Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 39, Hammond, Lake County, 3 August 1908 — Page 7

THE TIMES. S

Monday. August 3, 1908.

THREE MEET DEATH IN WATERYESTERDAY Gary Loses Two Citizens and South Chicago Loses One by Drowning.

RIVER AND LAKE GET VICTIMS Kobert Wilson Loses His Life By Falling Into Lake Michigan Saturday Night. Sraaon'a DronninKii in Region 10 Three men in the Calumet region were drowned yesterday and the shocking list of water fatalities now reaches nineteen. 'Jury was the scene of two drownings between Saturday night and Sunday night. The first orourrej out on Lake Michigan when Hubert Wilson was riding on a steam launch in the vicinity of Gary and fell from the rear of the boat into the lake. He went down and never rose to the surface of the water. All efforts to recover his body have been in vain. There is very little known about Wil- ' son other than his name. The boat was bound from (lary to Miller at the time the accident happened. StepM in little; (hick Down. The other drowning occurred in the Calumet river in the vicinity of the Lake Shore bridge. Stanley Longo, his brother and several companions were in the water swimming when suddenly Stanley Jngo stepped into a hole in the river and went down. The other young men were too much frightened to offer any assistance and the young man was drowned. The drowning happened at 12:30 p. m. yesterday afternoon and the body was not recovered until an hour later. Dr. E. M. Shunklin held an inquest over the remains and the verdict rendered was accidental drowning. Stanley Ixngo was 22 years of age and was employed by the Great Lakes Dredge & Dock company. In the case of Robert Wilson, who fell from the boat, the circumstances tire peculiar. No report was made of the drowning until yesterday, wnen some one telephoned the Gary police and stated that Robert Wilson had been drowned in t lie vicinity of Gary and if the body came ashore to notify Fred I). Doty of Kensington. Drown In Sight of People. That a man may drown within 200 yards from the shore while hundreds of 'people are standing on the beach ignorant of the accident, as a fact which was proven at the Nicholson beach yesterday. Richard O'Donnell, 20 years old, living at Seventy-sixth street and Lake avenue, was the victim. He was one of many who went out into the water and swam out farther than anybody else. His disappearance was not no ticed until several hours after he en tered the water. This morning his remains were found near the shore, showing that his drowning was due to an attack of the cramps. It was taken from the water by Officer Theodore Baer and taken to Lulinski's morgue, where the inquest will be held this afternoon. CRAZY HAN IS LOOSE Town Marshal Klopf Miller Has Unusual Experience. of Miller Station, Aug. .1. (Special.) Town marshal of Miller, Edward Klopf, had an unusual experience with n wild man yesterday. For a time it looked as if the craftiness of the peculiar customer would win for him his liberty, but Klopf still has him in the toils. A man by the name of .lim Ansley was arrested in Miller for Hashing a knife. The report came to Klopf that Ainsley was crozy and that some one Would be hurt if he was not put in Jail. Klopf went to the scene himself and soon had Ainsley in jail. He left the supposed crazy man there in custody of Charles Ring, the jailer. After Ainsley landed in jail lie seemed to quiet down and finally h asked Ring if he could not write to his mother and tell her of the trouble he was in. Prisoner l ocks Illm In Jail. Ring had no objection to that and eo he soon opened the jail door to let the prisoner out wjjere lie could sit at a table. Before King knew what had happened the prisoner had shoved him into the jail and had locked the door. Ring yelled at the top of his voice and tried to attract some one to his assistance. He finally made himself heard and it was not long before he was released from jail and was on the way to tell Marshal Edward Klopf of his experience. Klopf at once started on a search for his wary customer. He met Attorney Pardon and Judge Westergreen In an automobile and found that they had seen a man who answered Ainsley's description going down the road. Klopf got into the machine and in a few minutes Ainsley was again under arrest. The Living First. "The things you mean to Bay when they are gone, say before they go. The flowers you mean to send for their coffins, send to brighten and sweeten their homes before they leave you." This we all know afterward! yet, lo, these noxious herbs Instead! Jean Paul

