Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 101, Hammond, Lake County, 16 October 1906 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES TUESDAY, OCT. 16, 1906.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES ANrKVEKIXG NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED iiY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY... "Entered as second-class matter June, 2S, 1306, at the postoffice at Hammond, Indiana, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879." Offices in Hararond building, Hammond, Ird. Telepnone, 111. Chicago Office Room 1502 Tribune Building, Hugh W. Montgomery, representative. Term of Subscript loo. Yearly $3.00 Half Yearly $1.50 Single Copies 1 cent

Net Daily PAID Circulation October 1, 1906, TUESDAY, OCT. 16, 1806. IT IS with a feeling of sadness that we note the approacli of the fall campaign. Sadness because of the instinct of the small party organs throughout the country to "pick a fight." Instead of a fair and square campaign between candidates, it lias degenerated into a feud between rural editors. Mud-slinging, epithets of "liar" and "vile sheet" thrown about promiscuously can hardly be construed, even at a stretch of the imagination to be beneficial to the reading public. The power of a newspaper of general circulation is so great that instead of dosing the public with such concoctions, it should teach the right and wrong of issues if there is an issue. For legislative candidates there may be an issue, but for the leaser county officers it is man for man. , We do not conceive either Cox or Carter to be villians and probably Albert Maack and Tom MeCay both consider each other gentlemen. What the people want is news, not dope. May the best man win! WITH THE EDITORS. Tackles Iself. In a year Germany had 321 cases of murder and manslaughter and the United States 8,076. In the former country thert- was a percentage of 95.15 trials with convictions; in the latter a percentage" of 1.3. Anybody browsing around in quest of food for thought might tackle this. Philadelphia Ledger. Tin: joy or m;i a senator. It is a nice thing to be a senator if one can afford the luxury. Rut unless a man is very rich or very abie and brilliant, or possesses all these advantages, he would be better off among his neighbors and friends. Five thousand dollars does not go far in Washington, although contrary to popular opinion, it is not at all an expensive city in which to live quietly and out of the glare of the limelight. To occupy a house big enough and accessible enough for entertaining on a large scale requires a fortune, but to dwell in a second-class hotel or boarding-house, to spend the evening by the fireside and to ride to and fro in the street cars is no more Expensive than in any other city of the United States. A majority of the senators live the simple life, and it Is a demonstrable fact that a certain number of the whole actually save a part of their salary. The legitimate perquisites of a senator consist in a secretary or two to attend to the correspondence, a messenger to run errands, a comfortable and often luxurious committee room for his private use, the privilege of a free barber shop and bathroom and an allowance of $125 a year for "stationery," which includes anything and everything, from writing paper to playing cards. Reyond and above all. a senator is quite a distinct individual from an humble member of the House of Representatives., He is able to command at all times a show of that deference due to rank that atones for many of the less pleasant features of exalted station. There are rnrn in both houses today who are prominent, and in a way influential, whose sole equipment is wealth. There are those who have nothing hut their salary who are leaders. The L'.te Speaker Reed was a poor man when in public life, living in modest roms in a small hotel, and never a host at entertainments. Vet he was a dominating force among his fellows, a dictator of legislation and a social lion of the very first degree. New England Magazine. posse i it its i' it. FienriMh lusrnic llt-ntx AYoniaa Who l'cd Illm. Special to l ake County Times.) Logansport. hid.. .t. it;. Twenty five to fifty heavily armed men, ar known, but of wr.om good de&criptijn has been given, to lynch him. Thi:? man. believed to le a tramp, bfat Mrs James Odell. wife of a farmer living near l;urnettsvIle. almost to death. ' after she had gtven him food, while her bust and was away . KI.KV TEMPI. E DEDICATED. South Re:;d. hub. Oct. IS. The new Elks' temple was dedicated this afternoon at o ei H k with appropriate exercises. The ceremonies were of a ritualistic nature, and were for the members of the order and their immediate families only. The temple has been built at a cost of $7r.0e0. ami is regarded one of the finest such buildings in this part of the country, devoted exclusively to lodge purposes. WANTED Carpenters at once. American Steel Foundries, Indiana Harbor, liidiuiiii. 10-16-tf.

ADDITIONAL.

