Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 18, Hammond, Lake County, 9 July 1908 — Page 5
Tlmrsflav, Julv 9, 1908.
THE TIMES.
HERE AND THERE IN THE CALUMET REGION
Day's Grist in South Chicago GRAND JURY INDICTS THIRTEEN WHITE SLAVERS. Sooth C'hicagn Woman Coming; la Contact With Law Creates a Thirteen additional indictments in the federal "white slave" crusade, some of which wcr- against previously Indicted individuals, were returned yesterday by the federal grand jury. The Cnited States commissioned's room was crowded with victims and those accused when the indictments were returned. A scene that nearly caused a stampede among the women occurred shortly after the indictments had been returned, when Clara Isner. S216 Harbor avenue, one of the women indicted, became hysterical, shouting- threats against the government. After keeping this up for over a minute she began weeptns; and fainted, falling: into the arms of Assistant District Attorney Harry Parkin. In all fourteen indictments were returned against the men and women from the South Chicago tenderloin. SPRINKLER IS WANTED. South During l Suffering From th Duftt Henlilent Will Complain The residents in the south end of the Kigiith ward, will appear before the board of local improvements some time this week and ask why they c;n't Ret the South Deering streets sprinkled. The street car compmy's sprinkler, according to the Peeringifes assert'on only makes the rounds once each day and on a day like yesterday, the djst Is only laid for a few minutes. The women in the neighborhood are making the greatest kick. Some of them washed yesterday, or rather hung out their clothes to dry while the sprinkler was going by. A few hours afterward, unon going1 into the rear yards, they found tneir clothes were spotted with dust. This caused an uproar upon the part of the peaceful ladies of the suburb, who immediately got into communication with their husbands. The husbands gathered at the home of John Morgan on Torrence avenue, where the matter was discussed which ended in them deciding to take the matter up with the boaro of local Improvements. Will Exhibit Pictures. By special request of their patrons the Lincoln theater liae secured the plcturtrs. of the "Passion Play" or the Life of Christ" at a very large expense.' The pictures are in three parts and they will be shown Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, July 14. 15. and 16. Song pictures will also be shown, Eugenia Todhunter and J. George O'Donnell will sing the "The Holy City," and 'Abide With Me.'. Ladies and children are especially invited. Dies of Paralysis. George Keuper, one of South Chicago's well known business men, died yesterday morning at his home, 205 Peventy-rlxth street, from an atteck of paralvsis. The stroke that caused his death was the second one In twenty-four hours. The deceased had been subject to this disease for the last two years, which caused him to give up his business interests. Mr. K-uper was a member of the Bowen Lodge. Knights of Pythias, and the Calumet Singing Society, which orders will have charge of the burial services. which will probably be held Sunday. A wife and seven daughters mourn the death of their husband and father. Start Aldermanic Team. "Alderman Patrick It. Moynihan of South Chicago pitching staff." The above is the way the local alder man has been slated by his colleagues for the Chicago aldermanic baseball team that is being organized. The loWANTED Experienced girl for general housework; no other need apply. 27 Webb street, or Phone 2704, Hammond, Ind. It. WANTED Neat and pleasant girl to wait on table at Manhattan beach. Fundays only. Apply at white stand, Vierllng's pavilion. South Chicago BUSINESS DIRECTORY HENRY GROSS lPainting and Decoratings PAINT, GLASS, WALL PAPER PAINfER'S SUPPLI4S 033 Commercial Avt. Tel. So. Chicago 212 So. Chicago William A. Schoening Otneral Contractor and Builder rire Loam Adjusted OW)tng Promptly Attended to 1C520 TORRENCE AVE., Chicago Phone, South Chicago 483 fIVhoe i OfiWe, 1S ; Rraldene 343, Soatb Chleaaro. ?RANK FOSTER ATTORXKY AT UTV, Room 15, Commercial Block, J;C8 Commercial avenue, - Chicago, HI Residence 9120 Exchange avenue.