SCRAP MAY END

FUTURE AFFAIRS Bad Feeling Displayed at County Seat May Knock Out Annual Event. TOWNS INCENSED AT WHITING Contestants Charge That Whiting Played the Baby Act In Going Home. Crown Point, Ind., Aug. 3. (Special.) Charges of unfairness and the unsportsmanlike attitude assumed by some of the visiting teams of the Northern Indiana Volunteer Fire Department, who held their tournament here on Saturday, is said to herald the death knell of all future tournaments as far as Crown Point is concerned and those interested are loud In their denunciation of the way Crown Point was treated by the visiting teams and by some of the towns who wereconspicuous only by their absence, refus ing to send teams to the contest, when in the past Crown Point has sent a team and large crowds to participate in this annual event when held by its sister towns. (roivn Point Didn't Go After It. At the meeting of the board of di rectors some time ago, when the place for the tournament was decided upon. Crown Point did not make any bid for the affair, the members being perfectly willing to stand by the decision of the board and send a team to compete, wherever they decided to hold the tournament. The event fell to Crown Point and the organization here, with the aid of the merchants, made great efforts to entertain the visiting teams and expected to have competing teams from Hobart and East Chicago. Whiting's team came down, but their unsportsmanlike conduct is a matter of record and will not be forgotten in years to come, and never before in the annals of Crown Point's sporting events, have a body of kids, not even mentioning the men, shown the whiteliver and cold feet attitude as was witnessed here Saturday when the Whiting aggregation refused to "play" on account of a rumored decision which gave the Robertsdale men the first prize in the appearance contest, and no persuasion on the part of the officials could get them to compete, even to entertain the spectators who had assembled. Hobertsdale Did Her Duty. Robertsdale is the only team in the organization that really did what was to be expected of them, and they can rely on the support of Crown Point team in any competition they may have in the future. The other towns that failed in their duty and common courtesy in making the affair the success it ought to have been by their efforts, can hardly look for any support by the organization in the future, and if they have killed the contests by their case of "cold feet", in the future, they have no one but themselves to blame. One thing is certain Crown Point or its people are not very enthusiastic in their praises, and with the exception of Robertsdale, who was the only organization to show the proper spirit in entering the contest, win or loose. there is not another town that boasts of a volunteer fire department that can rightfully expect very much from the local lire department in return. DIES FROM LOCKJAW Lansing Child Steps on Rusty Nail and Death Follows Accident. I.nnslne, III., Aug. 3. Special. A hocking death from lockjaw occurred here yesterilny at the home of Mr. nnd .Mrs. Albert Kikkrrt, when their wix-ycar-old datrghter, Anna, passed away in great suffering. About a week nco the little itirl stepped on a rusty nail. A painful swellInn of the foot resulted nnd still the parents of the little one did not consider the wound very dnngerous. The disease had made surh rapid progress during the past few flays that the child's condition became critical nnd doctor's couldn't help her. The funeral will take place tomorrow at the Christian Reformed church. Rev. Hordman officiating. 1,500 HOBEJO WORK Business at Pullman is Now in Fine Shape Prosperity Returning. Conditions at Pullman have at last reached the turning point. This morning, the freight shop and the rolling mill opened up full blast and more than 300 men were placed to work. Work on the big street car contract is now progressing favorably and by the middle of August it is likely ' that nearly C.000 men will be at work in the ca rshop.s The roster last week showed that there were 4,600 men on the pay roll. Estimates are being made in response to the many inquiries and indications are that the conditions will Improve rapidly. Shipments made last week were five sleepers for general service and thirty repaired sleepers for general service.

