Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 91, Hammond, Lake County, 4 October 1906 — Page 5

THURSDAY, OCT. 4, 1D06.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE FIVE

THEATRICAL NOTES. '"Out of tlie t'arknss," ori'i of the prcttieft dramas of English and American lifo of the present day, is announced as thft attraction at the Calumet theatfr, South Chicago, for the week beginning with the matinee, Sunday, October 7. In this play Manager Connors feels that he cou!d not have leeud a play more -to the likaink of his patrons, who now come from all sections of the Calumet region. The play will be Etaged in a costly manner and the strongest cast that ha ben seer, at the- Calumet this year will be used in the presentation of "Out of the Darkness." There are many very interesting scenes In this piece and an abundance of good, wholesome comedy. The playing: ia stirling: and its climaxes are interesting. The vaudeville will be headed by the world's famous black face cornelian, Raymond Teal, who has no superiors and few, if any equals, in his particular line of work. I.tttle Mias Ilayfleld will sing the illustrated songs and the kinodrome will have another of those interesting sets of pictures.

Comedy rules again at the Chicago opera house this week and the dramatic company has scored another whirlwind success in Jerome K. Jerome's merry play, "Miss Hobbs." In the title role Katherine Grey has added yet greater laurels to her crown, and has won the highest praise for a clever and artistic performance. For the week starting Sunday matinee, .Oct. 7, a special production of J. M. Barrie's famous comedy, 'The Little Minister," is announced. The play is toa well known to need detailed outline or advance encomium. Tt is famous wherever the English lang-uasre is spoken as an example of the best in the drama of the closing 3ayS of the somewhat decadent nineteenth century. Katherine Grey will be seen as "Lady Bbbie," the part in which Maude Adams made her firm hold on fame, and William Ilramwell will play the title role. A special scenic production is being built. There will be the usual matinees on Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. For the week commencing Sunday matinee, 'Oct. 14, William Gillette's great dramatic success, "Sherlock Holmes" Is underlined for production at the Chicago opera house with William Bramvvell in the name part of the famoua detective. Walter Cralk Bellows has arrived to direct the stage at the Chicago opera house for a season of special weeks, "The Little Minister" being the first production under his direction. lie is Buffering; from the effects of a bad accident sustained in Denver and is doing heroic work directing rehearsals frum an ambulance on which he is wheeled to and from the theater. Poetry at $1,875 a Line. . The highest price ever paid for poetry was $1,S73 a line, $15,000 for an eight line poem, f , v It was not a good poem either. James Smith, one of the authors of "Rejected Addresses," wrote it. Smith met one night at dinner lu Loudon Strachan, the famous Euglish printer, Strachan, what with old age aud gout, was most Infirm. Indeed, he could hardly walk. Cut his mind was exceedingly powerful and brilliant, and he talked po well that Smith on his return home wrote the following doggerel about the old man: Tour lower limbs seemed far from stout When last I saw you walk; Tho cauw I presently found out When you began to talk. The power that props the body's strength In due proportion spread In you mounts upward, and the strength All settle in the head. Though this was undeniably rank poetry aud ranker flattery, it pleased Printer Strachan so well that he added to his will a codicil giving smith $15,000. Breaking the iws, "Alaska is a laud of adventure and romance," said a gold miner. "Many queer things have happened In Alaska," he continued, smiling "many wretched things. Sometimes it has beeu necessary to break sad news to mothers at home, and sometimes this news has been broken with wonderful skill. "An Alaskan called on a woman in Kew Hampshire to tell her of her son's death in the Klondike. " 'Yes, lady," he said to the weeping mother, "I was with him to the end. I seen him die. And I tell ye, ma'am, as he wuz dyln he looked jest like an angel. " 'Did he?" the mother sobbed. '"He certainly did, ma'am. said the Klondlker. 'Swingin' back'ords and for'ards In the air thar ye'd 'a' thought he had wings. "Kansas City Journal. For rmbrella Koretters. "Lost umbrellas, forgotten umbrellas," said tho lost and found clerk, "pay my salary. We sell all that are unclaimed, you know, deriving from this odd source $100 a month. Nearly all lost umbrellas are left in trains. There is a thing to do with an umbrelln on entering a train that will assure you of not leaving it. I'll toll you what that thing is. When you sit down in the car place the umbrella on the outBide, between yourself and the aisle. Thus the umbrella is a fence. It bars you In. When you jump up hastily to get olT at your station you fall over it You can't forget it whether you would or not." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Man, the Monstrous Speeter. What a monstrous specter is this man, the disease of the agglutinate! dust, lifting alternate feet or lying drugged with slumber; killing, feedlugf, growing, bringing forth small copies of himself; grown upon with hair l!kd grass, fitted with eyes that move ami glitter In his face; a thing to set children screaming, and yet looked at nearer, known as his fellows know him, how surprising ore his attributes! Q. Js -avouscax

