Hammond Times, Volume 4, Number 198, Hammond, Lake County, 9 February 1910 — Page 8

THE TUTTl.

Wednesday, Feb. 9, 1910. t

rur 2 : rt la

National Cash Registers at Low Prices

W guarantee to furnih a better

Cach Register for lest money than

any other concern in the world.

. National Cash. Registers are made

in many different styles and sizes and are suited to every kind of business, large or small. They are sold at prices and terms you can afford. In fact,

YOU CANNOT afford to ' be without

one.- '.-X V ; :' - . ',

' We have a FULL. LINE from $15 up AT THE HAMMOND OFFICE, and

will be glad to, show them; or phone

us and we will bring samples to you.

Don't, buy any kind of a 'new or sec-

LOOK VERY

ond-hand . register .until you prices. ; ' . ' - " V .. .

We make good

Registers of any make.

compare

allowances for old

$50.00

giPorchasedJ

No. 313 Total Adder, keys ' 5 cents to $1.90. $75.00

Scarlet Fever Appears in

Gary and D. Pashalich and Members of His Family Are Under Police Surveillance.

Doma Pashalick and his family and

three boarders, of Gary, have been placed under quarantine by Secretary

Harry Walsh of the health board be

cause of three cases of scarlet fever that have appeared In the family, each of three children having become afflicted with: the disease. About ten other boarders in the 't family narrowly escaped the same Tate but they were allowed to continue at work by living

at another place after they had been thoroughly fumigated. . . . '

Two guards have "been placed over

the residence, one on days and one on

nights, and these men have been busy constantly day and night . preventing the inmates of the house from escaping. There are three children in the family,

two. six, and ten years old, and each

of them have been seriously 111, but Dr. Walsh reported this morning that they were improving and that ha hoped that the building would soon be ready for

fumigation.

This is the only contagious disease

which has been brought to the atten

tion of the health board. This case, however, was so serious that it in

all probability would have been sent to the pest house had that place been

ready for occupancy. The old police

station Is being moved for that purpose

by the Fisher Construction company.

This will be fixed up for that purpose

and It Is expected that It will be completed within ten days In case it is necessary to use it. Dr. Walsh does not look for but few If any more contagious diseases appearing in the city

tTiis season, if there are any at all.

Trade Journal Speaks in

Glowing Terms or Steel

Outlook and Says . Conditions at Illinois and Indi- . ana Plants Promise Well.

'fflj3 neons .JiSrfti BIBTHDftY "si T'T)TT D II C II

UUUUIVLU

FHflO Bride of Banker in Quit Wedding PROSPECTS

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IJISERIf FR0L1 H BAD STOH

HOD DYSPEPSIA WILL VANISH

. No. 333

Total Adder, keys from 5 cents up I

to $1.95, or 1 cent to $3-99 :

TERMS 5 per cent off for cash,' or

110-00 down; $10.00 per month. $75.00

A romance begun as school children had its culmination in the wedding of Henry B. Clarke, vice president of the Hibernian Banking association, and Lulu Lovlna LeSage, daughter of. Mrs. George Eliot Ayrea, 2319 Michigan avenue. The marriage ceremony was performed quietly at the residence of the Rev. Dr. .William White Wilson, 50 2 Aldine square, rector of St. Mark's Episcopal church, and not until yesterday, when the bride and groom were well away on a, honeymoon trip to New Orleans, did the .facts in connection With "'the nuptials become" known ' to friends. " , " " "

i-Bai!c n" Tmn'Tt""'!t WJ CHAIKiCI 4 r- .'S33" 1

No. 415 -Total Adder; keys; 1 cent to $7.99. TERMS 5 per cent off for cash, or $10.00 down; $10.00 per month. Several styles-to select from.

$150X)0

The memory of Abraham Lincoln will be fittingly observed in Gary on the anniversary. Of his birthday next Satur

day, Feb. 12. Not only will the business men pay homage to the great emancipator, but the school children throughout the city are preparing to hold appropriate exercises on Friday morning and afternoon in each of their respective buildings. The banks of Gary announced today that those institutions would be closed all day. Other firms, such as real estate, may also be closed for the day. A number of the Jewish people as stated last

night in The Times, will set aside a period from nineo twelve in the morning for the celebration of the great American character. In the Emerson school there will be exercises in both the morning and afternoon. The morning exercises will be in charge of the seventh and eighth grades and those in the afternoon will

be conducted by the literary society of

the high school. In the colored school

at Foureteenth street Mr. Simpson, the teacher, is planning to have a most

enjoyable time for the greatest bene factor of the colored race in this coun

trv. The Jefferson school children are

also planning to hold exercises.