t . A Ticket Scalper's Story. C! 4 ; V

Original. I'm a ticket scalper. It's not much of a business and doesn't give a man much of a position in the world, but a scalper has a human heart, just like any one else. A scalper may feel Inclined to bestow that heart upon a woman. I had that Inclination once, but I'm never going to have it again. Women are the most ungrateful creatures in the world. A woman who would treat a man as one of 'em treated me isn't fit to live on the face of the earth. One day a pretty, melancholy looking girl of perhaps twenty-two came into my oflice and said she wanted to get to her mother, who was lying sick in Cincinnati. She said she was broke and wanted a ticket for about nothing. I had half a mind to give her a ticket, charging up the amount to myself, but that would be giving a stranger something like $10, and, while, as I said, a ticket scalper has a heart, he isn't the kind of man to give things away that he can't afford to give. I was looking among my old stock for something pretty cheap when I came across an unused half of an old excursion ticket, the limit of time of which had long ago expired. It occurred to me that if the girl worked on the sympathies of the conductor as she had on mine she might induce him to pass her through on it. I told her what 1 was thinking about and that if she was inclined to try it on I would give her the ticket free of charge. She asked if there would be anything dishonest in such an act, and I told her I didn't think there would be; there would be no misrepresentation. If the conductor wouldn't accept the ticket the worst he could do was to put her off at the first stop and she would be just so far on her journey. If she got stranded in a strange place she could get on the next train and go farther on the same ticket, and so on. She said she wouldn't do that, but if the conductor would let her go through on the ticket she would do so. The ticket had been paid for by some one, and she didn't think the road had a moral right to refuse it. I agreed with her as to that, and she accepted the ticket with heartfelt thanks and tears in her eyes. She looked hungry, aud I asked her if she was going through without anything to eat. She said she'd have to, and I felt so sorry for her that I asked her to go out to a restaurant and filled her up with oysters, beefsteak and a lot of other things. I remember the bill was $3.30. Her train went at 12:03 o'clock, so I took her to the theater. If you want to love any one, just do roinething for 'em. The more I did for this poor girl the more I thought what a lcv-ly home she could make for me. By the time I left her at the station I would have bought her a good ticket, but I'd spent all my money. I told her to keep up her courage and she'd go through all right. She said that I was one of nature's noblemen and I would be rewarded for my kindness to her. As the train moved away she waved her hand to me out of the coach window, looking at me with tearful eyes. It wasn't a week before I received a note from the attorney of the road over which I'd given the girl a ticket stating that thoy had a case against me for swindling pud must either chut up my shop or they would