Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 266, Hammond, Lake County, 29 April 1907 — Page 7

Monday, April 20, 1907.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE SEVEN

Want Column

MALE HELP WAJiTED. 5VANTED Good cook for lunch counter. Apply 284 Sibley street after 7 p. m.J 4124-tf. WANTED Good steady man for Insurance business at once. Apply 11438 Wentworth, avenue, Chicago, 111., 4-23-lw. WANTED Weekly in Lake county wants a capable young man to act as outside solicitor; good wages. AdSres C. F., Lake County Timea. 4-25-tf WANTED Good talker, between 23 and 30 years of age, acquainted with contractors and builders in Calumet region. Address L. 11. Lake Cocntt Times. 4-25-tf. WANTED lien, at once for service in Philippine Islands; ablo bodied men, unmarried, between ages of 21 and 33, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For Information apply at Recruiting Office. 92 Btate street, Hammond, Ind., or 333 South State street, Chicago, 111. 1-26-tf. rEMALB HELP WANTED. WANTElfk-Wash woman. Apply at 243 Michigan avenue. Prefer have washing done at home. 4-27-tf. WANTED Second girl; good wages. Apply Green's hotel, 67 North Calumet, one block north of distillery. 4-29-6t. WANTED Girl for general housework 265 Sbley street. 4-23-tf. WANTED Waitress. Good Hammond Cafe. 4-22-tf. FOIt SALE. FOR SALE Two light work horses $90 will buy the two if taken at once. Apply 10053 Ewing avenue, South Chicago. 4-27-3t. FOR BALE Fine fresh cow and calf. Call one mile south Clack Oak. Hen Jensen. 4-27-Ct. FOR SALE Country hotel. For particulars inquire at this office. FOR SALE 120 acres; fine farm land In Lake county, Ind. Apply II. Fuss, 22G Sibley street, Hammond, or J. C. Foss, Crown Toint, Ind. 4-27-3t. FOR SALE ?330 buys choice lot 37 Vi xl!Q feet, Carroll street near State Line. Apply 23 Sibley street. 4-23-lw. FOR SALE Six room cottage, modern conveniences. Inquire at Lake County Times office. "R. S." 4-22-lmo. FOR SALE Cheap; a nine room house with1 Improvements; DO foot front; in heart of Hammond. Inquire M. Rubin, 19 Stato street. 4-26-lmo. FOR HALE One cottage, lots In WI11itmi ireet. May street and we3t of Ettite Linr. Inquire D. A. Push, 213 Ana Btrcet. Phone 3244. 4-5-lm. no Arm and rooms. FOR RENT Room in modern brick flat; hot water; terms reasonable to desirable party; near Calumet Park, East - Side. - Call or-address L. II. Oslxrn. 9756 Avenue II. 4-29-3t. WANTED Would like large room with alcove, in south part of town. Call at South Shore Gas company. 4-26-tf. WANTED Two boarders. Apply 402 Claude street. 4-22-tf. at FOR ; RENT Furnished rooms; all modern conveniences. Call 275 Oaklej avenue. 4-13-tf. SITUATION WANTED. WANTED Position by young lady stenographer, experienced. Inquire 833 Summer street, Hammond, Ind. 4-25-lwk. MISCELLANEOUS. Sealed proposals for carrying the United States mails on messenger routo between the postotiice at Hammond and Michigan Central R. It., and Chicago, Indiana & Louisville R. R., will be recieved at the Hammond postoffice up to and including May 1, 1907. 4-29-2t. WM. II. GOSTL1N, Postmaster. The parties who stole the French Foodie from 162 Nlnty-second street are known and If they do not return same, will bo prosecuted. 4-27-3t. WANTED A cottage or ground flat. live or six rooms, centrally located; two year lease if satisfactory. P. O. Box 281. Hammond, Ind. 4-24-lw. UARGAIN Hank fixtures for sale turn p. uriKinai rosi ten rears ao TfUOO.CO. Have been stored for seven years. Will sell for $300. Inquire "A. II." care The Luke County Times. CKO r.tjffalo nvenne. Adv. tf. MONEY AND TIME SAVED Let William Marrhant buy your tickets for Chicago theatres. Leave orders at Sum mers Pharmacy and Mllllkaas store 3-30-tf. r Does your sewing machine need re pairing? If eo call up C, F. Miller, the ewing machine expert, 241 East State street, phono 2601. 10-16-lm. THE CITIZENS' 6ERMAI NATIONAL BANK f namraoad. A comparative state meat of deposits lac our opening dayi Mar 12, 1903 Jane 13, 1908 i4,oso.es C3,S1C3 65,975.19 123.97S.7i 147,433.73 182.1S3.33 X72.7SS'M 173fftSll sz,isa.4a ... 3t Jul 12, 1893 August 11, 1903 ...iitntii September 12, 1906 ........ October 12, 1903 SoTimbw 12. 1WJ December 1, 1904 January 26, 1907 236,543.48 Jio County, City vr School Fund 1st eluded In the above. We are the yoangest bank In Hammond. Oar first birthday will be on May S, 1907. THREE PER CENT. PAID ON SAVINGS AND TIME DEPOSITS. Give ua a trial and be convinced, ei oar fa!f treatment. Final resulta of the bnll games In THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES' Sporting Extra.

