Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 121, Hammond, Lake County, 7 November 1907 — Page 4
4 THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Tlnirsdav. Nov. 7. 1007.
The Lake County Times
AN
EVENING NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUXTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.
"Entered as sroiiil class matter June 2S, li06. at the posto3o at Hammond. Indiana, undr tiie Act of Congress, March 3, 1ST9."
MAIN' OFFICIOS HAMMOND, IND. TKI.EIMIO.NKS HAMMOND, 111 112 WHITING, 111 EAST tllICA(iO, 11). INI)1N HAHUOH, 111 SOl'Tll CHICAGO, .no SOUTH CIIIC'A(i( FFICK !H lo III ITVI. AVKNIK. TKI.IOIMIONK. S. Foumciv iir.ntKsKNTATivr.s i'wni: . vor.NC. T.'.O MAimi'KTTK III II IUMi, i III 310 FOTTKIl Hl.'ll.lMNt.. NKW lOltlv.
HITCHCOCK BACK; HERO
Actor Reappears, Surrenders, Let Out on Bail and Acts Same Day.
TEAR HALK YEA): SINGLE COPIES. . .
ITO1) , ONE CENT
Larger Paid Up Circulation Than Any Other Newspaper in Northern Indiana.
CIRCULATION YESTERDAY
k 11
9
A
60
CHt C LIGATION HOOKS OPTCY TO TIIE IM'BMC FOIl 1NSPTCCTIOX AT ALL TIM MS.
TO SUBSCIIIREIH Rradrri of The Time are rBftl o favor the Krrnrnt by rrporllnv; any lrre:nlaritle lo tlellvcriuM. Comma Bleate vv!h the Circulation; Department, or telephone 111.
TELEPHONE CO. 6RAHTED NEW
A
n
Aldermen of Chicago Battle in Long Day and Night Session to Final Vote of 44 to 23 Decide This Morning.
PRO FRANCHISE PEOPLE
JUST VOTE; ANT1S FIGHT Section. Limiting Earnings cf Chicago Company to 10 Per Cent is Killed Schedule Sate Adopted as it Came From the Company Large Crowd Witnesses Fight.
Chicago, Nov. 7. The Chicago Tele
phone company's franchise extension ordinance was adopted by the city council at 2:43 o'clock this "morning by a final vote of 44 to 23. The Pinal adoption of the ordinance was secured after ferocious fighting through a session of the body of aldermen lasting nearly seventeen hours. A solid Phalanx of aldermanlc partisans of the causa represented by the company put the measure through with only trifling changes from the shape In which it was reported by the committee on gas, oil and electric light and approved by the telephone com
pany. No Important amendment not accepted by Alderman Young, the chairman of the committee and the spokesman of the. company's supporters, was adopted." An opposition numbering at first twenty-six aldermen, but at the end dwindling to twenty-three, fought valiantly to obtain modifications in the terms of the ordinance for the benefit of the people, but was defeated at every step. Mayor "Will Study Measure. Mayor Busse was asked at 3 o'clock after the ordinance had been adopted, whether he would approve or disapprove of the measure in Its final form.
"I shall not say this morning wliat I shall do in tho matter of signature or a veto," said the mayor. "I want to take the ordinance In its completed form and study it carefully before I make any decision." Tho news that the council was putting through the telephone company's ordinance attracted a large crowd to the fourth floor of the city hall through the long evening session. Tenm Work Is Good. Nothing like the remarkable team work of tho solid rhalanx has been witnessed in tho council for years. The onslaughts of those opposed to the ordinance were centered on the section providing for the compensation to
be paid the city and the rates to be paid by subscribers. Hut the effort availed almost nothing. The compensation was kept at the 3 per cent which the company is willing to pay, and only Inconsequential concessions were obtained in the charges for service. Tho schedule of rates, practically as It came from the company's hands, was adopted as a part of tho ordinance shortly before midnight by a vote of 45 to 22. Gets Twenty Year Franchise. The net result is: The Chicago Telephone company gets a franchise for twenty years. It gives service to the people cf Chicago at these rates, eliminating the
quarter. Two party, $11 per quarter. Nickel slot service For outgoing calls: Pingle party lines, 20 cents per day. Two party linos, 12 !' cents per day. Four party lines, 5 cents per day. I'ubllc Telephones. For any message within the city, 5 cents. These rates are subject to change by the city at the end of thirty months. Eighteen months are allowed the company in which to make the extensions and improvements required by the ordinance. Section 8, limiting the net earnings of the company to 10 per cent on its investment, was killed in its entirety. Fight In Vain Vor Concessions. Every step of the way the o pposition fought for concessions in the rates for various kinds of service, but to little effect. The contest on this section began at 3 o'clock in the afternoon and lasted until after 11 in the evening, but only in two or three Instances were reductions obtained and these were slight.
