Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 15, Hammond, Lake County, 5 July 1910 — Page 6

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5 ' TH TIES- Tuesday, July 5, 1910. t . '. i ' i - - - . ..-

Crown Point News

Happenings of a Day in Lake County's Lively Capital

T SHUCKS Prom the Diary of St Lence "Would hev hed a safe an' sane Fourth over f Squdgeville ef It harn t a bi 1 fer Horatio Speechmore a-shootin' . of h!s mouth. ,-After a dilijunt search ' fer hours, little Willie's finger wuz located, th' rest uv him not bein' discernable as yet. Oughter change th' sound o' patriotIsm. A finger on th' hand's wuth tvvo lin a skyrocket. PLAYED A POOR GAME. After playing one of the poorest games of baseball seen on the local , baseball diamond this year Sunday afternoon, the score of the wooly contest i y Corn Dent Hurt A Bit. rircd, Ailing, Swollen, Smelly, Sweaty Feet, Corns, Callouses -and Bunions, TIZ Curs Right Off. 3 Say good-bye to your corns the very first time you use TIZ. 'ou will never know you have a corn, bunion or callous, or sweaty, tired, swollen, aching feet any more. It's Jan wonderful the way the pain vanishes. Rub the corn hammer It with your fist if you wish no more pain after TIZ than if there had never been a blemish on your feet. Doesn't that sound good to ) you? Doesn't it? Then read this: "The corns on either of my toes were as large as the tablets you make to cure them. To-day there Is no lfn of corns on either foot find no soreneaa. It's an up-to-date Godsend. nm. A, btm Just use TIZ. It's not like anything else for the purpose you ever heard of. It's the only foot remedy ever made which acts on the principle of drawing out all the poisonous exudations which cause sore feet. Powders and other remedies merely clog up the pores. TIZ cleans them out and keeps them clearn. It works right off. You fvill feel better the very first time it's used. Use it a week and you can forget you ever had sore feet. There is nothing on earth that can compare with it. TIZ is for sale at all druggists. 25 cents per box, or direct. If " you wish, from Walter Luther Dodge & Co., Dodge Building, Chicago, 111.

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OIL IS BROWN GOLDBROWN GOLD IS OIL. Yoa have heard of the wonderful gold strikes in California along in the 40's. ' California will always be known as a gold producing state - VTt:'" -neyderi,ed from go,d? K4a'BBUl'",,.C,,1'k "lde'S fn Californiayz:zzt to inTest your surplus f unds ta ms compMy- of Procrastination is the thief of time ; therefore fill out the attached blank and mail witi your subscription at

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California National Crude Oil Co. I. W. HELLMAN BLDG., LOS ANGELES, CAL GENTLEMEN Kindly issue me shares of the Treasury Stock of above corporation. Enclosed find $ In payment for same. Nam

Address

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being 15 to 7 in favor at the locals. The Riverviews, with only a handful of their regular team were compelled by the local management to cancel tneir game with the Crown Points yesterday, the officials not deeming it wise to toist a second poor exhibition of the national game upon the regular patrons and fans a second time. The Riverviews were not tho only offenders -hen it came to dishing up a ragged 'article of ball, the local players being several times guilty of very amateurish playing Lack of practice and a winner's quantity of ginger seemed to be the chief fault chacked up against both teams and the home team will have to brace up to draw the crowds whion have given them good financial support this season. They have demonstrated that they'are able to play good ball and that is the only kind Crown Point fans care to see. DEATH OF MISS WALLACE. The sad news of the sudden death of Mrs. Wallace of Chicago Heights, a lister of Ben. Hayes of this place, reached here Saturday. Mrs. Wallace was lecently taken to a Chicago hospital to submit to an operation on one of her limbs and died from the effects early Saturday morning. It is reported that Frank Bieker is having plans drawn for a large house to be erected at Gary in the near future. When completed it is said Mr. Biekr may move his family to Gary and start in business there. Four prisoners, charged with disorderly conduct were brought from Highlands on Sunday evening to be confined in the Jail to await trial. They were all forir-gners, section hands, and became mixed up in a warfare of pistols knives and brick 'bats, untl Iseparated by onlookers. The congregation at St. Mary's Catholic church held special services on Sunday evening, the event being the observance of the two new banners recently burchased, St. Joseph's and St. Mary's. A large audience attended the premony. The funeral of Mr. Xick Berg of Lowell, was attended by many relatives and friends of the deceased from this place on Saturday. The last two days have proven to be home-coming days for Crown Point people and nearly all are entertaining relatives and friends from out of town. Many old time familiar faces were seen on the streets yesterday and Sunday. The railroads reported a big business at the local stations. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Neal of Chicago visited yesterday with Mr. and Mrs, Frank Pettee on East street. Mr. and Mrs. John Dailey, Miss Jo Badinach of Chicago and Dr. Harry a iay wn.tu lit X1.III in Iiq -JUPQ J'eSfer day with Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hayward on Main street. Mrs. Theodore Staff and children leave today for Mexico where they wilt manage a fruit farm recently purchased by Mr. Staff in that country. Miss Edna Maynard of Englewood visited yesterday with Mrs. C. A. Lincoln on Court street. Earl Rockwell of Gary and Mrs. and Mrs. Victor Dyer of Hammond visited yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. James Rockwell on Court street. USED THINGS THAT YOU DON'T WANT CAN BE SOLD IF YOU ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES

