Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 165, Hammond, Lake County, 31 December 1908 — Page 4
THE TRIES.
Thursday, Dec. 31, 1908.
Th Lak:e County; Times INCLUDING THE GARY EVEN IS G TIMES EDITION. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION, AND THB tAXE COUNTY - TIMES EDITION, ALL. DAILY NEWSPAPERS PUB4 LISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTY PBINT- ' : ING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY." ' 1 ' ' , ' "Entered as second class matter June It. 196$, at tte post office at Hm" jnond, Indiana, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1I7.' ' , SUM OFFICE IUMMOND, IND,. TELEPHONES, 111 112. BRANCHES GAR Y, EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARHOK, WHITING, CROWX POINT, TOLLE5TON AND LOWELL. TLARLT , PALP TEiRT.T $1.50
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Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908. by Edwin A. Nye.
TO SUBSCRIBERS Reader of THE TIMES are requested to favor the maa. agemeat by reporting any Irregularities In deB-verlng. Cemmnlcte witi the Circulation Department. COMMUNICATIONS.
THE TIMES will print all communications on rbje of general Interest to the people, whea such communications are signed by the writer, bnt will reject all commualeattoaa not signed, no matter what their merit. Thla precaution la taken to avoid nUsrepreaentatloa. THB TIMES la published la the beat Interest of the people and Ita utterance always Intended to promote the general welfare of the public at large. THE REAL PURPOSE OF LIFE.
BER RED HEADED LOVER. "Yes; I know Albert Isn't handsome perhaps he is homely but I love blm Just the same." That was what Martha Day Greiner of Denver said about Albert Charles Dickenson of the same place. Albert's face is as homely as that of Abraham Lincoln. Nevertheless Martha is In love with him. Dan Cupid, who shoots at hearts regardless of exteriors, fatally wound
ed both Martha and Albert.
So that when Papa Greiner objected
that Albert was entirely too ugly to
be his son-in-law Martha replied by
eloping with Albert to Chicago.
Greiner followed, and there was a
scene. The couple were arrested, Mar
tha pleaded for Albert, and Greiner
finally consented if they would all re
turn home the wedding might proceed.
Interviewed by a reporter. Martha
said:
I know he isn't handsome. Fa
ther's objection Is that Albert has red
hair, but that Is not his fault. He may not be good looking, but he has
winning ways."
Good for you, Martha!
For such a woman one might well
UP AMD DOW It INDIANA f
Cyrill Scott "The Man From Home"
WHITE HEADS THE LIST. THREE MEN ARE KILLED. Union B. White, of Boonville, assist- j In a head-on collision of two freight ant secretary to Senator Hemenway, trains, four miles south . of Knightshas been informed by the civil service .town, on the Big Four, three men were commission that he stands at the head killed and one seriously Injured about
of the list Of eligible male stenograph. ( ers from Indiana. . j PRINCETON HAS NEWS AGAIN. Silas C. Polk, a Princeton man. supposed to have ' committed suicide thirty years ago following business failure at Mount Vernon, 111., has written
3 o'clock this morning. Those killed were Engineer Charles Fist and Fireman Ramley of Wabash, who were on the extra freight, and Fireman Anson of Greensburg, on the regular. SELECTS 21 DEPUTIES.
a former army comrade here that he Is i The names of twenty-one deputies
who will assist Prosecutor Elliot R, Hooton of Maroin county for the coming two years were announced yester'day. The personnel of the assistants is practically the same as last year, with the exception of one or two. Frank P. Baker, who has been grand
alive.
REPUBLICAN IS ELECTED. Edgar Durre, republican, carried the special election at Evansvllle for state senator over Jeppe Bertelson, democratic nominee, by 1,118 majority. Fifty
ty per cent of the vote was polled.
