Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 174, Hammond, Lake County, 10 January 1907 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES
HEGEWISCH NEWS
Mrs. E. the city.
Jacobson spent Tuesday in
, Mrs. Herman Jordan spent Wednes"ay In Hammond. Alrio Wedibf-rsr spent the day at Hammond.
Sadie Yalowitz was a Chicago visitor today.
Thursday, Jan. 10. 1907.
WEST PULLMAN
Oscar Tomblin of Yale avenue Is very sick with inflammation of the lungs.
Mr. Hanson of 119th street attended the Knudson trial Monday.
Dr. T. Jefferson Brown is visiting at the home of Rev. Dr. Shaw of l'arnell avenue.
Mrs. August Wolf was chopper Wednesday.
a Hammond
Samuel today on
Burnham business.
went to Thornton
A. C. Klucker and Anton Kosiba went to Chicago today on business.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Shuler saw "The Grand Mogul" at the Colonial theater last evening.
Mrs. T. Jacobson of Chicago spent the day with Mrs. J. Jacobscn.
Mrs. J. W. IMnkerton and Mrs. A. C. McDonnell were the guests of Mrs. I. Silverman Wednesday.
H. F.
grippe.
Mrs. O'Roark entertained the Dorcas society of the M. E. church yesterday.
The banquet given by the Knights of Pythias Tuesday evening was well attended and a good time was reported.
M. Taylor, tho meat cutter evey's market, has returned to
duty after a week's illness.
J. II. Harrington, representative of the Standard Oil company, was a Ilegowlsch visitor today.
Herbert Rallou of SSth place, who
has been on th sick list for some time,
is reported very low.
T. J. Cotton, Inspector for McCord & Company, has moved Into the new
house In Superior avenue, No. 13347.
known as
Mr. Minard, brakeman for the Calu. met River railroad, was slightly Injured while switching In their yards yesterday.
A committee, consisting of William Slppell, Herman Hiene, Ben Anderson and Nels Nelson went to Chicago Wednesday in the Interest of the South
End Improvement club.
The members of the Afternoon Pedro club spent a very pleasant afternoon
vesterdav with Mrs, Nick Henderson
at her home, 13425 Superior avenue
Mrs. Tlarrv Renbarsrer won the first
nriT nnfl Mrs. J. H. Lammcrlnz the
second.
Ike B. Silverman's up-to-date Liquor TTnnne. The most complete stock of
wines for medical and family use In
Hegewisch. Special prices from now on durinsr the holidays. 14501 Ontario
avenue. 1 2-1 4-1 m.
VALPARAISO NEWS
Mrs. W. II. Williams left for Battle
Creek. Mich., for her health yesterday
Miss Kate Banstrick of Mishawaka
Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ruge.
Alderman Henry Is at Francesville
on a business trip.
J. II. Wilson is at Indianapolis to
attend the opening of the legislature
Robert Hale left for Ottumwa, to visit his parents, yesterday.
Ia
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Dolson were in
Chicago today visting their daughter,
Bertha.
Charles E. Foster is at Indianapolis
attending the Lumber Dealers' conven
tion.
Mrs. Vira Baker of Chicago is visit
lng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Quinn.
Mrs. S. J. Summers was in LaPorte "Wednesday evening Installing the
Eastern Star officers.
A marriage license was issued to Frank Wanders and Iva McCormick
yesterday.
SOUTH DEERING
Mrs. Nels Edman is entertaining an
aunt from Chicago.
John Reld, Jr., has been quite sick the
last few days.
Tom "Dora night.
Davis and Eddie Flynn Thorne" at the Calumet
saw
las
Mrs. R. Roberts and Mrs. J. Fishe
attended tho Calumet theater Wednes
day afternoon.
i lie lire department was called to 10712 Torrence avenuo to extinguish
a small fire, caused by an overheate stove.