Whiting News Reception to Itev. Wright. The members of the M. E. church held a reception at their church last night in honor of their new minister, Rev. Manfred Wright. The church was most beautifully decorated for the occasion and dainty refreshments were served. Dr. Wells entertained yesterday. his brother A young man from here went to Chicago Sunday with his sisters. All was well until the return home. The young man decided that he would go in the smoking car and enjoy a puff. He was not in there very long when be went to sleep. He did not awake from his slumbers until La Porte was reached. As it was rather a late hour and not having any friends at that city, he alighted from the train and purchased a ticket to South Bend, where he thought he would enjoy a visit with some old time friends. He then took another ''doze" and the next time he awoke he was in Goshen. The night was nearly gone, so he waited for a train to return and he arrived home safe and sound yesterday. ANOTHER BODY FOIXD. The badly decomposed body of an unknown man was found about two miles up the west beacli at Michigan City late Sunday afternoon by a man who happened to be walking along the beach. The body had been in the water at least live weeks, and was no doubt washed ashore in the recent storm. It lay about one hundred feet away from the water's edge. Michigan City News. TRIBUTE TO A BULL DOG. He Was Disfigured with Scars, But a Faithful Brute. I would rery much Ilka to add a few remarks upon the loveliness of that horrid bulldog, says a writer in the New York Times. My dog was a yellow and white coated animal, with the wet, pink mouth, with little black spots upon the pink. He was the most faithful bruite I ever knew; ugly as could be to his own kind; was disfigured with scars from fierce battles. To me he was a gentleman. He had the misfortune to have one of his toes nearly severed from one of his hind paws from coming too close to a mowing machine. I covered it with an ointment and sewed the paw up in an old kid glove. Every other day I would remove the bandage and place the foot in a dish of warm bicarbonate of soda water. When cleansed and taken out of the water I would rebandage it again. He would turn, as wise as he could be, look at it and put his wet mouth up to my cheek and lick my face and hand. Gratitude was In his great eyes. He would guard me all day long. When night came I would invite him into the cottage and make a bed of straw-filled pillows upon the floor, and after rubbing his chewed-up ears he would lick my hand and cheek and we would part for the night. How safe I felt in that lonely spot, which was only a byroad in an Indian reservation section of country. ONLY A TEMPORARY CRAZE. Pilgrims From "the Other Side" Lapse Into "United States" Again. Recurrent peril, threatening our American speech, becomes imminent about this time of year. For there now returns from "the other side" the traveler, rather more likely to be feminine, who, swollen with the pride of her first ocean voyage, having stuffed her trunk to bursting with dutiable articles, gets even with a meddlesome government by smuggling in a warranted British accent for herself and family. Upon her avid tongue such useful little words as "were" and "been," "suffer a seachange into something rich and strange." approximating respectively the verb of garmenture and the popular name of a common vegetable. One even encounters accents which distort "clerk" Into "dark." But the maltreatment is, happily, in most cases only temporary. First, the family, despite pained and patient correction, fall from grace. Presently the enthusiast herself gives signs of lapsing. She imperceptibly graduates into the convalescent state of George Ade's rising social light, who every Saturday "took a bawth In the bathtub." And, long before the sewing circle has heard the last of her views of the Eiffel tower and the intricacies of continental currency the healthful home atmosphere of Pontiac, Mich., or Topeka, Kan., has done its work and the returned exile's common -peech is again according to Noah Webster, unabridged. Coliers Weekly The Bachelors of England. Under our present system our men emigrate, but leave our delicately nurtured wom;n at home. Families of grown-up, unmarried daughters, discontented and restless, are far too numerous among us, and all the while in far-off places of the empire, there are men by the thousand hungering for the sight of an English lass. We do not exaggerate. The flag of Brit ain in too many parts of the earth is flying over a generation of bachelors. Boy and Girl. Always Busy. Strictly speaking, we have no leisure class. Where we are doing nothing else, we are getting divorced. Puck

HEARD OX THE BOURSE. Most of the banks reduced rates on the call teans that have been running1 along for the past six months at 4 per cent. The tendency of time money was also, to considerable extent, easy, sixty days at 5 per cent, and for six months. Even mercantile paper was In demand. It looks as if money will soon be plentiful; for the pool to allow outsiders in the stock market to make a little money. The buying In St. PauT is of the very best, but stock will have rights of about 25 points inside of the next thirty days, and that, they say, will be after the election is over.