send me to state prison. I went at once to the attorney's office and asked to know what it meant. He showed me the ticket I had given the girl with a sick mother and asked me if I'd sold it to a deaf and dumb girl. I denied the charge and admitted I'd given it to a girl who could talk as well as I could. Then he told me how the ticket had been used. The girl had poked it at the conductor when he came around, and he told her it was no good. She began to talk to him with her fingers, aud. seeing her condition, he had given her a pencil and paper on which she wrote that a ticket scalper had sold the ticket to her for the regular fare. The road wa3 trying to get a case to scare us scalpers, and the conductor, backed by the passengers, who were indignant at such treatment of a poor deaf and dumb girl, passed her through, but he stipulated that she should give the name of the scalper, which she did willingly, expressing the hope that they would punish him soundly. Well, I told my side of the story, and when they sent to the address the girl had given them for corroboration of her side they found there was no such street and number in existence. The officers of the road believed that the poor girl shrunk from appearing against me and had, therefore, thus concealed her abode. But, not having any evidence against me. they didn't prosecute me, though I remained under a cloud with them. Not long ago In looking over a newspaper my eyes were attracted to an Item headed, "Working the Deaf and Dumb liacket." The item stated that Mary Moyers had been arrested for traveling on railroad trains on worthless tickets and pretending to be deaf and dumb. She represented that the tickets were sold her by ticket scalpers, thus exciting the sympathy necessary to get herself passed and often to draw forth a contribution from the passengers. I sent the clipping to the officers of the railroad she had swindled, and they wrote me a note of apology. Brit I don't want any more women In mine. MERRICK ANGUS.

tocks9 Grain and

Latest Events In the Markets

PROVISIONS

NEW YORK STOCK MARKET Open Atchison ... S7 Am Sugar. . 132 Am Car 39s Am Copper . . 7S U Am Smelt. . V.'1;. Anaconda . . 4 15 & O 92',2 High Uiw t'lose ' "s 131-4 39 -4 74 h :i ' ., 4 7--I 91 bi 4 3 3 2 -' a 1 7 2 U 2 4 . l;:. '4 139" 't 1, 132 39 7M4 ;o :is 4S IT.". 53 "4 44 33 '4 172 V2 2 4 137 U 140 32,4 US 1 OS 1 41 - 4 3" 94 125 1 2 2 1 - 21 4 73 ' 17 33 34 93 1 4 1 1 S 3 n!t 131-4, 39 8 77U S " 47 91 Brook R T Ohes O. C F & I. . . Canad Pac Erie com. O.rt North 111 Central . 4 3 . 33 .1721,6 . 24 V.. . 13:-i 32 -, 171 2 4 ', 4 136 '4 139- ?!'" .1 7 74 -a 107-4 1408 2i 9 4 M. 124 121'4 I'll 73 174 33 's 9 2 1 . 1 K"1, 1 ."4 'H 4 44 10S -s nt. .139: M K & T cm 31 - Mis Pac .... 57 78 Nat Lead . . N Y Cent . . No. Paid tic. Out & V. . Peoples das Pennsyl. Heading u i & s. . . Io pfd.. 1 o . 10K . 1 4 1 U, . 42 'i . 04 '2 .1254 . 1 22 . 21 '4 . 7.14 10K, 141 '4 43 94'1 2 4 122 's 21 7 3 1 7 -t 33-, 93 ' 1 11 i4 154 47. lo 'j 4 Rock Is I cm I"1 Do pfd... 33 S So. Pacific. 93 St. Paul 141V4 I'n. Pacific .Kk'.'h U S Steel. . . 4 5 45 i lo pfd...lO!f, 109 V;. Money closed 1 vi per c Total sales, 611,300. CHAIN AND PROVISION MET

