Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 98, Hammond, Lake County, 12 October 1906 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
TrIE LAKE COUNTY TIMES FRIDAY. OCT. 12, 1906.
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I WILL SELL Three 6 per cent Real Estate Mortgages Amply secured and made by men whose signatures alone are worth 100 cents on the dollar in any bank. One $1,300.00, due in three years. One--$1,600.00, due in five years. One $1,800.00, due in three years. Apply at once to E. A. KINKADEbKB&i 110 First National Bank Bldg. . Telephone Hammond, 3253. Open Evening Until 0 p. m-
QGQQGG3GQSI&O08OQQGOS&QQ3 PHONE O LADY ASSISTANT C;5 First class livery in Private ambulance O connection. Night cll OSce open night promptly attended. and day ?j 6 o 6 NICHOLAS EMMERLIN&
Successor to K.rot tt Butmsrllnir
PRACTICAL EM BALM ER. O
3 2 Sibley Street, Hammond, Ind.
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Garage
G. W. HUNTER
ZJesf Eqipped Repair Shop in the State. Compressed Air FREE. Bowser Gasoline System Phone 122 91 S. HOHMAN STREET Huchn Block. HAMOMND. IND.
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Hammond Horse Market 5to 40 (lead of Horses always 00 (land Hay, feed and Wood for Sale. Exchange Stable. ED MARSH. Proprietor MANHATTAN HOTEL, 396 Calumet Ave.
SAVE TWO CENTS A DAY YOU CAN OWN A FARM We mean what we say. "The Marvin Plan" enables any one who will put away a small Bum each day to own a farm that he can live on. or lease out, and in either case have a good income for life. Land is situated in tho most productive belt in the United States. An tbsolutely safe, sure and profitable investment far superior to a savings bank. Let us explain the plan to you. It is money in your pocket " to know our method of doing business. TRENHOLM, MARVIN & CO. D, 605 Baltimore Buildins, Chicago, IlL
Lake County Title 6: Guaranty Company ABSTRACTORS F. R..MOTT, President, J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary, FRANK HAMMOND, Vice-Fres. A. H. TAPPER, Treasurer, S. A. CULVER, Manager. Hammond and Crown Point, Indiana. Secretary's office in Majestic Bids:., Hammond. -Abstracts furnished promptly at current rates.
DAVIS BEOS., HARVARD DENTIST.DAVIS BEOS., HARVARD DENTIST
NOTICESPECIAL The Drs. Davis Bros., of the Harvard Dental Offices, wish to announce that NO ONE ELSE IS
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connected with same and they have exclusive control of offices. Only licensed graduate dentists, with years of experience, are employed. With lidy assistant, another chair added, makingfour chairs in our operating department, we are better prepared to "more than please." "You are always welcome." Telephone 2923. State end Mohman. Hammond, lad. C. L. DAVIS, D, D. S., J. A. DAVIS, D. D. S. Of Drs. Davis Bros. Harvard Dental Offices.
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SLE OF PIHES STATUS
Plainly Stated So Far as tha Cu' ban Provisional Government Is Concerned.
WILL liOT ASSIST IN SECESSION
Eailiwick Considered Part of tha Territory of Cuba,
In No tiense a Property of the United bt at es Annexationists Kxoner nte Hoot and WoodFarewell Functions.
Havana, Oct. 12. Trie provisional government will have nothing to do with the question of the sovereignty of the Isle of Tinea or with the separation of the government of the island from the rest of the Cuban republic. The executive authority of the United
States already Isle of Pines
has declared that the belongs to Cuba, and
chtc and attacked the ructcrn:r.n. He was rescued by the police and placed under arrest. Upon arriving at Liberal headquarters the rooms were found filled with people. Various addresses were made expressing satisfaction at the- results of the revolution and lauding the United States intervention. Uproarious applause greeted the speech of Jose Castcllauos, who advocated bidding farewell to Taft and Bacon with a bigdemonstration, in order to impress them with the fact that the Liberal party appreciated the dealings of the United States with Cuba, and to cause President Roosevelt to realize the sympathy of the Liberals with his endeavors.