One of the best posted of the larger brokers told his best friends there was just three things to do to make money in this market that was to buy en very small recession Steel common. Union Pacific and St. Paul, and then to buy some more St. Paul; that the big fellows would not for an instant allow the market to become demoralized; they would step in to support it. All they had to do was to buy one of the above-named stocks and the market would support itself, and if the market started to run away before the election they would stop it at once by selling Union Pacific or Steel, and they themselves will make a few election scares, so as to get the people out to vote and defeat Hearst, and to make their henchmen do a little of the work they are paying them for, and, in the meantime, incidentally, milk the market and gather In a few stray dollars. They are so successful In this game they forced a Chicago plunger to drop ten thousand shares of long stock that he bought at higher prices last Friday. Even F. D. Carley, the old-time prophet, is waking up again to the game, and telling his friends to buy the good rails on any reaction, as the market Is oversold; that on this big crop of wheat the market cannot go down more than a few points, but it can go up ten points. The Vanderbilts are now coming to the front. Big Four Is up on Its rights and business. The New York Central is buying new equipment by the wholesale fifty-six passenger cars in one lot; twenty-five baggage cars from the Pullman company, besides seventy that it turns out of its own shops; five hundred steel 50-ton freight cars and forty locomotives. No wonder the Iron Trade Journal says a shortage of spot iron Impends and furnaces are much behind. By. the first of November the entire rail capacity of the United States for 1907 two million tons will be booked. Moral, of course, is to buy Steel common. The bond market so far this month is far better than at any time since June. Steel fives above par, and the rates of listed bonds are higher than last year, the best kind of trading being in convertible bonds. The advance In the bond market always comes before the big trading in the stock market, and this looks to be the time to buy stocks. The Republican Iron and Steel company have just made an ore deal of their own, which, in Its way, is as big a thing as the Hill deal was for the United States Cteel company. Repeated efforts have been made to break the stock list by active traders taking the short side, but the marginal accounts are so small and stop-loss orders have been so scarce that they have not been able to bring on a serious setback . Certainly the investors have shown no effort to sell stocks, and the real strength has been more displayed on weak days, when trading has been the smallest. There is one thing' sure, further efforts will be made to put the market down on pre-election scares, and there is a large crowd of traders who are sold out, and on any setback they will be only too glad to flock Into the market to buy stocks for the rise that is sure to come. The bond market Is already better than at any time this year. J .L. D. A PECULIAR THING. Nature is peculiar In everything. It is natural that we should eat and receive the full benefit of our food, but do you get the full benefit? To do so you must have your entire system In perfect order, and the repository of all food the stomach must perform Its proper duties. When It does not, com plications arise; stomach, kidney and liver troubles follow, constipation sets in, pains in the back and sides are con stant, and the whole system is thrown out of order. Quaker Herb Extract reaches the seat of the trouble, and removes the cause. It discharges all Impurities In the natural manner, and rebuilds the entire human organism . Jas. R. Hughes, 1308 West Eleventh street, Muncie, Ind., suffered untold agonies for twelve years, from so-called stomach trouble. For three years he was unable to work. Less than onehalf a bottle of Quaker Herb Extract relieved him of a tape worm 80 feet long, six bottles made an entirely different man of him, and Mr. Hughes Is today strong and healthier than ever before in his entire life. Quaker Herb Extract is for sale by your local druggist, or Is sent on receipt of price, $1.00. Qauker Herb Co., Cincinnati. O. Free booklet and circular sent to any address upon request. Unpunished Crime. A crime in which many are implicated goes unpunished. Lucan. The Fate of the Czars. The reported determination of the czar to abdicate recalls the fact that since 1613, when the Romanoffs became the Royal house of Russia, there have been IS czars. Of these 18 Romanoffs one (Ivan) was an idiot, three have been murdered by their relatives (not including Alexis, son of Peter the Great, poisoned by his father), one was assassinated by bis subjects. 12 have died more or less natural death, while the present czar. Nicholas II. makes the eighteenth, and his l fate history has still to determine.

