Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 215, Hammond, Lake County, 28 February 1907 — Page 6

PAGE STX

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES

EAST CHICAGO NEWS

G. W. Lewis was in Chicago on busl ness yesterday. James Lahey Is reported very ill with typhoid fever. Georgia Compton of East Chicago was in Hammond yesterday. Miss Helen Harris is working for Crumpacker & Moran in Hammond. Mesdames I. and M. Specter spent last night in Whiting calling on friends. Mrs. E. T. Davis is considerably better and expects to bo able to be around In a few days. Mrs.' Tope of Chicago visited with Mrs. Hascall and Mrs. Johnson yesterday afternoon. Miss Jessie Compton of East Chicago who has been sick with typhoid fever U getting along fine. Moses Specter has added to his list of property another lot in Gibson. The deal was closed yesterday. Do not mis3 the Immanuel Ortorlo given tonight at the Congregational church by its choir, assisted by other talent. Mrs. Joseph Lamont of Ensley, Ala., is visiting relatives here. She Is staying with Mrs. Alec MeNabb, 4728 Tod avenue. The Misses Gertrude Cole, Fannie Cohen and Dick Iteiland attended the dancing Bchool in Hammond Tuesday night. Mrs. A. P. Brown and Mrs. Dale 6pent yesterday in the Chicago library where they were getting data and information for use in next weeks Reading club. Contractor Cherry will commence work on Harry Caplan's new building in Morris' addition to Hammond next week. After the completion of the building it will be occupied by Brick Bailey. The Ladies Aid society of the Swedish church met at the home of Mrs. Sandien this afternoon. A lunch was served from 4 o'clock until 6. The proceeds are to be used for the benefit of thee hurch. It is rumored that the Tod opera house was not purchased by Kaufman & Wolf, but that Gostlln, Meyn and Kid Warner are the owners, and that the latter will open up a saloon in the corner room, now being used by the East Chicago Land company. Dr. Bowles of Chicago will attend to the patients and practice of Dr. Spear, who leaves with his family on March 1 for Europe. Dr. Spear will take a post-graduate course in London. Df. Bowles spent one year in the Hammond hospital. The East Chicago Dramatic club gave another one of their delightful entertainments last evening in the Tod opera house. The title of the play vr&s "Daisy Garland's Fortune." The hou9e was well filled and East Chicago can well be proud of her local talent. The Block-Pollak company has nearly completed the concrete foundation for its new boiler, which they anticipate installing the latter part Of thl3 week, and have same ready for use about the middle of next week. Since their locating here they have doubled the capacity of their plant and are still contemplating making more additions In the spring. A number of the ladies of the Eastern Star enjoyed the hospitality of Mrs. Louis Cook yesterday afternoon at her home in South Deerlng. The ladie9 left East Chicago about 11 o'clock, arriving in South Chicago about 2. Cards were played during the afternoon. Late in the day a very nice luncheon was served. As favors a large red rose and a fern leaf was given to each lady. Those who were there were: Mesdames Thomas, Barlow, S. Clapper, B. Clapper, Van Gieson. G. Clinton, Dean, Bowers, Lightbody, Fowler, Alyea, Schwab, and the Misses Cora Winters and Grace Moss. Having purchased the entire teaming, livery and express business of Smith & Claffer company, we wish to announce to our patrons and public In general that after March 1. the firm will be known as the East Chicago Transfer and Express company. ,J. P. J.ewis ami B. J. Rcttlg, proprietors. 2-25-10t. W. R. DIAMOND FOR PURE FOODS 709 Chicago Ave. Phone 21 EAST CHICAGO, IXD. ALBERT GIVEN FASHIONABLE TAILOR Sprinsr and Summer Sty!e9 oven for your inspection. 12 Chicago Ave. E. CHICAGO, IND. Branch at 101 State St , Haramond. . SPECTER, E AST CHICAGO General Agent for North German Lloyd-Hamburg American Line Canadian Paciilc Line. All Foreign Money Transferred. Pay County Taxes Now find save penalty, we have complete duplicates on East Chicago Property. THE LADD AGENCY Real Estate and Inmrarce 3hone 343 EAST CHICAGO, IXD BURNS! DE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Frank Williams of SSth street, are the proud parents of a fine big baby boy. Edith, the little daughter of Mr. end Mrs. Robert Thatcher of 931 S Cottage Grove- avenue, is ill. Little Flroence Cochran, who has been seriously ill with pneumonia for the lasL week, is improving

Master William C. Marsden, son of Dr. Marsden, is visiting with his grandparents in 930S Cottage Grove avenue.