"After all the years we have waited to come face to face and hand to hand with this company, these are all the concessions we get," exclaimed Alderman Fulton at the close of an impassioned appeal. "After "their systematic robbery of subscribers, who were compelled to pay $175 Instead of $125, this company has the effrontery to ask this grant."
Other Provisions Untouched. In the last hours Alderman Devcr sought vainly to secure the adoption of amendments regulating the working hours and other conditions of employment of the telephone operators. But, as in the other instances, the suggestions went down before the ruthless vote of the solid majoritly. Finally, at 2 a. m., with the amendments disapproved by the company be
ing swept aside with the usual precision, the aldermen of the opposition became disgusted and began to show signs of weariness. At 2:45 o'clock the measure was adopted.
New York, Nov. 7. Raymond Hitchcock reappeared yesterday just a3 suddenly as lie disappeared before the grand jury indicted him a week ago, and last night he was back again in his stage clothes playing "The Yan- ; kee Tourist' to an audience that (cheered and applauded him as It might t have done some sort of a hero. Before he- was able to enjoy this j unexpected and surprising outburst of m i U mental sympathy Hitchock had I to surrender himself as a prisoner to i he district attorney and furnish $7,500 hall on one of the six indictments returned aguin.-t him on charges of as- ' i f and abduction brought by thre-u 1--'. tiie t-ldest of whom Is not lj. I Hitchcock's lawyer wouldn't allow 'isiiii to say where iie. had hidden himt, .i e ,. .;.. .:,... . ,. i-
ugo. The comedian told t lie reporters, however, thai he merely had remained in seclusion because lie was ill, not bt-cause he was afraid. He declared lie had come back for vindication. Great Crowd Welcomes lllm. lie certainly got a taste of vindication at the Astor theater, which was
crowded to the guards, despite the rain, lie had appeared suddenly at the matinee performance. The audience was small, however, and it was not until the play was well under way that lie was recognized. But the news spread that lie was back and playing again, so that by the time the theater was opened for the night performance there were enough people in the lobby and street to fill the house. In "The Yankee Tourist" Hitchcock, as Copeland Scuyler, does not make an appearand until the first act is well advanced. His wife. Flora Zabelle, as Miss "Whitney, is on the stage some time before he enters. When she appeared last night the house applauded violently as if to show her that they thought well of her for standing by her husband. Those who held watches, in a psuedo scientific spirit of inquiry, said that the applause and shouting continued for four minutes for her. She was unable to go on with her first song, as the orchestra could not make itself heard, and she proceeded with her lines when the cheering stopped. Meanwhile, she had stood with bowed head in the center of the stage. Couldn't Cheer a Hero More.
never met Principal Smith, but he Imagined he was "a thick necked individual." "What do Supt. Tracy and Principal Smith know about making men and
women of boys and girls, anyway?'1 he demanded. "Neither of them has a child. The idea of such a thing. You might as well put a lot of eggs under a couple of old roosters." At which sally even Judge Hooper laughed. "Recently," Mr. Moore concluded, "Attorney W. J. Brock of this city was approached by a member of the Kankakee high school football team, who said to him: 'Will youse guys buy a ticket to our football game?" If football is responsible for teaching such language, that is reason alone why it should be stopped."
FREEFROHBQGUSGOUHT
Great Grand-Niece of President Van Buren Granted a Divorce.
ELOPING HEIRESS HOME
Maloney Family Confers on Girl's Marriage Osborne Expects Agreement.
ing to semi-official Information obtained here, changed her mind on the pressing request of Kink Edward and Queen Alexandra, and decided at & late hour lajt night to accompany the emperor on his visit to England. It was announced yesterday that the empress was not going to England with her husband because her little daughter. Princess Victoria Louise, Is suffering from chicken pox and her majesty considered it advisable to remain and take care of the child.