BOLD CRIME AT TEISCO

Thus Hob a Japanese Bank of $V OOO and Kill One Man and Fatally Wound Another. San Francisco, Oct. 4. Armed with revolvers and pieces of gas pipe two robbers entered theJapanese bank Kirnmon Ginko, also known as the Golden Gate bank, at OTarreli street, at noon, and after fatally beating the manager and a clerk, escaped with $5,000 in gold. The robbers chose a time wheuthers were but few persons transacting business in the bank, and the sensational and bold deed was so quickly effected that it was all over before the crovd of people passing the doors of the institution were aware of what b3d taken place. 'There is no clew tc either of the robbers, and the -condition of the remaining one of their victims is such that he will probably die without telling anything. HE FELL ON A CHILD Painter In Falling Possibly Fatally Injures Roth Himself and the Little One. Cincinnati, Oct 4. A peculiar double accident which may result In two deaths occurred here. Albert Berger and Henry Reidlinger, painters, were at work on a scaffold at the fourth floor of a building when the scaffold broke. Berger was thrown to the ground, sustaining a fractured skull, internal injuries and broken arm and leg. Tlis fall was broken very slightly by striking Rosella Nieman, a 4-year-old child, who suffered serious internal Injuries and may die. Reidlinger clung to a rope and was rescued unhurt. Iowa W. O. T. U. Unites. Des Moines. Ia., Oct. 4. By mutual agreement of separater conventions held In this city two branches of the W O. T. U., one known as the W. C. T. U., of Iowa, and the other as the W. C. T. U., of the state of Iowa, were consolidated into one body. They were divided sixteen years ago by a dispute over the question of affiliation or non-aGilia-tiou with the Prohibition party. An article of the constitution, in which union Is reached provides that the organization shall in the future give it indorsement only to men and measures and not to parties. We Win tho Trophy. Creedmoor, L. I., Oct. 4. The silver challenge shield donated by Colonel Sir Howard Vincent, aide-de-camp to King Edward VII of England, will re-, main on this side of the Atlantic for two or perhaps three years. The rifle shooting team of the Seventh regiment. New York National Guard, won the trophy in decisive fashion here from the Queen's Westminster volunteers of London, "whom,. they defeated by a margin of GO points in the whole series at 500, GOO, 800 and 1,000 yards. Adams' Family Scouts Murder. New York, Oct. 4. Members of the family of Albert J. Adams, who was found dead Monday with a bullet wound in the head, declared they were of the belief that not a circumstance warranted any suspicion of murder. Information coming to them showed tnat Adams had given way to depression within the last week, alcnough h had concealed that fact from his family, and his act was due to the unfavorable turn taken by diabetes, witl: wnich he had long been afflicted. Brought Death to Four Men. Pueblo. Colo.. Oct. 4. A "blow-out at blast furnace "E" of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company's works in this city., caused the instant death of two; men, the later death of another, tb fatal inlury of another and serious injuring of n fifth. All five were foreigners.' The explosion is supposed to have been due to gas. Grenadier Captain Assassinated. London, Oct. 4. According to advices received here Captain Dziankowsky, of the Thirteenth Grenadiers, has been assassinated at Moscow. The murderer escaped. HEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE One hundred postmasters of the first class are in session at St. Louis to consider subjects of interest to the mail sen-ice. Sir Thomas Lipton, the British merchant prince and yachtsman, is at Chicago, where fie is being lionized It great shape. Lillian Russell, the airy-fairy,' was robbed at Springfield. O., of a sachel containing $5,000 in money and diamonds. Postmaster General Cortelyou has left Washington for Canton. O.. to attend a mecMnjr of the board of trustees of the McKIuley National Memorial association. Sunday school publication societies have entered a protest against increasing the second-class mail postage. Two men lost their lives by tt burning of the Cummins Wild West show at Geneva, O., both burned past identification. The central conference of the English Evangelical Lutheran synod of tbe northwest is in session at Minneapolis. Eight prisoners broke jail at Newark, O., by knocking down a turnkey and locking him in a cell. At the Philadelphia convention of the Fnitod Irish League $78,000 vrss raised to spend in British politics for Irish home rule. In hi speech at Des Moines Senator Beveridge said that certain taril schedules should be revised at once. The State rind Municipal Ownership party of New York held a convention and nominated, a full state ticketheadM for governor- by Joseph W. Cody, of Stew York city.