Mrs. Charles Johnson and daughter, Mildred, of 9307 Cottage Grove avenue, spent Tuesday with friends ifi East Chicago. Mrs. II. A. Brinkman of 9307 Cottage Grove avenue, is entertaining her mother, Mrs. E. Lindeman of 5311 Center avenue. Dr. William Mahaffy of S9th place has bought out the practice of Dr. Biberton and will now have his office at Grand Crossing. Little Ellen Kreager, who, with her mother Is visiting her uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. Curtis of 9307 Cottage Grove avenue, is ill with the measles. She is rapidly improving. WEST PULLMAN Judge Brown from South Dakota, is visiting at the home of Ret Df. Shaw. Mr. and Mrs. Wilder moved into their new home in Parnell avenue Tuesday. Mrs. S. T. Sears of Douglas Park was the guest Of Mrs. C. L. Rhase Tuesday. The little children of Mr. and Mrs. Allison of Wallace street, are sick with scarlet fever. The members of the Nemo club met at the home of Mrs. J. A. Bond Monday evening at a 7 o'clock dinner. IT. Hahn, who has been traveling for the International Harvester company, returned last week from South America. The concert given by Melvin Martineon Tuesday evening, Feb. 23, at the Congregational church, was a grand success. VALPARAISO NEWS C. V. Owen was in Chicago on busi ness. O. P. Kinsey was in Chicago on busi ness. Jack and C. V. Troup were in Chciago today. McDowell Pomeroy was in Chicago on business. Charles Sheehen was in Chicago on business.. J. H. O. Smith is home for a few days visit. Mrs. A. F. Helneman was in Chicago on business. Woody Merrill of Mishawaka visited In the city today. J. B. Dilley returned home after a visit in Oklahoma. Dr. J. R. Ragin was a Chicago pass enger this morning. Mr. and Mr9. H. B. Brown were in Chicago On business. Charles Blanchard of Hebron was in the city on business. George Card and John Harmes were In Chicago on business. Mr. and Mrs. George Rockwell are visiting relatives at Knox. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dowker of Dan ville are visiting in the city. Miss Loura Gregg, wha has been visiting here returned to LaPorte. Mrs.- William Baldwin of Knox is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Orrl3 Booth. Attorney D. E. Kelley was at Gar rett On legal business yesterday. Mrs. Edwin Forbes Of West Pullman was visiting in the City with relatives. A marriage license was issued to Frank Coslett and Elizabeth HuhQ, both residents of Porter. Harry Wlnslow returned to work this morning after spending a few dayB hero with his parents. Christian Werken was fined $20 and cost for allowing unauthorized parties in his ealoon cm Sunday. Auditor S. P. Corncy appointed Clar ence Dillingham to succeed his father, jStanton Dillingham, as township trus ts. The case of L. W. Block of license to open a ealoon in Main street but who had a remonstrance riled against him. apepared before II. B. Tuthill and he decided that he was a resident of the Vale and could open. SOUTH DEERING John Conley went out to Gary Wednesday. Tom Davis is reported to be on the sick list. Mrs. Ed Fitzgerald visited out of town yesterday. Little Louise Hasslan of 99T-109th street is confined to her roonl with a severe cold. Mrs. J. Fisher and Miss Violet Edman went on a shopping tour f6 Chicago Wtdnesdav. Mrs. Harry Robert3 entertained her daughter from Hammond yesterday afternoon. Joe Conley and J. Reid saw "The Moonshiners" at the Calumet theater Wednesday evening. THE LAKE COr.YTT TIMES never was and never shall be a "trimmer."