HAMMOND BUSINESS DIRECTORY
SPORTING GOSSIP LVJIL
Philadelphia, Pa.. Nov. 6. Although ail persons Concerned maintain silence. It is asserted that members of the immediate family of Martin Maloney. the millionaire financier, assembled here tor.ght to arrange an adjustment of the affairs centered around the marriage of Helen Maloney to Herbert Osborne.
1 ."'I'"1 ' " , f-t place next season if they they lorn.;, s elopement with Samuel Clark- 1uu , u ,a ,lt . , . . i u . .i. in) the good w ork, omnia is out MJ!!. a young Englishman, on uct. i. i up 1 ... la K. - ,,,. , ... . .. after the best material he can lay hands v ; -,i v , , . , -in,! appreciating the fact that the Nftgnbors &n.l i.t nnrs .1, !., r.. h:it tr i 'l,lu V """" "
ar.d Mrs. Maloney and Andrew Malotior. a brother of Martin Maloney, and Mrs.
The New York Highlanders will have a ream that will bo in the running for
i. R. MILLER c M. COOK MILLER & COOK' Plumbing:, Sewerage, Steam and Hot water Heatinjr. Jobbtnc promptly attended to. Kxtmnte oa application. Phone 203. 270 .. Ilohman St. HAMMOND. IXD.
REV. COUGHS UP 11 ill
Pastor Tells of Casting Out
Hardware Carried in Lung Sixteen Months.
The play proceeded regularly until
Hitchcock made his appearance. He enters at the head of a chorus. The first sign of him was the signal for another greater outburst of cheering,
shouting, and handclapping. He could
say or do nothing while for nine min
utes the noise continued. Then he went on as best he could, every line
he spoke being greeted by great ap
plause by those present to show that
they were with him.
Possibly all that was nothing in real
sentimental feeing to the moment when Hitchcock and his wife were seen to
gether on the stage. She is supposed to enter without him observing her, because they never have met before
in the play. What she did do when
the time came was to walk directly
up to where Hitchcock was standing and throw her arms about his neck. It wasn't in the play, but it took the house. When she put her arms about his neck Hitchcock stooped and kissed
her. The manner of approval by the audience of this cannot be well described. Every possible method of noise making within the reach of a
theater audience was used. Stamping, whistling, shouting, and handclapping kept up for a long, long time.
New York, No. 7. The medical pro
fession is taking great interest in the caso of Rev. Dr. Thomas II. Barag-
wanath, pastor of Grace Methodist
Episcopal church, in West One Hun
dred and Fourth street, who carried in the top of his right lung a nail an inch and a quarter long for sixteen
months, and has now rid himself of it in a violent fit of coughing. Ever since he accidentally swallowed tho nail ho had been seriously Inconveni
enced by its presence, but several doc
tors assured him it was practically a physical Impossibility for the nail to be still In his Interior, and that his symptoms were those of bronchitis or
pleurisy.
"It's just sixteen months ago," said Pr. Baragwanath, "that I was on the roof of a little place I have at Tupper
lake, in the Adirondacks, shingling. had threa or four nails in my mouth
and was telling a story. I laughed There was a sudden intake of breath
and one of the nails slipped down my throat. I couldn't mistake it. I felt
it scratching as it went down.
"A day or so later I had a throat
attack and called in a doctor. I told him about the nail, but he laughed at
the idea, and said it could never l ave
got into ray lung. It was bronchitis
lie declared, and nothing else, and he
treated me for t lint. "Since then I have had continual trouble with my throat and voice. Last Sunday night my assistant was leading in praytr and I was kneeling behind him. A violent paroxysm of coughing
jcame on. and 1 bent down so that the congregation shouldn't see it. I got my head down between my knees, and
Naples, Italy, Nov. . Countess di Oasteimenardo, who was Miss Edith Van Bureau of New Void;, obtained a Ifgal separation from her "noble" husband. The Countess di Castelnienardo was one of the most beautiful women in Europe, besides belonging to one of the best known families in the United
States. She is the great-grandniece of President Van Buren, and the daughter of the late General Thomas B, Van Buren, formerly American minister at Tokio. Her mother was the daughter of Joseph Sheffield, who founded the Sheffield scientific school at Yale; so she was a niece by marriage of the late William Walter Phelps. Details llushumrs Cruelty. A short time ago the beautiful countess appeared in the court of appeals here and testified to her husband's cruelty and rapacity. It then became known that the count's title was bogus when he married her in Nice seven years ago. His American
wife to prevent scandal, spent a sum to gain the count a certain legal right to the name he had appropriated. But bad as she knew him to be, the countess received a frightful shock when the "chief of police of Naples testified that the man with whom she mated is a carnorrist, who has undergone penal servitude and who is still subject to police surveillance. Even before the honeymoon was completed, the countess says, her husband began his brutal treatment, and this grew with their married life.