LABOR'S BIG SHARE

In the Results o! Last Century's Legislation. Half LAWS FOR WHOLE COUNTRY'S GOOD Have Resulted in Making This Country the Be8t Place for the Wage Earner In All the Vids World Thoee Who Attack the Republican Party's Labor Record Ignorant of the Facts cf History. i The demagogues who are attacking the Republican party on the labor rec-

ord proclaim, by that fact, their Ignor- j celebration because the intrepid lieuance of thia country's history for the I tenant who first flung the American

past half century, says the St. Louis Globe Democrat. One of them says: "Our fight against the Republican party has only just begun, and we are going to carry the war into Speaker Cannon's district. We are going to ask L'ncle Jce what he or the Republican party has done which has helped the workingman in all the years which have passed since he entered congrers." That, will be a rash question. Mr. Cannon entered congress In 1873, at the beginning of Grant's second term. One of the pieces of legislation of that first congress, Republican la both branches, in which Cannon served was the passage of the resumption act which went into operation in Hayes' time, in 1879, wJiich lifted every dollar in the country's currency up to the 100-cent gold level, and which has kept it up to the gold lino ever since. Let that demacratic demagogue try to figure out the billions of dollars of increased purchasing power which the resumption act gave to the wages of tho workingmen of the United States in the twenty-seven y?i-s in which it has been in operation. Other Laws Enacted. In the third of a century in which Speaker Cannon has been in congress the Republican party has adjusted the tariff to the needs of American labor, always keeping the interests of the workingman In mind and always protecting him against the cheap labor of Europe, as represented by the commodities which were shut out at our custom houses in favor of the domestic products. The Republicans did this In the tariff changes which were made In Grant's administration, and I they did it also In the act which Arthur signed in 1883, in the McKinley law which went on the statute book in 1890, in Harrison's days and in the Dingley law, framed soon after McKinley entered office In 1897 and signed by him.. As in the case of tho specie resumption act, the Republicans had to overcome Democratic hostility in passing these laws, and they had to defend them against repeated Democratic attacks. Incidentally, too, the Republicans had to repeal one Democratic tariff the Wilson-Gorman "party perfidy and party dishonor" act. The Republican party by its victories in 1896 and 1900, and by its law of March 14, in the latter year, prevented Democratic leadership from precipitating the country to the silver basis, and thus saved the working people of the country from having their wages cut in two. Protection to Labor. There are only a few of the larger pieces of legislation In the interest of labor which the Republican party has placed on the statute book in the third of a century since Speaker Cannon entered congress. This legislation is an essential part of the record of the Republican party, and has been a large factor in the country's pros perity. Let these foes of the Republican party try to estimate the tremendous advancements which have resulted to the workingman by the homestead act signed by Lincoln in 1862, which has planted millions cf homes throughout the west, which has created great centers of industry and which thas incited the building of tens of thousands of miles of railway. Let them also try to figure the benefit to the laboring man which will come from the national irrigation act of 1902, shaped by Roosevelt and passed by a Republican congress. Benefits Felt Widely. ; This legislation was for the benefit of all sorts of workers, of all forms cf employment and of all sections. This is how the Republican party legislates. In the Republican party's program of -.J 1 A. XI . t national neucriaeui tuere are no lines ui rcuuu ui uuuuu. me Republican party legislates for the entire American people. Moreover, the American people will applaud this action on November 6, 1906, by giving the Republican party a new commission to continue its good work. The American Business Man. No business interest need fear the application to itself of this principle of government regulation unless that business interest itself compels it The people require their government to prevent abuses only when abuses are persisted in. When a manager of a business that affects all the people, recognizes the interests of all the people and manages It as a trust for the people's welfare, as well as a concern to make money far himself, the people wilt not only never ask government interference, but they will not tolerate government interference. Senator Albert J. Beveridge.

