Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 49, Hammond, Lake County, 14 August 1912 — Page 7
Wednesday, Aug. 14, 1912.
THE TIMES.
SMs Wanted.
Four well-educated 3'oimg ladies, over 16 years of age, for collating books; good wages; steady employment; work easy to learn; as soon as experience can make from $10.00 to $12.Q0 per week.
Four sewing machine operators for sewing books;
must be 16 years old or over; work easy to learn, light and pleasant; good wages.
Three girls to separate books for sewing machine operator; must be 14 years old or over and will be given opportunity to become operators. W. B. CONKEY COMPANY, HAMMOND.We close at 12 o'clock on Saturdays.
FOR RALE. FOR SALE Must be sold at once,
new veneered brtck house on Alice t.; all modern conveniences. ' Apply
817 Alice at or phone 1247M. Ham mor.d.
FOR SALE No. 6 Remington type
writer; wil Hake bicycle aa part pay.
W D. Times, Hammond. 13-3
FOR SALE Double flat building; cen
trally located; in first class repair
throughout and well rented; $350 cash, balance on time takes it. Price $2,650.
Address 201. Times, Hammond. 13-6
500
500
4,000
FOR SALE Mason St., 7 rooms and bath, furnace heat. 87 ft. lot, garage In rear. Price $3,800. Part cash.
.. Detroit at., 6 -room bungalow, oaK floors. 37 ft. lot. Price $2,700. Part
cash. VACANT Mason st., 40 ft., $1,100. Ruth St., 50 ft., $1,400. Detroit St., 87 ft.. $760. Ridge Road. 75 ft., just the lot for a bungalow, $525. . W. J. HASTINGS. REAL ESTATE. 597 Hohman st. Phone 61
Lot 42, ,blk 2. , Tolleston Land
Co.'s 2nd add. John Kalalne to Tolleston Land Co HAMMOXft.
Lots 5 and 6, Phillip's add. Eng-
lehart Ullrich to J. B. Hesse- . brecht . Lots 11 and 12, blk 1, Towle'a 2nd add. Clarence I. Hoffman to William W. Moberly....
Lots 21 and 22. Stafford a Tr ankle's 2nd add. Bertalau Bagamer! to Clarence I. Hoffman Const. Co j Lot 15, blk 1. Hink's add, Gostlyn, Meyn & Co. to Thomas S. Bailey 600 Lots 17 and 18, blk 8, Homewood add, Gostlln, Meyn & Co. to Max Lovinger 1,200 Lot 5. blk 7, Towle & Avery add. Rena S. Brush to John N.
Beckman 200
Lots 13 to 15, blk 1, C. Smith's add, Frank O. Dryer to Francis Zora Dryer...: Same as last deed, Clarence C. Smith to same as last deed.... Lot B, blk 7, Towle & Avery's add, William Ahlborn to Rena
Brush i Lot 70, Stafford & Trankle's
Grove add, Gostlln. Meyn & Co. to John H. Christenson 900 WHITING.
Lot 16, blk 1. Standard add.
Standard Oil Co. to Cleora Quiggle 1,250 HAMMOND.
Part lot 23. Townsend A God
frey's add, Henry Schrage to Mary H. Wicker 7.000
ANNUAL
1CSIC FOR
SATURDAY
task to get the machine on the road
again. Two teams of horses were then
secured and after a hard pull the machine was brought to terra flrma again
and, Mr. Conde and party were able to I complete their journey.
Another lucky part of the accident
was the fact that where the auto first stuck, the unseen washout at the bot
tom of the embankment there was nearly ten feet of water and had the machine turned turtle and pinned the
occupants under the car, they would have been drowned.
FOR SALE Complete second hand outfit store fixtures at a bargain. 4S57 Melville a-e., East Chicago.
NOTICE TO TIMES READERS. NOTICE TO ADVERTISER 3.
ments who wish to communicate with AiSO assistant IOrelaa'. UO
FEW'UiE HELP.