OtL NATIONAL CRUDE OIL GO. I. W. HELLMAN BUILDING LOS ANGELES

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Mrs. Earl Guthrldge entertained the Thursday Afternoon club at tier home on Ontario avenue last Thursday afternoon. Small tables were arranged in the parlors, at which the ladies 'were entertained at'pedro. After several games were played - the prize was awarded to Mrs. A. A. Kuss. A dainty luncheon was served and a most enjoyed by all. '.' P. Del Marter returned to his home in Montague, Mich., after spending several days with his daughter, Mrs. H.i B. Reed of Carondulet avenue. Mrs. H. Klaprodt returned from the hospital to her home here last week very much improved. Mrs. J. Edwards and daughter, Genevieve, amd relatives from Lansing spent last Friday at Lincoln Park. Miss Ella, Hohwy entertained the pupils of her music class at her home on Ontario avenue last Saturday afternoon. The pupils gave a recital, after which a very, dainty luncheon was served and a very pleasant afternoon was enjoyed by the children. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buckmaster and Herman Jordan left here the latter part of last week for Vandalla, where they expect to spend a 'couple of weeks with relatives. ,7 Mr. and Mrs. John Weber and children spent Sunday and Monday with relatives at Indiana Harbor. Mrs. B. A. Anderson and son, William, returned home after spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. A. Stout, in Clarence, Mich. ' , " . ' ' - Mr. and Mrs. John Patterson and children left here Saturday afternoon for Morocco, where they spent the 4th with relatives. Mrs. Hollingshead is reported quite ill at her- home on Ontario avenue. P. Del Marter and H. B. Reed spent Saturday afternoon in Burnside on business. E. N. Hurd was a Hammond visitor Saturday evening. C. R. Reed transacted business In Burnside last Saturday afternoon for the Western Steel Car and Foundry company. EVEET HOUR OF THE VSt. M. Kolb, the reliable druggist of frammond, Ind., fs having calls for "HINDIPO," the new kidney cure and nerve tonic, that he Is selling under a positive guarantee. Its merits are becoming? the talk of the town and everybody wants to try It, and why not? It costs nothing if it don't do you good not one cent. They don't want your money If it toes not benefit, you, and will cheerfelly refund the money. Try it todays THOfiSloTl ' ' 1RHLTOMORR0W Gary Wellman Will Have Hearing Before Mayor 'mnnkirii.; ffrtjim u.uvrp dcb.-i.ui Knotts. Arthur Thomas, the Gary mill labor foreman, who was arrested for an allfged Implication in the padding of the payroll at the local mills, will have his hearing before jAidge Knotts tomorrow. Although the attorneys for Thomas claim they will have no trouble ' in proving that he Is not guilty, yet the mill officials say they have a chain nf evidence so strong surrounding Thomas and the other operators that they will have no trouble in binding them over to tne superior court. The outcome of the case is hAinoavaitea with much eagerness.

