthly payments. Come in and learn how cheaply you can get the use of $10 to $1,000 for one month to one year. If you can not call write 01 phone and we will send our representative to see you. CHICAGO DISCOUNT CO. 9138-40 Commercial Ave., South Chicago. Telephone South Chicago 104.

Room 203 Fink Bldg. Open evenings until 9 p. m.

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PHO.VE & First class litery In connection, Night c&Ua promptly atteniad.

LADY ASSISTANT W PriTate ambulance O

Office open night Q

and day

NICHOLAS EMM El R LING cecettor tti Kret & LmcaerUn UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRACTICAL EMBALMER. 2 Sibley Street, Hammond, Ind.

O o o o o o

THE ETERNAL FEMININE. My Dear Martha The gayety at the Pier and Newport seems to increase with midsummer and the frocks are as beautiful as August stars. At Narragansett some of the scenes have been as entrancing as meteoric displays for gloriously gowned, bejewelled women flit hither and thither as the Casino where even for the noon luncheon the dressing has been sufficiently elaborate to cause any novice to wonder what fairy garden was scheduled for the afternoon. And just when you decide that . the limit of magnificence has been reached, evening falls and we have bewitching femininity swathed" in diaphanous - materials which glitter and cling and entrance. Narragansett is arr- American edition of Trouville in France. Trouville, where fashion find3 its supremest expression. While the princess and empire are to be constantly met with, Dame Fashion has graciously accorded us the privi

lege of being thoroughly individual in our style as long as we conform to the prevailing lines and our modes may be made to especially display our good points and express our individuality. The advance guard of fashion ordains that the spreading skirt, with the bell-like effect at the bottom, are passe. The materials are all supple, and full enough heaven knows, falling in ample folds but without a hint of stiffening for the Jinings are of a firm but very soft silk. The petticoats worn are equally soft and while they finish with the same fiuffiness as of old, it is a fiuffiness without stiffening. If this fad prevails it will necessitate a wholesale training down and reduction of hips, for imagine a princess or semi-empire . bulging at the hips and clinging at the feet, effective outside of a cartoon ! Wraps and coats are wonderful this year and have had many a good airing, for the damp hot weather has made it impossible to wear thin summer frocks without an

L . additional warm . garment,

I am not exaggerating when I tell you that the women are running mad on separate coats; every other dress is of white and with these are worn the most fetching little coats in colors. Lettuce green, lavendar blues and the off tones of pink are in great favor with embroidery in the selftone. In consideration of sea dampness there is a goodly display of white serge and voiles which do not wilt and drabble like muslins. The silk voiles make up beautifully and nearly all have transparent yokes and collars of exquisite bits of lace, probably more costly than the entire gown, and as long as they har- . monizo, this lace need not match the other trimming. Coral and rose tones of pink are extensively used for linings and slips, especially under those thin black and white striped gauzes so much in vogue this season. The exquisitely gowned women shine so charmingly and appealingly. these brilliant nights, that the intoxicating music, shaded lights and creeping sea breezes make us long to forget that winter must ever incarcerate us and kill the dreaminess only begotten -by August indolenee and August moons.

CHURCH SERIES

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH.

JSeSfptlan Onion Egypt has been recanted by soma people as the land of pyramids and mummies only, but it has from time

IIU YI.IU to the EarL There is a well known English bishop who writes a very bad hand. This bad hand caused a sad error to happen

ship With Christ." The Lord's supper will be administered. In the evening the sermon subject will be "Self-Building."

. Gntt "r.arrclii. To brown gun barrels wet a pifce of rasr with chloride of ant'.mouy. din it

into olive oil ami rub the barrel over, i immemorial had a reputation for SOme Tears aco. A vcunsr clercvrjan

In forty-eight hours it will be covered onious. Ancient E-ryptiaus swore by f jjad written to the bishop to inquire with a fine coat of nist. Thou rub the the onion and regarded the plant as 1 about a vacant curacy.- and the reply barrel with a fine steel scratch brush 1 sacred. The Inscription on the r.vra- j that the young man got Informed him. and wipe with a rag dipped In boiled j mid of Cheops tells us that the work- j that the salary was small and the work linseed oil. To rebrown remove the old i nieu had onions plveu to them, and . difficult. But there was one miticating

The incumbent, among

remove the grease with caustic potash. brews, when slaves under Pharaoh, his other duties, would visit the earl

I enjoyed these bulbs, and that when far every morning and spend two hours

Rev. W. H. Jones, pastor, 11 S Russell street.