The last hours of a dying year are slowly stealing upon us and the once-young 1908 feebly draws its fluttering breath. The good resolutions
that many of us made with its birth and died while the year was yet an elope much farther than from Denver
Infant, will orobablr be recalled by the determination to keep another set to Chicago.
of resolutions. Martha sees qualities in Albert the u. - , v f .,k nw0 rK. world does not see. She knows that,
u yaUB iub 6 - - . & go()d
iemns. nesg js souj deep. She knows that Al
dl. j aiiies HAtis : vv uai is tujr mo ; imu ma uu auowci iu M bert s winning ways come irom a
tion is: "For ye are a vapor, that appeareth for a little time, and then warm heart. And when you are choos
vanisheth away." The brevity of life has been the subject of deep thought lng one whom you are to live with all
and of anxious solicitude in all ages of the world. The poet tells us: your life soul qualities count.
"Our birth is nothing but our death begun.'.' It is likened to a dream, a
! shadow, a vapor, a swift flying cloud, or the autumn leaf. Such is life! this life we are living away; this life that will so soon be over; this life on whose transient breath hangs everlasting destiny.
But we fail to appreciate life's meaning if we spend our time in sigh- ther cannot see.
ing over its brevity. Life is not merely a vapor that presently vanisheth, it And as for the red hair-
is a journey to a fixed destination. We are not only going but we are going Why, forsooth, let the father look somewhere; not into the depths of a mystic solitude to be extinguished P the historic records of the red
and forgotten. Our destiny is not annihilation and nothingness. To go for
ward aimlessly is the most Inexcusable folly. To have around him all the
evidences of the All Powerful and never to see them to look upon a
thousand church spires that point to an eternal life, and miss all their mean
ings, to be in land of bibles that reveals the Almighty's purposes for man's
eternal destiny and be ignorant of his own end Is indeed a negligence which class most distinguished women of
it is difficult to comprehend. It is not death but life that is before us, not history have had flaming red tops MrtM, life ainro h,,t Ufa ihroaA mmiin Intprmlnnhlv thrrmtrh the warn Titian red at least-Cleopatra, and
' , xi. j i j Charlotte Corday, and Catherine of of eternity. Life is given us to be used with a view to its eternal destiny. Uus8i and EiizaJbeth of Engiand, and
to use it so as to give me soui room ior its unioiamg capacities, 10 ue u i Bernhardt
to promote the nignest good, to use it so as to mane tne most 01 it, mat is Martha is right.
to have before a high and true ideal and the greatest hope for any event that can possibly follow. If we but work out our destiny according to the
divine purpose it cannot fail to be eternal glory.
Abraham Lincoln's homely face was
glorified by the great soul that shone through the honest, rugged features. And so Martha can see a halo about the red head of Albert which her fa-
headed.
To say nothing of Rufus the Red,
there's Shakespeare, and Napoleon, and Oliver Cromwell, and Thomas Jef
ferson. They had red hair.
And if you go into the feminine
Durre is a strong Beveridge support-i Jury deputy, will serve as assistant
QUESTION WAS A LONG ONE.
- The. celebrated hypothetical question of Delphln M. Delmas, the California j lawyer who defended Harry K. Thaw In ! his murder trial, has a close second In a similar question propounded ' to Dr.
Ernest C. Reyer, an expert witness, at Greenfield, by Henry Spaan, leading at
torney for the plaintiff In the Rhodlus
marriage annulment case.
It took Mr. Spaan sixty minutes to
state the Question, which was answered by the witness in five words. The Ques
tion contained a complete history of George Rhodlus from his earliest child
hood to the present time, and embraced a summary of all the evidence that has been given in the case by different wit
nesses.
HAS 45 MAIL TRAINS. At the present time there are fifty-
five regular mail trains carrying mail from Indianapolis. Thirteen express
train carry closed pouches from Indi
anapolis and three interurban lines car
ry mail. The service is said to be
more satisfactory than at any time In
many years, so well arranged is the train service and the character of the train on which the mail is carried.