The-Creeks of South Deerlng hav
been celebrating their Christmas fo
the past four days. They attend spec
ial services held in the Greek Catholi
church at the corner of Clark and Johji
street in Whiting. This is the onl
church of this kind near here.Thei
feasts are cooked out of doors as in thei
own country. They form in a circle and dance a kind of a war dance. They have been unusually quiet this year.
Garfield Flory of 119th street nd nion avenue. Is having a home built
n llStn street ana cutworm nvu-
ue.
THE
By KATHERINE CECIL THURSTON, Author of "The Circle." Etc.
Copyright. 1005. 1004. by Harper Brother
6-
Miss Inez Marburton
venue entertainea at a er Saturday evening.
of Eggloston 6 o'clock din-
BURNSIDE NEWS
fact that I haven't worn now will scarcely interest
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. W. H. fine baby girl.
Curtis.
Sprague is very sick with la-
Miss M. Whelan visited with friends
n West Pullman yesterday.
at
his
like. The
rins till
them."
"But you do admit to me, that you
are not Jack?"
"I deny nothing and admit nothing.
I still offer my congratulations."
Tpou what?"
"The same possession your imagina
tion."
Lillian stamped her foot. Then by a
quick effort she conquered her temper. "Prove me to be wrong!" she said.
touch of excitement.
Mrs. Wilson of 89th place is enter
taining her mother. Mrs. Gorman l
3rd street.
EAST SIDE NEWS
Axel Jacobson of the East Side,
contemplating a trip to tho south.
is
A. Alson, 10019 Avenue L, sprained
his left ankle yesterday.
Roman Kassman of the East Side
s on the sick list.
The Swedish Lutheran church of the
East Side will hold a bazaar in the
near future.
Axel Larson of the East Side,
taken a position as "rigger" at local ship building yards.
has
the
Mr. and Mrs. Nordstrom, 9910 Ewing
avenue entertainea a numoer oi tneir
friends at their home last evening.
Emma Ehn entertained a number of
her friends at her home yesterday. The
occasion was her fourteenth birthday
anniversary.
John Connelly and Martin Krieps,
two officers of the local Boilermakers
union, have returned to the East Side
from Detroit, Mich., where they attend
ed a convention.
KENSINGTON NEWS
Mr. Grey of State street and 118 place,
is reported ill.
Lecture by the Hon. F. H. O'Donnell
for the benefit of the Holy Rosary
school. Tickets 50 cents a cotiple.
with a fresh
"Take off your rings and let me see
your hand."
With a deliberate gesture Loder put
his hand behind his back. "I never gratify childish curiosity," he said, with
another smile.
Again a flash of temper crossed her
eyes. "Are you sure," sue saia, "that
it's quite wise to talk like that?"
Loder laughed again. "Is that a
threat?"
"Perhaps." "Then it's an empty one." "Why?" Before replying he waited a moment,
looking down at her.
'I conclude," he began quietly, "that
your Idea is to spread this wild, im
probable story to ask people to believe that John Chilcote, whom they see be
fore them, is not John Chilcote, but
somebody else. Now, you'll find that a
harder task than you Imagine. This Is
a skeptical world, and people are ab
surdly fond of their own eyesight. We
are all journalists nowadays we all want facts. The first thing you will be asked for is your proof. And what does your proof consist of? The circumstance that John Chilcote, who has always despised jewelry, has lately taken to wearing rings'. Your own testimony, unattended by any witnesses, that with
those rings off his finger bears a scar belonging to another man! No; on close examination I scarcely imagine that your case would hold." He stopped, fired by his own logic. The future
might be Chilcote's, but the present
was his, and this present, with its im
measurable possibilities, had been rescued from catastrophe. "No," he said again. "When you get your proof perhaps, we'll have another talk, but till
then"
"Till then?" She looked up quickly.
but almost at once her question died
away.
The door had opened, and the servant
who had admitted Loder stood in the
opening.