Address

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S OPEH Gary's Beautiful Quarter of a Million Depot Thrown Open to the Public Yesterday Without Either Frill or Formality. Instead of buying their railroad tick, ets in a shack, Gary people will now have the use of the finest union depot in the state of Indtana. It is the new quarter of a million dollar Broadway station of the Lake Shore and Baltimore & Ohio lines. The depot was used for the first time yesterday and no frills or formalities irarked the occasion. That will come later. Th edepot is the direct result of a piece of advice given to the two lines in 1906 by Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the United States Steel corporation, who said: "Gentlemen, it will-not be many years until Gary is a city of two hundred thousand. Do not build an ordinary station. Create a depot big enough to handle the traffic. Take my advice and you will profit , by what I have said." The Judge's words turned out to be true enough, but he missed the mark. Gary's new union depot is big enough for a city of two hundred thousand and many metropolises twice and three times that big are not gifted as half as well. But the depot is not big enough for Gary. Not even a Harriman could have forseen that the steel city would present an unusual problem in railway operations. In ordinary cities people come and go, but in Gary thousands of transients attracted to the city by its wonderful things come every week. Yesterday morning five minutes before the first train pulled out for Chicago two hundred people occupied m How the teeth do relish SOZODONT They thrive on It."

WAR LY WH TO

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California National Crude Oa Co. 1. W. HELLMAN BLDG., LOS ANGELES, CAL, GENTLEMEN: Kindly issue me shares of the Treasury Stock of above corporation. , Enclosed find $ In payment for same. Namo ...

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TUG OF WAR GAiE BETWEEN HARBOR AND E. CHICAGO

(Special to The Times.) Indiana Harbor, Ind., July 5. "When Greek meets Greek then comes the tug of war," should have been applicable to the game of ball Sunday afternoon between Indiana Harbor and East Chicago, but the contest fell far short of meriting so dignified a title as tug of war. in fact, there was no tug to It at all except on tho part, of the E. C.'s v-ho were striving desperately to avoid an ignominous shutout. East Chicago and I r.diana Harbor have been trying to get together in a game of ball for some years past, but the fact was never accomplished until last Sunday, if it Is permissible to call the exhibition that took place then a game of ball. The Harbortes literally swamped their neighbors on the west, and as one distinguished I. H. fan remarked after the game, "They may have better politicians across the canal then we have, but you can bet that if the mayoralty contest had been decided by a baseball game his honor would have been a resident of Indiana Harbor." In the first Inning the politicians got two men on bases due to a pass and single, but after that Croak, the new pitcher for Indiana Harbor, got miserly end the visitors never got a man on every seat in the depot, another hundred stood in Inside while the rest of five hundred walked about on the wide driveways. Station Master Slusser as he surveyed the patrons remarked: "Well, who would have thought that this depot could have been twice .as big and not tig enough."' When the officials first saw the plans they thought that the station would be too large for the city for several years to come. The Lake Shore lines, outside of Its La Salle street station In Chicago, has one or two depots larger than the one in Gary, but none so attractive. Most of the depots which the Baltimore & Ohio has outside of Washington, Baltimore and New York are hardly worthy of the name. Gary's depot was started a year ago and was built by the Leonard Construction company. It is of steel and concrete construction and will last a century. Even the celling is of concrete. The main waiting room is 50 by 12 It Is handsomely decorated and the length, breadth and heighth of the room gives it a most imposing appearance. The finishings are of marble and brass. Off the main room is the smoking room, the ladies' room, which has a maid in attendance, and the lavatories. Ir. the main room are the enclosed quarters of the ticket offices and the Union News company. Some of Its Facilities. ?t&r-J?JMt1LrWiJk tsjpeatedtbe . , baggage rooms and one hundred feet to the south on the terraced driveway Is the receiving and shipping station of the American and United States Express companies.. Lake Shore passengers use the north entrances and Baltimore & Ohio passengers use the south entrances of the depot. Ample space is alloted for cabs and autos and trucks and an inclined driveway leads to the tracks, which are elevated twenty feet. POLISH PEOPLE IN REGIOfUJELEBRAIE Cities of Hammond, Gary, East Chicago and Whiting Join In Festival. THE BATTLE OF GREENWALD Spectacular Procession Is Headed By Mayor and City Officials. (Special to The Times.) East Chicago, July 5. There was a large demonstration on Sunday by the Poles from East Chicago. Indiana Har bor, Whiting and Gary and Hammond, in commemoration of the 500th anni versary of the battle of Greenwald, which occurred July 15, 1410. All the Polish societies were in line and the procession was headed by the police, while Mayor Schlieker and City Attorney Abe Ottenheimer, the members of the city council and the fire department were all in line. The city officials and the speakers who were to take part in the program at the conclusion of the parade, all occupied carriages, while the marshal of the procession astride of gallant horse charged up and down the stree'.s along the line of marchers, bands played and banners floated. Altogether it wae considerable of a spectacle and was witnessed by a large number of spectators. The procession started the corner of Chicago and Earing avenues, mached up Baring avenue to One Hundred and Fiftieth stret, over to Forsyth and back Forsyth to the Lewis rink. Here the marchers disbanded and entered the hall, where a fine program was carried out. : The speakers spoke in both English and Polish, Mayor Schlieker opening the program with a few remarks. Professor Plontkoski followed with an address in Polish. The professor is an official of the Polish National Alliance of Chicago. Father Mungoven of Indiana Harbor gave a talk as did also F. Kowalski, editor of a Polish paper published In Chicago. There was also music. The battle of Greenwald grew out of the crusades to the Holy Land. At it - th Poles and Lithuanians were victor-