BRIEFS

J O F E2

LEAGUE STANDINGS. AMERICAN LEAGUE.

o NATIONAL LEAGUE.

Club. W. L. Pet Chicago ft 4 .(JDl! Philadelphia 8 4 .CG7 New York 7 4 .G36 Detroit 8 5 .615 Cleveland 5 7 .417 Washington 4 7 .364 Eoston 4 8 .333 St. Louis 4 10 .2S6

Club. W. L. Pet Chicago 11 2 .SH5 New York 10 3 .769 Pittsburg 7 3 .700 Philadelphia ... 6 5 .C43 Boston 6 6 .500 Cincinnati 4 8 .333 St. Louis 3 12 .200 Drooklyn 1 9 .100

AMERICAN ASSOCIATIO X.

Club. W. L. Pet Columbus S 2 .SCO Louisville 3 3 .623 Indianapolis ....5 4 .530 Toledo ft 5 .545 Milwaukee 5 6 .455 Kansas City 3 4 .429 St. Paul 4 7 .034 Minnepolis 2 7 .222 CENTRAL LEAGUE. Club. W. L. Pet Evansvillo 4 0 1,000 Wheeling 3 0 1,000 Terre Haute 2 1 .667 Canton 1 1 .500 Springfield 1 1 .500 South Bend 1 2 .333 Dayton 0 3 .000 Grand Rapids 0 0 . .000

WESTERN LEAGUE.

Club. W. L. Pet Des Moines 7 3 .700 Lincoln 5 5 .500 Denver 5 5 .500 Omaha 5 5 .500 Sioux City 5 6 .453 Pueblo 4 7 .384

YESTERDAY'S EESULTS. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago, 3; Detroit, 1. St. Louis, 3; Cleveland, 0 (first game St. Louis, 2; Cleveland, 1 (second game) NATIONAL LEAGlli Chicago, 3; St. Louis, 2 (first game); Chicago, 1; St. Louis, 0 (second game). Pittsburg, 5; Cincinnati, 1. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Milwaukee Indianapolis, 4; Mil waukee, 1." At Louisville St. Paul, 5; Louis ville. At City, At Columbus Columbus, 3; Kansas 1. Toledo Minnepolis, 7; Toledo, 5 CENTRAL LEAGUE. At Evansville Evansville, 5; Grand Rapids, 4. At Canton Springfield, 2; Canton, 0. At Wheeling Wheeling, 3; Dayton, 2 At Terre Haute Terre Haute, S; South Bend, 1. WESTERN LEAGUE. At Omaha Denver game postponed; wet grounds. At Sioux City Pueblo, 16; Sioux City. 5. At Des Moines No game; wet grounds. EASTERN LEAGUE. At Newark Newark, 8; Baltimore, 3 At Rockey Point, R. I. Providence ; Jersey City, 3. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. At Shreveport Shreveport, 3; Little Rock, 0. At New Orleons Memphis, 5 Orleans, 2. New GAMES TODAY. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Detroit at Chicago. Cleveland at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Washington. New York at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Chicago at Cincinnati. Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philadelphia There was plenty of excitement at the meeting of the Chicago Coursing club yesterday afternoon on the course east of the Mt. Olivet cemetery, when two valuable dogs became exhausted in the fourth race and died shortly after being taken from the ring. Another dog. Lord Bruce dashed into the ring and killed a rabbit before he could be captured by the onlookers. The accident to the dogs happened while the fourth race was under way. Mascot, owned by James Donegan of Whiting and Limebrick, owned by Mr. Koath of Chicago, were exhausted during the course of the race and fell to the ground. They were brought to tho ring and all the aid that could be thought of administered, but tha animals died in a short time. They were valuable hounds and were valued at $300 a piece. The first race of the day was won by Lord Bruce, owned by Harry Kllcullen of Whiting. After Me. owned by Jim Donegan of Whiting, was in first In the second ra3 and Mascot got in the money on the third. The meeting was largely attended and fully 600 enthusiasts, watched the trials. The purse of $300 was offered for the races with $225 added. The association offers purses of $230 for the meeting netft week. The freshmen of the Hammond high school were completely outclassed by their older rivals the sophomores, Saturday afternoon at the interclass meet. The 10 team failed to get a flm. but managed to work in a few seconds and 1 thirds and rolled up a score of 2t points