STEAMER LETTERS.
ran and
the Ocean
B. T. WASHINGTON'S WARNING
p . ' ' i 1 J f j fet, ( -7i i I V' t it ' 5 v "1 , ' v ' . - ' 1 Z. i V v '
DAVIS BEOS., HARVAUD DEHTIST.DA VIS BEOS., HAEVAEJQ DENTIST.
What the Negro Iieader Has to Say as to Some Advice from the North. New York, Oct. 32. The annual session of the National Afro-American Council, which has been in progress here, was brought to a close with services in Zion church. Iiooker T. Washington made the principal address. He took for his subject "The Requirements of Citizenship." The church was crowded, a largo number of those in attendance being from the southern states. Washington's speech was of the same tenor as others he has made on the race issue. In the course of it he said: "To the members of my race who reside in the northern states let m? utter the caution that in your enthusiastic desire to be of service to your brethren in the south you do not make their path more thorny and difficult by rash and intemperate utterances. P.efore giving advice to the negro in the south the negro In the north should be very sure that what he advises is that which he himself would be willing to take into the heart of the south and put into practice. Re careful not to assist in lighting a fire which you will have no ability to put out."
SNOWS NO "BETTER CLASS"
Copyright, 130G. by Clinedinst. BniOADIEa GEXEBAXi JT. rEAKKLIN BELI
has embodied that affirmation in a
treaty conceding the sovereignty of the island to Cuba, and this treaty is now pending ratification in the United
States senate. The entire matter being one for the adjudication of the state department the provisional government, which is- wholly under " the
war department, will not mix therein.
No Sect.-ision Will Be Allowed. Tlio mode of government of the Isla
of Pines as part of the Cuban republic may be altered or amended, but the?
desire of citizens of the United State
in the Isle of Pines for territorial or municipal government as part of the United States cannot be conceded by
any act on the part of the provisional
government of Cuba or the war department. The president of the Amer
ican association of the Is'e of Pine;? ha:; not yet interviewed Governor Taft
on this matter, but-the most that is likely to be gained will be the placing of a United States military officer as
(temporary governor of the island in
lieu of the present Cuban mayor, with whom the relations of the foreign resi-! dents have not been pleosant. They Kxonerate. Hoot and Wood. The citizens of the United States residents of the Isle have adopted unanimously a resolution "exonerating Secretary of State Root and General Leonard Wood from all blame in connection with the turning over of the isle to Cuba." and they reel that this step ought to open the way to negotiations for making the ile United States property. They consider the present condition of affairs oppoitune for securing a settlement of the matter, which they believe may hang fire indefinitely in the United States senate. Stops the Pay of Statesmen. Governor Taft has decided that the pay of the Cuban senators and representatives be stopped with Oct 1, when the Palma government cea?ed. He will decree the congress to bs in recess i:ntil the question of its status is settled. Mrs. Taft and Mrs. Baeon held a reception in the main salon of the palace. It was attended by several hundred Cubans and others, including almost all the army and hay officers here. Governor Taft gave a dinner in the palace to the naval officers. The battleship Louisiana will leave here tomorrow afternoon for Norfolk, with Governor Taft and his par ty on board.
Candidate Hughes, However, Finds What He BrlieTes a Menace to the United States. Canandaigua, N. Y., Oct. 12. Chas. E. Hughes, the Republican nominee for governor, made speeches in this region yesterday. Among other things he said: "I do not like to hear talk in this countr about classes, and the people will not stand any attempt to create class feeling. I take no stock in the notion that there is a so-called.