STREET GAR FRANCHISE HATTER GOES OYER

East Chicago City Council

Holds a Bleetsg Last Night.

Aft icnsEfi,. s

No. 356

Total Adder, keys from 1 cenU to

$29.99.

Detail slip, cash, charge, record account and paid out transaction taken

care of. This machine now sells for $150.00, less 5 per cent for cash, or

easy payments at same price.

The National

Cash Register Co 85 State St. Hammond, Ind.

E. N. BUNNELL, Sales Atrent Office Phone 177

R?ldence Phone 385

H. S. PUPILS TO

MEET IN DEBATE

East Chicasro and Crown

Point . Will Meet in the Debate Arena.

SEWER ON 141ST. STREET

Service On South Shore Line Comes

Up for Consideration of - Council.

BALLARD FINALLY

RELEASED FROM JAIL

Gary Attorney Accuses Au thorities of Being in a . Frame-Up.

The conditions at . the . Illinois , and Indiana steel plants looks exceedingly

bright for the coming year; According to the Iron Age, enough orders have already been . booked . which will carry them comfortably through the year of 1910 If nq farther" orders are taken. In the bar .trade tire west has become entirely, independent of, the east -as the new merchant mills at Gary have a Capacity of 1,000,000 tons, of bar. No sheet mill capacity of the Chicago district will be largely augmented in the coming year while tin plates, for years an important Indiana' product, will in time figure in the output at Gary. Great possibilities are suggested by the successful .Installation .last year In " the Chicago district of a 15-ton. Heroylt electric furnace for refining steel. The producof this .furnace, amounting to several thousand, tons a month, has been sufficient to provide western roads with 500-ton experimental lots of steel rails, which have shown remarkable

'ability to resist hard usage. If the

cost of this electrical treatment is low

enough to permit of it being used for

rail steel, it is expected that steel re

fined by this process will find a variety

of other outlets in products which command a higher market value.

For more than twenty years Illinois

has been the leading state in the pro

duction of agricultural implements, and

now does nearly half the entire busi

ness of the United States. Illinois also takes high rank in the broad census

classification of foundry and machine

shop products. The west has taken the

lead in the production of malleable iron castings, as, well as in the steel casting

industry. Not a few of these steel

foundries have grown to a rate of pro

duction wll beyond 100 tons a day, and several announcements have recently

appeared of the construction of 20-ton and 30-ton open hearth furnaces in

western steel casting plants.

At Gary the by-product ovens under construction will produce 2,000,000 tons of oke annually, and the gas will be used for power, this Bupply in addition

to that derived from the blast furnaces,

being considered ample for all the sub sidiary industries that are In contem plation.

Take .your sour, out-of-order stomach or maybe you call it Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh of Stomach; it doesn't matter take your stomach ,trouble right with you to your Pharmacist and ask him to open a 60cent case of Pape's Diapepsln and let you eat one 22-grln Trlangule and see if within five minutes there la left any trace of your former misery. The correct name for your trouble is Food Fermentation food souring: the Digestive organs : become weak, there la lack of gastric Juice; your food Is only half digested, and you Become affected with loss of appetite, pressure and fullness after eating, vomiting, nausea, heartburn, griping' In bowels, tenderness in the pit of stemach, bad taste in mouth, constipation,, pain In

SALAKY QUESTION

limbs, sleeplessnes: belching of gas, biliousness, sick headache, nervousnes, dizziness or many other similar symptoms. If your appetite is fickle and nothing tempts you. or you belch gas or t you feel bloated after eating, or yottr food lies like a lump of lead on youi stomach, you can make up your mind t that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause fermentation of undii gesed food. . Prove to yourself in five minutes! -that your stomach is as good as any a that there is nothing really wrong. Stop this fermentation and begin eating, what you wart without fear lot discomfort or misery. Almost instant relief is waiting 'for you. It ts merely a matter of bow soon you take a little Diapepsln.

CAUSES HEAT

, proceded to try to tear . down his cell ; Vloor, and .finally .attacked the walls of

confined. It was necessary to shackle htm both hands and feet before ' .he would cease In his efforts to do himself and the building damage. "When taken before Judge-' tteiland after he had sobered up,' he had a welldeveloped case of the . "colonels, and hence the leniency of his honor. s;

FATHER SEES i J ; SON KILLED " (Continued from Tage One.) . - a visit two weeks ago and many of his friends saw him then. He wa enthusiastic about his work and was getting' along well.' Yesterday morning the father of the boy, without having had a very good excuse to do so, decided that he would visit his son in Ev&nstonv He watched him at his work and the two enjoyed-, a pleasant visit. 'Young Spafford and Dunkel were on the signal tower while the" father of Spafford remained on the ground. " Ho was the first one at his son's side after the accident. ! - Was Popular In Hammond.