HE MARRIED MONEY! NO. Following an alleged boast that he
was "about to marry more money than some people ever saw," John W. Gipson
of Avon, Ind., had the chagrin of seeing Miss Wanetta Taylor of Avon, his
bride-to-be, tear the marriage license in
bits a little before the ceremony was
to have been performed.
France, died. Born April 2, 1838.
IT IS ALL FIXED UP NOW.
THIS IS MX BVTH BIRTHDAY
Frederick C. Selour.
Frederick Courtney Selour, the fam-
nn Vm n o y onil prnlnrpr who in nlan-
ine t.;nesterton iTiDune aia in us last weens issue tnat 10m iuioiis njng the trip of President Roosevelt,
wanted a supreme court at Gary. Of course every one knows that Senator was bom in London, Dec. 31, 1851, and Bowser meant superior court. The TIMES published the Bowser story and received a liberal education. In 1871
goodnaturedly added: "Don't believe that Brother Tom wants a SUPREME I guth Africa He oroceeded to Ma-
court for Gary though, does he?" Of course every one knows very well tabeleland the following year .and from
that Tom wants a SUPERIOR court in' Gary. But the editor of a little that time until 1890 traveled continu-
fiarv sheet, iust thought the auin about the Bunreme court was awful so it ally all over South Central Africa, mak-
v, v v. . tr Mn& a living by elephant hunting and
wa&, sum, uieoa ma ullic ucai l, uc dciii, mo icyuitci iu iuiciyicw mi. xviiutio th, nllAft,nn of ,mdmonn of natural
as fast as his legs could carry him. The faithful reporter, breathless and history. In 1890 he took service under
pon-eved. burst upon Mr. Knotts and told him the harrowing tale. The the British South Africa company and
acted as guide to the pioneer expedi
firm in Mnshonaland. He returned to
looking serious with one eye and winking with the other. Then the faith- England" in 1892, but soon went back to
ful reporter hurried back to the sanctum and what Mr. Knotts said was Africa and the hunting of big game.
painfully written and put under a double column head and the throbbing For his work of exploration he has - a i )(..! t . T. , . , , , , , . I been honored with decorations by the
uiu yiuyiLtti.ms uc o sivcu iu mo nutiu. ii ia tci leumy uciicasiug iu nave
your Christmas dinner disagree with you a week after it was eaten and the
little Gary paper certainly has our sympathy in Its distress.
Royal Geographical society and by oth
er learned and scientific bodies both in
Europe and America.
DRAW THE LINE AT THE "YELLOW" PUGS.
THIS DATE IN HISTORY.
January 1,
1735 Paul Revere. American patriot
We believe that Hon, Jack Johnson, who swatted Hon. Tom Burns so born in Boston. Died there in 1818
hard the other night and made him cry, will be very foolish not to draw the 1776 The "Cambridge Flag" was un
color line. As we understand it, Hon. Burns hated to fight the black man
and numerous other white pugilists who are big enough and noisy, enough
to put up quite a fight are scurrying away from the Hon. Johnson, as fast
as their fifteen-inch calves will carry them Why doesn't Hon. Johnson draw
the color line against the "yellow" fighters? A white man who is in the fighting business and won't fight a black man Is not white but yellow. We have no particular desire to hear of any white man getting clouted over the
ear by a negro, but it looks mighty queer to see them side-stepping the Hon.
Mr. Johnson. o
NOW, HONESTLY, after the elegant time you have been having since
Christmas eve and which is to wind up on Sunday, how can you ask whether
there is a Santa Claus? This unbelief Is enouarh to out wrinkles in a
Lydla E. PInkham cut.
furled by General Washington.
1801 Ireland passed into an- incorpor
ating union with Great Britain, and
the three kingdoms were hence
forth called the United Kingdom o
Great Britain and Ireland.
1831 William Lloyd Garrison began
publication of "The Liberator" in
Boston. .
1848 GIrard college was opened
Philadelphia.
