Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 23, Hammond, Lake County, 15 July 1907 — Page 4

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4 THE LAKH COUNTY TOES. Monday, Julv 15, 1907. . f T

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The Lake County Times

AN: EVENING NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AN L PUBLISHING COMPANY.

"lOnterd as second cla matter June 2S, 1906. at the postoffice at Hammond. Indiana, under the Act of Congress. March 3, 1879."

LOCAL OFFICES HAJWO.VD BUILDING. TeUyhour 111. SOUTH CHICAGO orT'ICK f140 Ill'FFAI.O AVENUE. FOREIGN RKPIiESK.NTATIVES PAVXK & YOUNG, 750 MAIKIVLTTB BUILDING, CHICAGO. 610 rOTTUfl BUILDING, NEW YOKIC

TEAR HALF YKAH fcUfcULE COMES.

larger Paid Up Circulation Than Any Otncr Newspaper in Northern Indiana.

CIRCULATION YESTERDAY

CIRCULATION HOOKS OPEN TO THE rUBLIO FOH INSPECTION AT ALL TIME?.

TO SUVSCIMBEItS Readers of The Tim- are rrqueated to favcr the man. mxrrcftit by reporting any lrr-iculurltie la dtrllverluic. Communicate with the CtrccsJatlfcA Btpartnent, or telephone 111.

BUSINESS PRINCIPLES SECRET OF Y. M. C. A. SUCCESS. Next Friday tho railroad Young Men's Christian association at Gibson will oen tho new building which has been erected at a cost of $15,000 or $20,000. Tho building has been made possible only because the railroads recognize the beneficent influence of an Institution of this kind and have donated the money for Its construction. It Is a favorable commentary on the Y. M. C. A. as an institution when its promoters can persuade a hard headed railroad man that it is of enough benefit to his employes to warrant his company's spending thousands of dollars on It. Tho. secret of tho success of the Y. I.I. C. A. movement over tho country lies in the fact that this organization is the only religious institution that is conducted on strictly business principles. As Elbert Hubbard says, "preachers exist on the tips of the members of their congregation." So do churches and it is too lad that institutions of this kind are compelled to eko out an existence on tho gratuities of their members. It is not very conducive to respect for the conduct of Institutions of this kind When brilliant men with college educations are compelled to merely exist. The Y. M. C. A. does not do things that way. It Is conducted on business principles. Each member pays a minimum fee of $8 to $10 a year. Any man's religion .should be worth $10 a year and if he wants to pay more he may do so. But the Idea is to get a stipulated amount every year and then the salary of the secretary will not have to be made up on the proceeds of some fair. The Y. M. C. A. pays its b ills. It gets nothing for nothing. When it is once fairly established It is self supporting. Its members usually get their money's worth. That is the kind of an Institution tho business man likes to deal with. The railroad man realizes that his men are not only Improved morally but mentally and physically as well. He is decidedly for an institution of this kind and the thousands of dollars that business men all over the country have donated attest to the popularity of the institution. TWO SIDES TO THIS STORY.

There was more truth than poetry in the remarks of Judge II. B. Tuthill on corporations, delivered before the state bar association at Indianapolis last week. The only fault that could be found with his honor's speech seems to have been that he did not go quite far enough. There Is no doubt that corporations are largely responsible for their own Ills by reason of their indifference to what is just and right with reference to their employers and the public to whom they must look for their support. There Is small doubt that the general disposition on the part of the "souless" institutions is to "do nothing excepting what they are forced to do." On the other hand there is equally small doubt that tho hostility of the workmen in the employ of these vast enterprises for the concerns on which they are dependent for a livelihood, is in a measure responsible for the indifference of the corporations. It Is a fact that the majority of workmen "have it in" for the firms who employ them, have the proverbial chip on ' their shoulder and are looking for the first opportunity to arbitrarily enforce what are sometimes tho most unreasonable demands. It is their policy to wait until a propitious moment, when a walkout will mean the greatest loss and inconvenience to those for whom they are working, to declare a strike. In justice to the corporations, for the devil should be given his due, it should be admitted that it is a case of dog eat dog. "Whoever happens to have the upper hand takes advantage of the situation, either by ignoring, or harassing the other and the result is that the relations exising beween the corporations and their workmen are anything but conducive to the most favorable results. If once a feeling of genuine consideration and loyalty should be established between employer and employe, more could be accomplished than either workman or employers have ever experienced through force and intolerance.