Reports come to the office of Thb

Times that certain members of the local

board of health are anything but pleased with their annual salaries as fixed by the city council last Monday night.

At the meeting of the council on Mon

day .night the salary of the president of

the board, Dr. W. S. Faulds, was fixed

at $200 per year, and the other two

members, Dr. Millstone and Dr. Laue,

are to be paid $100 for their services.

"With an object in view of making

known to the people of Gary that he

does not have to depend upon the $100 for his livelihood. Dr. Millstone called

up Thb Times office last evening and! The Spaffords have lived in Hammond

stated that he had donated $50 of his ', approximately three years, having mav-

first year's salary to the Mercy hospital ed here from Davenport, la. The young

and the remaining $60 will be donated toward the building of a Jewish syna

gogue at the corner of Eighteenth avenue" and Connecticut street. Dr. Mill

stone said he donated his first year's

man was. the second of three children,1 the oldest being Miss Lillian, and the' youngest one "William, who is still g,oing to school, Arthur Spafford wasi a member of the Episcopal church chojr.

salary purely from a philanthropic view ; He was popular in a large circle of -and stated that he was willing to work ' friends and the bereaved family has the on the health board without any salary. ; sympathy of many friends.

Just what the - rift is between' the The body was sent to Hammond this

city council and members of the health S afternoon, and the funeral arrangeboar dls not known, but there Is said ments will be announced tomorrow. The to even be a breach-between the mem-! Inquest was held this morning.

bers of the health board. The ordinance 1 '-.

fixing the salaries of the health board flow j ff,vi-iviriW Dnvf.

' :Tr. . i - Not long ago theAssGciated Prl

i, AtA , carled a story

vi. w5 v.vuv. wiu wvt nuu w v xif&i. "tiiey !

IS9

carled a story to the effect thalT an

. , . , , ... . . i eastern traction syndicate propose to werevotlng for and it is said that the have maJe th lo t trlp by aH 4lecenmlty arising from their salaries beT , ulc . ne seye undertakeni involv!ng

better feeling. .

THERE'S A CHANCE THAT YOU

OUGHT NOT TO POSTPONE THAT "SHOPPING" ANY LONGER. . READ THE TIMES' ADS AND SEE IF THIS

IS NOT SO.

Will Have a Part o rr tvi

m v3urxrage iriay.

PEOPLE COMMENT DN CASE

Mayor Knotts Disappears After Ballard's Arrest and WouldiA

Approve Bond.

(Special to Thb Times.)

Crown Point, ind., Feb. 9.-An event

of unusual importance and of great in

terest to high school scholars and

friends of the public school will take place at the Central Music hall on the evening of Feb. 25, when pupils from

the East Chicago high school will meet

a trio from the Crown Point high in

debate. The . event will be the first inter-scholastic affair of its kind held

in Lake county in recent years, and since the announcement yesterday the greatest of interest has been evinced in the coming affair. The debate will be conducted under the parliamentary law, rules and non-resident and impartial judge will decide the relative merits of the debating teams, stress being laid on the argument and logic expounded and the delivery ant diction displayed by each speaker. The question selected for the opening debate will be "Resolved, That the rights of suffrage be given to the women of the 'United States, Crown Point has the affirmative side of the question to defend. Those representing the local high school are: Oakley Morton, Walter i Illxon and Fred Grimmer.

(Special to Thb Times.) East Chicago, Ind., Feb. 9. No ac

tion was taken on the street car fran

chise, matter, which is the most important matter of business before the city council at the present time, at the regu

lar meeting of that body. The subject

wa brought up and the franchises laid over, being placed meanwhile in the

hands of the street and alley commit

tee for consideration and amendment.

The finance committee reported that

they had let the contract for the aud

iting of the city books to-Arthur Young & Co. of Chicago, the "work to cost $1,200 and to cover a period of the city's

bookkeeping of sixteen months back.

A resolution was adopted authorizing

the building of a sewer and laterals in

141st' street from .Forsyth to Kennedy avenues. Bids for the same will be ad

vertised for and the .contract let after

the necessary preliminary surveys have

ben ma-2e and plans drawn.