cal man has not played ball for several years, but at one time he was considered a handy man In this region with a baseball. Mr. Moynihan said yesterday that he
wouldn't mind going out and playing a game, the only thing he would object too would be practicing "for that is one tiling I always hated to do," said Alderman Moynihan. If the Pouth Chicago man is placed in the bov to do the heavy work the St. Louis delegation can find plenty of bets in South Chicago that they will go back to the "show me" state perfectly "showed." Hold Annual Picnic. The Woodlawn Knights of Pythias held their annual meeting last night at Fraternity hall, Sixty-fourth street and Stony Island avenue, where they, dis cussed plans for their annual picnic which will be given this year at Cedar Lake. Ind. The Woodlawn Knights are a growing organization, now bavin over 300 members in their lodge. Their picnic will be held at the In diana resort some time next month, the date to be decided at a special meet ing next week. Takes Up Problem. The Cheltenham Improvement association held a regular meeting last night and took up the question of transpor tatlon. Cheltenham Is entirely dissatisfied with the treatment that it has been receiving at the hands of the street car companies. The suburb wants better connections and cheaper fare, and a committee of three, with Charles Ringer as chairman, was appointed last night to wait upon Ira Cobe, traffic manager of the Calumet Electric and South Chicago railway companies and ask him for better service. Nicholas Larson presided at the meeting last night as chairman. Fall Crushes His Skull. John Probish, a foreigner employed in the Wisconsin steel mills fell from a scaffold yesterday afternoon, a distance of twenty-five feet, and crushed his skull. The foundation of the scaffold gave way and Probish, who was the only one on it at the time, was taken along to the ground. .As he landed at the bottom a heavy timber struck him cross the head, lading his head open and causing other internal injuries. He was rushed to the South Chicago hospital, but there is little hope for his recovery. Contracts Are Let. The contracts for the new South Chicago hospital were let last night to the various contractors. The work was all divided and their bids will be made public tomorrow. Professor Case Is Back. Professor J. L. Case, the famous South Chicago aeronaut and balloonmaker, returned to South Chicago last night from Glenn Island, Canada, where his balloon landed on the July 5 in the international balloon race. Where THE TIMES May Be Had. The SOUTH CHICAGO TIMES may bo found on sale at the following places. Those who are unable to secure a copy will confer a favor by notifying the cir culation department. Room 15, Lincoln building, or telephone 288 South Chicago. Harding's, 158 Ninety-second street. Costello's, 93 Ninety-second street. Jamlnson'8. 197 Ninety-first street. Raduenzel's, 184 Ninety-second street. Pouley's, 9155 Commercial avenue. Moore's, 7502 Saginaw avenue, Windsor Park. Truog's, 9908 Ewlng avenue. East Side. Zegar's, Ninety-first street and Commercial avenue. M. E. Dowdlngs, 153 Cheltenham place. Thomas Powell, Sixty-third street and Btony Island avenue. William Mason, Seventieth, street and I. C. station. Sam Winters. 10401 Ewlngr avenue, East Side. Also Takes subscriptions. Phone 4023 South Chicago. Killacky Bros., Ninety-fourth street and Cottage Grove avenue. Burnslc". Friday and the Soothsayer. Two women who wlshpd in matu nn appointment with a fortune teller who was pronounced "just splendid-' by everybody who had patronized her, were advised by the seer to come on Friday. "That is, if you are not superstitious about Friday," she said. "Most people are. They regard Friday as such an unlucky day that they won't even have their fortune told them for fear they will hear something unlucky. That is why I advise you to come on that day. I will have plenty of time, and won't have to put your cases through with such a rush." Entitled to the Best. Tipping is admitted to be a bad habit, but it is firmly established. A young fellow who took his best girl to supper felt that he must conform to custom, and handed out his coin with liberality, so that no one in the restaurant was overlooked. After they had been swung through the revolving door she said: "Did you give that man at the door anything?" "No. Why?" "He ought to have had the most He let us out." Shoot Fish with Arrows. Many of the natives of the inlands of the South Seas are experts at shooting fish with a bow and arrow. The art is a difficult one, for the reflection of the water has to be allowed for.