ARE GOING FORWARD

American People In an Era Growth, Not Decadence. cf DEVELOPMENT IS UNSURPASSED Currents Which Course the Veins of the American People Are Essentially as Pure Now as Those Which Fiiled the Veins of Our Ancestors Notable Address by Vice President Fairbanks at Pike's Peak. Indianians generally feel a special interest in the Pike's Peek centennial flag to tho mountain air on that historic height xtm an Indianian, and then because theprincipal address of the occasion was delivered by Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks. In concluding his notable spesch the vice president said: The century which has elapsed since the expedition which wo celebrate has given a tremendous Impulse to the cause of republican government and our Institutions, which were reooie aip viewed witn mucn distrust a century ago, have grown wonderfully in strength and in the confidence of the world. They have successfully withstood assaults made upon them and have increased in strength with each attempt to overthrow them. The perils through which we have passed have intensified the people's love for them and their willingness and purpose to guard and defend them to the utmost We may say without any spirit of vainglory that our institutions can stand against tho world without, and no disintegrating influence within can affect their essential soundness. We hear much said of vice and corruption, much of the subtle enemies of the state and social order, but the great heart of the people is as sound and Incorruptible today as at any hour In all of our matchless history. The conscience of the people has not been seared. Pure materialism has not achieved the mastery. All of the forces which make for the intellectual, the moral nnd the social advancement of the people were never more powerful and never in fuller play than they are today. Honor among men was never more regarded, and dishonorable practices, either, in? public , or private life, were never more abhorred than they are today. There has been upon every hand a demand that those who hold place and power shall be clean men, and that they shall consecrate themselves completely to the utmost advancement of the public welfare. People are Adyancing. The American people are going forward and upward with a tremendous momentum. They are advancing in all of the ways which make for a strong, upright, patriotic people. They respect right and condemn wrong in every relation of life. Those who would contaminate tho state, or would carry into the business world low ideais of business morality can lay no claim to the general respect. The American people are not to be judged by the standards of the exceptional wrongdoer, but by the generous purpose of the great body of our countrymen. The currents which course the veins of the American people are essentially as pure now as those which filled the veins of our ancestors. The past one hundred years have been notable in our history. The story we have written, both in war and peace, challenges the admiration of mankind. ' Our development in every avenue of human endeavor is unsurpassed, and is an invitation for us to go forward in the accomplishment of even greater things. We have won rich trophies both in the ways of peace and in the theater of war. Against the glories of war we set the rich achievements of peace. We know wfvt war is, for we have its indelible imprint everywhere. We have come to believe that advancing civilization must, lead further and fur ther away from war and the possibil itles of armed collision. Peace Is Preferable. It would seem that the entire world is coming to regard war as more and more unnecessary, and it Is earnestly seeking to establish some method wnereby jt may b9 henerably avoided. Aithrmjrh wb ars a militfln people. we prefer the ways of peace and the rich fruits which are gathered from the practice of her generous arts. While by no means shirking any responsibility which a high sense of justice and national honor may put upon us, we nevertheless stand ready to co-operate wiht other powers in the establishment of come agency for the settlement of grave international differences whereby they may be ap propriately confided to an arbitral tri bunal. The nation which hesitates to do sll in its power to advance the cause of international arbitration fails in its supreme dnty to itself and the rest of mankind. In the laconic utterance of one of our greatest generals, "war is hell. Yes, as a rule, It is the expression of the. brutish In man. The settlement of private differences hy force of arm3 is no longer toT-vd. It is repugnant