WITH THE AUTHORS Dr. Kramer of Germany has been travelling around the Pacific for three years studying the atolls or ring islands and their Inhabitants, a topic that has not been overworked. In his book he gives us an idea of the difference between a globe trotter and an explorer, and illustrates the matter by his doings at the Jalult atoll in the southern part of the Marshall Archipelago. He sailed through the channel leading into the enclosed lagoon and landed on the atoll. He saw the cabins of three or four white traders, a few natives typical of the handful of aborigines, their huts, the missionary station, cocoa palm groves, other vegetation and the narrow coral strand. In three hours he was back on the ship, having exhausted, he says, in the sense of the globe trotter, the possibilities of the atoll. He had seen everything worth seeing. Hut he was there in the role of an explorer, and what he saw in his brief survey convinced him that an explorer had a rich field of work before him. o he went ashore again. Ho spent weeks on this little speck of coral, and what he saw and heard tills sixty pages of his book without a word wasted. H took photographs of the natives and their handiwork, their groves and gardens, of the ocean waves dashing on the coral and running off in channels the water had created in the nck. He tells of the geography and history of the island, of its tiny commerce, the life of the white traders. the occupations of the natives, th--ir relations with the whites, their mental outlook, joys and sorrows, their hospi tal and diseases; and gives specimens of their songs and language, minutely describes the narrow ring of coral on which their lives are spent and pictures the kinds of coral that form their island. Of course the globe trotter also writes a book. He gives us a few generalities about the superficial aspects of Jaluit: then he longs for the hoisting of the anchor and all speed to the

$3.00 $1.50 .ONE CENT

i i9o o o

next stopping place. But the explorer, penetrating the heart of things, gives up the real atmosphere and life of this tiny human centre, and what he tells ifj worth holding fast as something seen with scientific insight. In the current installment of his au tobiography in the North American lleview. Mark Twain tells how it happened that from such reading he "unonsciously assimilated Oliver Wende 311 Holmes dedication to a volume of poems and used it for his own "Inno cerce Abroad. M hen his attention was called to the fact. Mr. Clemens soys he wrote to Dr. Holmes and received reply which to his sorrow he lost. since he "could better have afforded to lose an uncle." He sav: "Of these (uncles I had a surplus, many of them no real value to me. but that letter -was beyond price, bevond unclodom, and unspareaMe. "In it Dr. Holmes laughed the kind est and healingest laugh over the whole matter. and at considerable length and in happy phrase assured me ihat there was no crime in un conscious plagiarism; that I committed it every dav. that he enmnvittp,! it every day, that every man alive on earth who writes or sneaks commits it every day and not merely once or twice, but every time he opens his mouth; that all our phrasings are spiritualized shadows cast rr.ultitudinously from our readings; that no happy phrase of ours is pvpr noit.-w oi-wii with us, there is nothing of our own except some slight change born of our own temperament, character, environment, teachings, and associations; tnat this slight change differentiates it from another man's manner of saying it. stamps it with our special style, and makes it our own for the time being; all the rest being mouldv. and smelling of the breath of a thousand generations." To this Mr. Clemens adds: -In the thirty-odd years which have coma and gone since then, I have satisfied myself that what Dr. Holmes said was true." Yon can boy or 1I a houe wlih a "want ad" ia THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES.