Has Count Arrested. Finally, at the urgency of her brother, the American Consul at Nice, she caused the count's arrest in Genoa last year. He was convicted of unfaithful ness and cruelty and was sentenced to three months' imprisonment and to pay the costs of the action. Miss Van Buren went to Klondike in 189S with Mrs. Roswell B. Hitchcock, widow of Commander Hitchcock, United States navy, of New York. She staked out a claim near Dawson and sold canned gods to the miners on week days and sung hymns to them on Sunday. From the Klondike Miss Van Buren started around the world for
New York. She met the Count in Nice.
carbery Richie, a sister of Miss Maloney., wer- at the Maloney home on West 1. ,-.a S-jiure toduv, and thnt Miss
H!n Maloney subsequently was o! ouuh.t to the holism by her uncle. Andr. y Maloney, in a closed carriage. Her aruval was foiloWe.l tonight by that of young Osborne and his attorney. William J- Fanning, of New Yotk. Onliome Eviieets Agreement. The house is closed to all enq u ire is, but it is asserted that Osborne said to a friend of the Maloney family that he had not embraced the Catholic faith, but that matters wouid be satisfactorily adjusted. No authorized statement has
been secured from any member of the family.
WIDOW WATCHES QUEL
Jealous Swains Slash Each Other With Wartime Sabers.
GQURTVVONTKNTERFERE Injunction to Restrain "Prize Fighting" Football Denied.
PURITY SESSION LILY
Sizzling Resolutions Adopt ed in Campaign Against Vice Censor Wanted.
Rawrenceburg, Ind., Nov. 7. Charles W. Bennett and Otis Gooden last night
called at the house of George W.
luard to see Mrs. Minnie Hess Cooper,
comely widow. A quarrel soon
arose.
Hanging on the wall in the parlor
were two sabers that had been used in the civil war by Mr. Guard's grand-
ather. Each man seized a saber, and
a sword tight ensued.
The commotion in the parlor and the
screams of Mrs. Cooper attracted the attention of Guard, who had retired.
He partly dressed, ran into the room and found the two men slashing each other with the sabers.
Bennett was proving a poor fencer,
and was getting by far the worst of
the fight. He was bleeding profusely from cuts and slashes, and just as
Guard entered Bennett fell on tne noor
covered with blood. Gooden was in the act of running the saber through his fallen opponent when Guard hnterferred
and felled him to the floor with a heavy
hair. Tho widow ran into the street cry
ing for help. Tolicenian u ingerter ar
rived, and after a struggle with Good-
n compelled him to surrender at the
muzzle of a revolver, lie was taKcn to jail.
Dr. George F. Smith was summoned
and dressf-d the injuries or lsennen There was one serious stab in hi3 ab
domen which required eight stitches
to close. Bennett is in a serious con-
lition but will recover unless blood
poison develop:-'.
Mrs. Cooper declares that she will
not countenance either man in the fu
ture.
1
se that helped things a bit. I
technical points and getting the ordinary telephone us. r: Huiktness Telephones.
to!
party lints, $125 per
3".at rat Sir,
year. Measured service Single party I 1,200 outgoing calls, $C.) per year. Next 2.400 calls. 3 ca nts each..
mes.
felt something give way. I felt whatever it was come halfway up my throat
and stop. Then I coughed strain end my mouth fiile-lr with blood. I put my Singers in and drew out the long lost 1 nail."
. alls i ji c x
-s ot
".00.
INDIANS HI TOWN.
