Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 47, Hammond, Lake County, 11 August 1906 — Page 4

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THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES SATURDAY, AUGUST, 11, 190G.

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THE LAKE COUNTY. TIMES

AX EVENING' NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKH COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY. Terms of Subscription: Yearly 13.00 Half Yearly 11.30 Single Copie.-s 1 cent"EnUred us second-class matter June 28, 1900, at the postoffiee at Hammond, Indiana, under the Act of Coagre.-a. .March 3. 1 579. " Offices in Hammond building. Hammond, Ind. Telephone 111. SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1906. Statement of Circulation of Lake County Times July 16 to August 1, 1906. July 16, 1906...... 2310 July 17, 1906 2484 July 18, 1906 3271 July 19, 1906 2671 , July 20, 1906 2691 July 21, 1906, 2767 July 22, 1906 Sunday July 23, 1906 2850. July 24, 1906 3103 July 25, 1906 3296 July 26, 1908 3267 July 27, 1906 3462 July 28, 1906 3531 July 29, 1906... Sunday. July 30, 1906 3612 July 31, 1906.... L. 3578 42,903, Samples, Waste.2936 Net Circulation . . 39,967 EUGENE F. M'GOVERN, Circulation Manager. Circulation books always open to public inspection. WE BEG to call the attention of advertisers to the above circulation statement of the Times, a sworn copy of which is at our office. " We welcome inspection of our books and records by advertisers. Four times as many people read the Lake County Times as any other daily paper in Lake county. Advertisers should know what they are paying for. Demand to see a WITH THE EDITORS. Mr. Bryan may never be president; will never be. unless the American people have become too simple to see him as he is; but in employing circus and campmeeting methods as a candidate for the highest office in their gift he has never had his equal. A man who has no claim to constructive statesmanship, whose information on any economic subject is superficial and whose administrative abilities his partial friends seriously doubt; Mr. Bryan's unending candidacy for that office is not flattering to the democratic party. Mr. Bryan must have a rather small opinion of the party himself, if he has a natural sense of humor. To be indispensable when one is a makebelieve statesman is like an indictment of the party of Thomas Jefferson for lack of wit and gumption. The American people, however, have taken Mr. Bryan's measure twice, and their second verdict of insufficiency was more emphatic than their first. The fact that he courts a third verdict is not flattering to his intelligence. New York Sun. One deplorable feature of our advancement along scientific lines is the tendency to misuse modern inventions and appliances. For ex ample, the moving picture machine might be employed to record acurately, for the enlightenment of suc ceeding generations, the great events of current history, but the tendency seems rather to secure and present that which will merely amuse or else present only the exaggerated and unnatural side of life. The result of this misuse of the mov ing picture machine cropped out at Evansville yesterday when a 10-year-old boy was arrested for burglary He confessed that he had been start ed on a criminal career by seeing jmoving pictures and that one a view showing how train robbers work had resolved him to follow their example. Fort Wayne News. Between Trains Gov. Hanly's muck rakers have found discrepancies of $15,000 against a former auditor, now dead. Why doesn't our dear governor go after sorv of the live ones around here. Is he waiting for a tip? The republicans of south Carolina held a convention the other day and decided not to nominate a state ticket. Evidently they find more profit in other kinds of exercise.

When it comes to a show down, the peekaboo stocking also has its supporters. Washington Post. Well, maybe; but in this matter you'll find that lots of people are from Missouri. Indianapolis News.