STOCKS AND

Latest Movements in (Br Direct Wires to NOT Y0EK LETTER. ..New York, Oct. 18. The stock market was again exceedingly dull and without feature. The big operators seem to be willing to allow the market to drift for itself and therefore the trade Is entirely professional and fluctuations narrow. The tendency of the market, however, was upward. SliKht advances were 6Cored in all of the active issues with Copper probably the leader. It scored an advance of a full point, selling at 116 and closing with shorts the anxious buyers. The metal situation continues strong and the consumers are buying all of the available stock of copper they can get hold of. Another bull argument on this stock, which the trade at present is discounting, is the meeting that is to be held next Thursday when the company will take action upon the dividend. If the rate is increased to 8 per cent as a great many conservative traders believe, it will have a bull ish Influence on the entire market." Union Pacific was strong and higher. It was the pronounced leader in the railroad list. It advanced a point from last nights closing price and held the entire gain. The buying was more for the professional element and for short account than for any particular interest. Quite a flurry was occasioned In Pressed Steel common which recorded an advance of three points for the day, opening at and selling up to 57UThe bull argument advanced for the strength is that the company, like all of the steel companies is showing large earnings and extra dividends are possible. New York Central sold ex-rlght3 this morning. The rights were quot ed at six and one-half. This amount wai taken off the price on the initial transaction in New York Central. NEW YORK STOCK Description. Open

High Low Closs 103 Vt 103 103 M IOI14 101 hi 101 V 137 1364 136 46 451 457 116 114?, 116 160Vi 159t8 I6OV2 90 89 90 77 76Vi 76 10014 36 36 36 123 iB 1227g 123 73 7 73 Va 73V4 79 79 79 61 '4 61 61 56 56 Vi 56 39 39 39 20 14 20 20 180 1797i 180 37 37 37 42 42 42 85 85 85 71 71V; 71 47 47 47 174 174 174 38 367 38 29 29 hi 29 61 147 . 22 22 22 35 35 35?4 71 71 71 97 .96 97 79 7$ 79 134 133 7s 134 Vs 95 94 95 47 47 47 36 36 36 91 90 91 1447s H 14 57 54 57 153 152 152 3S 37 37 98 98 98 28 28 28 50 50 50 95 94 95 36 35 35 177 176 177 25 25 V4 25 60 59 59 48 48 4 3S 38 38 188 187 188 49 V 48 7s 49 107 7s 107 107 39 39 39 20 V 20 20 46 x 46 Vs 46 2 5 86 86 86 14

Atchison ...103 Atch, pfd. . .101 U Am. Sugar. . I36i Am. Car. 45 Amal. Cop. ..115 h Am. Smelt. .1601-8 Am. Ice Sees 90 Am. Locom. 764 Am. Tob. pf.lOOV Am. Wool... 36k B. & 0 123 Biscuit 73S'8 Brook. R. T.. 79 Ones. & O... 61 V C. F. & I 56 i Col. South.. 39i Corn Pdts. . . 20Vs Canad. Pac. 180 Cent. Leath. 37 1 Denver com. 42 Denver, pfd. 85 Distillers .. 71 Erie, com. . . 4 7 - : 111. Cent 174 Interboro .. 37 ;' K. C. S. com 29 V4 K. C. S. pfd 61V? L. & N 1471 Mex. Cent.. 22 4 . M K & T cm 35 K K & T pf 71 " Mo. Pac 86 Nat. Lead. .. 78 N. Y. C 134 Va Nor. & W... 94 Ont. & W... 47 Pac. Mail... 36V Peop. Gas... 91 Pennsyl . . . 144 Ti Press. Steel 544 Reading . . .152 R. I. & S 37 R. I. & S. pfd 98 R. Isl. com. . 2S7, Rubber 50 So. Pacific. 94 7 So. Rv. com. 36 St. Paul 177 i. St. L & S W. 25i,4 St L&S W pf 60 St L &SF2dpf 48 Texas Pac... 38 Union Pac... 187 U. S. Steel.. 49 U. S. S. pfd. .107 Va. Chemlc. 39 Wabash 20 14 Wabash pfd. 46 8 Wis Cent... 23 Vs Western U.. 86 New York Central ex-rltes. Detroit United Ex.-Div. i per cent. GRAIN f.IiO PROVISION MARKET Description. Wheat. Open High Low Close Dec. May July Corn. Dec. Mav July . ot. Dec. May Jan. May Hitia. Oct. Dec. Jan. I'ork. Oct. Jan. .74 Vs .78 .78n .42 43