IVlilEssal UNI! pfHIUnH

while the other team scored 82. Hunter, 09, took the individual honors and was the star of the meet, winning nine events and placed second in another Summers also showed good form winning the half mile, the mile and tho 120 yard low hurdle race. The relay race was won by the sophs in the fast time of 4 minutes and IS seconds. The officials wtre Clerk of Course Fox '07 Assistants Evers '08 and Bauer '08, Starter Elliott '08, and the judges. Professor A. L. Spohn, W. A. Hill and Will Whitlie-b. A banquet followed at the expense of the "freshies." No ono can blame E. E. Smalhers who won the Memphis gold cup, driving Major Delmar to vicltory over Lou Dillon, for being a trifle eoro over the aftermath of tho victory in the court case, but ho certainly is handing it back to the Memphis Trotting association when he offers the valuable cup back as a trophy for a mile dash between trotting mules. The well known sporting man certainly earned the cup not only in tho race but in the fight to keep the trophy in his possession after wards, when unsportsmanlike conduct was charged against him. Now ho says that he does not want the cup, and offers it back under amusing condi tions. He barrs all members of the Caucasian race excepting C. K. G. Billings in the mile dash for the cup, and stipulates that only one mule can bo entered in tho race by an owner. The Memphis association has not as yet replied to the offer. Score another game for the Sox yes terday when the combining of the interests of Owen and Walsh, proved disastrous to the fierce Tigers. Walsh relieved Owen in the eighth as crafty Davis thought that the Jenning's bunch was getting too frisky, although they had got but three hits off the delivery up to that time, u aisn was tne man of the hour thereafter, and although one run was scored, it was a gift from Silk O'Laughlin. Coughlin in a race to the plate after a passed ball by Sullivan ran several feet out of the base line around Ed Walsh," and while the Six kicked a bit tho ump waived them aside in hi3 silky manner. The triumphant Michigan team returned yesterday from their trip to Pennsylvania, where they captured the four mile relay race in a fine manner. Tho team was met by an enthusiastic gathering of students and town people and the usual red fire and speeches followed. The Wolverines now look forward to winning the inter-collegiate. The Cubs added two more victories to the growing score yesterday when they took the St. Louis bunch into camp in a double header. The "young fellows," Taylor and Chick Frazer were In the points for Chicago and the. latter allowed but one hit. Taylor allowed nine. The score was 3 to 2 and 1 to 0. Tip O'Neil and Gus Dundon, now playing at Toledo, are having their little differences. Dundon, who is in charge of the team, benched O'Neil yesterday for inffifferent base running. A dog fight was pulled off yesterday at Summitt, after tho boxing bouts were declared off. Bully, from the Farmer kennels, was declared the victor over King, owned by Tom Fish, after an hour and a half of fighting. The match was for a $300 purse. The Notre Dame team leaves tomor row for an extended trip, visiting all the leading cltie3 in the middle west. Tannehill's leg is rapidly recover ing, but lie, will not be in the game for two weeks yet. Guillen is there with the bat with out a doubt. Every dump and vacant lot a base ball diamond yesterday. "Beauty Doctors'" Harvests. Compounders cf beauty lotions, bleaches, pastes and powders nave thriven from time immemorial, though r.ever as in the present, when for tunes are being steadily amassed by the gentry who eater to the inborn yearning of womankind to improve upon nature's gift. Family Doctor. Cause Enough. Caxsone I hear your typewritist left you in a huff. Gebhart Yes, I put my foot In it. Carsone What did you do? Gebhart I had dinner with my wife one day last "week. Tha Bohemian. Fasily Satisfied. "Notoriety 13 dearer than anything else to that man." "Yes. He's all puffed up for an hour if he happens to see his name In the city directory." Suiting the Action. "How many new Ideas one can pick up in the course of one's travels!" soliloquized the shoplifter, deftly concealing a picture hat of the latest pattern under her long cloak as she passed the millinery counter. The First Glcvemaker. Rebekah, the wife of Isaac, for did she not "put the skins of the kid3 of the goats upon the hands cf Jacob" to deceive her blind old lord and master? D. C. IT 60. X. Y. Press. Truth and the Opposite. Think of little George Washington bravely facing hi3 father and telling the truth, and then think of how this strange old world is given to the other thing. Larrd Awaiting Exploration. There are still 20,000,000 square miles of tha earth's surface that hav not been explored.