Open High Low Close Wheal Sept . .3-4- 94 7' 0.1 !U1 Dee. . .95- 97 '.4 H5 ;.ti May ..99I2 101 '4 "j: 'i 101 ss orn Sept . .76,4 76 70!t Pec. ,.64-fi.". 1.2 0 4 fi.i'4 May ..64-65 65 64 C5 ''M Ont Sept . .4'sf-7s 46 45'h 4 543 Pec. ..45l2-;i4 4Sn 4 5 3 - 1 46 May . .47Mi-T4 4H1-1i 47 4Ss Pork Oct. ..15S2-S5 1602 15S2 1 5951) Sept ..1572-80 1 597 1 572 1 5971) Oit. ..15S2-85 12 15N2 15l5b I.arri Sept ..950 965 050 962 Oct. ..957 975 957 970b Itll.H Sept ..900 910 S97-90 305-03-Oct. . .902 915-17 902 915

H. S. Voorheis, Broker In Stock. Bonds, Grain, Provisions, Cotton and other SecurWtles. Stock Quotations Received by. Ticker Service. Direct Wires to Chicago and the East. ROOM 414 HAMMOND BLDQ, Phon;3641 LIVE STOCK MARKET. Union Stock Yards, Aug. 3. Hog receipts. 40,000 head; left over. 3.000; market 10c lower. Light, $6.20 ft 6.S5 : mixed, $6.30C 6.95; heavy, $6.20 rsi 6.95 ; rough. $6.20 'n 6.40. aCt tie receipts, 24.00l; market 10c lower. Sheep receipts, 2 l.oov; market 10c lower. Hogs Cattle Sheep Omaha 3.0io 7, ((00 11. 0011 Kansas City... 7. 000 14, 000 O.uihj Vnion Stock Yards. Aug. 3. Hogs close 10c. lower. Eight. $6.1 5 fa 6. so : heavy and mixed, $6.1516.90; rough, $ 6.1 5 fi 6.35. Cattle and sheep weak. GRAIN MARKET. Chicago. Aug. 3. Cariots Wheat. 395. 202. 374; corn, 221. oats, 257, 1 26, 173. today : !5. 15s; Chicago, Aug. 3. Estimates tomorrow Wheat. 559 cars; corn. 265 cars; oats. 2S.1 ears; hogs, lt.eno head. Chicago. Aug. 3. Clearanci Wheat and flour, 405,oimi oats, 7,oOO bu. World's Shipment. This wk Last wk Wheat ...5.424.0(10 5.296.00(1 Corn 4.1 77.000 2.56o.ooo today : irn. nil; List Yr s.(i:;2.oou 5. 265. Ono 'orthvet Cnrm. This ( ar I.ist Year. Wheat inc . . . .snj.o.io I no . . 1 . 4 vi.Oimi Corn. dec... 476. 000 pec.. 412. ono Oats, Inc.... 35.000 Pec... Miii.iimii Totnl Yioiltle Supplv. This wk List wk Last Yr Wheat 16.1 74.000 1 4,2s'2.i)Ou Corn . . 2. 07S. (100 2.500.000 Outs ... 1 520,000 .4S5.OO0 4V31 s.ono 2.759.01)0 rrlniarr Market. Receipts. .1,711 .oiiii . 1 .733,0(0) . 1 .531.000 4 3 '.'.01 10 to:!. 000 . 553,000 Ship. S''iS,(Hl0 963.0 00 2 7 5 1 " 1 o :::t7.ooo 3 5X.OOH 609.0110 Wheat, Last Last today Week year . Corn, today Last week Uist year Southwestern M arkcl m When t Keeeipts. Minneapolis, toda y . . . ;it .0iin Last year I so, (mo 7 St. Louis, today 191. not) 9 r-liip. 1 1 . ) t e 1 1 79.IMIO 97. OHM 2".0tM) 1 m'iiihI 1 1 5. ocO Last year 2 1 2.000 Kansas City, today ... 097. 001) I-ast year ny.iueo PRODI I II MAHKETS. P.uttr r Rcct ipts. 10. 096 tubs; creamery, extras. 20c; price to retail dealers, 23c; prints, 24c; extra firsts. 1!H...'; firsts. 19c; seconds. ISc; dairies, extia. 19c; tirsts. Pc: seconds. 17c; ladles. No. 1. 17'xC, packing stock. 16',2e. Eggs Receipts. 7.923 cases; miscellaneous lots, cases returned, 1 I cases included. 14'-s 'n I5e; ordinary tirsts. whltewood eases and must be 40 per cent fresh. 17'e; prime tirsts. packed in new whltewood cases and must be 00 per cent fresh. 2oe; extra. specially packed for the city trad" and must be S11 per cent fresh. 21,-2'. New pot a toes Receipts, ears; choice to fancy. S0';i S2e; fair lo good. 7 3 ra 7 5c. Sweet potatoes Virginia, $6.00 per hrl Veal Quotations for calves In good order were as follows. 50 to 60 lb weights. Ct7c; 60 to SO lbs. 7(f(Sc; Ml to 1 01.1 lbs. K4iJ4c Dressed beef No. 1 ribs, ISr; Xo. 1 loins. 20c; No. 1 round. 11c; No. 1 chuck. 7c; No. 1 plate, fic. Live poultry Turkeys, per lb. 14c; chickens, fowls. 12c; springs. l.j'ijlCc: roosters. 6lsc; geese, $1.006.00; ducks 9 n 1 1 c. California green fruit Plums, sr.c $1.35 per crate; nectarines. M5c'fi$l.oo per crate; peat lies. 95f f; $1.05 per crate; pears, $1.707 1.S5 per box; grapes. fl.Oo & 2.50 per crate. Fruit Apples. $1.00 '5 3.73 per br! ; 31V (H $2.00 per bu; new apples. 25c-i $ 1 .00 per bu; bananas, jumbo, per bunch. $1 ; straight. $1.15 1.40: culls, P0c'&$1.15; 1 bouquets, 70?90c; lemons, f 2 . 5 0 3 . 7 0 1