74 73 73 7s a 78 78 78a 77 42 42 2 a 43 43 43 a 43 33 33 33a 34 34 34 a 33Vi 33 33 a 1377 1367 1372a 1335 1387 1392n 950 940 945 840 ,J35 $40 825 817-20 820b 835n 750 742 745-47a

.33ii -34 .33 ..1377 , .1392a ..950 !."825 . .842a . .750 CHICAGO LETTER. Chicago, Oct. 16. WHEAT was dull and heavy again today. It lost ground from the opening bell until the close. The rallies were very feeble and of no consequence. Foreign markets were quoted lower. Crop news from Argentine more assuring than previous reports. Receipts In the northwest were liberal and quite a line of wheat was sold in this market against cash purchases. The market closed weak with sellers having the advantage. CORN Weak and lower, partly in sympathy with the weakness In other pits also good sellers by commission houses and elevator concerns. The May option lost a half a cent on the day. The cash situation is strong, however, old corn is selling at a premium of four to five cents a bushel over the futures. The market closed weak. OATS Weaker than corn. The weight of the offerings of new oats is being felt in the speculative market. Cash oats in the sample market were quoted to one-half cent lower. This will revive cash sales to exporters. 50,000 was w-orked today for export. The market closed without rally. WANTED Carpenters at once. American Steel Foundries, Indiana Harbor, Indiana. 10-16-tf. Subscribe for The Lake County Time

PROVISIONS

Finance and Trade. Lake Connty Times.) HAMMOND MARKETS. The following are the average prices

quoted in the local markets: Flour, 50 lb 1-25. Potatoes, bu 0c. Eggs, doz 26c. Butter, lb 30-32c. Eggs, doz 26c. Milk, qt ScSii gar, It 6c. Cream, qt 24c" Round steak, lb 15c. Ham lb 22c. Porterhouse steak, lb 19-22e. Pork, lb 16c. Sirloin steak, lb 17c. Crab apples, bu 1.40 Head lettuce, hesu.1 10-12c. Lima beans, lb 10-12c. Ceiery, per stalk , 5c. Apples, bu 1.00-1.20. Egg plant S-lOc