A report from Washington says that small coins are yetting scarce. (The report ha3 been vtrined In Hani- ! mond. The state board of health has outlawed kissing in Indiaua. Another bunch that is ready tu join the perpetual motion club. "A number of people went to see the Ilerman-Yanger fight last nis-ht." - I n d i a napol is cor res po n J e n c e . CHURCH SERVICES First Congregational church. Gostlin street; N. E. Sinninger pastor. 9:30 Mission Sunday school at Pine street union mission. 11 a. m. H?rmon at church; sub ject, "Santification and Common hense. 2:30 p. m. Sunday school. 7:00 p. in., Y. P. S. C. E. 8:00 p. m.. Gospel service; ser mon subject, "A Runaway Boy and His Home-coming." A warm Christian welcome to all. ST. PUAL LUTHERAN CHURCH. Theodore Klaus, pastor. Services at 10 a. m. No preaching service in the evening. Will preach at Lansing in the afternoon. FIRST M. E. CHURCH. Rev. L. S. Smith, pastor. No preaching services either morning or evening. Sunday school as usual. No Epworth league services. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Rev. W. H. Jones pastor, 118 Rus sell street, 'phone 27S3. In the morning the pastor will preach on the theme "The Elder Brother." The evening subject will be "Why 'a Fool?' " RAILR0ADN0TES The turn matters have taken may end excursions after this season, as the presidents of various railroads have taken the low excursion rate in hand. This is believed to be an outgrowth of the action of the Erie in fighting low excursion rates. It is now said that this broad scope of the rate war will make plain to the heads of the road the necessity of an agreement on a much higher basis of fares for excursions. The trouble originated in Cleveland. Superintendent Sullivan of this di vision of the Wabash, has issued his July bulletin of merit and demerit marks. Eight engineers, two fire men, six conductors, three brakemen, three switchmen, one clerk and seven operators received a "total of 345 de merit marks. One brakeman was discharged because he refused to go out on his run when called, and one operator was dismissed for failing to deliver a train order. Fifteen employes received five merit marks each for good service, etc., and a number of others received marks for clear records for a period of six months. The Pennsylvania has adopted a new first aid packet which will be placed on all trains, both passenger and freight, in all signal towers, block stations and in all the shops and depots. Heretofore there has been no standard size, but several different kinds, at different points over the system and a? a result the trainmen and others who had occasion to use them, often found that the packet that happened to be on their train or in the block station near which an accident had happened was unfamiliar to them and' they were hampered in their work of giving aid to the injured. With the adoption of a standard form, this difficulty will be eliminated and whenever a trainman happens to be on the systom he will be perfectly familiar with the first aid packet, in case he should have use for it. The new packet is a small wooden case about twelve inches high and nine inches square at the base, it contains three compartments. In the lower one is a small wash basin, in the second is a set of surgical instruments and in the third are medicines. The instruments and the medicines are in tin cases and sealed air tight in order that they may be in ; condition of immediate use without beinsr sterilized. Three or four clerks from the cen- ! r jsus Bureau at Washington will leave I for Indinapolis the latter part of this week to compile the divcrec statistics ! for Marion county for the last twenty years. From Indianapolis they will go go to Evansville, Terre Haute, Fort Wayne and South Bend, and later the work will be extended to the less populous counties. It is hoped to complete the work in Indiiana in two or thee months.

Lowell News: Oren Thompson and son Clifford are on a prospecting trip down in Arkansas.

Albert Webb and family will soon become residents of Hammond we understand. A sister from abroad is visiting her brother, Wm. Tanner and family. Mrs. Thomas Arnott is enjoying a visit with out-cf-town friends. David Lee is enjoying an outing at Water Valley down on the Kankakee river. Mrs. William Kenney and Miss Lizzie Bain received a telegram from New York Friday announcing the .sad news that their brother John Baia wa dead. Mr. Baia was a traveling salesman. The Lowell Tribune people have installed a. 2 Vs horse-power electric sparker gasoline engine in their printing establishment, and their first test on it was a special edition of 1,500. It worked like a charm. George Kennedy has returned from Brazil, Ind., where he went a few days ago to the bedside of his little grand-son Kenneth Brownell who is very sick. He says he left the little fellow a little better but not entirely out of danger. Blackberries and blackberry pickers are the thickest in this neck of the woods they have been in many a season. It is a common thing to see the pickers pass by each with fifty or sixty quarts for one days' work, and one aged lady, Mrs. Edward Hayden, picked seventy-one. A great many search for patches that have not been invaded and when fortunate resort to all sorts of schemes to establish a monopoly, but the latest is the scheme worked by Kelly Nichols. Everybody knows Kelly. He found a patch that had never been touched, and picked and feasted, and feasted and picked for several days without being discovered. But alas! A woman appears "In the case," then another, and another. "Aint this just lovely," says one. "Perfectly Listen! ! I believe the whole menagerie has turned loose and is coming this way" says a third. "What terrible noise Is that," says all in concert. Kelly had hid himself and was doing his best to imitate the roaring of all the wild beasts he had ever heard of. The ladies concluded it was time to hike and find new patches and Kelly thought "this is the place to laugh" and is still feasting and picking in his unfound patch, and all the women are keeping very shy about it. St John News. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Scherer will occupy the house he lived in. William Keilman will have a windmill erected on his place. The C. O. F. Court No. 99 will hold a regular meeting at the C. O. F. hall Saturday at 8:30 p. m. All members cordially invited to attend. John Miler has . been to Chicago seeing different firms about plate and art glass which he intends to put in his new building, the first one in town to haves itch glass. According to the loks of it now the corner will be one of the nicest in town. Scott Lavoy, the butter maker for the former St. John Creamery com pany, has moved to Wadsworth, 111.with his family, where he has been offered a position by the same company that he worked for seven years a so. The Young Ladies Sodality will have their first meeting Sunday at : 8:30 a. m. It is to be the first meet ; ing for a new year and new officers j will be elected. AH the young lad- ; ies not belonging to the sodality ; are expected to become members now. The Hoffman school, about two miles northeast of St. John, is be ing repaired. The roof will be shing- : led and a new floor has been put in, while last summer the school ; like many others in the township was supplied with the necessary apparatus and the interior of the whole building looks very much different ! now from a few years ago. It has ; had so far the largest enrollment iuf pupils of the district schools in the township and it is also the oldi est building. Th? Italians working in the yards on the C. I. & S. railroad, about one mile north of town, went on a strike for higher wages Thursday, their pay being $1.50 per day. The company offered them $1.65 but they refused to w-ork under $1.75, which they finally secured. The Italians started to work again the next day.