Special Wire to The TIMES

'oranges. $3. GO'S 4 . 0 ; pineapples. $1.00 Q per crate; peaches. -:..c 'd -." p,T-r crate PK( L'i'c per l-." bu basket: grapes. L'ii 'a ir,c per 8-lb basket; pears. $1.00 1i 1 . j'i per bu. Perries Cherries, per 16-o.t case, $1 ft 1.5m: blackberries. 6-qt cast'. Jl.t'O'd 1.25; blueberries. $1.25il.6o per 16-qt ease; raspberries, red. $1.50'i1.75 per 2 1-pt case; black. $1.50 per 16-qt case; currants, per 16-qt case. $ 1.0" Ca 1 .25. P.eans Pea beans. hand picked, choice. $2.5o ti 2 .54 ; common. $2.00 i 2.40; red kidney, $1.70; lower grades, depending on qualitv. $l.25'ii 1.5a; brown Swedish. $2,150 2.25: off grades, $1.2.VM 1.50; limas, California, per 1 00 lbs, $5.62'i. Melons 3ems, 65c(ii$1.,iO per crate; Kockvfords, California, standard crates. $1.75(U3.00: pony, $1.502.00; watermelons, $25n.00 f 300.(01 per car. Green vegetables IJeets. SO 'a 3c box; cabbage. 50cii$l.i0 per crate: per a rrots, 5057 75c per box; cauliflower, 25c !t $1.00 per box; celery, 15c $1. Oil per box; cucumbers, 2ui30e per box; garlic. 7c per lb; green onions. A'n'tc per bunch; green peas, $1.00 per bu; horseradish, 6('c per bunch; lettuce, head, tub, 40jj30c; leaf, tub, 30!?40-; mushrooms, 40fj6e per lb; peppers. 75c per crate; parsley. 10c per doz; pieplant. 15j ISc per bunch; radishes, home grown. $1.00 per 100; string beans, green. 0Oe per bu: wax. 60c per box: onions. '75c per bu; spinach, 4r'c per tub; sweet corn, 25( 401' per sack; tomatoes, 35f(75c per crate turnips. 65"i. 75c per sack; watercress, 25fi 35c per basket. HEARD ON THE BOURSE. Eognn The trade is now convinced that the spring crop is in a serious condition and likely to get worse. The extreme heat over Sunday may put the trade of the entire country in even a more bullish frame of mind today. Pringle We feel there are great possiblities on thf long side of wheat. White It is now a question of rust. More reports mean higher prices; a let-up in prices reports a big break. aPrtlett The crowd is bullish and If the weather favors this view prices are apt to be marked up this week. Ware & Eelund We look for higher prices. On further upturns we look for profit taking sales. N THE SUPERIOR COURT C'nxeK. 4"20. Conrad Seipp Brewing company vs. Robert P. Jensen. S20. State of Indiana vs. Edward F. MeOovern. Perjury. 4S21. Seondins Mantakownls vs. In land Steel company et al. Foreclosure of nioehanich's lien. 1S22. Yinzent Ku hit vs. Eva I.unski et al. Foreclosure of mechanic's lien. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS EAST CHICAGO. It 33, Ijadd fc Smith's addition, .1 ii i in. liackstock to Clarence C. Smith $3 Lts H and I. Like Shore addition. Pittsburg Land Co. to Gertrude F. Waters TOLESTON. Iit 15, block is. oak Park addition, Henri Smith to Olive H. Smith Lot 9. block 20. C. T. L fc 1. Co.'s third addition. Emmet o. O'Connor to Bernard P. Mailer Lot 9, block 20, C. T. L. I. Co.'s third addition, Bernard P. Miller to Joseph Christel. . Lits 10 and 11. block 1. Borman's second addition. Fred W. l-'ind-liiig to Arthur T. Sells GARY. Lot 5 5. block 91, Gary Land Co.'s first addition. Gary Jind Co. to J. Glenn Harris GLEN PARK. Lots 2 and 3. block 14. C. J. William's addition, (lust Ulioden to Sidney A. Williams ,000 100 600 100 Value of the Smile. What the sunshine is to all material naniro, quickening all life, giving tc all beauty, color and fragrance, tinting even dead matter with glow of goll. and giving true pold itself a higher glisten, so the smile is to human life, making sorrows and disappointments easier to bear and giving to joys Themselves a richer sweetness. Work as a Necessity. Work is as necessary to material advancement as are air and water to life. A man can gain nothing by standing idly by. except the name of a drone in the human hive, who exists by the sweat of others. You mus be up and doing if you would advance. Yon must not wait for opportunity, but create the opportunity for yourself. Giivng More Difficult Than Getting. The difficulty which is faced in America in connection with philanthrophy is not to find the people who have the money to give, m to discover the ways in which money may be givt-n wisely. Ideas for wise giving are much scarcer than money awaiting opportunity. Her Ag9. A wdman in Ohio was refused a license to marry because she gave her age as 30 when in reality she was 80. Now. as according to proverbial philosophy, a woman Is as old as she feels, and if this woman felt like ?,0 after twic; marrying and becoming a grand niofaer, she should have beer encour atted lor the sake of public policy in her persistent grasp cm juvenility. Beezlumbots Bad as Dialect. Southern people have much to bear. The articles in the magazines, for example, in which northern contributors Iry to put out negro dialect! It is enough to give one the beezlumbola. Galveston News. The Main Trouble. Most, people would be satisfied with the kind of a living they are making if other people were not living bet ter. Chicago Record Herald.