For all
cents each. Additional single line to be given free for each e.C'h) calls at 2 cents each in excess cf 7.2f". calls. Private Exchange, $335 a year. Additional lints, $5 per quarter. lirsIJciH'f Telephone. Flat rate Single party, $1S per
j The Big Chefs are In Hammond for i a few days. If you want to see some I Inui.-ins that have a real record, just j take a look in the show windows of
th South Shore Gas and Electric company. If you want to hear their history, just ask Hunter at 91 South Ilohu.an street. 10-22-tf.
Kankakee, 111., Nov. 7. Judge Frank I Hooper, in the circuit court yesterday, denied Attorney S. R. Moore's application for an injunction to restrain the board of education from permitting "prize fighting" in Kankakee school:". Judge Hooper's ruling did not recognize the synonymity of prize fighting and football assumed in the injunction petition. "Boards of education," Judge Hooper ruled, "have no right to lnterfero with the pleasures or training of school children after school hours. A private citizen has no right to interfere in such matters unless lie has sustained some pecuniary injury." Attorney Moore made a hard fight to convince Judge Hooper that the term football was a mere subterfuge for irize fighting, and as such ought
to be prohibited. Jtis argument was aimed especially at Principal E W. Smith of the Kankakee high school, and F. N. Tracy, superintendent of schools. Finds Wnmlntc In the fllble.
In his argument yesterday in favor of his bill the attorney quoted everything from the bible to the last issue of the Medical Journal. He pointed to the fate of Cain and Abel as being that in store for the boys who indulge in the "brutal, violent and uncivilized" school f:ame. "Booting" beheld to be an evil scarcely less dan- ... v. t i
gerous tr:an ioowaii. "The superintendent and the principal of the high school during school hours teach the boys and girls to give a certain yell," he said. "They tell them to go out and 'root' for their school. I don't know what they mean by "root." I went to college five years and I never 'rooted.' The man who does such things has no right to be over children as a teacher." Doesn't Think Much of School Officers. Attorney iioore admitted that he had
Battle Creek, Mich., Nov. 7. Resolu
tions were adopted yesterday by the
national purity congress after most ex
citing debates, declaring that criminals
and degenerate children should be un-
sexed, was opposed unanimously by
the men delegates, but carried by the
women.
Other resolutions favored special teachers for sex education in public
schools, abolition of vicious employes in hotels and restaurants, strict laws to punish couples' false registration
at hotels, press censorship for news
papers and novels, and laws to restrain
the publication of scandal. Says Girls Will Have Luxuries.
This afternoon Bolton Hall, the New York author, declared that in every
state the great majority of girls em
ployed average in age about 25 years
the period at wiucri tney snouiu no making homes. He said that while
wages were too small to allow the lux urles that Kills should and will have they demanded amusements and at trac
tive gowns, even at the cost of their
happiness.
"Appalling as it may seem," said Mr
Hall, "the ordinary rescue work sim ply means that the weakest of the re
sneotable wag earners will be dis
placed and fall into the chasm." 1'itreuts illumed for Eil. Without attacking the causes was like cutting the lop of a tree to destroy the roots. As causes of Immorality h named prudishness of parents, who hesitate to educate their children, and stress placed on "easy" employment,
making labor seem debasing and gluttony, creating abnormal physical desi res. Tonight the Rev. U R Pickett- o: Louisville, who lias juxt been defeated as candidate for the office of K"crnor of Kentucky, said that, though defeated, he had the assurance of both the democratic and republican can IIdates that they will urge new temperance laws.
i Co ,vt-i have fallen from tneir nign
piace in the eyes of the fans, he is going to put in a team that will pull n... M.iw.k to his irrounds. Now that
the has Niies for second. Hemphill for
center and Glade for pitcher with a big possibility of having Stahl somewhere i.a the Infield, rind Willi Koeler. Eiberfiel.l and Hal Chase, who signed yesterday, doing their regular stunts, Grif will have a money getter. The Yale football team already has its eyes ahead ten days for the big game with the Tigers. The bulldog will have to tight hard and with a team the makeup of which is yet a puzzle. But the material is there nevertheless and the coaches are on hand to whip it into shape. Tim sale of tickets for the Michl-gan-Pcnna game on Nov. 16, has been
reported extremely large. Fifteen thousand seats were disposed of at Ann
Harbor the first day
The report comes from Eos Angeles
that the Young Donahue-George Mem-
sic bout is a fixture. The fight Is sched
uled to take place at Tom McCarey's
club, Nov. 2C, and is limited to twenty
rounds. Donahue will win that bout
it is in shape and Johnny Mach, his manager, promises that he will be in form. Donahue is not known very well in the west, but in the east he is
regarded as the next lightweight
champion. He already has a ten round draw with Memslc to his credit at In
dianapolis, in a private bout of five
rounds in the east with Batling Nel
son last winter he made the latter
look like a selling plater.