first again until the seventh when they counted four times. In I. H.'s half of the first, after one man was down, Ogren walked, Rymal lifted a fly to Lowry. who dropped the ball. Thomas struck out, Hiller sent a grounder to Snedden, the same being fumbled and the first score of the game rtgistered. Rymal then made the third out, trying to score -on a wild pitch. In this inning Havll, who started to pitch for the politicans, hurt his finger and was replaced by Hill, late of the Whiting Grays. The second was unproductive of runs on either side, but the Harborites did things in the third. After Croak had disposed of three men in succession via the strikeout route on ten balls pitched, his team mates started something in the run-getting line. Bergwald, the first man up, foule dout to P. McShane, but Ogren walked. Rymal lifted a high one to--center which the boss of that territory allowed to get away from htm. Croak was passed, filling the bases. Thomas struck out, but Hiller shot a clean hit to right .scoring Ogren and Rymal and still leaving two men on the bases who came home a minute later when Galvin placed a safe one on left, Saunders ending-, the Inning by an out.

ious over the Knights of the Cross j was fought after the tyranny of the Teutonic Knights had hecom unhnr- " v v i UlC WU1IU. 1 IIP l)H I 1 IP bie, they hnving preyed upon the smaller principalities to an extent that made it necessary to crush the oppressor or be forever crushed themselves. It was a glorious victory for the Poles and Lithuanians and is an event much celebrated wherever the inhabitants the countries prevail. n DENOUNCES THIS HANDWRITING SYSTEM Chicago Penmanship Expert Criticizes the Vertical Style. (Special to The Times,) East Chicago, Ind., July S.Some pertinent observations regarding the present system of writing as taught in the public schools throughout the country, including Lake county, Ind., were made yesterday by Miss Alinda Gamerdinger, cashier and office -manri , thA-flvftr,o. nas Jvut Iereol.lno CVS m " iuausure 6c L-O., CTilcago, one of the largest manufacturers of fringes and furniture guimpes and trimmings in the United States, who was a visitor in East Chicago over Sunday and the "Courth. "I am not alone in this opinion," said Miss Gamerdinger. -If i have heard one business man express this idea, I have heard twenty. You would be surI prised to see the hand that many a col lege graduate writes. Absolutely devoid of character and crude in the extreme. Most om the young men who apply at the Mansure offices for positions, write like schoolboys in their teens. This Is true of men who have been well educated as well as men who have simply had public school training. The girls are the same. It is a mistake to imagine that since the typewriter has come to be a fixture In every office that good penmanship is at a discount. There is so much to be done that cannot be done on a typewriter, that the demand for good writers is almost as great as it ever has been i he past. ' Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, the present superintendent of schools in Chicago. while she ha3 not exactly put the ban on the vertical handwriting, has practically sounded its death knell In Chicago by Instructing the teachers to let the children write in any style that they ca ndo the best work in, her aim being to get them to write legibly and at the same time as rapidly as is consistent with good penmanship.