"Dinner is served!" he announced in
his deferential voice.
the day of his speech; then immediately and with characteristic clearness it opened up the subject nearest the writ-
i er's mind.
ery slowly and attentively Loder read the letter, and, with the extreme quiet that with him invariably covered emotion, he moved to the desk, wrote a note and handed it to the waiting servant. As the man turned toward the door he called him. "Itenwick," he said sharply, "when you've given that letter to Mr. Fralde's servant ask Mrs. Chilcote If she can spare me five minutes." When Renwick had gone and closed the door behind him Loder paced the room with feverish activity. In oae moment the aspect of life had been changed. Five minutes since he had been glorying in the risk of a barely saved situation; now that situation with its merely social complications
had become a matter of small Impor
tance.
Ills long, striding steps had carried
him to the fireplace, and his back was
toward the door when at last the handle turned. lie wheeled round to
v
In the new Park subdivision, the
home of Otto Ludwlg is nearly com
pleted.
Mr. and Mrs. Aug. Sahn of State
street, has as their guests, Mrs. Fiegel
and son of Pekin, 111.
O. A. Viall company's new office at 114th street and C. E. I. tracks is near
ly completed.
Division No. 29 A. O. H. and Division
No. 21, L. A. of the A. O. II., will give
a lecture and entertainment, Thurs
day, Jan. 24, 1907, at the Market hall.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ward of 116th and
Front street, have with them their grandson, Marlon Ward, who returned from Belolt, Wis. He will make his
future home with them.
Mrs. Swartzenberg of Michigan av
enue, was tendered a party by a num
ber of her lady friends, Monday after
noon in honor of her birthday. All pres
ent reported a lovely time.
STONY ISLAND NEWS
P. J. Garry is on the sick list.
Miss Ivy Eme is on the sick list.
Mrs. M. E. Judge saw "Dora Thorne"
at the Calumet theatre Wednesday.
C. J. days.
Eme is laying of for a few
Very slowly and attentively Loder read
the letter. receive Isve s message, then a look of pleased surprise crossed his face. It was Eve herself who- stood in the doorway. Without hesitation his lips parted. "Eve," he said abruptly, "I have had great news! Russia has shown her teeth at last. Two caravans belonging to a British trader were yesterday interfered with by a band of Cossacks.
The affair occurred a couple of miles outside Meshed. The traders remonstrated, but the Russians made sum- ; mary use of their advantage. Two I Englishmen were wounded and one of j them has since died. Fraide has only ' now received the news, which cannot
be overrated. It gives the precise lever necessary for the big move at the reassembling." lie spoke with great earnestness and unusual haste. As he finished he took a step forward. "But that's not all!" ha added. "Fraide wants the great move set in motion by a great speech, and he has asked me to make it." For a moment Eve waited. She look
ed at him in silence, and in that silence he read in her eyes the reflection of
his own expression.
"And you?" she asked in a suppressed voice. "What answer did you
give?" He watched her for an Instant, tab
ing a strange pleasure in her flushed
face and brilliantly eager eyes; then
the joy of conscious strength, the sense
of opportunity regained, swept all oth er considerations out of sight.
"I accepted," he said quickly. "Could any man who was merely human have
done otherwise?"
That was Loder's attitude and action on the night of his jeopardy and his success, and the following day found
his mood unchanged. He was one of
Mr. Chrlstman of Huntington, Ind.,
visited his brother-in-law, C. J. Eme,
Tuesday.
CHAPTER XXIII.