GIL'S BREEZY CHAT OF SPORT

STANDING OF THE CLUES. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L. Pet. Chicago 5 SO .737 New York 4 S 2 -t3i Pittsburg 4.5 SO .o'9 Philadelphia 41 32 .562 Boston 32 .-j1 Brooklyn 32 44 .421 Cincinnati 30 4i .3St. Louis IS CI .223 AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. L. Pet. Chicago 49 2tf ..'3 Cleveland 47 30 .610 Detroit 41 30 .01. Philadelphia 42 32 New York 3 4 37 .4.9 St. Louis 31 4a .4S Boston 2S 46 .37'J Washington 3 47 .323 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. V. L. Pet. T.-ledo 51 31 .622 Minneapolis 47 35 .0.3 Columbus 4 5 3 3 .563 Kansas City 41 40 .506 Milwaukee 41 42 .494 Louisville 36 43 .441 Indianapolis 34 51 .400 iil. Paul 33 50 .393 WESTERN LEAGUE. W. L. Pet Omaha 49 3 4 .590 es Moines 41 31 .569 Lincoln 41 35 .539 Denver 36 3 .4S7 Sioux City 33 45 .423 Pueblo . 29 46 .3S7 CENTRAL LEAGUE. YV. L. Pet. Canton 33 30 .524 Davton 33 37 .483 Evansville 3 36 .520 Grand Bapids 32 39 .451 South Bend 31 41 .431 Springfield 39 31 .557 Terre Haute 35 39 .473 Wheeling 39 30 .565 THREE EYE LEAGUE. "W. L. PcL Springfield 40 22 .645 Hock Island 42 25 .625 Decatur 29 24 .619 Peoria ;..37 27 .573 Cedar Rapids 37 29 .561 Clinton 29 33 .433 Bloomington 25 .397 Dubuque 9 55 .141 GAMES TODAY. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Chicago at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at New York. St. Louis at Boston. AMERICAN LEAGUE. New York at Chicago. Boston at St. Louis. Washington at Detroit. Philadelphia at Cleveland. YESTERDAY'S SESUTTS. NATIONAL LEAGUE. No games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Chicago, 3 3; Washington, 1 5. St. Louis-Philadelphia, rain. CENTRAL LEAGUE. South Bend. 0; Springfield, 2. Canton, 4; Evansville, 5. Wheeling, 1; Terre Haute, 0. Grand R.aplds, 3; Dayton, 2. THREE EYE LEAGUE. Dubuque, 0; Cedar Rapids, 4. Rock Island, 0; Clinton, 4. Bloomington, 1; Peoria, 4. Decatur-Springfield, rain. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Kansas City, 7; Indianapolis, 3. Milwaukee, 2 11; Columbus, 1 2. Minneapolis, 2 9; Toledo, 1 2. St. Paul, 3 1; Louisville, 2 4. WESTERN LEAGUE. Des Moines, 2 1; Lincoln, 7Omaha, 4 3; Denver, 0 1. Sioux City, ; Pueblo, L -1. The Sox won and lost yesterday in their double header with the Washington team, winning the first game by a score of 3 to 1, and losing the second by a score of 3 to 5. Frank Smith tried to do the double game pitching stunt, but fell down in the sixth inning of the second game and Frank Owens got his after that. The first game showed Smith in grand form and he allowed the visitors but three little hits, Falkenberg, who twirled for the Nationals, was strong in the points also, and the Sox were only able to get five hits off the tall boy. Dougherty had his batting togs on in the first arid whaled out three of the five hits. Smith lasted six innings in the second. Jones thinking that he was In such good form in the first that he would be able to hold his own in the nest. The Nationals took his measure anil got six hits while he was in the box. Owen allowed four more in turn and two of the five runs were scored on these hits. Dougherty again led in the batting honors, getting two more hits out of the six the team made off Case Patten. The Highlanders open up today. The boxing game will be pushed along good this week. There is to be four heavyweight contests in Philadelphia alone, and the amount of beef in the total of the mitt pushers aggregates l.i 00 pounds. The top liner is the six round go between Bob Fitzsimmons and Jack Johnson. This go will come on Wednesday night, and they are saying that Fits is in just as good shape as he was ten years ago. Johnson, too, knows that he has got to fight, and if the pair really got going in such a short distance the fur ought to fiy. The other fights will show Black Bill and Morris Harris, Jim Jeffords and Kid Cutler, who has been touring the country with John L. Sullivan, and Frank Jeffrys and Fred Bradley. I he Giants are bolstering up their team with a vigor that shows the reeling m New York. They will not stand for a losing team any longer than any other city, despite the cracks they make. Their latest addition is Doyle, the crack third sacker of the Springfield team in the Three league. Dan Brouthers is doing the scouting for McGraw and he says that Dyle is a cracker. Catcher Ludwig also joins the Giants at the close of the season. The office holders of the Hammond building played a team composed of the lawyers of Hammond yesterday morn