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9 1 I'M I 1 I i .1 I ill 11 t- ill I

II ILL UU IVL1

13th Annual National Conference will Take Place in Minneapolis. JUNE 12 TO 19 TIE DATE Meeting To Be Presided Over By Secretary Butler of the Indiana State Beard. The national conference of charities is to hold its thirteenth annual meeting in Minneapolis. Minn., June 12-19. A. W. Butler, secretary of the Indiana board of state charities, will preside. Tho program includes ten general ses sions and nineteen section meetings. Archbishop Ireland will preach tho an nual conference sermon and many persons of national reputation will be in attendance. At the opening session the delegates will be welcomed by Governor John son and the mayor of Minneapolis. Mr. Butler will deliver the presidential address and Senator Beveridge will follow. icobert H. Hebberd, commissioner of public charities of New York City, is chairman of the committee on state upervision of charitable and correc tional agencies. His report will deal peciflcally with the inadequacy of much of the present supervision. Other papers Will be read by Hon. L. A. Rosing, a member of the Minnesota board of control; Hon. William R. Stewart, president of the New York board of harities; Rev. William J. White, su pervisor of Catholic charities, Brook lyn, and O. F .Lewis, who conducts the Joint application bureau of tho New York City charity organization and the poor association. The latter will take up the tramp question as it affects tate board work. The committee on needy families, their homes and neighborhoods, will take up different phases of organized charity work. A. W. Gutridge. general secretary of the SL Paul associated charities, is chairman. Some of the speakers for the different sessions of this committee are: W. D. Washburn. r., of Minneapolis; Prof. Graham Tay lor, Chicago; Prof. E. A. Ross of the department of political economy in the University of Wisconsin; W. II. Mc ciain, or the fat. iouis Provident asso ciation; Miss Mary E. Richmond, gen eral superintendent -of the Philadelphia society for organizing charity; A. W. McDougall and C. M. Hubbard of the charity societies, respectively of New ark, N. J., and Cincinnati, Ohio. The committee on promotion of health in home, school and factory, will conduct three symposiums; on health in the school, led by Dr. S. A. Knopf of New York City; on health in tho factory, by Miss Marie Jamme of the Minneapolis Visiting Nurses asso ciation, and on health in the home, by Sherman C. Kingsley, who as secre tary of the New York committee on the condition of school children, has been directing an extensive inquiry in to their welfare, will make the re port. Dr. Owen Copp, secretary of the Massachusetts state board of insanity, is chairman of tho committee on the insane and epileptic. He will outline a system of public care and treatment of the Insane, according to recent ad vances in this direction. lJr. Copp will be assisted by such experts as Dr. A. N. Barrett of the University Hospital of Michigan, which was the first psychiatrical clinic connected with an American university; Dr. J. Montgomery Mosher of New York Superintendent Adams of the insane hospital at Westboro, Mass.; Dr. Walter E. Fernald of the Massachusetts school for feeble minded; Homer Folks, secretary of the New York State Charities Aid association; Dr. John E. Fish of the Massachusetts school and home for crippled children. Dr. J. M. Murdock of the Western Pennsylvania institution for the feeble minded, has charge of the committee on defectives. The condition and needs of the blind, deaf, feeble minded, epil eptic and the physically deformed, will be considered. Dr. A. C. Rogers, su perintendent of the Minnesota school for feeble minded; Prof. J. Perrine Hamilton, superintendent of the Michigan employment Institution for the blind; George S. Wilson, superintend ent of tha Indiana school for the blind; Dr. J. N. Tate, superintendent of the Minnesota school for the deaf; W. Wade of Pennsylvania, author of "The Blind-Deaf and the Deaf-Blind"; Prof. E. R. Johnstone, superintendent of the New Jersey school for feeble minded; Dr. Wilmarth, Dr. Mogridge and Dr Rogers, superintendents, respectively, of the Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota schools for feeble minded, will all con tribute. One of tho most important commit tees of the conference is that on statistics. The chairman is John Koren, special expert of the U. S. census bu reau. Papers will be presented by Mr, Koren; Prof. Lightner Witmer of the University of Pennsylvania; Dr. Lins,y R. Williams of New York, and Frederick L. Hoffman, chief statistician of the Prudential Life Insurance company. George L. Sehon of Kentucky, who is so well known to Indiana charity workers, i3 the chairman of the committee on children. Senator Beveridge. John Temple Graves, the noted leader of philanthropic movements In the south, and a number of well known students and workers in the child saving field will have a part In the program of this committee. The committee on prison and police administration has for its chairman Joseph H. Scott, formerly of the Massachusetts reformatory and now su&er-