IND Loder dined with Lillian
Astrupp. We live in an age when society expects, even exacts, much. He dined, not
through bravado and not through cowardice, but because it seemed the ob
vious, the only thing to do. To him a scene of any description was distaste
ful. To Lillian it was unknown. In
her world people loved or hated, were spiteful or foolish, were even quixotic or dishonorable, but they seldom made
scenes. Loder tacitly saw and tacitly accepted this. Tossibly they ate extremely little during the course of the dinner and talked extraordinarily much on subjects that interested neither, but the main point at least was gained. They
dined. The conventionalities were appeased. The silent, watchful servants who waited on them were given no food for comment. The fact that Loder left Immediately after dinner, the fact that he paused on the doorstep after the hall door had closed behind him and drew a long, deep breath of relief, held only an individual significance and therefore did not count. On reaching Chilcote's house he passed at once to the study and dismissed Greening for tfc3 night. But scarcely had he taken advantage of his solitude by settling into an armchair and lighting a cigar than Renwick, displaying an unusual amount of haste and im
portance, entered the room, carrying a j those rare individuals who never give a letter. promise overnight and regret it in the
Seeing Loder, he came forward at morning. He was slow to move, but once. "Mr. Fralde's man brought this, when he did the movement brushed all
WHEELER NEWS
The A. ing and itiation. lunch.
A. O. G. met Wednesday even-' Installed officers and had inAfter the work they served
The Monarch Manufacturing company is now occupying the new addition to its plant.
The P. F. W. & C. Railroad company is now building a block signal station one mile east of Wheeler close to the overhead bridge.
Hig'.er and Jones have Improved their store by the addition of a new cigar pase.
While one of Charles Porter's team
sters were driving in South Chicago,
the horses got frightened and ran
away, breaking the wagon and throw
ing the driver to the pavement.
Bear Raids a Camp.
A bear of unusual size terrorized a camp of 200 laborers employed by the American Pipe Line company on
a reservoir for the Pennsylvania rail
road, four miles west of Duncansville,
Pa.
For an hour the animal wandered
about the camp, and, while the men were armed, they were afraid to leave their shanties to meet him in open combat Dogs aroused the sleepers, and Cullen Webster, a clerk, awoke to find the bear looking in at his window. After wandering around an hour Bruin ambled past James Coyle's window, and he shot him
sir," he explained. "He was most particular to give It into my hands, making sure 'twould reach you. He's waiting for an answer, sir." Ixder rose and took the letter, a quick thrill of speculation and interest springing across his mind. During his time of banishment he had followed the political situation with feverish attention, insupportably chafed by the desire to share In it. apprehensively chilled at the thought of Chilcote's possible behavior. He knew that in the comparatively short Interval since parliament had risen no act of aggression had marked the Russian occupation of Meshed, but he also knew that Fraide and his followers looked askance at that great power's amiable attitude, and at sight of his leader's message his intuition stirred. Turning to the nearest lamp, he tore the envelope open and scanned the letter anxiously. It was written In Fraide's own clear, somewhat old fashioned writing and opened with n kindly Rebuke for Lis desertion oi him since
obstacles aside. In the first days of his usurpation he had gone cautiously, half fascinated, half distrustful. Then the reality, the extraordinary tangibility of the position had gripped him when, matching himself for the first time with men of his own caliber, he had learned his real weight on the day of his protest against the Easter adjournment With that knowledge had been born the dominant factor in his whole scheme the overwhelming, insistent desire to manifest his power; that desire that is tho salvation or the ruin of every strong man who has once realized his strength. Supremacy was the note to which his ambition reached. To trample out Chilcote's footmarks with his o'vi-n hand had been his tacit Instinct from the first. Now it rose paramount It was the whole theory of creation the survival of the fittest the deep, egotistical certainty that he was the better man. And it was with this conviction that he enteret on the vital period of his dual career. The imminent crisis au4
his own share in It absorbed h!:n absolutely. In the weeks that followed his answer to Fraide's proposal he gave himself ungrudgingly to his work, ne wrote, read and planned with tireless
energy. He frequently forgot to eat and slept only through sheer exhaustion. In. the fullest sense of. the word he lived for the culminating hour that was to bring him failure or success. He seldom left Grosvenor square ia the days that followed except to confer with his party. All his Interest, all his relaxation even, lay in his work and what pertained to It. His strength was like a solid wall, his intelligence was sharp and keen as steel. The moment was his, and by sheer mastery of will he put other considerations out of sight ne forgot Chilcote and forgot Lillian,