SOUTH GHiCAGOANS
BUYING SNOWBALLS
Denver Delegation Sends to Another Message South Chicago Times. ALL CAN ENTER THE HALL Roger Sullivan Provides the Boys With Tickets and Good Cigars Visit the Parks. The following letter, received yesterday, !s self-explanatory: Denver, Colo.. Editor South Chicago Times: Late Monday evening The -South Chicago delegation, that is the majority of them, have just retired, in order that they may be fresh for thet opening session tomorrow morning. There lias been a groat scramble for tickets on all sides and hundreds of lenverites have been left in the lurch with only a promise to remember the convent ion. Every member of our crowd has a ticket good for the convention which were secured for us through the courtesy of Koger Sullivan. Mr. Sullivan was mingling among our crowd this evening for a few minutes and Tom Healy and Alexander Wisnieswski left the, hotel office in company with him. Talk about good cigars the Denver brands are the real goods and while here we are enjoying plenty of the fragrant Hr.vanas. A large delegation from the southern states arrived in Denver tooay and they are making quite a splurge as they promenade up and down the main streets. Those who have gone to bed. when asked what we should say for them, said: "Say we are enjoying oi.rselves immensely," anj these words express the feelings of our party. Xpcnt Afternoon In Park. This afternoon was spent taking in Denver parks, which are the finest in the west. An amusing incident occurred this afternoon when we were accosted by a .small boy carrying a basket piled high witli snowballs wliKh were purported to be from Pikes Peak. These he was selling for 10 cents each and most of our crowd helped the boy along and if we can't bring tiie snow to South Chicago, we will put the water in a bottle to show you natives what it looks like. Tom Healy says there isn't ::ny difference In the water fiom that in South Chicago and Gilbert Morgan maintained that there Avas, this led to an arcrunier.t which was finally left to cur bunch who decide! that Morgan was right and accordingly Tom bought a round of cigars. The hands r,n the clock are now pretty close to the 11 o clock mark so we will say goodby. The South Chicago Delegation. Human Pincushions. "I was in an uptown tearoom where the scenery is all out of proportion to the amount served you," said a Xew York clubman. "I was dallying with some ice cream when my spoon struck a common, everyday pin in the bottom of the frozen stuff. I gave a little wave and a waiter slipped to my side. 'S9, a pin in this ice cream,' 1 said. "Why, I might have swallowed that.' He took the glass and disappeared. When he returned he reminded me of an undertaker, he was that solemn. 'That pin has lost a man his job, sir,' he said. 'Well,' I replied, 'I am sorry for that, but it might have cost me my life, when you come to think of it.' Yes, sir,' said the waiter, meekly. Then, 'You see, sir, most of the folks that eats here just sips their ice cream and don't chew it.' " The Word Post. Many persons wonder how wa got the word "post" as applied to the mails. It comes from the Latin positus, which means placed; thereif0 U is a fixed 3m- From this it came to mean an established conveyance of letters from one station to another, and the place from which the letters were sent out came to be called the postoffice. "Post-haste," a word used by Shakespeare, means speed in traveling, like that of post or a courier. An Impertinent Question. "Your wife," impertinently asks a massage cream advertisement, "is she as fair and fresh as the day you were married?" We are out of sympathy and accord with those who scoff at marital felicity, in the first place; in the second place, the word-play is old and obvious. Resides, either answer might precipitate trouble. Commission. Walter had been collecting coins for some time, and one morning at breakfast he asked: "Papa, do you go down town to make money?" "Yes," said his father. "Why?" "I wish you would make me a set of United States gold dollars," said Walter. Doubts About It. "Bangs' daughter had such expensive tastes that I suppose it is a reliet to him to get her married off so well." "I don't know about that." "Why not?" "She was always on his hands, but when I saw him taking her up the Aisle, she wu on his arm."