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STAHL SCORES RUN; WINS FOHIS TEAM Manager Makes Circuit in Ninth and Defeats River Forest, 3 foU. Jake Stahl's South Chicagos won an excedingly hard-fought game yesterday at South Chicago park from the River Forests by the score of 3 to 2. The River Forests tied the game in the first half of the ninth, when Callahan's muff let in two runs with two men gone. In the last half of the inning Stahl led off with a hit. went to second when Babcock beat a bunt, to third on leading's long fly and scored on Saxe s hit. Score: South Chicago. B McKee, cf 0 Staton. ss 0 Hill, 2b 0 Stahl, lb 1 Babcock, If 1 Brading, p 1 Saxe, 3 b 0 Lamia, cf 0 Callahan, rf 0 II 1 o 0 A o 0 1 3 9 27 Totals 3 S 1

River Forest. II II P A K Kearney, rf 0 1 0 0 0 Hage, 3b 0 0 4 2 0 Stephan, lb 0 0 6 1 0 Kutina, If 0 0 3 0 0 Lange, cf 0 0 4 0 0 Mctiill. p 0 10 10 Ooldblum, c 0 1 3 2 0 Thering, ss 1 2 1 2 0 Vallenda. 2b 1 0 4 2 0 Totals 2 525 10 0 One out when winning run was scored. South Chicago 000000 20 1 3 River Forest 00000000 2 2

Two base hit Brading. Double play Thering to Vallenda to .Stephan. Struck out By Brading. 7; by Mcdill. 2. Bases on balls Oil Brading, 4; off McGill, 3. Umpire McCarthy. Ing at Harrison park. The Hammond building men were the victors and the score was 19 to 14, and they would have been playing yet if they could have found a few more pitchers. Many were tried but few could ever be chosen as box men. However, it was good exercise for the men and lots of fun for the spectators. The Hammond baseball team found the Mystic Giants some ball players yesterday afternoon at Hubbard's park, and they were compelled to play the best they knew how to win the game. The score was 3 to 2, and both sides were guilty of many glaring errors. Pate, who pitched for the visitors, was a strong proposition lor any man to face and eight of the Hammondites struck out before his curves. McMahon, who was in the points for the home team, did well and had five strikeouts to his credit. One of .the features of the game was a one handed catch of a hot liner of Newbourne, which was one of the best of its kind ever seen at the local field. The score: Hammond 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 Giants 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 1 2 Two base hits Jones, Newbourne, Hyde. Stolen bases Hammond, 3. Batteries McMahon and Eder, Hammond; Pate and Irwin, Mystic Giants. The Jockey club is to do away with the barrier In starting the ponies hereafter and the walking start will again be in vogue. The decision was reached after a long discussion and it is claimed that the horses will not be left at the post so often. It is said that the poor work of Mars Cassidy of late has been offered as proof of the poor system used now. The ban has been lifted from Frank Chance and today he will be in tho line-up as usual. The team will play at Philadelphia and there is a big fest on, it being Elks Day. The whole city is decorated with the Elks colors and each member of the team will wear an Elks pin. Murray is planning to pitch Buster Brown in today's game against Brown of the Cubs. One of the longest baseball games of the year was played yesterday at Green Bay in the Wisconsin state league. Twenty-three innings were played before Green Bay finally took the measure of LaCrosse and the game ended with a score of 2 to 1. Each team used two pitchers and got 11 hits apiece. Society's Latest Pet Dog. The Japanese spaniel, or sleeve-dog of Jr. nan. is one of the long-coated va rieties which is much admired. They rave been hard to acclimatize, and taanv discouragements have heen met with in their introduction. They have large heads, with big, dark eyes set wide apart and very full. Their little tails curl up over their hacks like feather dusters. One pound is the true sleeve-dog weight. Suburban Life. A Faint-Hearted Modem Lovers. The average modern young man cares only for "tame rabbit coursing." He labors under soine new-fangled delusion that it is undignified to woo unless you're more than half sure of winning. Naturally, the sport i3 dull both to pursuer and pursued. The dainty art of courtship is nearly fc--gotten. Woman at Home. New York's Increase in Wealth. Real estate values in New York city, according to the assessment figures, are increasing $1,096,970 each day. Hope for End of London's Smoke. To do away with London's smoke it 13 proposed to use electric power generated elsewhere, for heatinz. etc

FAMOUS BATTLES Ofl HAMPTON ROADS Tourist to Jamestown Will See Ocean and Scenes of Naval Fights.