1863 Union garrison and steamer Har
riet Lane captured at Galveston by
the confederates.
1877 Empire of India proclaimed.
1894 Opening of the Manchester shl
canal to traffic.
1907 The pure food law went into ef
feet In the United States.
THIS IS MY C5TII BIRTHDAY. George E. Chamberlain.
George E. Chamberlain, governor of
Oregon and the choice of the people o
that state to succeed United States
Senator Fulton, was born in Natche
Miss., Jan. 1, 1854, and received his
education at Washington and Lee unl
to Mr. Hooton in the criminal court
in the lace of Judge Charles Remster, who was elected to the circuit bench. WILL INDIANS HAV BUILDING. Shall Indiana have a state exhibit at the Seattle exposition next year? This question has been put up to the Indiana delegation In congress by J. E. Chilberg, president of the exposition. H. E. AGAR OFF TO TEXAS. IL E. Agar of Princeton left for San Benjto, Tex., early this morning, and so quiet was his departure that it was not known until near noon that he was gone, the first definite information coming in a message to Attorney Harvey Harmon, dated St. Louis. LINE IS NOT SOLD. The officers and directors of the Ben Hur traction line at Crawfordsville made public that ' the Ben Hur line had not been sold to the McGowan syn
dicate, as reported. A meeting of
the board of directors was held at Indi
anapolis, and it is reported nothing was said In regard to the sale of the line. TELLS STRANGE STORY.
A strange story o,f a robbery was told by J. W. Cooper of 728 East Vermont street, Indianapolis, whose wife had lost her watch, bracelet and 65 cents recently. Mr. Cooper said last night in
reporting the robbery to Detective Sam
uel Gerber that his wife lost all con
sciousness on the street early in the afternoon and did not awake until
about 5 o'clock.
L
R A N D O M THINQS AND FUNGS
We wish you a happy New Year and prosperous one,' and that It putting
it very mildly.
And many of . them.
In fact, we can't hjye too many of
them to suit us." "'
The reason yon aeldom ace a woman running an automobile Is because It la one of the few things In the world that she can't manage.
Make up your mind what you will
quit!
Or, are you going to quit?
Same here. Nix.
WHEN A MAN .IS GOVERNED BY
HIS WIFE'S GOOD JUDGMENT, HE CERTAINLY OUGHT NOT TO BE SO
MEAN AS TO TAKE THE CREDIT
FOR FOR IT HIMSELF.
Year's gift. And he actually believes
It, no matter how shocking a chap he
is.
When a friend Invites you to
go home to dinner, It Is a good plan beforehand to find out whether his wife knows
you are coming.
There seems to be a chance that Cas
tro will be eliminated from world poli
tics. No flowers," please! ' - The object of a lot of wo man's parties these days seems to "be to see who can have the swellest luncheon.
Mrs. Annie Peck has just returned
from her feat of climbing the highest mountain in the world. Time to say
that woman keeps on climbing.
The honeymoon Is generally over when your money runs out and you have to return home.
In
A CANDIDATE IN Missouri reports his campaign expenses as nothing
and his opponent, who was elected, says hi3 were $3.68, and yet some stingy men think they can run for office and be elected without spending any
money.
A MARRIED MAN complains that his wife effected an entrance to his
home by cutting her way through a window with a diamond. It is not
thought, however, that this will affect the giving away of preesnts thls season, versity. Following his graduation he
I went to uregon in iit ana locatea in
BETWEEN 30,000 and 35,000 persons are killed and 2,000,000 injured in the practice of law ' In 1S80 he was
the Lnited States every year in the war of industries. This puts all the elected to the Oregon legislature and
other wars on the back seats with the bundles. from 1884 to 1886 he served as prose
aaa cuting attorney for the third judicial
aimjj owiN itxxu newspapers win Degin tne plea lor a safe and sane mi the newly created office of attorney
Fourth of July again. Tempus certainly does fugit and there is no stopping general of Oregon. The following year
it, either. - .... , . ,ne waa re-eiected to tne ornce. in is6
J he removed to Portland and the same
m TTr. n,rr'Trn . . . ... I -
inc lin-mwu news-rcisser set anotner nign-water mark for its special- date for the circuit bench. In 1902 he
ty last night billingsgate. w-as elected governor of Oregon, defeat
ing the republican nominee by a good
! majority. He was re-elected to the
mous actor, born In New York. I ornvrnorshin two vears aero, and st
born in Isew York. Died near! year he was nominated for United
A Tit-Hit for Tantabogus.