In the morning the pastor will i coating with oil and emery paper, then ; from the Bible we learn that the lie- j circumstance

preach on the theme "Our Fellow-

FIRST M. E. CHURCH.

J.

Xo. 115 Russell street. Lewis S. Smith, pastor. Residence, 134 Ogden street. 'Phone 2773.

9:50 a. m Sunday school. Wesley Reed, Superintendent. 11:00 a. m., and 7:30 p. ra

j Pleaching by the pastor. . i

Special music by the choir. 6:30 p. m. Epworth League. A cordial invitation to all. Omcia! board inet4s Monday 8:00 p. in.

at

'

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

Services tonight at 7:45; tomorrow

at 11:00 a. m. and 8:00 p. m.

Preaching by evangelist.

N. E. Sinninger.

Sitting en Chtr. Des sitting en chairs tend to make people stiff and awkward? Orientals can sit on their heels however fat and elderly they may be, while many English people after middle ase can rarely rise from their chairs without assistance. London Graphic.

Xof For tv. "That man is an Inveterate gossip, and he has a perfect genius for smelling out squally times In families." "Then his Is something of a storm scenter." Baltimore American.

away they remembered "the leek and j there. The curate would have rejected

the onions and the g-irlie." The Egyp- j j,0?t bUf for the dully visit to the tiou onion ; a handsome and usefui i earl. That attracted him. There would, vegetable, and by selecting the best j doubt, he told himself, be many strains of seed the quality tends, year j fashionable dinners to which he would by year, to improve. The Egyptian ; naturally be Invited, lie would mako

knows two varieties, the "l.aah and . many friends among the rich and the "Miskaoui," but supplies of the lat , powerful These friends would be able ter kind are seldom sent abroad, a, j to help him In bis career. The earl, they absorb so much moisture from the f perhaps, had daughters. One of them frequently irrigated ground in which who knows? stranger things had they are prown that they do not stand happened. And so the curate accepted

j a sea voyase widl. The

ill" Ol

It is easy to be brgve when you know the enemy has only blank cartridges.

Is the more popular Egyptian onion and is grown in yellow soil, which is sparingly watered while the bulbs are maturing. In order that the onions may stand a lengthy sea voyage with little risk of sprouting.

Subscribe for the Lake County Times.

the dit'dcult and poorly paid curacy to discover on his first visit to the town that he had misread the bishop's letter and that his daily two hours' visit wa$ not to the earl, but to the jail.

Times' Want Ads. Bring Results

A Golden Opportunity

WOODEN CHECKS.

.Yours,

A. f

Tallies TVer t'aed In Eaglnnd t'nttl

the Year 1S34. Wooden checks are the sort of thing

one would expect to find used in China

or Tibet, but, as a matter of fact, they

were used In England from the earliest

times down to as late as 1834.

Tallies, as thej' were called, were

made out of a curved piece of hazel,

notches being cut along the edges to stand for a certain sum of money. The tally was then sawed half through

below the lowest notch and the notch

ed part split into two pieces, on both

of which the notches appeared.

These pieces served as check and

counterfoil, the latter being always the larger piece with the unnotched end

as a kind of handle. The smaller piece was then taken by the payee, the larger

sent to the person on whom the check

was drawn, generally a collector of customs or other revenues, public or private. He would honor the check on finding that the two pieces fitted and had the amount credited to him by the

drawer on returning them together; to

him. Thus were the great danger and

expense of transporting large sums of

coin avoided.

Forgery of a tally was obviously Impossible unless a new counterfoil could be substituted, and If stolen in the or

dinary way it would be of little use to the thief, for, unlike our checks, there was nothing to show on whom It was

drawn.

There are still a good many tallies In

existence, but the majority were burned in the great lire which destroyed the old houses of parliament. The remain

der are chiefly to be found in the pub

lic record office and no doubt also in

the muniment rooms of great land

owners.

Much Kxaspreratcd.

"Tell me," said the Inquisitive for

eigner, "do American girls affect men's

clothes?"

"No," replied the gallant native, "not

to any extent." "Well, -well, Is that really true?"

"Well, of course, a little rouge, may stick to the shoulder of a fellow's coat ' occasionally, but then it's easily brushed

off. Philadelphia Press.

THEATRICAL NOTES.