not because they escaped his memory, but because he chose to shut them from it Of Eve he saw but little in this time of high pressure. When a man touches the core of his capacities, puts his best into the work that in his eyes stands paramount, there is little place for andno need of woman. She comes before and after. She inspires, compensates or completes; but the achievement, the creation, is man's alone. And all true women understand and yielS to this unspoken precept. Eve watched the progress of his labor and in the depth of her own heart the watching came nearer to actual living than any activity she had known. She was an onlooker but an onioukcr
who stood, as it were, on the steps of the arena, who, by a single forward movement, could feel the sand under
her feet, the breath of the battle on her face, and in this knowledge she
rested satisfied. There were hours when Loder seemed scarcely conscious of her existence, but on those occasions she smiled in ber serene way and went on waiting. She knew that each day before the afternoon had passed he would come lnt his sitting room, his face thoughtful, his hands full of books or papers, and, dropping into one of the comfortable, studious chairs, would ask laconically for tea. This was her moment of triumph and recompense for the very
unconsciousness of his coming doubled its value. He would sit for half an hour with preoccupied glance or with keen, alert eyes fixed on the fire, while his ' ideas sorted themselves and fell into line. Sometimes he was silent for the whole half hour, sometimes he commented to himself as he scanned his notes, but on other and rarer occasions he talked, speaking his thoughts and his theories aloud, with the enjoyment of a man who knows himself fully in his depth, while Eve sipped her tea or stitched peacefully at a strip of embroidery. On. these occasions she made a perfect listener. Here and there she encouraged him with an intelligent remark, but she never interrupted. She knew when to be silent and when to speak, when to merge her own individuality and when to piake it felt. In
these days of stress and preparation he
came to hor unconsciously for rest; he treated her as he might have treated a younger brother relying on her discre
tion, turning to her as by right for sympathy, comprehension and friend
ship. Sometimes as they sat silent in the richly colored, homelike room Eve
would pause over her embroidery and
let her thoughts spin momentarily for
ward spin toward the point where,
the brunt of his ordeal passed, he must
of necessity seek something beyond
mere rest. But there her thoughts would inevitably break off and the
blood flame quickly into her cheek.
Meanwhile Loder worked persistent
ly. With each day that brought the crisis of Fraide's scheme nearer his ac
tivity increased and with it an intensifying of the nervous strain. For if he had his hours of exaltation he also had his hours of black apprehension. It Is all very well to exorcise a ghost by sheer strength of will, but one has also to eliminate the idea that gave it existence. Lillian Astrupp, with her unattested evidence and her ephemeral interest, gave him no real 'uneasiness, but Chilcote and Chilcote's possible summons were matters of graver consideration, and there were times when they loomed very dark and sinister. What if at the very moment of fulfillment But invariably he snapped tho
thread of the supposition and turned with fiercer ardor to his work of preparation. And so the last morning of his probation dawned, and for the first time he breathed freely. He rose early on the day that was to witness his great effort and dressed s-lowly. It was a splendid morning. The spirit of the spring seemed embodied in the air, in the pale blue sky, in the shafts of cool sunshine that danced from the mirror to the dressing table, from the dressing table to the picture.? on the walls of Chilcote's vast room. Inconsequently with its dancing rose a memory of the distant past a memory of long forgotten days when, as a child, he had been bidden to watch
the same sun perform the same fantastic evolutions. The sight and the
thought stirred him curiously with an unlooked for sense of youth. He drew himself together with an added touch
of decision as he passed out Into the i corridor, and as he walked downstairs ! he whistled a bar or two of an inspiriting tune. In the morning room Eve was already waiting. She looked up, colored and smiled as he entered. Her face looked very fresh and young, and she wore a gown of the same pale blue that she had worn oa his first coming. She looked up from an open letter as he came into the room, and the sun that fell through the window caught her in a shaft of light, intensifying her blue eyes, her blue gown and the bunch of violets fastened In ber belt To Loder, still under the influence of early memories, she seemed the embodiment of some youthful ideal same-
l'1'o Be continued).