How about Tantabogus? Well, it was this way: Close to where I feed my pigs is a big patch of cat-claw briars,
and as I was feeding my pigs the other evening and admiring them, old Tantabogus (that is the name of my pet
pig) jumped up and grabbed mv hand for an ear of corn and mad;-! a beeline for that tall briar patch. I tell you, I did some hollering, but he led me right on through them briars, and when he got thru he found out It was not corn he had, so he turned me loose. I went on back to the house, and the old woman wanted to know what was the matter. I told her I fell over the fenct In the briar patch, and she said: "Poor fellow," and gave me some ointment to rub with and another shirt and told me to be careful and not tear my clothes so. Branchville Cor. Sylvania (Ga.) Telephone.
On the Move.
For fear that almost everybody in
town doeB not know that Charles H.
Gove has moved his shops down back of his house, we will mention the fact,
and that Albert Smith has bought J.
G. Wadley's Ice house and moved it onto his lot, and Ernest Sawyer has moved several new hen houses onto
his farm and so the move goes on.
Guilford (N. H.) Item.
A woman's Idea of high financiering is to pay for everything with checks aad yet have no money to pay out.
Well, we will ge glad when the holidays are over. These nervous gaps are undesirables.
The stork is hovering 1909 is here.
THIS DATE IN HISTORY. December 31. 1620 The Pilgrims observed their first Sabbath in their Plymouth settlement. , 1775 General Montgomery killed while leading unsuccessful assault of an American force against Quebec. 1780 Mutiny of the troops in General Wayne's winter camp. 1819 John Lester Wallack, famous ac-
T lie re Is method with the woman who talks so mach about her new hat, It Is done to keep her friends from talking about the old one.
tor.
Stamford. Conn., Sept 6, 1888
1829 General Guerrero resigned the! presidency of Mexico. 1832 Insurrection of the slaves In Ja-' maica.
1862 Battle of Murfreeeboro continued with Indecisive results. 1882 Leon Gambotta, ex-dictator of
States senator at the state primary.
Business Is Business. Customer (sarcastically) See here, waiter, there are only two hairs in this butter. Waiter Sorry, sir, but we charge extra for a whole wig. Harvard Lam-
Lot of people In this country speak about holiday spirit. They probably
mean holiday spirits.
THE KIND OF A MAN A WOMAN IS MOST LIKELY TO REFORM WID3N
SHE MARRIES HI M, IS ONE WHO
HAS TID3 BAD HABIT OF HOLDING
ONTO HIS MONEY.
This is the season of the year when
the man who was born on New Ypars1
Higher Courts' Record. Supreme Court Minutes.
2133L Hugh D. McGary vs. Elgin A,
Yeager. Gibson C. C. Appellee s brief.
21337. State of Indiana vs. Orrln II
Trook. Miami C. C. Appellant's brief,
20975. Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago
& St. Louis Railway company vs. Jame
O'Conner. Johnson C. C. Appellee's pe
tition for rehearing and briefs.
21280. Inland Steel company vs. AI
fred Klessllng. Lake S. C. Appellant'
reply brief.
New Supreme Court Suit.
21379. Isaac M. Darnell et al vs
state of Indiana. Marion C. C. Record Assignment of errors. In term. Bond
Appellate Court Minutes.