6HRT BOARD
Passed Resolutions Scathingly Denouncing Lawyers Who Made Chief Martin Subject of Their Attacks.
The Gary town board yesterday met j in special session for the purpose of hearing the evidence which, it was understood, the Gary Bar association would Introduce to show that Chief of Police Martin is guilty of a conspiracy to give the police court business to the law firm of Harris & Bretsch. The meeting had been adjourned from July 6 to give the Investigating committee of the bar association a chance to make its report. The report failed to come In and the members of the town board becoming disgusted with the entire affair, passed resolutions vindicating Chief Martin and scathingly denouncing the signers of the petition who called for the investigation. The resolution in part is as follows: "He it remembered that certain mem bers of the Gary Bar association caused to be circulated and published against Chief of Police Martin, charges concerning the conduct of his office." t'onnrnnua of Hfnoliilloii. The resolution then goes to say that Chief Martin asked for a public hearing before the town board and that July 6 was set for the hearing. No one appeared, and it was later learned that it was desired by the complaining members of the bar association that the hearing be continued until July 68. HOT SHOT FOR FOREMAN Charged With Being the Ally of Corporations While Councilman. Alderman Milton J. Foreman was charged with being the "ally" of corporations in the Chicago city council, with "jamming through" the telephone ordinance and with securing a franchise for a corporation for which he was the legal adviser, by State Senator Samuel E. Kttelson before the Third AVard Republican club in Wood's hall, Thirty-eighth street and Vin-rr-nnos avenue, last night. Senator Kttelson's charges were: That Alderman Foreman was the chief promoter of the Chicago Telephone company's recently acquired franchise, which was passed by the council in the middle of the night and to obtain which the company expended $1,000,000. That while securing the Calumet Electric Railway franchise for the Assets Realization company Alderman Foreman was in the employ of the company as counsel. "Knllr-d to Keep Promise." That Alderman Foreman enabled the Chicago City Railway company to lay 'loop" tracks In Iangely avenue, north of Thirty-ninth street, during the night after failing to keep a promise to first inform the property owners that the tracks were to be laid. Two hundred persons heard the charges. Senator Ettleson was introduced as a candidate to succeed himself as county central committeeman in opposition to Alderman Foreman. Reading a section of the regulation form of the oath of office relative to the acceptance of bribes, Senator Ettelson said: "Ever since I took office I have kept that oath. I wonder if for the nine years of his alleged public service Alderman Milton J. Foreman can say as much? "What is the picture you have In your mind of his attitude In the city council. Do you find him working day and night in the interest of the publie Or do you llnd him promoting tiff welfare of corporations'? Uses of a London Church. The church of All Hallows, London, England, presents a strange appearance every morning. The building is opened early for the accommodation of girls and women who arrive in the city by the "workmen's" trains, which frequently are run at such an hour as to compel the passengers to make a long wait after arriving in the city for their places of business to open. A short service is conducted and then the congregation is permitted and even encouraged to employ themselves with needlework or with reading. The women and girls are provided with reading matter, though care is taken that it shall not be too narrow in its range. Dancing Defined. Charles had been looking on at a dance for the first time in his life. When he reached home he said: "Aunty, it wasn't a bit like I thought ?t would be. I thought when people danced they jumped up and down but they didn't. Tnfy just took each other by the waist and skated." Harper'? Take Care of the Eyes. Rye strain is certainly a factor in producing disease of every part of the eye. Old age is the time of retribution for those who have sinned against their eyes. Health
MEETS
SPECIAL SESSION