THE ETERNAL FEMININE.

My Dear Martha: By steam launch and automobile, visitors continue to arrive at the Pier and crowd the Casino for the weather has been criminally hot and cruelly damp. The day's routine here seems to call for an endles. change of dress, and at no other season can we so fully appreciate the long hours of thought and energy expended at fashionable modistes'. A? for the morning gown, the popularity of the linens is on the constant increase, especially the colored ones, and little wonder they are stamped with fashion's approval, for aside from the exquisite coloring, even the cheaper qualities do not fade from nearly an equal division in the demand for the smart severely tailored, and those with quantities of lace o: raised embroidery. If you adopt a moderate course, a wide band of embroidery above the hem, with narrower bands following the coat lines and on the sleeves, makes a charmin;finish. The two most effective and graceful designs in embroidery, quite in vogue, are of daisies and wheat and they combine well in either light or heavy embroidery. And Oh, the chocs are just delicious! For, enc sees such perfectly matched hose, pumps and linen that one wondert why long ago our women were net so attractively shod. The rain, fog and gloomy weather have played havoc with the summer chances for display, and many a woman is bemoaning the dainty muslins and organdies she has had so little chance to air before the admiring and crit ical eye alike. There have been many indoor fetes where fashion ran riot and color schemes were suggestive of plumage, flowers and crushed fruits. One dress, lingering in my mind's eye at the Venetian fete had a skirt of white chiffon cloth closely plaited around the hips and hanging in limp folds with a very wide hem and two four-inch tucks at the bot tom. The Directoire coat was of delicate mauve moire antique, with fine cameo buttons and bits of real lace. The crin hat had a short front and the back under-brim had mauve plumes brought well towards the front; shoes and stockings matched. Hints from Paris as to trimmings are of great value to women having their gowns made at home. One model has inverted box-plaits to give the fullness, and for trimming, large rings are cut out of the material with hollow centers so that each one of two slipped thrpugh the other and were heavily embroidered with silk soutache. Another Parisan idea is the lavish use of inch wide velvet ribbon to match the material. A fetching little black taffeta coat is embroidered around the border with narrow black velvet ribbon in ring designs and has a waistcoat effect of white moire embroidered with polkadots in heavy black silk. This can be removed or adjusted according to atmospheric demands by buttoning it to the lining back as far as the arm hole. Fringe of varying widths, is striving for a plate on ultra smart creations, but so far I have only seen it in favor for entire black or white gowns. I must say that everything seems In tune here with the weather. The winds blow strong enough to sweep away all ideas raw damp winds which force the decision that it may all be God's weather but this isn't His best! Always, JANE. NOTICE TO BIDDERS. Hammond, Ind., July 28, 1906. Sealed proposals will be received at the office of F. Richard Schaaf, Jr. Township Trustee of North township, in the Superior Court building at Hamond, Ind., until 12 noon sharp, Aug. IS, 1906, for the erection and completion of a four room school, building to be erected near Saxony, Lake county, Ind. Certified check $1,000 payable to F. Richard Schaaf Jr. Trustee. Bonds full amount of contract. Plans, etc. can be seen at the office of architect J. T. Hutton, 306 Hammond building, Hammond, Ind. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. F. RICHARD SCHAAF, JR. Trustee North Township. 7,2S,tf. Thre is more catarrh in this swtion of the cntitTy than 'l other disease? put tog-ether and nnti the lost few tphts was supposrT 10 te incnraHe. For a creat nianr Tears doctor pronounced it a local disease and rrecribed local remelies. and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Caturrh Cure, manufactured I y F. !. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on tie market. It is taken intemaHy in dfw froni ten drops to a teaspoonfu!. It acts directly on the blood andmaco;s surfaces of the system. Tbey offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Sold by OruFrists. Tfc. Take Hali's Family Pills for constipation. Palace of Sweets CANDIES AND ICE CREAM Times subscribers not receiving their papers properly will confer a favor on us by ealling Telephone 111 and telling us.