to the educated conscience of tho civilized world. Crts of Justice are established ever;"-- here to determine then. Most of the disputes between nations could be composed by some method equally honorable and efficacious. An appeal to forco in adjusting them should fall into disuse. The majority cf the differences which may arise may be readily adjusted in tribunals which the nations may create. There are but few controversies which might not, with honor and with confidence, be submitted to their deliberate consideration. Arbitration does not suggest any lack of national virility. It is rather an evidence of improvement in the moral and intellectual fiber of the people. America May Ee Trusted. I belisve that the hour is fast coming when' the statesmanship of the world will be able to devise some instrumentality which will put in tho way of just solution those grave questions which frequently menace international amity and rudely disturb international peace. Toward this consummation, so devoutly to be wished. America may be trusted to make her rich and ample contribution. Fellow-citizens, this will always be the home of a strong people, selfcontained, aggressive and progressive, with sound minds and a high order of patriotism. Here, in the pure air of these mountains, men and women

should be able to look with clear vision upon their institutions. They should be able to realize that the sure foundation of the republic is the homo and that it must be home where religion and intelligence, virtue and lovo abide. Here they should be able to take a large and sane view of the great questions which lie at the foundation of our social and national progress. We stand in a portion of the repub lic rich with possibilities. The next century is large with promise. Here in these valleys and upon these moun tains sides thousands, will come in the years which stretch before us, where there are hundreds now. Churches and schools will be built, universities will be established, libra ries will be fouded, industries will be created and cities will arise. Here will be found a numerous, contented, prosperous population, devoted to the cultivation of all of the fruits of peace and ready and willing, if supreme need should come, to show that they are the heirs of their honored sires by giving the highest proof of a patriot's devotion to flag and kindred. Origin of Crescent Dread. The origin of the Viennese bread shaped like a crescent, which is found in most places on the continent, dates back to the time when the Austrian capital was being besieged by the Turks under tho terrible Grand Vizier Kara Mustapha, and as they failed to take the city by assault they decided to dig a passage under the walls and so penetrate into the town. In the daytirxs the noise of the siege made the sound of the tunneling inaudible, and at nighttime the defenders of the place were asleep, all but the sentries and the bakers. It was the bakers who, as they baked the bread for the garrison, heard the pickaxes of the miners coming nearer and nearer and gave the alarm. In the fighting the Bakers' association took their share with the utmost bravery, and as a reward for their services the emperor gave them permission to make a special cake shaped like the Turkish crescent London Sketch. Once a Jfes-t of Pirates. Lnndy, in the Bristol channel, Is nn Island where one may see an earthquake at any time. There Is nothing alarming about these "earthquakes," however. They are simply certain curious crevasses In the west of the island, which the local people call by that name. Lnndy In former centuries was a notorious nest of pirates. In King Henry III.'s time William de Marisco, a traitor to the king, built a castle there and set up as an early Captain Eldd. And so it went on through the centuries until In the middle of the eighteenth Thomas Benson, a Barnstable merchant who was then lessee of the island, -was convicted cf piracy and smuggling and expelled. He had a contract for carrying convicts to the American colonies and vised quietly to land them on Lnndy and use their labor there. The Nine In the Calendar. The figure 9, which came Into the calendar on Jan. 1, 1SS9, will stay with us 111 years from that date, or until Dec. 31, 1980. No other figure has ever had such a long consecutive run, and the 9 itaelf has only once before been in a race which lasted over a century that in which it continuously figured from Jan. 1, SS9, until Dec. 3L 999, a period of 111 years. The figures 3 and 7 occasionally fall Into odd combinations, but neither of them has ever yet served for a longer period than 100 consecutive years in our calendar since tho present mode of calculating time was established. It U also clear that from their relative positions among the numerals it is an impossibility for either of them to appear in date reckonings continuously for a longer period than a century Business Methods. Great numbers of vast fortunes In thi3 country have been and are being built up on the very ignorance of the masses in regard to business methods. The schemers bank on It that it Is easy to swindle people who do not know how to protect their property. They thrive on the ignorance of their fellows. They know that a shrewd advertisement a cunningly worded circular, a hypnotic appeal, will bring the hard earnings of these unsuspecting people out of hiding places into tLelr own caSEersu Success Magazine