intendent of the reformatory at Elmira, the leading institution of the kind in the world. Major Richard

Sylvester, head of the police force in ! Washington, D. C; Henry Wolfer, warden of the Minnesota state prison; and Rev. Harris R. Cooley, director of public; service, Cleveland, O., will assist Mr. Scott in carrying out the committee's program. Because of excellence of the program and the prominence which Indi ana has been given in the organization of the conference, with Mr. Butler as president, Mr. Alexander Johnson as secretary, and a number of others on the executive and standing committees. it is hoped that this state will send a large delegation to the Minneapolis meeting. The executive committee is in communication with the railroad authorities and it is hoped that a sub stantial reduction in the rate secured. will be Rea Transfers April 20, 1007. real estate transfers furnby the Lake County Title A list of isht-d daily & Guaranty Co., abstracters, Lake county, Indiana. Gary Lot 25 Block 11 Broadway Addition S. L. Kohn to John Rosdilskl ct al $ ammond Und. 1a Lota 45 & 46 Block 1 in Rediv. Hoffman's 1st , Add., Giles T. Warner to David T. Emery Hammond Lot 41 Iilock 2 Subdiv ision Blocks 2 to 5 Stafford & Trankle's Addition, Louis II. Stafford t William II. Woods.. Hammond Lots 6 & 7 Block 2 Towle's 2nd Addition, Henry Hartley to Thomas Hammond... Hammond 35 Block 2 sub. Blocks 2 to 5 Stafford & Trankle's Add., Louis H. Stafford to Ira Sholos.. Hammond W Lot 10 & E u Lot 11 sub. W y2 Block "A" Dyer's Addition, Gostlin Meyn & Co., to Lucy N. Granger Hammond Lots 7 & 8 Block 6 Marbles sub. Marble's Addition, Edwin Bcbb to Jesse L. Ewing. Hammond Lots 6, 7 & 8 Block 6 Mrble's Addition, Jesse L. Ewing to Charles B. Schermerhoun . Hammond Lot 2 Block 2 Fogg & Hammond's 2nd Addition, Joseph P. Kasper to William Farlin - Hammond Lots 5 & G Marble's sub. Marble's Addition, Jess L. Ewing to Amanda E. Clark..... - Hammond Lots 5 & 6 Block 2 Birkhoff's Addition, Georgo Birkhoff, Jr., to Eugene II. McGary - Hammond Lot 3 Block 1. Chester B. Masslich to Ward B. Sawyer, Hammond Lot 22 Block 2 Morris Addition, Joseph B. Morris to Jacob Krikschumar Hammond E E y2 Lot 2 a w W Va Lot 1 Block 4 Redlv. Helberg's Add., Le Grand T. Meyer to Louis II. Scheer. Toleston Lots 31 & 32 Block 5 Logan Park Addition, Arthur E. Clark to bhas. B. Shearer Toleston Lots :3, 34, 35 Block 22 S. in C. T. L. & I. Co.'s Rediv. 4th, Owen S. McGinnlty to Edward Landsberg Indiana Harbor Lot 22 Block 62 Ella G. Orth to Matharine E. Pound 3000 Indiana Harbor Lot 19 Block 2 in 1st Addition, East Chicago Co. to Julia McLunis 1175 Indiana Harbor Lot 24 Block 5 in 1st Addition, East Chicago Co. to Thomas Chizman. 1475 East Chicago Lot 59 Block 21 in E 4, 7 S W M 29, 37, 9, East Chicago Co. to Frank O. Green.. 1205 Hobart Pt. Lot 47, Barbara Hal sted to Anna E. Llnklart. . . . . 200 Section 23, 35, 8 W. Pt. N 143.46 acres, John Brown Ex. to Herman E. Sasse . . 12,767.94 Section 13. 36. 9 W. 16 acres N E i'. S W V.. William Dedelow to Henry Muchert 1 Section 8, 34. 8 W. Pt. N W i, Nicholas Lauerman to Meyer Winer 150 Crown Toint Pt. Lot 6 Commis sioner's Addition, Elizabeth Burge to Mrs. Maude E. Creager 1000 Crown Point W Lot 69 also 25 feet off N. side Robinson's reserve; Anna M. Dales et al to Levi L. Chatfield 500 In addition to the foregoing trans fers there have been filed for record 5 mortgages, 10 releases and 4 mis cellaneous instruments. Y. M. C. A. in New York. New York city is the greatest Y. M. C. A. center in the world. It has more than 40 organizations and 20,000 mem bers; it has 400 secretaries and employes, and 2,800 of its members are office holders and committeemen. Its largest building, the Twenty-third street branch, cost $1,000,000, and has 3,600 members. Keep Mum. Women, as women, are pretty much alike. They have the same hair, differing slightly only as to color and length; same features, same thoughts. When we love one of them, therefore, we are in reality loving them all. But it is just as well not to mention this. Life. They Tire Him. takes a red-nosed man with it greasy vest and a soiled collar and a cheap cigar, and with hi3 feet on aaother chair, "to put the proper emphasis in the words, "These women reformers make me weary." W. D. Nesbit, in Chicago Post Concerning Doctors. A man may not have much faith In doctors, up to the time when the first baby arrives In his house. After that he regards them with awe. Not for Her. An Englisli vegetarian proposed to a woman, whereupon she delivered her self of the following scathing words:' "Go along with you! What? Be flesh of your flesh, and you a-livlng on cabbage? Go and marry a grass widow!"