Fancies For
Traveler. "Steamer letter" has come to have a peculiar signiiicanee in the language of travelers. The scope of such a l?tter is as wide as the ocan to which it belongs, for in its development it means
anything from the gigantic baskets of
fruits and flowers which, crowding tha Btiloons on sailing days, are a burden to every one but the honored recipients, down to the humble postal card without even a picture, which has been scribbled by some enthusiastic friend, crammed in a post box and comes on at the last moment by the supplementary mail. If one's object Is simply to give a friend pleasure there is nothing that can accomplish this more surely than to send a package of letters to the purser of the steamer, asking him to deliver one each day during the voyage. After the first day out. when no postman makes his daily rounds, when the only news the wireless telegraph brings is that some actress has again lost her jewels or some great house at Newport has been burglarized, a personal letter, with the least touch of
home feeling in It, will appreciate in value every second. Therefore if one is a good letter writer and can write a seemingly spontaneous letter for each day there is nothing that will give tha absent voj-agor more pleasure. But, unfortunately, the taleut of good letter writing is besto'.ved on few and those to whom fate has denied it must devise something else as a substitute for daily letters. Where amusement alone is desired in a steamer letter the Lst way perhaps i3 to have for each day of the voyage a verse with some nonsensical accompaniment. For example, in one box a lemon, with a stick of candy through which it was to be imbibed, had this verse: If a body feel the motion sailing o'er the sra. If a body take a notion very sick to be. Then a body nreds a lemon. Here la one for you. May It prove a strength and comfort, as 'tis said to do. A box for a college girl had for the flrst day a tintype of three of her cb.um.3 waving handkerchiefs in farewells, marked "To be opened on leaving the
pier." A package of gum or a bottle of clam bouillon, both of which are
said to be specifics for seasickness, will
sometimes please those who "feel the
motion." A "Jackson ball" can be
sent as an "entire voyage souvenir
A collection of funny pictures about the 6ea or traveling adventures can
Dcn't Head This Advertisement if you Wish to ' Keep Year Money. Why? Because I am offering- acre and lot property so tremendously low that the temptation will be too great for you to hang" on to your money any long-er. I am selling: vacant lots for $10, $15, $20, $25, $30, $50 and upwards; acres at 50 and $100 per acre and upwards. Write or call for particulars. R., L. MILLER. Suite 408, Hammond Bids-, Hammond, Ind. Phone 3021 Branch Office, Tolleston, Ind.
At midnight In the sleeping room. The best protector of the home 'Gainst sickness, fire and burglary Is an extension telephone. It allows instant communication with the doctor, the fire-house or the police station. You call without running down stairs to the main Instrument. And when you are ill. You talk direct to business associates or friends without leaving the bed. The extension has a double value a protector and a comfort.
One and two-thirds cents per day is a small cort for home happiness. Order an extension today and on November 23th you will be thankful. Telephone the Manager.
CHICAGO TELEPHONE CO.
NEW
ELECTRICAL THEATER 252 East State Street.
be made from old copies of Life or i
better class, with superior morality, Fliegende Blatter and will never comaj
with better examples of virtuous liv-1 aruisa. a ciever story or toe ocean or ing. of travel cut from an old magazine "Nothing is- more, reprehensible in and bound by itself In a piece of heavy
Next to iVlinas' Department Store. Change every other day. noving pictures in the world and all the latest illustrated songs. Admission Only 5c.
Finest
the United States than an appeal. to passion. Not since Jtlie civil war has there been .such an Issue as now; never before that I . know of has there been an attempt through newspapers established in different communities in the United States to focus the whole attention of the country upon, alleged wrongs, and create, discontent, envy and hatred and arouse the worst passions of the multitude. That is the menace to this country and that is the menace we propose to deal with on election day."
wall paper will surely give pleasure.-
Good Housekeeping.
Was a Janitorist Captain. , New York, Oct. 12. Thomas Cle.iry, formerly an alderman and said to have been the highest salaried janitor in New York, if not in the world, is dead. As caretaker of the Equitable Life As surance Society building at 120 Broads way Cleary received a salary of $2G,000 a year. This was brought out In the insurance investigation.