TONY ISLAND NEWS

lm Mrs. Clyde Swartzile spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. 3. Bampl. Mrs. Judge attended the Calumet theater Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Hickman visited friends in Burnside Tuesday evening. i3 sewing for Mrs. Coogan this week, is sewin gfor Mrs. Coogan this week. Mrs. D. Begely of Burnside visited Mrs. M. Leahey Tuesday afternoon. A fireman who works for the Nickel Plate has moved into the house formerly occupied by Mrs. Whitehouse. Miss Bessie Swartzile, who is a nurse at tho Washington park hospital, visited her parents in Stony Island Wednesday. WHEELER NEWS Mrs. Arnold was a Valparaiso visitor Wednesday. W. II. Abbott transacted business in Valparaiso Wednesday. II. Schofield was a Valparaiso visitor Wednesday. O. M. Tatlock transacted business in Chicago Wednesday. Oliver Crisman was a visitor in Valparaiso Wednesday. Postmaster C. O. Johnston and wife of Hobart visited with L. K. Johnston of Wheeler Wednesday. PULLMAN NEWS Miss Lizzie Sclmldt of Pullman visited Miss Thiry of Roseland today. Mrs. Miller of Indiana Harbor visited her Pullman friends today. Mrs. Engle visited Mrs. Overhide of Roseland last week. Mrs. Sanford was burled from Holy Rosary church last Tuesday. Mr. Collins of Kensington avenue was buried from Holy Rosary church Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock . Rev. Octerene gavo a splendid lecture at the Academy of Our Lady, describing his trip to Europe. The Marquetry department is at present very busy. There- is plenty of over time. The benefit concert of the Methodist Church was very well attended. The entire program was furnished by the Roseland School of Fine Arts, and showed the capability of the pupils as well as those of the teachers who had charge of the program, to furnish a delightful program to the music lovers who were present. The Eack-Levlton wedding was celebrated with great solemnity at the Burnside half by Dr. Stol2. The bride is well known in social circles here and the bridegroom also. They have the congratulations of their many friends who wish them success in all undertakings, and a long and happy wedded life. The members of the Turnverein gave a farmers dance at the Turner hall. The women wore short skirts and the men wore knee knickerbockers. It was a regular country dance. A large crowd was present. All departed at a very late hour satisfied that they had had a genuine good time. CLARK STATION Herman Heine of Ross, Ind., was a visitor here Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. Hoopes of Clark was in Chicago on business Tuesday. The brick work of R. Muck's house was finished Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Ohera of Clark was a business visitor in Chicago Tuesday. Mrs. W. F. Warren of Englewood was the guest of Mrs. E. B. Miller yesterday. Mrs. William Schwalbee and Mrs. Brown of Clark -were visitors at Ross, Ind., Tuesday. LANSING NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Ir.t Hout made a business trip to Hammond yesterday. George Keklcer of West Pullman visited here yesterday. Misses Ton, Hart and Runge attended an entertainment at Thornton last night. T. Taarlberg, T. Gowenn and Henry Zerdine. former students of the Thornton high school, are now employed on different farms near here. $100 REWARD, 3100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science ha3 been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directlv upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold bv all Druggists. 75c, Take ilaU's Family Pills for constipation.

., THE CONQUEST sf CANAAN

By BOOTH TARKINGTON, Author of "Cherry.' "Monsieur Beiucaire," Etc.