-Charles E. Fowler, chairman of the

transportation committee of the Com

mercial club ef East Chicago and In

d'.ana Harbor, was present and - read

the correspondence that passed between

his committee and General Manager C,

N. Wilcoxson of the South Shore lines.

with reference to the service of the In

diana Harbor branch pt the lines. He also told of the committee's visit and interview with Manager Wilcoxson recarding the same, reporting that this

did not result In a great deal of satis

faction to the committee. The matter

was placed in the hands of the street and alley committee and the law and

ordinance committee "with the. city at

torney to act in conjunction -with them in an effort to arrive at some means

which would force the company to come to time in the matter of keeping to the

terms of their contract with the city

E. G. Ballard, the Gary attorney, was

finally released from custody yesterday

afternoon after he had been confined In the Gary jail for several hours on the

charge of trespass, for which he had

been arrested. Mr. Ballard,' upon his

release,,, has. made the statement : that he thinks- that the' whole matter is f a

case of malicious persecution." ' '

The comment of the people of the city

upon the case is that if the police had always obeyed the law to the letter as

strictly as they did yesterday- there would not have been as much lawlessness and crime in the city as. there has

been in the past. It has been the custom in police stations that when a" man

of good repute is arrested on a trivial

offense, such as the charge against

Ballard, that he will not be locked up

pending the securing and approval of the bond. Instead of that, however, Ballard was put in jail along with a negro forger. Mr. Ballard claims this morning that the failure to locate any. one' who would ' approve the bond which he gave yesterday was due. to a frameup ' on the part of the authorities to keep him in jail. Immediately, after Ballard's arrest Mayor Knotts suddenly disappeared and those who had the authority to approve the bond refused to do so. ., : ,

DRIVER HURTS FOOT. (Special to The Times.) Whiting. Ind.. Feb . 9. James McNamara of Laporte avenue, who is a driver for the Matson Dairy company, injured his foot badly yesterday. When alighting from the wagon his. feet was thrown under the whel and. the horse beginning to go, ran over his foot.

MARRIAGE LICENSES.

(Special to The Times.) Crown Point, Ind., Feb. 2 9. The fol

lowing marriage licenses have been issued here: . .Vincent Gullino, Cornelia Slcialia, East Chicago. Louis H. Worst, Hattie Rosenstock. Chicago. Frederich

Rausli. Lydia Kurth, Chicago. Albert

N. Blidsal, Jessie G. Manson, Chicago. Albert J. Kast, Florence Barnard, Chi

cago. Bartlett Chreston, Myrtle Keenen, Columbus, O. John Ixmgyel, Mary

Kraul, East Chicago, Bertha Fary,

Mary Bonwig. Indiana Harbor. George

Norton, Hobart; Ida B. Cress. Crown Point. Walter Einspahr. Vira E.

Graves, Lowell.v

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STAHLY WAS TREATED

UITH T.1UGH KlIliESS

East Chicago Man Was

Very Naughty But Very Penitent Afterwards.

some 2,700 miles with the use of steam for but fifty or sixty miles. A. J. Littlejohn is now making this trip. , He reached Chicago yesterday, having, covered 1,000 miles in forty hours of" actual travel, and on his fifth day out made seventeen stops, staying over sight at Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit and Chicago. Tomorrow he leaves for Indianapolis via South Bend, .262 miles, and will make a brief stop at Gary at about 9 a. m. He expects to make the entire Journey in ten days. .

(Special to Thb Times.) East Chicago. Ind., Feb. 9. The next time Stanley Zuleskl feels it imperative upon him to Indulge his thirst extravagantly in the matter of intoxicating liquids, he!! probably pick East Chicago as the most desirable place to get drunk in, because he was treated so kindly here after a similar offense. Yesterday he was fined 23 cents and costs before. Judge Reiland, who was constraine3Jo deal so leniently with him because of the prisoner's penitence. Stanley was captured in tfce; business district, where he was roaring like a wild bull. IJe was ready to eat, up any dozen "of men of his own or superior weight -a$d invited everybody in sight and some who were not, to come on and mix It up. The first taker of his challenge proved to be a policeman, who. While he. 'managed to subdue his man, found him rather a tough customer to deal with. : .. '

Landed inside the Jail Mr. Zeluskl

mm

EESTSMFC3TEAOCCfTEG

6Y COERS EVERYWHERE!

Miss Josephine Baum. though not a

student at the University of Chicago, is to take part in a play "How the Vote Was "Won," which the "co-eds" will present on Friday evening in Mandel hall.- The comedy is one that has been produced by those interested in woman suffrage on several occasions, and the presentation win be attended by many members of the South Side Suffrage association and the Political Equality league. Miss Baum will give a Spanish dance.

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