RUNS INTO MONEY

Possibilities of Bryan's Government Ownership Scheme Staggering. WHAT SOCIALISM WOULD COST Indiana Would Ce Saddled With an Enormous Public Debt That Would Bend the Backs cf Generations Yet Unborn. Would Mean a Doubling of the Tax Levy. R. G. Tucker In Cincinnati Enquirer The bewildering possibilities of government ownership of railroads in Indiana, as suggested by William Jennings Bryan, as a cure-all for evils existing in the commercial world, were demonstrated at Indianapolis recently on paper by a stato official, who has been figuring on them for his own information. According to him the state of Indiana would be saddled with an over whelming debt for the next century or bankrupted within a short time by the enforced purchase of local lines. His conclusion was that Bryan declared for government and state ownership without attempting to learn the cost to the state and federal governments. According to the report of the state board of tax commissioners for the recent session the total value of tho railroads in Indiana for the purpose of taxation Is $1S2,000,000. The trunk lines were appraised at $105,000,000 and the local lines at $77,000,000. Quarter Billion of Prosperity. It has been the custom of tho state tax board to assess tho railroads at about seventy-five per cent, of their total valuation, so the sale value of the trunk and local lines at a conservative estimate would be in the neighborhood of $250,000,000. The official who made these figures asserted that it would cost the state of Indiana at least $103,000,000 to buy the local lines even should the various companies submit gracefully and permit their property to be taken at the state's prices. He also declared that it was an easy matter to see how trouble would start for the' state government as soon as the roads were taken over. For Instance, he said that it would be difficult to float bonds for $103,000,000, as they would have to run at least a century, and probably could not be sold unless they bore four per cent, interest annually, which would cost the state $4,120,000 the first year. The state would have trouble pay ing the Indebtedness tt a rate of $1,000,000 annually, but at that pace 103 years woul be required to discharge the principal. In the meantime the interest would reach an enormous total, so the local lines would cost the state in the neighborhood of $425, 000,000 before the principal was dls charged. Increase In Tax Levy. Figuring further, he showed to what an enormous extent the state tax would be increased. It is now 31.33 cents per $100. The levy for the gen eral fund is twelve cents; state benev olent institutions, five cents; state educational institutions, school fund, 11.60 cents. The railroads (trunk and local lines included) are now T iying about $5,000,000 In taxes in Indiana. If government ownership, as now understood, were to be instituted, the $3,000,000 taxes paid by the roads would have to be sacrificed, as the state and federal governments would not pay taxes. In order to. pay four per cent interest on a bonded indebtedness of $103,000,000 and to obtain money to discharge the principal a tax levy of 36.5 cent3 per $100 would have to be added to the present tax levy. The withdrawal of the taxes now paid by the local railroads to the state would also necessitate an increase from 31.35 cents to 35.5 cents In order that the total state tax levy fund might be held at the present mark. The total tax levy for tho state would be seventy-two cents if the local lines could be purchased for $103,000,000. The state and counties, the official pointed out, would also suffer further by the withdrawal from taxation of the value of the trunk lines which would bring the total state tax levy up three or four cents. Wculd Have to "Dig." The state, he figured, would be compelled to dig up $3,120,000 as it3 first payment for the local lines. The money could net bo obtained except by an increase in the tax levy on all kinds of property, as the state wa3 unable to carry, out many of its projects at the last session of the legislature owing to a scarcity of funds. The total tax values la Indiana on which funds are to be raised for next year is $1,582,000,000. There are many counties, notably Lake, la which the railroads pay nearly balf of the taxes, so the official figured that the government ownership plan would hit them hard. In Lake county, for instance, the railroads pay half the taxes. The other property would have to be assesed at twice its present valuation if the revenue derived by the county was not cut square in two. Going further Into the possibilities of government ownership, as Bryan suggests, he said; thai the federal government would