CLASSIFIED

NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. All want ads must be paid for with order or before paper is Issued unless vou carry an account with The Times. The rate 10 cents per day for a want ad is so low that it makes the proposition a losing one when a collector has to be sent several miles to collect ten cents. HAI.B HELP WA.NTED. WANTED Salesman to represent a large concern, to sell local also to travel; salary and expenses paid; experience not necessary, we will train you so you can earn a large salary; splendid opportunity; strictly business oniv; ail applications by mail only. :eo. Pewitt Clinton, 1513 iley worth Hidg., Chicago. 29-6 WANTED Men for the west, from $2 to $5 a day; cheap car fare. Call C. M. Uensou, 33o So. Clark St., Chicago. 22-liii WANTED Men who need a good advertising medium and who will let us show them thai The Times is that medium. tf FEMALE DELI' WANTKO. WANTED Woman at 126 Ogden street to take care of invalid lady. 3-tf WANTED Oirl for general housework in a small family; one that is without a home preferred. Call at 517 West Stale street. 3-1 WANTE Girl for general housework. Apply 6 47 Summer street. 1-3 WANTED Good girl for general housework. Apply 366 South. Hohman street. 10-tf FOU SAL. Ft. FOR SALE Second band bicycles, $7 to $14; new tires on all these. Triangle Shop, 215 Sibley, between Erie and N. I, tracks. 3-1 FOR SALE House with basement. cheap, inquiie at S19 .Sheffield avenue. 3-C FOR SALE Six rooms of nice furniture; a great bargain for some young couple; must be sold at once tor casn only. Apply at Hub Clothing aud Shoe House, Mr. Culm. 3-tf FOU SALE Stock of clean grocery and butcher; big ice box (new) Sxl2xl0; cheap for cash or trade part for good horse and buggy; good reason for selling. No. 1, Lake ounty Times. 3-3 FOR SALE Furniture, cheap. The store at 4o5 Sibley street lias changed hands. Mrs. H. A. Bixby, proprietor; E. F. O'Toole, manager. 3-6 FOR SALE A three drawer national cash register of the check and slip printing style; in use only t-ix months. Apply Seehase Hardware Co., Indiana Harbor. 3-tf FOR SALIC Six room cottage and 50 foot lot. No. 46 119th St., Robertsdale, R. E. Hubbard. 3-b FOR SALE- A six piece birdseye maple bedroom suite. Apply or address C. A. Y., 7652 Coles avenue. South Chicago. 3-3 FOR SALE Boy's spotted Arabian saddle pony. Call 8952 Houston avenue. South Chicago. 111. 1-5 FOR SALE Buggies, harnesses, good loose timothy hay, $12 pr ton, horses, mules and cordwood. Hammond Horse Market, 396 Calumet avenue. 31-4 WANTED Every reader of the Times who has no home and would like a little truck farm from 10 to 40 acres, we will furnish you such; one-half of crops until paid for; get a home. West Prairie Land & Stock Co., Rensselaer, Ind. 17-tf FOR SALE Cheap, two buildings in Gary (16x2 4 and 8x16), located on Adams street, between 9th and loth. Apply to Haas & Hilton Co.. 213 East Randolph St., Chicago, or 0187 South Chicago avenue. South Chicago. 27-6 FOR SALE Choice cottages and lots in best location in city; cah or easy payments. Phone 3244 or call 213 Ana street after 5 oc'luck iu the evening. 15-tf FOB UKXT. FOR RENT Store at 9220 Commercial avenue, 25x10" feet; steam heat; suitable lor any legitimate business. Apply Washburn & Tiffany. 79th St. and Cheltenham place; phone 937. 3-6 FOR RENT Luge furnished front room tor one 01 two gentlemen. 47 16 oleott avenue, corner 4th St., East Chicago. 3-3 FOR RENT Seven room Hat. upstairs. Inquire at 117 Douglas. 1-2 FOR RENT One good store; good location for good business. 4715 Oleott avenue. East Chicago. 31-3 FOR RENT Four Plummet- a enue. met- avenue. room cottage. 1 1 Inquire 7o Plum 31-3 FOR RENT F East Clinton car l.ir -1 reet. rooms. 1 7S 30-3 FOR RENT Three nicely furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Inquire 277 Michigan avenue. 25-lf Z5-tf FOR RENT Large furnished front room; suitable for one or two gentIemen; modern conveniences. Apply 9 Rimbach avenue; phone 4471. 21 -tf FOR RENT Space in these columns at your disposal. Try a want ad. try any kind of a three-liner for ten cents a night. FOR RENT Places In this want ad department for you. ten cents a r.iglit. Do you want to make money? Try it. tt FOR RENT 14 room steam heated Hat: eight rooms furnished; suitable for boar. ling and rooming house. For particulars address J. S.. Times. 22-2W LOT AND FOl'XD I)ST (Mi Iloh'iiiin street, i.! pocket, containing key. gl.i icl silk s and Times 3 handkerchief. office. Pleas. return to LOST Sunday night, between shooters paik and Hohman black jacket with brown strip, er pb-nse return to Tunis o'!l. e up 2S72 and owner will call ho 1 SharpSt feet. :. l-'ind-or call .tme. 1 1 FOFND An East found by John street. Hammond, own r can li.'i ve the Tim.-s office. in I Kar: tar pin was 1 Sibb-y It .',.!'. 1 I 1 e , a 1 , ) ng at FOFND Large red row. fibout old. Owner may have same vea; s ' ca:iing at home of lib-hard l.'e Oroot, on - mile south of H.ghlands. Ind.. and paving expenses, or address (iritfitn. Ind., R. R. No. 1. 30 LOST Hunch of keys with owner's name on ring. Finucr p lease leave at Times office and receive reward. 23WAXTCD TO nUV. WANTED To buv s.-i ond hand bicy cles and framt paid. 3o4 Sibiey ; hig! --tree: ash pries rj - WANTED TO HEXT. WANTED To rent five or six cottage near the center of city given if d'-sirabo ; three iu family. Address 1Z. A. P., care Times. . 21-tI