thing lost, sought for and found again. Realization of his feeling for her almost came to him as he stood there looking at her. It hovered about him, it tipped him, as it were, with its wings; then it rose again and soared away. Men like Lira men keen to grasp an opening where their careers are concerned and tenacious to hold it when once grasped are frequently the last to look into their own hearts. He glanced at Eve, he acknowledged the stir of his feeling, but he made no attempt to define its cause. He could no more have given reason for his sensations than he could have told the precise date upon which, coming downstairs at S o'clock, he had first found her waiting breakfast fer him. The time when all such incidents were to stand out. each to a nicety in its appointed place, had not yet arrived. For the moment his youth had returned to him; he possessed the knowledge of work done, the sense of present coinpanioaship in a world of agreeable things; above all, the steady, quiet conviction of his own capacity. All these things came to him in the moment of his entering the room, greeting Eve and passing to the breakfast table; then, while his eyes still rested contentedly on the pleasant array of china and silver, while his senses were still alive to the fresh, earthly scent of Eve's violets, the blow so long dreaded so slow in coming fell with accumulated force.
West African English.
Punctuation is hot the strong point of the journals printed on the west
coast of Africa, as the following quo
tation from one of them shows: "On
the 6th inst. a sensational accident oc
curred to a certain woman who con
veyed a load of plantains over a hundredweight stumbled and fell down
the heavy load falling on her child
about 12 months who died instanter.
The sad news soon spread to the town
and parents were in great awe.
is a pity the great loss the woman has sustained and, to thing her pay
is only 4 plantains.
Anomaly of Human Nature. It is one of the curios and puzzling phenomena of human nature that the situation which inspires some to theif highest endeavor arousea others ta their worst Ida M. Tarbell.
Mr. Carondoiet Remembered. Miss Backbay You are familiar, in a general way, with paleontcloty, are you not? Mr. Carondoiet No, 1 don't remember that I ever happened across it But I once read Paley oa "Evidences of Christiaalty," or soma thing like that, when I was a boy, anJ I found it awful heavy reading,
Italian Official's Cow. Italian officials have a mania for sending telegrams at the public ex
pense. A sub-prefect in Sicily had
his cow stolen! recently, and within a
ehort period SCO telegrams had been dispatched, not only all over Sicily, but over the Italian peninsula. This.
waste of money was too much for tha prime minister, and he has ordered the sub-prefect to pay the expenses'
uf the wires, amounting to about 100k The cow has not yet been found.
Said It Himself "I see the publishers of your latest
novel advertise it as a splendid boc to take along when one is going on a
railway journey." "Yes, if one has it
one cannot complain of being unable
to sleep on tho cars. Now, confound
you, perhaps you'll admit that I hava a sense of humor."
'iber Is more cntarrh in t ftta actlon of tha
eonntrr than H other die.ies pnt together and) nntl the lt few Tears wm cuppofted to be In
cur at lr. v or arrest manr years doctor pro. Bounced it a looal dlseas and Trescribad local remedies, and hj constantly fUln to cur wlta local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Scd ee ha proven ratarrh to he a constitutional disease and therefore rrfjulres constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. 7. Cheney ft Co.. Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional enre on the market. It ta taken internally In doses from ten drop to a teaspoon, ful. It acta directly on the blood and mnooua surfaces of tie system. They offer on aundreti dollars for any case it fiiila to ewe. Send for circulars and testimonials. AldsS : tF ilP11 Toledo, Oala Sold by Drumlsta, ,6c. TJko ii all's Pauiuy PCla tar osuttMtloa.