Immense throngs of people were the rule at White City the past week.

and the 11th week of the summer re

sort opened Sunday under the aus

pices of good weather. An innovation in bands furnishes the music at the park this week, for the "Kilties,"

Canada's greatest band, which, in ad

dition to its instrumental music given in highlander costume, has a

choir of twenty voices which sing all the Scotch melodies, both old and new, and the Clan Johnstone which gives all the reels, sword dances, and

CmitAr s, ,.;!.-. ni,ri off tut; iciputuuiwu uuuiues lur

. ...... . . . . - -. ' ' i

Bntte. Mont., Aug. 4. A dispatch which the Scottish clans are famous.

from Great Falls states that at a meet-! On the circus ring where the free

ing of the Mill and Smeltersmen's un- hippodrome is given, the great Nel-

lon the strike which had shut down i0.n family are the primary attrac-

UJV IHiMUU XiUU .UUUlUUa fimrUiUIC tinn J Tho f.nnc;?Atn rf ih norl

JANE,

smelters and the mines of the company in Butte, was declared off pending an investigation into the cases of five smeltermen who were discharged by the company and whose reinstatement is demanded by the union.

Nelson and Gans to 3Ieet. Gold field, Nev.. Aug. 4. "Battling'' Nelson, through his manager, has expressed a willingness to meet Joe

o

p r .3 r-? f r- r rrs v "s v .

'J W w J W

are all doing a land-office business

and prove irresistible attractions to

the public.

On Tuesday, August. 17th.. the Chicago Tribune in conjunction, with the park management will give a day

for the benefit of the Tribune ice and hospital fund, and it is expect-

i ed that with anything like good

Cans in a finish fisrkt for $-Wm here ! w earner irom v,uuu to iuu.uuu peo-

on Labor day. The money, now on Fh? will pack the park on that day.

deposit at a local bank, will be posted ! A special feature will be the pub-

lu an Francisco, jlication of a minature copy of the

1 xriDune, wnicn win oe soia as souvenirs oa the grounds, the proceeds

Root's Speech Doesn't Please. Montevideo, Uruguay, Aug. 4. Stu

deuts have .actively endeavored to pro- j

voke the animosity of against Secretary Root.

iu lu iiic iuuu, uuu mis vuy ui

: x nr. i 1 . t , , v. in . .

the people. irilRllie w,u ue nuea entirely Seme papers ! with news of White City, written by

A chance for everyone to own a Home

The Hammond Realty Company will help yon

WE are potting on the market seventy-five choice resident lots 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.

For information and particulars call at our office

HAPlilOND REALTY COriPANY Hammond Building or our Agents

GOSTLIN, HEYN & COMPANY 92 State Street

Men's and Boys

Suits, Trousers,

Underwear, Negligee Shirts, Shoes Etc. 1

Gostlin

leyn

" Real Estate in all Its Branches." Now is the time to buy yourself a home. We have houses and lota 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.

Wq List hero a forj of our Bargai

comment unfavorably oa his late dis- the best talent among the Tribune's

.4 course. j staff of writers

INQlANA.

US

New 7 room house with bath; briclc foundation, paveraent and trick sewer paid for. 50x150 ft. lot, Calumet ave., $2,500. 25 foot lot on State street across from Carter's livery barn, et a rery reasonable figure, $2,300. 9 room house- 50 foot lot, Hurray street, $1,400. 4 room cottage, 50 foot lot, paved street, E. Sibley street, $1,100. 6 room cottage brick foundation, 37y2 foot lot, LaSalle street, $1,003. 42 foot lot on State and State Line streets at a bargain. Fine two fiat building, 50 foot lot on Ogden street, $3,600. Michigan avenue 8 rooms, $2,100. 5 room cottage, Chicago avenue, $1,000, easy payments. j 9 room house, 50 foot let, Sheffield avenue $2,500. 8 room house, 50 foot lot, Sheffield avenue, $2,000. 4 room cottage, Oak street, north of HoSman, 25 foot lct oa easy pay nents, $750. 5 room cottages on Brunswick street for sale on monthly payment plan. For Sale Five room cottages with pantry and bath on Murray street, for sale on easy payments. We are building 6 modem brick houses which will be sold on payment plan in Oak Eidge addition on State, Plummer and Sibley" streets. We have also for sale a fine business corner on West State street at a bargain. The above are but a few of the bargains we offer.. .If you wish to look into anything in the real estateline not listed abote, call on us or write us. We can suit youGostlio, Mcyo & Co "Ocal Estate ia all itsBriccfaes .',