COPYRIGHT. 1903, BY co:vtisced. he pulled her round sharply to the left. "We're not going to your house." "Where are we going?" "We're going to your Uncle Jonas'." "Why?" she cried in supreme astonishment. "What do you want to take me there for? Don't you know that he's stopped speaking to me?" "Yes," said the old man grimly, with something of the look he wore when delivering a clincher at the National House; "he's stopped ppeaklng to every body.' CHAPTER V. IIE Canaan Daily Tocsin of the following morning "ventured the assertion" upon its front page that "the scene at the Tike mansion was one of unalloyed festivity, music and mirth; a fairy bower of airy figures wafting here and there to the throb of waltz strains; a veritable temple of Terpsichore, shining forth with a myriad of lights, "which, together with the generous profusion of floral decorations and the mingled delights afforded by Minds orchestra of Indianapolis and Caterer Jones of Chicago, was in all likelihood never heretofore surpassed in elegance In our city. Only one incident," the Tocsin remarked, "marred on otherwise perfect occasion, and out of regard for the culprit's family connections, which are prominent In our social world, we withhold his name. Suffice It to say that through the vigilance of Mr. Norbert Flltcroft, grandson of Colonel A. A. Flltcroft, who proved himself a thorough Lecoq (the celebrated French detective), the rascal was seized and recognized. Mr. Flltcroft, having discovered him In hiding, had a cordon of waiters drawn up around his hiding place, which was the charmingly decorated side piazza of the Pike mansion, and sent for Judge Tike, who came upon the intruder by surprise. lie evaded the Judge's Indignant grasp, but received a well merited blow over the head from a poker which the Judge had concealed about his person while pretending to approach the hiding place casually, Attracted to the scene by the cries of Mr. Flltcroft, who, standing behind Judge FIke, accidentally received a blow from the same weapon, all the guests of the evening sprang to view the scene, only to behold the culprit leap through a crevice between the strips of canvas which inclosed the piazza. He was seized by the colored coachman of the mansion, Sam Warden, and immediately pounced upon by the cordon of Caterer Jones' dusky assistants from Chicago, who were In ambush outside. Unfortunately after a brief struggle he managed to trip Warden and, the others stumbling upon the prostrate body of the latter, to make his escape In the darkness." Not quite a mile above the northernmost of the factories on the water front there projected into the river near the end of the crescent bend above the town a long pier, relic of steamboat days, rotting now and many years fallen from its maritime uses. About midway of its length stood a huge, crazy shed, long ago utilized as a freight storeroom. This had been patched and propped, and a dangerous looking veranda attached to it, overhanging the water. Above the doorway was placed a sign whereon might be read the words, "Beaver Beach, Mike's Place." The shore end of the pier was so ruinous that passage was offered by a single row of planks, which presented an appearance so temporary as well as Insecure that one might have guessed thetr office to be something In the nature of a drawbridge. From these a narrow path ran through a marsh left by the receding river to a country road of desolate appearance. Here there was a rough Inclosure or corral, with some tumbledown sheds which afforded shelter on the night of Joseph Louden's disgrace for a number of shaggy teams attached to those decrepit and musty vehicles known picturesquely and accurately as night hawks. By 3 o'clock Joy at Mike's place had become beyond question unconflned, and the tokens of it were audible for a long distance In all directions. If, however, there Is no sound where no ear hears, silence rested upon the countryside until an hour later. Then a lonely figure came shivering from the direction of the town not by the road, but slinking through the snow upon the frozen river. It came slowly, as though very tired, and cautiously, too, often turning its head to look behind. Finally It reached the pier and stopped as if to listen. Within the house above a piano of evil life was being beaten to death for Its sins and clamoring its last cries horribly. The old shed rattled in every part with the thud of many heavy feet and trembled with the shock of noise, an incessant roar of men's voices, punctuated with women's screams. Then the riot quieted somewhat. There was a clapping of hands, and a violin began to squeak measures Intended to be oriental. The next moment the listener scrambled up one of the rotting piles and stood upon the veranda. A shaft of red light through a broken shutter struck across the figure above the

T

HARPER shoulders, revealing a bloody handkerchief clumsily knotted about the head and beneath it the face of Joe Louden. Joe opened the door and went In. All cf the merry company (who were able) turned sharply toward the door as it opened. One or two nearest the door asked the boy, without great curiosity, what had happened to his head. lie merely shook it faintly In reply and crossed the room to an open hallway beyond. At the end of this he came to a frowzy bedroom, the door of which stood ajar: Seated at a deal table and working by a dim lamp with a broken chimney, a close cropped, red bearded, red haired man in his shirt sleeves was Jabbing gloomily at a column of figures scrawled In a dirty ledger. He looked up as Joe appeared in the doorway, and his eyes showed a slight surprise. "I never thought ye had the temper to git somebody to split yer head," said he. "Where'd ye collect it?" He unwound the handkerchief and removed it from Joe's head gently. "Wheel" he cried as a long gash was exposed over the forehead. "I hope ye left a mark somewhere to pay a little on the score o' this!" Joe chuckled and dropped dizzily back upon the pillow. "There was another who got something like it," he gasped feebly, "and, oh, Mike, I wish you could have heard him going on! Perhaps you did. It was only three miles from here." "Nothing I'd liked better!" said the other, bringing a basin of clear water from a stand in the corner. "It's a beautiful thing to hear a man holler when he gits a grand one like ye're wearing tonight." He bathed the wound gently and, hurrying from the room, returned Immediately with a small Jug of vinegar. Wetting a rag with this tender fluid, he applied It to Joe's head, speaking soothingly the while. "Nothing in the world like a bit o' good cider vinegar to keep oft the festorln'. It may seem a trifle scratchy fer the moment, but It assassinates the blood p'ison. There re go! It's the fine thing fer ve, Joe. What are ye squirmIn' about?" 'Tm only enjoying it," the boy answered, writhing as the vinegar worked into the gash. "Don't you mind my laughing to myself." "Ye're a good one, Joe!" said the other, continuing his ministrations. "I wisht, after art, ye felt like makln' me known to what's the trouble. There's some of us would be glad to take it up fer ye, and" "Xo, no; it's all right. I was somewhere I had no business to be, and I got caught' "Who caught ye?" "First some nice white people" Joe smiled his distorted smile "and then a low down black man helped me to get away as soon as he saw who it was. He's a friend of mine, and he fell down and tripped up the pursuit." "I always knew ye'd git into large trouble some day." The red bearded man tore a strip from an old towel and began to bandage the boy's head with an accustomed hand. "Yer taste fer excitement has been growin' on ye every minute of the four years I've known ye." "I've got $7," Joe said, without replying to Mike, "and I'll leave the clothes I've got on. Can you fix me up with something different?" "I'll have the things fer ye, and I'll let ye know I have no use fer $7," relie looked up as Joe appeared in the doorway. turned the red bearded man crossly. "What are ye sniffin' fer?" "I'm thinking of the poor fellow that got the mate to this," said Joe, touching the bandage. "I can't help crying when I think they may have used vinegar on his head too." "Git to sleep if ye can!" exclaimed the Samaritan as a hideous burst of noise came from the dance room, where 6ome one seemed to be breaking a chair upon an acquaintance. "I'll go out and regulate the boys a bit." He turned down the lamp, fumbled In hi3 hlD nnrdiet and went to the door.