SOUTH WATER STREET MARKET. Chicago, Oct. 16. Quotations on round lots ranged: Butter Receipts. 6.362 tubs; extra creamerv, jobbing, 25 c; price to retailers 27c; prints 28c; firsts 2240e; seconds, 19Si21c; ladles. 17c; renovated. 19 ft 20o. Eggs Receipts, 4,342 cases; fresh stock, at mark, new cases included or cases returned, 15ffl9e; firsts, 21c; prime firsts, packed in whitewood cases, grading 60 per cent fresh stock, 22 o; extra, so per cent fresh, packed lor city trade ,25c. Potatoes Receipts. So cars; early Ohio, Minnesota, 455x 470. per bu: wiiite stock. Wisconsin, 45&4Sc per bu; red, fair to good, 4 3 Cd 4 4c. veal Quotations for calves In good order were as follows: 50 to 85 lb. weights, 6?i6c; 60 to 75 lbs. 7Sc; to 110 lbs. fancv 9ffl0c; 150 to 175 lbs., good, meaty, 4 fir Co. Live Poultry Turkevs, per lb. 14 Ht 16c; chickens, fowls. 10 c, springs, 10c; roosters, 7c; geese, $8.00 (Tp 9; ducks, 11c. Iced Poultry Turkeys, per lb, 12'a 15c: chickens. fowls, I0(fllc; springs, 10Cllc; roosters, 7c; ducks, S'f 12 c. Fruits Apples, $1.50 2.50 per brl.; crab apples $1 per bu. baskets bananas. Jumbo, per bunch, $1.401.50; straight, $1.1001.25; culls, 75c $1; bouquet, 50w oc; lemons, California, $6(f7.50; oranges. California, $3.00(&'5; melons, gems, Sl.25w2.00 per crate; plums, 35c per 1-5 bu. basket: peaches. 12W27c per l-n tin. basKet: grapes, 13ry,20c per 8-lb bas; pears, 50c (a $1.75 per bu, basket; si.iagta.UO per Dri. Ueans Hand picked, choice, ll.40(a' 1.45; screened and depending on quality, $1.00i-1.30; red kidney, per bu. $2 2.30; off grades, $1. 40ft 1.90; brown Swedish $1.601.70; limas Cal. per 100 lbs.. $4.50?r 4.7o. Hides Firm; green salted. No. 1, 12c; No. 2. Ilc; No. I, bull, 10c; No. 9c; Green salted, calf, 13c; No. 2, 1 ! AX. O U N CEM EXT. II. E. Tuttle wishes to call the attention of the public to the new elegant location of his tonsorial parlors In the rooms formerly occupied by Bloomhoft & Co., First National Bank building. Billiard and pool room in connection. 10-10-lW.; : v- .. ' "ARTESIA GARDEN LANDS." About 100 miles south of San Antonla, Texas, lies a tract of 14,000 acies called the "Artesia Garden Lands." so named because the deep, rich soil and the mild climate make the land especially adapted to the growing of all kinds of garden truck, fruits and vegetables. You can find no finer fruit or truck lands anywhere. Truckers have been realizing trom $200 to $800 an acre from their lands in this section. There is no better alfalfa land in this country, that crop producing from seven to nine cuttings each year, and each cutting yielding from 1 to 1 tons per acre, which sells readily for from $10 to $12 per ton. Rocky Ford cantaloupes grow to perfection on this land, as do all other kinds of tiuck, fruit and vegetables. Corn and cotton do equally as well. From this lard you get three crops each year, any one of which would pay for a number of acres of the land. The soil is deep and rich; the climate is fine and healthy; the location is near town, schools and churches; the price Is extremely low. Can sell 40-acre tracts and up at $12.50 per Acre; one-half cah, balance on easy terms. You can raise a crop in less than ninety days and pay off the balance without interest, jo down and investigate for yourself. Cheap rates. Next excursion October 16th; only $25 for the ro;md trip from Chicago. Why rent land? Why work for another and get just enough to live on? Buy 40 acres or more of this garden spot, and in a few years you will b independent. DO IT NOW. Send for descriptive circulars of this section. The Showalter Land Agency EAST CHICAGO, IXD. pianos are made. 10-9-lwk D x y a JO? Trade Mark Brtrhtedt. rlenneot. tt most economical. Everr partiCl. UI be iwd. 6.r..t t r. twir. far w nt .r liquid polish DOES HOT BTHN Off. FREE SAMPLE Address Dept. 2. I JimMit, Corliss Co.. A (rt..Tl Hudson St.,N.Y. There Is more cstarrh la this section of tbe country than ail other disses ptit together and nnti the last few rears was supposed to be lncuraHe. For a treat many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly fallinir to care with local treatment, prononnceid it Incurable. Science bas proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's CatarTh Cure, manufactured ty F. J. Cheney & Co Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken Internally in doses from ten drops to a teaepoonfal. It acts directly on the blood and rnnco surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to ewe. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. C KINKY Co., Toledo, Oni Sold by DTursista, :&. Take Hall's Fatally FiU for coastipation.

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usiness OF LAKE See WM. KLEIHEGE F0S PLUMBING. 152 South Hohmap Street. Telephone. 61. T.O C"V TT"l41 JPr CnmnlA Tw " " " v " i FEED LASH, Prop. 271, 273 E. State Street. Phone 34, L. D. 90. Hammond, Ind.' LUNDT & CARLEY ROOFING CO. Phones : 140 & 1331. 210 STATE ST. HAMMOND REALTY CO. Owners of choice lot la McHle'a Sub-division. Hammond, Bldg. Hammond, lad. ASK FOR CHAS. MARTIN'S NEW ENGLAND BREAD Wholesome and nutriclous. Try our Bohemian Ry and Home-made bread. AT ALL GROCERS. Best Work Reasonable Prices E. BARELLI, MERCHANT TAILOR 245 So. Ilohman Street, Hammond, lid. C. E. Green, Carriage ud Wagon Painter 236 Plammer Aven. Hammond, Ind. Accuracy, Promptness and Reasonable Rates Guaranteed. MRS. L. A. MINARD, PUBLIC STEXOGRAPIIER Office, 151 So. Hohman St., Room 6, Telephone 1802. Hammottd, Ind. Phone 2183. DR. W. H. DAVIS DEXTIST Rooms 1-3, Mnjentlc Bldg. Special Notice Do not confuse this offlco with the Harvard Dentists, for 1 am la no way connected with 'them, never have been. ll Are you in Need of Money? We loan to persons temporarily embarassed on Purnitute, Horses, Wagons, Pianos, etc., at lowest rates possible. No inquiries of your friends or relatives. Easy Payments. If you can not call, write or ohone South Chicago 104. and we will send our agent to see you. CHICAGO DISCOUNT CO. 9133-43 Commercial Arenue South Chicago. Boon 2C3 Open evenings till 9 p, m. FOR SALE A two-story house, barn and 3 lots at a sacrifice. $2,000.00 buys all. APPLY TO SAMUEL A. ROSENBERG 1506 Tribune Building, Tel. Central 2056. CHICAGO. LOW RATES TO KORTO A AD SOUTH DAKOTA. Vis Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul Railway. Harvester seron-class tickets, from Chicago to all points on Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. In North Dakota and South Dakota. Rates $14.50 for each person,, when five or more persons travel on one ticket. Tickets on sale dally until August L Low rates returning November 30. E. G. HATDEN, Traveling Passenger Agent. 426 Superior Ave.. N. W. Cleveland. O. Palace of Sweets CANDIES AND ICE CREAM J