WANTED Experienced
sewers on collar machine.
FOR SALE Piano in first class condition; will sell cheap. 115 Fayette St., Hammond. 12-8
FOR SALE OR . EXCHANGE New buildings with 2 ft acres, near the Kankakee river. Henry Von See, Thay
er. Ind. 13-
advertisers whose identity is not revealed, should follow the Instructions to address them by the key letter given. Requests at this office to reveal the Identity of anonymous advertisers can not. in Justice to the advertisers. re answered. Simply foliow instructions. As tar as it Is possible It Is advised that all classified ads should either be mailed or sent to the office. The Times will not be responsible for errors In ads taken ever the telephone. ,
shen Shirt Mfg. Co., 105 Condit st., Hammond, Ind. $2.50 PER DAYpald one lady ;n each town to distribute free circulars for concentrated flavoring in tubes. Permanent position. F. E. Barr Co., Chicago.
FOR SALE Two new - 6-room cot
tages, with bath, electric light, basement and cement" walks around house; well located. One 7-room two-
story house, bath, electric light, fur
nace neat, lawn graded and grass started; terms reasonable; bargains If taken at once. Geo. W. Teazel, 205 De
troit st., Hammond.
FOR SALE Top buggy and single
driving harness. Geo. A. Dobbins,
grocery Btore, 659 So. Hohman at.,
Hammond.
FOR SALE One hot water Apply 404 Hammond Bids.
heater,
WANTED Saleslady, one who can 1 play piano preferred. Apply F. W. Woolworth & Co., 5 and 10c store, J State st.. Hammond. . 14-3'
FOR SALE Second hand household
goods at a give away price. Call Got
den Bros.' storage houre, Fayette and
Sohl St., and ask for Mr. Sourbeer, man
: M-TJS HELP. ; WANTED Young man to learn ce
ment tile making; steady work year i -"round: COOd nav whilp lfamlnfr Alan!
laborers wanted for general work. '.meiltS of OUT Store. Pemia
federal Cement Tile Co., Hammond,
Ind.
WANTED 30 sales ladies in the various depart"
nent positions are open to
tall who are experienced and
WANTED Men to work on concrete, t . ohilifv T inn Rtnrf Apply at once, room 508 Hammond!8110 "01111,. IjlOn fcTOre,
bidg.. Hammond, ind. 14-3 : Hammond. Ind. Ask to see
Mr. Payne.
TTOR R ENT.
FOR REJnT Six rooms, bath, gas, 424 Plummer. F. B. Hall, 141 Sibley at..
Hammond, Ind., .
FOR RENT Two furnished rooms for light, housekeeping. 188 Plummer
ave., Hammond. ntf
; WANTED Two yard clerks. Apply A. M. DeWeese, agent Erie R. R., Ham
mond, Ind.
14tf
! WANTED At once, shirt
operator, mond.
Blck Laundry
and Co..
collar
WANTED A competent, sober middle
aged man for night watchman; must W ANTED WaitreH We Cater Res-
l.r," . : 3 ' . '. taurant. 90 State st., Hammond.
vim ciuchl oc iue io., nammona.
FOR RENT Store and flat; suitable
lor drugs, hardware or decorating
store. Apply at Blank's store, Miller,
Ind. 14
FOR RENT Furnished room, large
aeiacnea room; two gentlemen or
couple preferred; desirable, central. 43
Russell St., Hammond. 13
WANTED Short order clerk, porter, dishwasher. Apply 120 Sibley st., Hammond. Kaufman & .Wolf's new building. 13-3
WANTED Good, strong boy in our mailing and delivery department. Must be 16 years old and willing to wrork. Unless you expect to be steady and work don't apply. Fine job fop the right young man to learn trade. Apply at once at Times office, Hammond, Ind.