Norfolk, Va July 13. To the multitudes of the interior who are contemplating a visit to the exposition, the recommendation, beyond even that suggested by a great world's fair lies in the opportunity for a sight of and a trip on the ocean. In the Jamestown exposition site and vicinity, shore and sea and climatic conditions have combined to create a territory supremely attractive. Tho site of the celebration is the choicest of a choice collection. Situated on Hampton Roads, it is rich in every prospect to fire the heart of patriotism and sparkle the eye of nature's lover. Both land and sea are rich In hsitorie.il interest. The expanse of Hampton Roads is the field of many gallant achievements of the American sailor, and tho shores about are for- ! ever consecrated by the valorous blood of the American soldier. Here, in the nation's Infancy the savage warcry roused the colonists to action. Here, the Fnglish mariners have met the ships of France.. Here, in tho revolutionary war and in the war of 1S12 American sailors set their battle flag and defied the power of Britain and it was here during the great civil war, that the Monitor and Merrimac inaugurated a new epoch in the naval affairs of the world. A reproduction of this remarkable duel will be one of the striking and original features of the exposition. The tract upon which this city beautiful of 1907 lias been reared is admirably adapted to the purpose for which it is intended. With more than two miles of water frontage it offers at every turn a charming combination view of land and sea. The harbor is at this point five miles wide and the outlook is superb. The cities on the farther shore are merged by perspective into a cameramie picture; and the great government piers offer a point of vantage for the enjoyment of a marine picture unequalled on the American continent. WITH THE EDITORS Reform in Practice. The members of the State Bar association appear to be agreed that the criminal practice In Indiana is rotten. The people who are not lawyers will likewise subscribe to the opinion. This i3 a condition which is not peculiar to Indiana and which is even materially worse in a number of other commonwealths, but tills fact should not in any way interfere with a movement for reform in this state. Indiana can afford to pioneer. Indeed she cannot af ford not to. If we in thi3 great state are to lead quiet and peaceable lives, if mob law is to bo eliminated, and it our courts are to be held in veneration and respect, not only the rules of practice in criminal cases must be amended, but our highest tribunal must in its consideration of appeals, cease to quibble over senseless technicalities and I roceed with an eye single to Justice. The church was decadent in those times when churchmen forgot the cause of Christ and wrangled testily a3 to the number of angles able to dance con veniently on the point of a needle. And who can deny that the cause of justice is in eclipse and disgrace when tho eddar.ded murderer of his sister, James Gillespie, is let go scot-free, because the trial court made some inconse quential error? or when a state officer convicted of a serious crime, is re leased because by some hair-splitting distinction it 13 held that the money he stole was not legally in his possession? Is it any wonder that high courts are laughed to scorn and come into positive disrepute when by quibbling and positive pettifogging miscarriages of Justice are brought about? The people do not see the very nice distinctions of law by which a crkna Is legalised. They merely see that a bad and guilty man has gone unpunished. That Is enough for them to fee. It is enough for any man to know to bring him to a realization that there is something radically wrong In the operation of our courts? of justice. The State Bar association may well agitate this reform. It is one that cries aloud for promotion and It must ultimately be enhtroned. Much better will it be if it is brought about by the local fraternity, honestly actuated by a desire for the elevation of the profession and the public welfare, than if it is forced by an angry people clamoring against courts that are governed by technicalities rather than a desire to do justice and lawyers who pettifog rather than practice. Fort Wayr.e New s. Possibly President Roosevelt made a mistake in ordering the war fleet around the Horn, but it is noticeable that it is now officially announced from Tokio that Ambassador Aokl will re main indefinitely at Washington, that Admiral Sakamoto says he never said it, which probably is true, as he is reasonably sober in his habits, and all the distinguished Japs are callin our Uncle their country s best and dearest friend. It is not probable that the Japs ever had the remotest Idea of going to war with this nation, but they looked for glory and some reward by throwing a scare Into us. They kept it up just a little too long. Duluth News-Tribune. F. Marion Crawiord has returned to his home in Sorrento after his usual annual trip to America. He is busily engaged on his 'History of Rome," which is founded upon a careful study of old documents and will appear in four volumns. The first volume will appear some time during the winter. JndSclon nd vrrtUlnpr In THE LAKE COIXTV TIMES l a RTat tonle for a run-down bmineM. it is the ataCT

ot life for a healthy business.