THE HAM MONO

DISTI LL1NO OO. DAIL.V CAPACITY 38,000 OALUONS

No Cure

DON'T HESITATE to call on me, for

""t ui.ius iui me uu ice. Get my agreement in writing. I will teil you just what it will cost to cure you. MODESTY: Many times people suffer untold agony from ailments of which, through modesty they dare not speak to physicians I wffi say to all such. If you have any disease or ailments that you don't want the world to know about, call In and tell me about it You can always depend on getting the BEST POSSIBLE ADVICE AND. TRF4T MENT. AND EVERYTHING; WILL BE STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL ADVICE ALWAYS FREE. J. RUCKEL, IVf. D. 237 Commercial Avenue, Gaiety Theatre B!dg So. Chicago OCIc Phone 5023. Hours: 8 to 12. 1:30 to 5, and 7 to 8:30. Sundays. 9 to 12

wXMakes Ihe Mare 60

Money to Loan at most reasonable rates and easy terms. Proof of this statement can be had upon Inquiry. If you wish to borrow any sum from 10.00 upwards in a quiet confidential way, consult the Hammond Loan & Guarantee Company "THE BEST PLACE TO GET MONEY" 145 South Hohman Street Over Model Clothiers Phone 257 Hammond, Ind. Office hours 8:00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. Saturdays 8:C0 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. WHITING'S BALL GAMES (Special to Tns Times.) . - Whiting, Ind., -July 5. The game between the whiting Greys and ex-Alderman Moynihan's South Chicago team on Sunday resulted in a victory for th Greys. he score being 9 to T. The batteries for the GreyB were MeKenna and Evans and for the "South Chicagos were Price and Williams. The game between the La "Vendors and the Hammond Greys did not come off for the Hammond team did not shoV up or send word as to why thfcy "did not come. " - ' Yesterday the Greys played the Chicago Mutuals in a ten-inning game, The Greys y:ere defeated 3 to 2." The game by innings was as follows: Whiting.. 100110000 23 9 3 Mutuals. .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 " 6 :' 3 '3 The batteries were Weber ami MeKenna and Dolan and Wilson. Struck, out by Weber 3; by Dolan. 9: T.vo base hat, McCann, Girard, Grabow. Home Runs, Hansen. Eases on balls, oft Weber, 2; off Dolan, 2. Hit by pitched ball, McKenna, Callahan and Wilson. Stolen bases, Girard and Hausen. " Wisconsin's Greatest Land Sale A Woderfnl Opportunity for Settler ind Investors to Secure Rich Fnrm State for $6.50 TO f 20 PER ACItB OX EtST TERMS. The" enormous Wisconsin land holdings of the lumber interests are now on sale and are rapidly passing Into tn hands of settlers and far-sighted Investors. These rich lands, comprising ovr 500,000 acres, have been thrown on tha market by the Ametican Immigration company of Chippewa Falls, Wis., at such low prices and on such easy terms that the whole country is aroused The' center of activity is In the famous Round Lake country, in Sawyer count v where 150,000 acres; the verv cream of ROUND LAKE WISCONSIN KAlllI usxua, jo ueing cut up into farms. -The American Immigration company owns the fee to all the lands they offer to sell. - The prices run from 16.50 to S20 per acre, depending on ine value of the standing Umber, location, etc. The land Is sold on ten years' time. The soil is rich and yields abundant crops. On much of this land there is enough timber to pa for the farm. It 13 a country of abundant rainfall and the purest of water. This is unquestionably the greatest cheap land opportunity of the country isconsin land values are advancing by leaps and bounds. PAT5r tD LAKE WISCONSIN FARM LAISDS are going fast and the man who gets In at the ground floor prices can make himself independent in five years. The time to act in Now' . Er?eBooks' MaP nd full information may be secured by addressing the local representative of the American Immigration company. GOSTLIN, MEYN & CO. COR. STATE All 1 rtlrnir v No Pay

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NO MATTER how lo yoa bare been sick ot how many have failed to cure you, come to me IF I CANNOT help or cure you, I will not take your money. I HAVE HAD twenty-Din years experience enrfng the sick. DURING THE PAST NINETEEN YEARS I have made a specialty of curing hard and puzzllng cases that other physicians had failed to cure or had Imperfectly cured, and have succeeded In curing thousands of those who were nro-

If I cannot cure you. J will tell yon

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