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iPirectorv COUNTY ad Best Equipped Repair Shop in the Stata G. W. HUNTER AUTOMOBILE GARAGE Compressed Air FREE Bowser Gasoline System 91 S. IIOIIM AN STREET Phone 122. Huehn Block. Hammond, lad W. F. HASHXNO FIRE INSURANCE. OfSce In First National Bank Bid. CALUMET HOTEL Otto Matthiaa Prop. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Corner Calumet Avenue and Hoffman Street. Phone 2043. Hammond, Ind. If you want every EnsIUb. peaking person in Lake County to read your advertisement put It In THE LAKE COTXTY TIMES. DR. WILLIAM D. WEIS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Duetscher Arzt. Office and residence 145 Hohman BU Phone 20 (private wire) day I and night service. Correct Style Perfect Fit Richard Ilahlweg MERCHANT TAILOR Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing All Orders Promptly Filled Moderate Prices 51 S. Ilohmnn St., Hammond, lad. Phone 4 lit J. W. GARVEY Plumbing, Gas Fitting and Sewerage Steam and Hot Water Heating Jobbing Promptly Attended To CO?. 119TH STRKRT, WHITIXG, IXT. GOAL! GOAL! GOALI Notice to the PublicI We, the firm known as Rlt eralde Coal Co., located at corner of Michigan and Sola! atreets, nlih to announce, tbat wo are non ready to do builneas. We will handle nothing; bat rood grradea of coaL Quick aules, Small proflta 1 and 2.0C0 pounda to the ten ahalt ever be u motto. RIVERSIDE GOAL CO, Residence Phone 1433 Office Phone 3932 Fine Residence and Brick Building a specialty. Estimates on short notice. Plans free. J. H. ICoHing. AXXOL'XCKMBXT. The Slrnube Piano factory wishes to announce that it hna no retail branrhea or atorca In Hammond or elsewhere. Tlit com puny aella direct from the factory only, at factory prices. Do not be misled or confused by pianos with similar names, but when In the market for an Instrument, bay direct from the factory, thereby savins middie men profits and intents commission. TertnM to suit. Take South Hohman street car, come and see how GOOD pianos are made. 10-9-lwk That Leak! Are you Interested in that and willing to do a little saving. WE PAT TOU I NT ERST ON TOUR SAVINGS. THE CITIZENS GERMAN XATTOXAI BANK OF HAMMOND, IND. We'll help you. Give us your account in your savings lino and we will pay you 3 Interest compounded every six months. One dollar and upwards will start you on th Road to Success, try it one year. The only National Savings Eank In Hammond. This is a Home Bank, owned by Hammond citizens, sixty-three la number and therefor is cot one-man's bank. Chas. C. Smith, Pres. Win. D. Wels, Viee-Pres. George M. Eder, Cashier. E. S. Emerlae, Aas't Cashier. cney to Loan in any amount on short notice, em real estate or personal property, fer Btinson Bros. Attorneys at Law, Stenographer and notary in offlce. All inqniiies strictly confidential. Salts 105, First National Bask Building, Hammond led.

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