t BROTHERS !

r is Crp- m

CHAPTER VI. THE day broke with a scream of wind out of the prairies and such cloudbursts of snow that

A Joe could see neither bank of ' the river as he made his way down the ; big bend of ice. The wind struck so bitterly that now and then he stopped j and, panting and gasping, leaned his weight against it. The snow on the ground was caught up and flew like sea spume in a hurricane; it swirled about him, Joining the Cakes in the air, so that it seemed to be snowing from the ground upward as much as from the sky downward. Fierce as it was, hard as it was to flght through, snow from the earth, snow from the sky, Joe was grateful for it, feeling that It veiled htm, making him safer, though he trusted somewhat the change of costume he had effected at Beaver Beach. A rough workman's cap was pulled down over his ears and eyebrows; a knitted comforter was wound about the lower part of his face; under a ragged overcoat he woro blue overalls and rubber boots, and in one of his red mlttened hands he swuug a tin dinner bucket. lie bent his body against the wind and went on, still keeping to the back ways, until he came to the alley which passed behind his own home, where, however, he paused only for a moment to make a quick survey of the premises. A glance satisfied him; he ran to the next fence, hoisted himself wearily over It and dropped Into Roger Tabor'3 back yard. The place seemed empty, and he was on the point of going away when he heard the click of the front gate and saw Ariel coming toward him. At the sound of the gate he had crouched close agalast the side of the house, but she saw him at once. She stopped abruptly and, throwing the waterproof back from her head, looked at him through the driven fog of snow. One of her hands was stretched toward him Involuntarily, and It waa in that attitude that he long remembered her she looked an Undine of the enow. Suddenly she ran to him, Btlll keeping her hand outstretched until It touched his own. "How did you know me?" he said. "Know youT' was all the answer she made to that question. "Come into the house. I've got some coffee on the etovo for you, I've been up and down the street waiting for you ever since it began to get light. There's no one here." She led him to the front door, where he stamped and shook himself. He was snxiw from head to foot. She wasted no time In getting him to the kitchen, where, when she had removed his overcoat, she placed him in a chair, unwound the comforter and, as carefully as a nurse, lifted the cap from his Injured head. When the strip of towel was disclosed, she stood quite still for a moment, with the cap in her hand. Then, with a broken little cry, she stooped and kissed a lock of his hair which escaped, discolored, beneath the bandage. "Stop that!" he commanded, horribly embarrassed. "Oh, Joe," she cried, "I knew! I knew It was there, but to see it! And It's my fault for leaving you. I had to go or I wouldn't have I" "Where'd you hear about it?" he asked shortly. "I haven't been to bed," she answered. "Grandfather and I were up all night at Uncle Jonas', and Colonel Flitcroft came about 2 o'clock, and he told us." "Did he tell you about Norbert?" "Yes a great deal." She poured coffee into a cup from a pot on the stove, brought it to him, then, placing some thin slices of bread upon a gridiron, began to toast them over the hot coals. "The colonel said that Norbert thought he wouldn't get well," she concluded, "and Mr. Arp said Norbert was the kind that never die, and they had quite an argument." "What were you doing at Jonas Tabor's?" asked Joe, drinking his coffee, with a brightening eye. "We were sent for," she answered. "What for?" She toasted the bread attentively without replying, and when she decided that it was brown enough plied It on a warm plate. This she brought to him and, kneeling in front of him, her elbow on his knee, offered for his consideration, looking steadfastly up at his eyes. He began to eat ravenously. "What for7' he repeated. "I didn't suppose Jonas would let you come in his house. Was be sick?" "Joe," she said quietly, disregarding his questions "Joe, hare you got to ran away 7" "Yes, I've got to," he answered. "Would you have to go to prison If you stayed?" She asked this with a breathless tensity. "I'm not going to beg father to help me out," he said determinedly. "He said he wouldn't, and he'll be spared the chance. lie won't mind that; nobody will care! Nobody! What does anybody care what I do?" "Now you're thinking of Mamie!" she ! cried. "I can alwava tell. Whenever i you don't talk naturally you're think ing of her!" He poured down the last of the coffee, growing red to the tips of his ears. "Ariel," he said, "if I ever come back" "Wait," she interrupted. "Would you have to go to prison light away if they caught you?" "Oh, It isn't that," he laughed sadly. "But I'm going to clear out. I'm not going to take any chances. I want to see other parts of the world, other kind3 of people. I might have gone, anyhow, soon, even if it hadn't been To De Continued TIMES' till ADS Pi