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Fred Kunzmann FRESH and SALT MEATS GROCERIES Reasonable Prices, Prompt Delivery and the only Sausage Works in Hammond.

: t 88 STATE STREET. ake County Title

I 7 H I ABSTEACTEESh

Abstructs furnished at Nominal Ratca F. R. MOTT, President FRANK HAMMOND, Vice Pres. J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary A. II. TAPPER, Treasurer S. A. CULVER, Manager

Secretary's Office In Majestic BIdg. HAMMOND

Have You Seen

The New on Conkey Avenue Take Trolley on Write W. Gordon Smith T

HE HAMMOND ISTILLING CO.

DAILY CAPACITY r I 'M' v T f - i Av rTo le$3 tlinn 20 com und gone since he years ago, after a wide

HE HAS STOOD THE TEST.

After treating more than 6.000 people

r iiT . Hccompiisn ail promised them in every instance where they followed nis instructions. w win , nt.n

on the subject. SIX THOUSAND

I have treated more than 6.000 eick people in and about South Chicago and maae many cures among those classed as incurables. No disease too alight or ioo severe to command my careful attention.

WHAT

I treat most diseases where the patient is able to call at my ornce and can

r""'""1" inana special arrangements to call on those who are not abld to come to me. STOMACH TROUBLES.

If feel dePressed after meals, and bowels, with belching of gas,

TIRED FEELING. I find eo many people who complain of being tired from very little exert ?l,or the' are more tired in the morning than after a day's work. Many or these do not sleep well, but are continually disturbed by dreams. 1 can always help those cases promptly and cure them in a short time. DISEASES OF WOMEN. t"'k other cIaS9 of diseases are so badly treated as are the diseases of women. 1 nave given many years of careful attention to this subject and have proven remedies that cure quickly. Call in and ask as many questions as you wish. I will answer them and guarantee all I promise. No charge for advice. DISEASES OF 3IE.V. I have studied the subject carefully and made the discovery of om very Important remedies in recent years, which enables me to perform perfect cures in less than one-fourth the time formerly required. You will notice the improvement In a few hours after beginning treatment. Call in and talk over your troubles with me. I will explain Just what can be done for you and what the cost of a cure will be. 1 guarantee all I promise. No charge for advice. CONSTIPATION AD PILES. I treat successfully all cases of constipation and piles. KIDNEY DISEASES. If you have any difficulty with your kidneys or bladder, call and get my opiaion. BLOOD POISON. I treat blood poison with marked success, give prompt relief and guarantee a cure In every case where instructions ar followed. WEAK AND FAILING MEMORY. I treat weak and failing memory and nervousness in both men and women and give prompt relief from the distressing malady. COST OF CURE. I make no charge for telling you Just what it will cost to cure you. ONE CALL WILL CURE. In many cases a single prescription is all that is needed to cure; in others, considerable time and medicines are required. LEGAL WRITTEN CONTRACT. If you so desire I will give you a written contract to cure you for a specified price, which we may agree upon. CHARGES REASONABLE.

You will find my charges reasonable. I don't believe in taking- advantage of people, who need ray services, by charging enormous fee only because I

hold wiiEin my grasp me remedy tnat will cure them. DOXT DELAY. Don't delay, for the longer a disease runs the harder it is to cure.

If you follow my advice you will

maae you. I mean every word of this advertisement and will stand by it. Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. ra; 1:S0 to 5. and 7 to 8:30 p. m. No Sunday Hours. Charge for Ad Tic.

J, F. RUCKEL, M .D.

OVER

92nd St- 5c Commercial Ave

Telephone 77.

& Guarantee Co. HAMMOND AND CROWN POINT, LVD.

Houses

near Conkey Plant, Hohman Street for Book 321 Conkey Avenue HAMMOND 25,000 GALLONS. The Title "The Old Reliable Specialist" of So. Chicago hcLs been fittingly given DR. RUCKEL fio - called anociallsts have located Here, ubout IO experience In other cities. in and about South Chicago, without SICK TREATED. I TREAT. with a bloated condition of the stomach I can give you prompt relief and a thornot be disappointed in any promise I POSTOFFICE. SO. CHICAGO

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