6930. State ex rel Frank Gillespie
clerk, vs. Samuel H. Barr, sheriff. Ja
C. C. Appellee's petition for time.
Granted to and including Feb. 20.
6995. Fred H. Poetker, receiver, vs
Harve Tlndle et aL Dubois C. C. Ap
pellee's petition for time.
6990. Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago
& St. Louis Railway company vs. Alon
zo L. Wheeler. Putnam C. C. Appel
lee's petition for time.
6899. Ft. Wayne Iron and Steel com
pany vs. James R. Parsell. Dekalb C. Appellant's petition for tlm
Granted to Jan. 30.
.. ':V.::::'v:J;'''''-:::''::fW MKSiOJ; ' i,'S' ".- ; r ", ' ' 3 "--y? J - x I 4e . h . ' , I .::f '.f.UJi t
APPEARING AT THE TOWLE OPERA HOUSE NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT.
LABOR NEWS
A Fellow Sufferer. In Philadelphia they tell a story of
man whose wife had arranged an "author's evening," and persuaded her reluctant husband to remain at home and help her receive the fifty guests who were asked to participate in this intellectual feast. The first author was dull enough, but the second was worse. Moreover, the rooms were terribly warm. So, on pretense of letting In some cool air, the unfortunate host escaped to the hall, where he found a servant comfortably asleep on the settee. "Wake up," sternly commanded the Phlladelphlan In the man's ear. "Wake up, I say. You must have ben listening at the keyhole." Harper's
tells you that he was his parents' New Magazine.
President Gompers will attend the
next session of the British Trade Union
Congress.
The Union Labor Advocate is about
ready to be published in and for Great
er New York.
New York has the greatest number
of wage earners of any state in the
Union. Pennsylvania comes next.
Scottish coal masters have announced
the intention of making a further reduction of miners wages to the extent of 6 Vi, per cent.
Considerable improvement is report
ed in the manufacturing department of the linen trade of Lurgan, one of the chief centers of Irish linen trade.
An effort is being made to amalga
mate the International Brotherhood of
Boilermakers and Shipbuilders and the United Boilermakers and Iron Shipbuilders of North America.
W. B. Wilson, the former secretary
of the United Mine Workers of Amer
ica has been honored by being re
elected to congress from Pennsylvania
on the democratic ticket at the last election.
Of the important strikes in this coun
try the object of which was an increase of wages 49.95 per cent were successful during the past year; 18.69
per cent were partly successful and
21.36 per cent failed.
The Iowa Federation of Women's
Clubs will try to bring about the pas
sage of a law by the legislature fixing the minimum wage which department stores and factories shall be al
lowed to pay their girl employes. The number of women and girls in
the stogy manufacturing industry In
Pittsburg, Pa., is larger than in any other factory trade in that city and outnumbers the men and boys in that
industry three to one.
The Cincinnati branch of the Inter
national Printing and Pressmen and Assistant's Union has recently won its
long drawn out fight with the Nationl Printing and Engraving company in that city for the granting of the eighthour day.
During the year 1901 the sum of $27,000,000 was expended by employers In Germany for the direct aid of their employes. More than two-thirds of that sum was given as voluntary contribution by a number of private firms and individuals. Many workmen are planning to leave the island of Samoa in the Medlternranean, forty-three miles south-east from Smyrna, because of the introduction of cigarette machinery which makes it possible to produce about 100,000 cigarettes daily. The Canterbury Conciliation board of New Zealand has recommended that the hours of farm laborers and farm hands should not exceed eight, except at harvest time, when ten may be worked. In America the farm hands work on an average fourteen hours a day. In giving judgment in connection with the bakers' strike at Wellington, the New Zealand Arbitration board held that the operatives' union was entirely responsible for the strike, and fined it 1,000 LFtr., intimating that if the fine were paid within a week only nominal penaltieswouId be inflicted on the men individually. If the union did not pay, the court would inflict substantial pen-alltf-s on the operatives who took part in the strike.