No "Simplified" for Theirs. Washington. Oct. 12. At the final business session of the United Spanish WarVeterans it was suggested that the simplified method of spelling be used in the preparation of the official documents of the organization, but the idea was rejected practically unanimously.
The Simple Life at Lone Wolf. The tenderfoot started slightly as he read at the foot of the menu of the Lone Wolf hotel: "Guests, after picking teeth, must positively return bowie to belt or boot leg. Sticking bowie upright into table beside plate is strictly prohibited."
Cheap Jewels in Watches. A jeweler, no matter how dishonest, would not steal the jewels in a watch, for they are valueless; they cost only ten cents apiece. In antique watehes the jewels were often costly. In modern watches they are never worth more than $15 a gross.
HEWS FACTS III OUTLINE
DEMONSTRATION OF LIBERALS
They Escort a Returninsr Rebel Across the City of Havana. Havana. Oct. 12. An immense crowd of Liberals, mostly negroes, from all parts of Havana and its suburbs, met P.rigadier Arenciba and other returning ex-rebel chiefs at the terminus of the Western railroad and escorted them across the city to Liberal headquarters, where theretwas a general jollification. Colonel Betancourt, second in command to Pino Guerra, was expected, but Governor Taft telegraphed him to remain in Tinar del TCio to attend to the collection of arms in the western part of that province. At the intersection of Galiano and San Rafael streets, a street car broke through themctleyparade and knocked d'nrn a horse and four men. Some of the uaraders at oace drew theb- ma-
Love the First of All Ventures. Since love is the artificer of all virtue, let us with exactness implant her in our souls, th&t she may produce foi us many blessings, and that we may have her fruit continually abounding, the fruit which is ever fresh, and never decays. St, Chrysostom.
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Fire at Charlottetown, F. E. I., destroyed fifty buildings at a loss of $200,000. The Spokane Chamber of Commerce has offered the Chicago base ball clubs $ir.000 to have the deciding game of tne world's championship series played at Spokane. San Domingo's revolution hss been suspended by mutual agreement for awhile. The Republicans of Rhode Island
have nominated George II. Utter for! governor. , i Frost hasvisited the Lynchburg, Va., j
section, killing vegetation in truck patches and elsewhere. Thermometers in the government weather Imreau at Madison. Wis., registered 2P yesterday morning. Cordial support is to be given by the National Wholesale Druggists' association to the national pure food and drug law. The thirty-fifth annual meeting of the Women's Synodical Missionary society of the Presbyterian church of Wisconsin is in session at Madison. Wiliiran J. Bryan made speeches at Springfield and .Toplin, Mo., yesterday. Dr. Rosen, the German minister to
Morocco, was given a private audience of the sultan at Fez and presented his j majesty numerous gifts from Emperor William. j Advices from important cotton sec-' tlons of Oklahoma and Indian Territorv are that the crop was materially damaged by, this- week's frost. The international waterways com- i mission will meet at Chicago next t Tuesday. The jotirneymen bakers of Buds. Fest. Hungary, have voted in favor of 1 strike. i
The Strncbe Plan factory Tvishen to
announce that It has no retail branches or etorea in Hammond or elewhcrr. The company gellg direct from the factory only, at factory prices. Do not be misled or confused by pianos with similar names, bat when in the market for an instrument, buy direct from the factory, thereby savins mid- '
dlemen's profits and agents commission. Terms to salt. Take South Hohman street car, come and see how GOOD pianos are made. 10-9-lwk
Hammond Bourbon Hammond Sourmash Hammond Rye Malt Gin Hammond Dry Gin Cologne Spirits T -G 3
Daily Capacity, 25.000 Gallons
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The beautiful homes illustrated above, located on Sumner street, one of the most popular streets in Hammond, icr sale Gostlin. Meyn & Co.,. on exceedingly liberal terms. A small payment down the balance on payments but slightly in excess of rent you are now paying.