"That on said July S." reads the resolution, "no one offered any evidence whatever relative to said charges. Therefore be it resolved that Chief Martin is liereby wholly and completely exonerated and found guiltless of any said charges and the said attorneys, and each of them are hereby condemned for circulating, or causing to be circulated, said charges which they admit, by their failure to appear before this board, to be false." It is understood that there is to be a meeting of the bar association in Gary tonight and that the action of the town board is to be the subject under consideration. Thought It Could Take Time. It seems that the committee from the bar association, which had the examination of the charges against Martin, thought that it could take all the time it wanted in making the investigation and could report to the town board when it pleased. The members of the town board, however, did not take this view of the situation. They thought that the disagreeable matter had been prolonged long enough and they decided to put up with the procrastination of the bar association no longer. The action of the board does not end the matter, for it is probable that the petitioners and the complaining members of the bar association will carry on their investigation to Its conclusion, and it is hard to tell what they will do. HOLD YATES MEETING Addresses This Evening in Big Tent at South Chicago. The Yates forces invade South Chicago Jhis evening and hundreds of voters from all sections of the ward are expected to turn out and hear what the ex-goverr,or has to say. The meeting will be held at Ninetysixth street and Commercial avenue, where a large tent will be pitched this evening and every voter and those who are not voters are invited to come out for the meeting, which, it is said, will be one of the largest so far held on the South Side. Richard Yates himself will be in South Chicago early this afternoon and accompanied by several members of his forces, will mingle through the crowds before the speaking begins. Yates has begun one of the most strenuous campaigns in the history of Illinois politics, and his friends In South Chicago believe that It will end in his again being elected governor of the state. I'pon every side Yates admirers are to be found and hundreds of the small buttons with the words, "Yates for Governor" can be seen daily, no matter In what part of the ward you go. On the East Side the admirers of Yates hnvi- formed a boosting club in his interests and this club now has a membership that will reach close to 200. With over two hundreds East Siders working for Y'ates, the voters on the east side of the river say that Y'ates will win in a walk. Mr. Yates is a good speaker and in addition to this he has a large corps of other spellbinders who will endeavor to further his interests through the ward this evening. Moon Regarded as a Deity. Among the early peoples of Mesopotamia all of the heavenly bodies were regarded as deities, but the moon, because of the variety of the shapes which it assumes, was the chief of them all. Special reverence was therefore paid it and some of the oldest and most important of the Babylonian temples, as at Ur and Haran, were devoted to its worship. Thus the crescent, the symbol by which the moon god was represented, was supposed to have the power to avert evil, and then together with the star it formed the word for incantation. Poor Bobby! "My son," said Bobby's father, "you should always remember and emulate the busy bee." Ten minutes later Bobby was caught in the neighbor's apple tree gathering blossoms. After being peppered with salt by the irate neighbor he was , taken down behind the barn and i soundlv thrashed. "Thai's what you get for emulating the busy bee," he sobbed. "Next time I am going to emulate the lazy toad and sit in the grass and do nothing." Where Autos May Travel Fast. There is no speed limit for autos outside the city of Shanghai, China. Within the city 30 miles an hour Is allowed. The Ideal and the Real. Every time you hear a man poetize about his soul's ideal you can make ! a safe bet that he will marry a reality with freckles and No. 6s. To Do Away with Envy. Thou oughtest not to know tb wtalth of thy neighbor. Homer,
BRYAN IS CHEERED 88 MINUTES.