THE CREAM OF THE Morning News
Ail Italy is stunnned by the enormity of the catastrophe, which grows worse with each hour, 110,000 being killed in two cities alone. Demented refugees fill cities unprepared for them and starvation faces many thousands. Illinois branch of the Red Crosr Society gives $2,900 to the relief fund. Local Italian colony cables $4,000. National Red CroBs society cables
$50,000 to the ambassador at Rome.
The money is part of the San Francisco
fund. King Victor Emmanuel and Queen
Helena reach Messina and personally
take part in the rescue work, both extricating injured persons from ruins. Secretary Root and Ambassador Bryce have agreed on three treaties disposing of the New Foundland fisheries question, the control of international water ways and the settlement of pecuniary claims with Canada. Count Boni loses his suit for the custody of his three sons, the court ruling that they remain in the custody of their mother, formerly Anna Gould. Y. M. C. A.will fight to secure $169,000 today in order to complete $600,-
000 fund and get $100,000 from J. G. Shedd. President Weston of the South Side "L" road warns straphangers that public hostility will end in financial crash. Fifty women gamblers are caught by the Chicago Law and Order league detectives in a second card game raid. Speakers before the American Scocio-
logical society favors drastic laws on marriage rather than on divorce.
Illinois State Teachers' association,
in session at Springfield, is unable to
agree on the instruction to be given i
on the effects of narcotics.
Two chauffeurs are convicted of lar-
cency in New York for using automobile without their employers' consent.
Aged mothe is beheade din New York by her insane son.
Never too Late to Mend. "Why so sorrowful, girt?" "We have parted forever. He writes me to send back the ring." "Tell him to call'' for it," advised the experienced friend. Washington Herald.
Audible Silence. Professor (eeverely) Gentlemen, I must Insist on silence in this room while I am speaking. Harvard Lam pooh.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS WHITING. Lot 11. block 3. A. H. Wilcox's first addition, C. 11. Dillon to Ellen M. McElroy $ 125 HAMMOND. Lots 4 to 7, block 4, Homewood addition. Peter Crumpacker to Leo Wolf 1 Lots 33 and 34, block 1, Homewood addition, Emma W. Bridge to William E. Husseli 1.800 W t lot 6, block 5, Wilcox and Godfrey's addition, Peter W. Meyn to Julian Youche 1 EAST CHICAGO. Lots 38 to 41. 43. block 2: lots 1. 2, 3. 4. 42 to 4f, block 3; lots 4 to 7, 22 to 24. block 4; lots 40 to 43 46 to 48, l)lock 6; lots 2, 3, 13, 14. is, 1, 22, 33. 36, 38, 39 to 45. block 7; lots 16. 31. 34. 35, block 8, Gary Park subdivision, Gary Realty Co. to Frank Pearson 15,000 Lots 9 and 10. block 4. subdivision NW U 32-37-9, East Chicago Co. to Andrew Kmiec 700 Lots 11 to 13. bloi k 6, subdivision SW i 29-37-!, East Chicago Co. to Charies W. Hotchkiss 5,400 Lot 24, block 6, subdivision NW Yt, 32-37-9, East Chicago Co. to Mavek NowracoJ 259 Section 5-36-9 W Part. Standard Steel Car Co. to Standard Car Forga Co. 1 Section 5-34-8 W Part E SW Harold H. Wheeler to Maurice C. McKenzie 2,500 GARY Lot 14, block 12, Broadway addition, Lorenzo P. 'Godwin to F. Thomas Norrls ." J Lot 136, block 6. Lincoln Park subdivision. United States Land Co. to Mrs. Julia Hobik 100 Lot 136, block 6. Lincoln Park subdivision, Julia Hobik to Jacob Weichselbaum SQ ' TOLLESTON. Lots 6 and 7, block 2, Oak Knoll addition, John Peterson to Paul Conrad j
Portuguese Proverb. There Is never wanting a dog to bark at you.