ins unf

OP I LAKE COUNTY $3.50 kef $3.00 When in InJiana Harbor Kemcmber THO NEW STAR RHSTAURwr m. Pampas. Prop. Block Avenue Near Michigan Av. First-class Meals sorved at all hours. CHAS. SPEICHERT CARPENTER AND BUILDER Estimates Furnished on Short Notice Fhons 162 Residence 270 Michigan Avenue. HAMMOND. IND. WILLIAMS & CO., Fish, Oysters, Game and Poultrr Fresh DaMv - - v-uj urnea Opn Evening 63 0. State St W. B. NEWMAN, Contractor of Painting, Paper Hangin and Decorating 147 MORTON COURT Brummel & Budinger HIGH GRADE CIGARS 33-37 E. Randolph St., Chicago tel Central 3603 LA PORT ADA (The Can Claw) For sale at all local dealer WHITE PINE COUGH REMEDY Prepared by E. R. STAUFFER & CO., Druggists 2S4 State Street, Cor. Oakley Hammond, InJ Western Union Telegraph Co. Office In Rotunda of HAMMOND BUILDING. INVALID APPLIANCE & CABINET MFRS. Manufacturers of Modem Mechanical Appliances foff the Alleviation of the Suffering Office & Factory, 4: 6-4 12 Indiana Ave. HAMMOND REALTY CO. Owners of choice lota la UcUla'ft Sub-dlvlsioa. Hammond, Bldg. Hammond, lad. Phone 21&2. DE. W. H. DAVIS DENTIST Roouia 1-3, Majestic Bid. Special Notice Do not confuse this efflco with the Harvard Dentists, tot I am In no way connected with them, never have been. Beat Equfpfcea Krp' Shop Ttk tns Btt 6. W. HUNTER AUTOMOBILE GARAGE Compressed Air FREE Bowser Gasoline System 1 8. MOirUN STREET Phone 122. Huehn Block. Hammond. 14 W. F. MASHINO HUE INSURANCE. Offlce in First National Bank Blfls. Axctzr&cXf Promptness anaTIU&sonbli Rates Guaranteed. UBS. L. A. MIHAED, PU3LIO STESfOG IUPOEIt Office, 2S1 So. IX oh man St., Room Telephone IS 02. Hammond. lad KONG HONG LO CO. Chinese, American and European RESTAURANT Chinese Chop Suey. All Chinese dlsbaw serred in short order. Chinese Goods Open from and Tea. 11 a. m. to 1 a. ra PI State Street Hammond. Ind. Vra. Pepperdina & Son Phone 2633 Oontractors and Builders Cement and Concrete Construction a Specialty. 244 Plummer Ave. Hammond. Lake County Savings & Trust Co. Collects Ccunty Taxes. We have a complftf duplicate on Hammond property. 82 State St. Open evenSns except Thursday. It yon want every Cngllsh apeaklas persan ta Icie County to reaa your advertisement pat it In TUB LAKE COUXTY TIMES.

i I r r-t