MOJf Wu IJiiiLileiiill

Thinking of a New Waist, Cravenette,

To herself if she fails to spend a quarter of an hour looking at Dobson's before she buvs anywhere. It is our desire, that every lady should regard this advertisement as a personal letter from our store to her.

Bo

Telephone 1524 SOUTH HOHMAN ST.

18-4

1 1000 Feet from the Hammond Court House This is One of Our Homes 100 t JTm

300 ,

500 I .' X

Sewers, Sidewalk, City Water Gas and all Improvements going in now Lots on Easy Terms. ?1oney Loaned To Buiid. The best class of people are locating in our sub-division and a "New Homewood" is being built within 5 minutes Walk from the Business Center of Hammond. & A. KIMKADS5Ker 110 First National Bank Bldg. HAMMOND.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK, HAMMOND, IND.

Capital and Surplus $140,000.00 UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY

OFFICERS: Jt. TUBNER. Prldmt S. C. MIN AS. Vk Pre' W. O. 3 ELM AN, CMhior W. P. MASHINO. Asst. Cwfcler

WE PAY 3 PER CENT INTEREST Oil TIME DEPOSITS

W. colic It your account. W offer Cotrvat!i Ban kins. OLDEST A SAVINGS

Was added on March First. Deposits of $1 and up received. Interest paid every three months at the rats of three per cent.

Use Undo Siefosrt's Bread The Master Piece by a Master Baker. KusiftBR & THE HAMMOND BAKIHG CO. near hcs es

a Artistic Commercial

Suit, Coat, Skirt, Petticoat, etc. etc.

4

iiiisiice HAMMOND. BOARD OF DIRECTORS l M. TURITER, W. & B ELM AH. V. W. HEY!. &. O. MC A3. W. F. MASRTNO, J. N. BECKAIAJt y6u Ubwflty, Coartey, Prostata. u4 BANK IN HAMMOND. DEPARTMENT Printins:--Tirnes Office