NON-RESIDENT NOTICE.

THE STATE OF INDIANA, LAKE COUNTY. In the Lake Superior Court. October Term, 1906. Cause No. 3,256. Action to Enforce lien on Real Estate. East Chicago Company vs. Charles A. Friedrich, et al. Now comes John L. Rodgers, trustee by Knoits and Borabergtr, hi3 attorneys and files an affidavit of a competent person, showing that the defendants, Charles A. Friedrich and Nellie E. Friedrich, his wife, are not residents of the State of Indiana. Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action and that the same will stand for trial at th? next term of said Court, and that unless they appear and answer or demur therein, at the calling of said cause, on the 9th day of October, A. D. 1906, the same being the 2nd day of the next term of said Court to be begun and held in the Court House at Hammond, in said County and State bn the 2nd Monday October, A. D. 1906, said action will be heard and determined in their absence. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said Court, at Hammond, this 12th day of July A. D. 1906. HAROLD H. WHEELER. Clerk L. S. C. Times' Want Ads. Bring Results ANC At Long's Hall. Thursday evening, Aug'. 9. Come and enjoy yourself. Admission 50c per couple. Unaccompanied ladies, 25c POST BROS , Alanagers. For Ice Cream and Cold Drinks 11. MORELLI & CO. IS THE HEADQUARTERS Ice cream for partys and picnics at moderate prices. Bricks a specialty Phone 2031. 258 So. Hohman r-fY f Model 14

THE GAR THAT IS RIGHT IN DESIGN, MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP The highest possible grade of material, handled according to the design of skilled and experienced engineers, by expert mechanics in the largest and most thoroughly equipped automobile factory in the world. There is no part based on guess work or on what the other fellow does, and the costly experimental work is done in the factory and not by the purchaser. It is RIGHT in the beginning, RIGHT when delivered and stays RIGHT all the time. These are the features of primary importance the facilities of our enormous factory enable us to give you THE RIGHT CAR AT THE RIGHT PRICE Will be cheerfully shown and demonstrated at our various branches. MAIN OFFICE AND FACTORY, - - KENOSHA, WIS.

Representative for this District THE HORNECKER MOTOR MFG. CO. 14 Indiana Blvd. Whiting, Ind., U. S. A. Me have the best equipped Garage and Repair Shops in this locality. AH work done by skilled mechanics. Also manufacturers of TORPEDO MOTORCYCLES.

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Or LAKE F. L. KNIGHT & SONS Surveyors, Engineers, Draftsmen. Investigation of records and examls- ! ations of property lines carefully 1 made. Maps and , plates furnished.! Crown Point Indiana Since 1SD0. ! See WM. KLEIHSGE FOR PLUMBING. 152 South Iloliman Street. Telephone, CI. HAMMOND REALTY CO. Owners of choice lots In McIIic's Sub-division. Hammond, Eldg. Hammond, Ind. NELSL iH.0SON jw xfcuiuuju sueei, vuicago. Buys and sells acres and lots at GARY and TOLLESTON. The cheapest and best. Probably has bought and sold more than any other REAL ESTATE firm. REFERS TO CHICAGO BANKS. Eyes Tested Free Glasses $1.00 Up. Correct in style to suit your features. Repairing' done afternoon :r.d evening. C. Breman, O. G. Optician 1S8 South Hohman St. Up Stairs. tor; iv.'i , - S1750

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rectory COUNTY U -' DR. WILLIAM D. WEIS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Duetscher Arzt. OKce and residence 115 Hohraan SU Phone (pr,vatp wre) day raid night service. JOHNSON'S STUDIO ; lias two back entrances that all parties can drive to with thei. brid- , J a! parties and flower pieces uatil Slate street is finished. I MASONIC TEMPLE. i WM. J. WHINE RY i j LAWYER. i Telephone 2141 Suite 306 Ilammoul Building, j w. F. ivIASHINO FIRE INSURANCE. Office in First National Bank Bldg. CALUMET HOTEL Otto Matthias. Prop. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Corner Calumet Avenue and Hoffman Street. Phone 2043. Hammond, Ind. MAX NASSAU JEWELER AND OPTICIAN Olcott Ave. East Chicago, Ind. Fine Repairing is Our Success JOHN HUI3ER C. A. RODQLUS Huber & Radgei UNDERTAKING LIVERY AND SALE STABLE NIGHT CAB Office Phone 115 Res. Prions 8121 71-73 STATE STREET HAMMOND, IND. i We have other models ct the following prices: $ 400.CQ 650.00 780.00 950.0U 1200.0d j 1350.00 and up to $3,000

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