Tlte Herman-MeFarland bout Is the next big thing in these parts and a big
crowd will go down to Davenport from
Chicago, while a few of the regulars
from hereabouts will be on hand. The fight is on Nov. 21. Will Hanly and Sheriff Smuzer of LaPorte, stop the fistic carnival In that city tonight? Yes is the answer. It la in the forbidden land, north of Indianapolis.
rbooe 21K3. V. H. DAVIS, UE.vrisT. Over M.4, CUh,BK slor. Special Notice-Da not confute thU ot,ce with th. Harvard DentUt,. for 1 am In no way connected with them, never have been.
KAISER SEEKS A REST
Announces Intention of Remaining Fortnight on Isle of Wight.
est Equipped Repair Shop in th StaU G. W. HUNTER
AUTOMOBILE GARAGE
Compressed Air FREE Bowser Gasoline System ill S. KOHMtN STREET
Phorrn 1JJ. Huehn Block. Hammond. Iod
HOWARD STEVENS, Open lot Contracts.
Paiutino:. Pa dpi- If
and Decorating. GRAIN INti A SPECIALTY. My Motto- j ;.... 1.
1K3 State l ine Sl,. ,. '
Telephone I GO I.
The Reddy Roofing Co.
Grnvel and Asphnlt Hoofing; CONTRACTORS AND Dl.AI.KRS.
Tel. 4iK 313 Mlehl tr ft n Aptiiirv
HAMMOND, IND.
MAX LEVIN, . :-: Merchant Tailor, :-: It you Hut satisfaction In a nit of clothes, come to met ISO South Ilohman street. Over I. Ion Store HAMMOND, INO.
Elopers Are Married at Crown Point.
(Continued from page 1.)
The Lake Construction C Manufacturer ol Artificial Stone and Concrete Building Material OFFICEi 413 HAMMOND PLDO. Tclaphona 47S1 Plants Florence and Chicago Avantiea.
KONG HONG LO CO. Calnese, American and Eoroa RESTAURANT. Cblns Chop Suey. All Chineaa dlaheal aerved In short ordar. Chinaaa Goods Open from and Tan. 11 . m. to 1. a. m P- Stat Street. Hammond. Ind.
Unkind Aspersion. Lord Charles Beresford, who has always been a temperate man. is now a total abstainer. Recently a lady at dinner, on observing that ho took no wine, remarked: "Ah! I suppose all you hard drinkers have to come to this sooner or later!"
Berlin. Nov. 7. Emperor William's announced intention of remaining a fortnight on the isle of Wight after his visit to the British court, "upon the advice of his physicians and in
order to complete his recovery from an attack of catarrh," is mystifying to court circles. because the emperor, with the exception of a slight cold remaining after his recent attack of influenza, appears to be in pt-rfect health. l'rotv-ssor Schmidt, the throat and nose specialist of Frankfort, who excised the polyp from the emperor's throat in l'.IOS, wus in Berlin last week. He said there was not the slightest trace of a recurrence of the growth, and that his majesty's throat was absolutely norm mI. Speculations, therefore, th it the old trouble may possibly have returned are out of tho question. It wr,j hinted yesterday thnt the revelations in the Moltke-Harden suit have no pve rd on the emperor that he Is se.rfiiliiK severely from Insomnia. 1'or . r.il wi rUi ho has not had two
1-1 01 H.-i n 1 1 v o bout of sleep, and he Mpi nl s a Kteat part of the night walklug ai.out hi bedroom. UuUrr citr In .ooil Heulth. A inrmlirr ( the Imperial entourage,
who fpent an hour and a half with the
cinpiiiir t oil a , Ba Id ;
"Hit mnl.vjty remarked that the cold
whhh bud timdr him wretched for ;i week had now left him. I knew of tht enipoioi'i purpo:. to ret on the iso
of WSkM, run! 1 studied his Voice to e. If it win iiiiv different from usual. H was unite the suio-, clear and rather loud. Sei-iulnnlv there was no stoppane In the lo ad, as might result front catariha! t:o;i(,;.. 'Do- ;p. or drove through 1'nter den Linden before s o'clock yesterday morning, urn! then went through the park. He appealed to 1" in tincotnmotilv good h alth and talked animatedly with his adjutants. It appears to be probable that the emperor, in deciding to stay at the Isle of Wight, really wishes to be away from the care of. state for a couple of woks and thus' relieve himself from er.g.tgementa that now seem burdensome, an has been working very hard recently. 1 I'mprcss Augusta Victoria, accc---