(Continued from page 1.) In fight against "Bobby" Burke's delegation from Illinois. TOM I- JOHSOX Is victor in factional contest in nineteenth Ohio district. TIIE m'BOIS or anti-Mormon element wins in the Idaho fight by a vote of 2 to 20. OKLAHOMA gets eighteen votes in the convention instead of fourteen. Denver, July 9. After its all night session the credentials committee fin ished its work at 11 o'clock. Another meeting was called for 2 o'clock in the afternoon, but there was no occasion for it, the actual cause of delay being the necessity of lining up the states on the (luffey contest. With the exception of the action in the Pennsylvania case the committee accepted the report of its subcommittees and sustained them. The Pennsylvania colonel was defeated by a vote of 27 to 15. Fred Dubois and his Idaho and anti-Mormon delegates were sustained by a vote of 26 to 20, while t lie reports of the subcommittees sus taining Sullivan in Illinois and Murphy 1 in New York went through by acclamation. "Tom" Johnson was allowed to retain the nineteenth Ohio district and t lie division of the seats in the District of Columbia as made by the subcommittee was accepted. Oklahoma was granted eighteen instead of fourteen seats. Colonel Uttlfey Down sod Ont. Jim Guffey of Pennsylvania, Bryan's pet enemy, was defeated In his fight before the democratic convention shortly before midnight tonight, when a motion to substitute the minority re port of the credentials committee for thpt of the majority, which unseated he Guffey delegates in enough districts to deprive him of the national committeeship was rejected by an emphatic majority. Guffey was beaten by a vote of 3S7 to 615. The Guffeyltes fought nobly, but the thumbs of the Bryanites were turned down. The Famon Plank. The famous "anti-Injunction" plank modification which will probably be passed. Is as follows: Th eourtu of Justice are the bulwark of our liberties, and we yield to none In our purpose to maintain their dignity. Our party has given to the bench a long line of distinguished Judges, who have added to the respect and confidence In which this department must be jealously maintained. We resent the attempt of the republican party to raise a false issue respecting the Judiciary. It Is an unjust reflection upon a great body of our citizens to assume that they lack respect for the courts. lit Is the function of the court to Interpret the laws which the people create, and If the laws appear to work economical, social or political Injustice, it Is our duty to change them. The only basis upon which the integrity of our courts can stand is that of unswerving justice and protection of life, personal liberty and property. If judicial processes may be abfcsed we should guard against abuse. Experience has proven the necessity of a modification of the present law relating to Injunctions, and we reiter ate the pledge of our national platform of llrOO and 1904 in favor of the measure which passed the Vnited States senate in 18JWI, but which republican congress has ever since refused to enact, relating to contempts in federal courts nnd providing for trial by Jury In cases of indirect contempt. Questions of judicial practice have arisen, especially In connection with industrial disputes. We deem that parties to all judicial proceeding? should be treated with rigid Impnrtlnlity. and that injunctions should not he Issued in any case In which Injunctions would not issue if no industrial dispute were Involved. The expanding organization of Industry makes It essential that there should be no abridgement of the right of wage-earners to organize for the protection of wages nnd the improvement of labor conditions, to the end that such lnlior organizations nnd their members should not be regarded as Illegal combinations In restraint of trade. Din coin. Neb., July S. "The democrats have been good to me. I can find no words to express my appreciation of the confidence and good will the demonstration indivates." These were the words of William Jennings Bryan today after the telegraph instrument on the front porch at Kairvlew had ticked off the news that the great outburst of democratic enthusiasm at Denver was over and that Senator Gore was resuming his speech. Mr. Bryan had deserted the telegraph instrument half an hour before the demonstration ended and was engaged in cutting up the big watermelon sent him by Texas admirers when the (inal report of the cheering came. Mr. Bryan was deeply affected by the news of the excitement occasioned on his behalf. Farly in the morning it had berome apparent that the nervousness of the previous day had been displaced by composure and confidence. Mr. Bryan was not worrying. Carves Melon During Cheering. With the newspaper correspondents practically his only guests at Fairview during the convention, Mr. Bryan t-hatted amiably on nonpolitica! subjects while the bulletins were coming in. He looked happy and at time absented himself from tlo instruments to chat with a friend for ten minutes at a time. Alton B. Parker ha been advised 1y Ills friends here to mingle a littlf mon; with the crowd. Thpy think tin1 peo-iM.-havp the Impression that is tno much of an aristocrat, vhih thfe friends say Is not a good reputation to have at a convention of this sort. Consequently, in the last day or two the former candidate for president has emerged from his seclusion, and has shaken hands with everybody who comes along. 'Convention tickets for sale tare."