WANT ADS.

PERSONALS. PKUSONALr Piin-nrr, J.-.o. Get t it puncture repaired at the Triang Shop. 245 Sibley, between Krie and .. P. tracks. 3-1 UARTCK AM EXCHANGE. FOR EXCHANGE What have you t exchange for paper and hanging. Address it. I., Time! 2i FOR EXCHANGE A tuba horn for poultry; also a gas heating stove for poultry. Address M. I'., Lake County Times. 22 FOR EXCHANGE Auto. horse and buggy, motorcycle or piano in pa.i payment for a home. Address L. L.. Times. 1 MISCtri.I.AM'JOl s. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY CAN ITT you in a profit paying business an l will not keep you from your present position, placing you where you cau make from $100 to $300 per month wi:,i a very little investment; strictly confidential. Address P. C, Lake County Times. 29-n -tl U vertlsing As a store grows In importance its Advertising must grow. But the advertising must grow, in volume, in liberality. In quality, faster than the store Itself grows. This is true because the fetore must keep pace with the advertising, or within hailing distance of it. It never does quite "catch up" anymore than the cars 'of a train overtake the engine. And exactly as the engine "pulls the train along', so the advertising "pulls the store along. To pursue the comparison. It requires a bigger engine to pull a thirty-car train than it does to pull a ten car train. And it takes more advertising to "pun." a "hundredclerk store" than it does to pull a ten -clerk one. The train will not make much progress on the days that the engine is not running; but it will make hist as good progress on those days as well as will a store on the days when the advertising Is not running. Your Bdvrtllng g "adequate" when It is strong enough to pull the store along after It; and when it is running on every day tbst ycu dea rs t seek business and to Increase traJe. Our method of advancing money on Pl&noa, Furniture, Horses, Wagons, etc., will Interest you. We -will treat your Inquiry as strictly confidential. Our rates are more satisfactory than those tn South Chicago. HAMMOND LOAN & GUARANTEE CO. 14S SO. BOH MAX STREET. Phono 1ST. Over Model Clothiers. Open evening except Wednesdays and Thursdays. 1 - ! i There Is Comfort WnEX A MAX'S SU.AUV STOPS Through Hlrknesn, failure of bis employer, or a suspension of buMlBrsa, (. fori that you bare nomrtklng; to fall back on In your honr of trouble. Put a small amount racb week la mr. Iu;s la a stood, reliable saviass baa'i, like tbe Citizens' German National Eani ONE DOLLAR STARTS ACCOC.NT. A SAVINGS Boat Equipped Repair Shop In the Stats W. ENTEB AUTOMOBILE GARAGE Compressed Air FREE Bowser Oasoline System ; , ' I 1 S. HOHMAX STREET Phone 122. Huehn Block. Bmwiid. I HOWARD STEVENS, Opea foi Coatracta. Prjintmcr Haner Harrrintr ' - x a j i and Decorating. GRAI.MNO A SPECIAI.TT. My Motto: Good Work. J ISO Biirrij iiguiBivuia Telephone 10

Dili' A