BERT B. POTTER CO. FOUNDRY, MACHINE AND PATTERN SHOP Gray Iron Castings FOR RAILROADS, MILLS, FACTORIES AND CONTRACTORS. Hlchest Market Prleea raid For Old Machinery, Iron, Steel aad Brass. ;ORRKSPOXDEXCG SOLICITED PHONE GRIFFITH KOI. CENTRAL LOCA TION GRIFFITH, LAKE COUNTY, INDIANA. SHIPPING FACILITIES Chicago A Erie R. R., Clileaar A Orsni Trunk ft, R., Chicago, Cincinnati A Lonlavllle R. R., 'Michigan Central R. R. aa Elcln, Jollet A Eastern R. R. and Cblcego, Lake Shore & Earfern R. R.
tuft IBUSINESS DIRECTORY!
op LAKE COUNTY
TeL 22G1. Chung Maw, Uf, CHUNG KEE LO. . Chinese Chop Sucy and Americas)
Itestourunt. CHINESE AND JAPANESE GOODS 91 State St. Hammond. Ind, Open from 10 n. m. to 1 a. m.
AUGUST FRANCK PHOTOGRAPHER 144 AND 11 1IOHMAN ST. Phone 264.
ifi&-fE.4,;fat i-fc.'J! fjZ t."Wiv sflti an arftiiaViniiir-"""' j
DR. WILLIAM D. WEIS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Duetscher Arzt. OSes &ad residence 145 Hohmcn St, Phon 20 (private wire) day and night service.
Pfaoae 21 S3. DR. W. H. DAVIS DENTIST Rooms 1-3, Majestic Bide. Bpecial Notice Do not confuse thl offlco with the Harvard Dentists, for I am la no way connected -with them, never have been.
Best Equipped Repair Shop In the Stata Q. W. HUNTER AUTOMOBILE GARAGE Compressed Air FREE! Bowsei Gasoline System 81 S. ItOHMAN STREET Phone 122. Huehn Block. Hammond. Ind
W. F. MASHINO FIRE INSURANCE. Offlce In First National Emit Blfig.
THE CITIZENS' GERMAN
JATSOHAL BANK
of Hnmmond. A com parol lve atatew meat of deposits siaee our opening dart May 12, 10C8 $ 14,9S0.0t June 12, 1003 93,812.08 Jnlr 12, 180 68,973.19 Auust 11, 1308 12S.9TS.T September 12, ltOC 147,433.73 October 12, 1900 1C2.185.S9 November 12, 1SCO. ., 172,788.84 No County, City or School Fonda In eluded In the above. We are thm youngest bank In Hammond. Oar first birthday will be on May S, 1907. TliriEE PER CENT. PAID ON SAVINGS AND TIME DEPOSITS. Give us a trlrl and be convinced o our fair treatment.
If yoa want every English speaking person in Lake County to read year advertisement put It in THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES.
HAMMOND REALTY CO. Owners of choice . lota la McHle'i Sub-division. Hammond, Eldg. Hammond, lad.
Fine Residence and Brick Flat Building a specialty. Estimates short notice. Plans free.
J.
Kollinsr.
411 Sohl Street.
Accuracy, Promptness and Keaaonabla Rates Guaranteed. EES. L. A. MINARD, PU3LIC
STEN OGRAPIIER Offlce, 151 So. Iloliman St Room , Telephone 1802. Hammond, Ind.
WM. KLEIHEGE 103 PLUMBING 152 SOUTH HOHMAN STREET. TELEPHONE 6U
1 CAN SELL
Your Real Estate cr Business
No matter where locf.ted. Properties and Business of all kinds sold auickly for cash in all parts of the Uaited States. Don't wait. Write today des'cribicg: what yon have to sell and gire cash price on same. If You Want to Buy any kind of business or real estate any where at any price, write me your requirements. I can save you tim an4 money. DAVID P. TAFF, THE LAND MAN - 413 Kansas Aye,, Tcpeks, Kao.
I L
Sf