This sign, rudely scrawled upon a piece of cardboard and standing on a glass showcase at one side of the main entrance to the Savoy hotel, caused a good deal of irritation among the delegates who rassed it in the morning. Some of those delegates in vain had tried to secure tickets for importunateconstituents. "It's disgraceful," said a perspiring delegate from Michigan to an assistant sergeant at arms from Alabama. "It suah is." said the southerner, 'an' mo' than fouah hundred of ouali people tryin' to get in." He meant from the southern states. Not that many came from Alabama. "If you'll watch this guy," said a New Yorker, referring to the fresh young man who sold the tickets from behind the counter, "I'll call a cop." '"Taint no use," spoke a man from Missouri. "I asked a special officer
ing. "You fellows make me tired." said the ticket vender. "Where do you suppose I got those tickets? I got them from a lot of cheap delegates who sell them. If you want to buy any at $li apiece say so, or move along." More delegates came up and entered their protest. The Real Thing. "How do I know that you love me? "I walked all the way down Main street this evening to propose." "What's that got to do with It?" "I passed a solid mile of millinery and dry gods stores with windows fim!l of price tags and I never faltered. Houston Post. To Banish the Goat. Malta's celebrated goats are llkery soon to be only a memory on the historic island, for It has been found that banishing goats' milk means an. end to the ravages of Malta fever. The commission appointed In 1"907 to trace the origin of the fever in the garrisons and crews of warships made the discovery that the germ of the fever was present in the milk of the ffoat. Wherever the use of this milk has been prohibited the fever has disappeared. Women't Fashion. Like the famous Allee, Faction would Insist that we grow "taUerer and tallerer," and "slimmerer and ertmmerer." Skirts are nemwer aqd longer tL an ever, and the ebjeet at every well-condacted cot-tome would sem to be an expressed declaration that women should have only on leg to fctnjd on. Madame. s 7 Children's Sleep. As a general rule the lad at scnool between the ages of 13 and 16 requires nine to ten hours sleep. Growing boys need a large amount of sleep, and when this is denied them, neither their bodies nor their minds can develop properly. An English authority points out this lack of hours of rest falls most heavily on the clever boya. Take THE TIMES for Ita political oevrs until after the election. Aot for Its republican nerrs, not for It, democratic news, bat for both aides. MONEY LOANED on good security such as Furniture, Pianos and other personal property QUIETLY and QUICKLY. CHICAGO DISCOUNT CO S138-40 Commercial Ave. South Chicago Room 2 . Tel. Ho. Chicago 104 Open Monday. Thursday and Saturday evenings until P. M. Greenyaid's Seldom, if ever, have the people of the Calumet District had an opportunity In selecting their m home furnishings from such a complete line of high pade furniture all new and direct from the factory as is now on sale in our big store, which covers nearly 12,000 square feet We have a complete line of Parlor Suits, Bedsteads, Sideboards, China Closets, Tables (all descriptions), Chairs, Rockers, etc., to select from. We can please you, and with credit terms to suit your convenience M, L. Greenwald &Co. 279-81-83 Ninety-second St. SOUTH CHICAGO. Mrs! (Mil MVmH&u fftifTil i isis imWmm i Yihrti'l iR rffitfr wTwHi WHISKEY There is only one BEST TRY Old Steuben Bourbon (Straight Goods) and a&rec with us that It is PERFECTION Steuben County Wine Co. Distributors, CHICAGO, ILLS. CHICHESTER S PILLS TflK DIAMOND IUIAMI, a L.odls! Ank your llrogf In for a hl.rtar-trrs l1nonl TlrndA I'lll in Ited o.l feold rnrtn.ltW I s-a.r 1 witta B;.i! Rlt.:n. Tmkfl n ofhrr. Bar f yonr ' Itmni.L. A.lrfort li'i. irK-TFR KIAiloND ItRAMt PII.I.O, f.w 8i ynnknown is Bet, Saf,t, AUavi K-H: :e
kS0lD BY DRWGISTS RERYWHLRE