take over the paying lines, while tht state would get only those that art cow classed as nonpaying feeders. Buying "Streaks of Rust." He declared that ther are only three or four local lines in Indiana that are paying propositions. Most of them are "streaks of rust" that tha trunk lines maintain out of their prof its. The state, ha sai l, would not bj able to make money enough to pay tfca interest on the bonded indebtedness, so there would bo nothing left but to more than double the present stata levy. Tle Democratic pres3 of the stata is silent relative to Bryan's latest Idea. It has fallen on deaf oars, so far as the Democratic editors are concerned, as they are neither advocating nor defending it About all the Democratic papers contain cn government ownership ia written at the state committee rooms and sent out In the regular press bureau service. This has not advocated government ownership or defended it, but from the start has been an effort to interpret the "peerless one's" views so they will do the party as little harm as possible.

THE MOST ESSENTIAL FEATURE OF A TYPEWRITER first, last and all the time is that it shall be an Don't make the mistake of thinking any visible writer will do get the spirit of wanting the best and then gfet the Underwood Typewriter Go. 135 Wabash kid., Chisago. HS2SlE7irHSS5HS2SSSZSr S BEST IN TOWN !i Whan YtfTAre nnnrrv REMEMBER THE MAINS RESTAURANT AND LUNCH ROOM Meal st All Hour For Ladle- and Gentlemen BEREOLOS BROS., ft 122 8. II ohm m Street A Eyes Tested Free Glasses $1.00 Up. Correct in style to suit youi features. Repairing done after-i noon and evening:. , C. Breman, O. G. Optician 1SS South Hchman St Up Stairs. FredDumlcQ Shoes Repaired 221 Mich. Avenue. Library. Opposite My latest and most improved ma4 chinery, coupled with 35 years practical experience, enables me to maka your old shoes look like new. FOR SALE A two-story house, barn and S lots at a sacrifice. $2,000.00 buys all. APfLY TO SAMUEL A.ROSENBERG 1506 Tribune Building, Tel. Central 20S6. CHICAGO. BerftaCzara Private fiospital FOR WOMEN frr. Ont-elin l'M-ate Home for Ltd In Im 4lirat- fetallh wi-klsy tkilirl MMieal Or Ssrrirat trrtmat t qatrt home r eoHimodttlUBS 4arfa ruHtfinrnU Trader ear be&toJ apoa iht pat!! intru'Ud to s by oth-r ph-siriant. tireaiara ea p pliratioa. ; H. Jdin Srre-t, hicaw fcUUe LIccb.c, leltfkoue Knrvo Ui