long lingering look at the suit case containing his immaculate swaliowtail, which had arrived long before he put in an appearance, and then, mur
muring, "it cannot be," he dashed onto the stage without so much as putting on a clean collar or changing ends to his cuffs. It was an embarrassing moment for Burton when ho first faced the correctly garbed, immaculate and eager throng. He longed to tell them how it was, but was not at liberty to make a public announcement of his friend's marriage to the audience, so h5 contented himself with three apologies, one at the beginning of the lecture, one in the middle, and the other near the end. The lecturer, however, explained the situation to a few of his friends after
the lecture was ended. Incidental' he has taken a mighty oath hereafter never to go ten miles from the lecture hall on a day when he Is scheduled to speak, without carrying a black broadcloth clawhammer along In his grip.
In the meantime the marriage had been duly solemnized and every one but
Burton was happy.
DON'T SWALLOW DRUGS FOR
SKIN AFFECTION
Phone 3763. HAMMOND GARAGE Automobiles for Icntl Gasoline, Oil and Sundries.
General Repairing jr. w. Mcmullen, Prop. 74 So. Ilohman street. Hammond. IsvdV
Woodhull Ice Cream Co Manufacturer of Frozen Creams, Fruit Ices, Etc. So. Chicago. 230 02nd St.. Phone 77 Hammond. 85 State Street, Phona 177
W. M. CHRISTEN ARCHITECT AND BUILDINd SUPT 312 Hammond Buildinff HAMMOND
CASTLEMAN & JONES GARY, IND. Lots In Gary Perfect Title $10 Monthly Payments
Discovery Proved thnt Skin Disenne
Kilntn In the Skin Only Cure the
Skin Through the Skin.
The old method of trying to cure
skin disease by treatment through the
blood by way of the stomach has now been given up by all scientists. It has
been proved that the only sure way to relieve and cure skin disease is by treating the disease where the disease is. The remedy discovered and used by hr. Pecatur F. Dennis in his practice with such remarkable success in cases of eczema, roriasis, ring worm, barber's itch and other such diseases and w hich he finally gave to the world under the name of D. D. D. Prescription, is now effecting almost miraculous cures everywhere. Thousands of people have written warm personal letters testifying to the wonderful results obtained by the use of this remedy, especially in connection with D. P. D. soap. One valuable feature is that it stopa all itch and burning instantly, immediately relieving the patient of agony and suffering.
while continued applications fu a positive cure. Just read this: "Your P. D. P. Pre-
v.fst remedy I have
ever used for eczema. It does all you claim for it. and I can't help feeling grateful to you. My son suffered with ring worm and scald head for four months. His head was something awful Il hi hair came out. Nothing would cure him. Then we bought two bottles of D. P. D. Two bottles with your advice cured him and he has had no return. His hair came in thick and beautiful." A. M. Peelen, Mariner's Harbor, L. I.. N. T. We carry D. P. D. In stock because we know it cures skin diseases. Come in and let us prove what It has done for others. OTTO NEGELE.
5
It's Simple Figuring how you might have saved your home If you had begun to eave your money in time and had deposited It bit by bit with U3, WE HAVE HELPED OTHERS, let us help you; 3 per cent interest du your savings account. The CITIZEN'S German National Bank
Hall for Rent.
For all Occasions such as Balls, Dances, Partes, Lodge Meetings, etc. SCHNEIDER BROS., Props 300 WEST STATE ST.
Did yon buy an advertised "bargain yesterday f There are more ot them advertised today