WANTED Competent girl for general housework; family of 3; good wages. Mrs. R. O. Winkler, 14 Mason St., Hammond. lOtf
j r vii i iwo lurnisnea rooms
nice locality; gentlemen preferred
Inquire at 828 So. Hohman St., Ham
mond. is
YANTED25 girls above 16 years of age to act as cash girls during the sale. Apply at Lion Store, Hammond, Ind. Ask for Mr. Payne.
run itc.xi inree lurnisnea rooms
for light housekeeping; $12 pe
month. 663 Indiana ave. Small sleep ing room. $1 per week. 138 Plumme
ave., Hammond. 13tf
FOR RENT 6-room steam heated flat,
over Cleveland Printing Co. Apply 9
Plummer ave;, Hammond. 13tf
SITTTATION WANTED. WILL TAKE IN PLAIN SEWING Piece quilt, at 498 E. State St., Hammond. ' Phone 917M. 13-3
WANTED Machine hand. Strauba VI- , ano Factory, Hammond, Ind.
CARPENTERS WANTED McCllntock . Marshall Construction Co., at Hubbard Steel Foundry, East Chicago, Ind.
WANTED Car repair mexi; steady work; good wages. Apply Illinois Car & Mfg. Co., 143rd and Clark st., Hammond, Ind.
FOB SALE. FOR SALE Furnace, suitable for 6room cottage, complete with hot air pipe, wall registers, etc; new last year; bargain. Dr. Glllls, 56 Rimbach
ave., Hammond, Ind.
FOR RENT Large neatly furnished
room, with bath, steam heat; cen trolly located; suitable for two gent
lemen; Whiting, Ind. Address W
Times, Hammond. 12-
FOR RENT Two modern sleeping rooms. $1.50 per week. Phone 543. 243 E." State St., Hammond.
CHICAGO OIL MARKET.
Chicago Wholesale prices for car
bons and other oils were as follows:
Standard white, 180 test, 10Hc; perfection, lOftc; headlight, 175 test, 12c; eocene, 12ftc; gasoline, 16c; machine gasoline, 25 He; raw linseed single
brls, 68c; boiled. 69c; turpentine. 48c; summer black oil, 7 He; winter black oil, 8c These quotations apply to brl
lots f. o. b. Chicago.
PRODUCE MARKET.
Butter Extra creamery, 24c; firsts.
23c; seconds, 22c; dairies, 2123c;
packing stock, 15 20c; process, 24c.
Live poultry Turkeys, per lb, 10
12c; geese, 79c; ducks, 1013c;j fowls, 13c; roosters, 9c; broilers. 17c.
Eggs FIrsta, ISftc; ordinary firsts.
16fte: dirties, 13ftc; checks, UHc.
Beans : Pea, hand picked. $2.75
2 88; brown Swedish. $2.40(8 2.60; Lima. 100 lbs, $5.87 H: red kidney. ?Z.50 2.60.
Green fruits New apples, brl, $2.50
4.50; crabapples. brls, $3.503.75;
pears, bu basket, $l.00ig l.35: grapes, 8 lbs, 25c: cherries, cases, 16 qts, $1.60S 3.00; plums. 24, qt cases, $1.00!. 76;
peaches, bu basket, 75c$1.60; 6 baskets, $1.00 1.60; baskets, 1-5 bu.
Mich., 12 H 20c; currants, red, 16 qts.
$1.001.50; black, 1.001.50.
Berries Blueberries, 16 qts, $1.75 2.50; blackberries, 16 qts, 1.251.50;
red raspberries. 24 pts, $1.602.50.
Vegetables Celery, crates, Mich., 25 (3 36c; beets, 100 bunches, 75c$1.00;
cabbage, '100 headTBc $1.50; green onions. 6 bunches, 35c; spinach, tub.
258 36c; carrots, 100 bunches, 75c(g $1.00; cucumbers," Climax, baset, 80(3
35c; - egg plant, doz, $1.00; radishes, 109 bunches. 76c$1.00; squash, dos.
0e; onions, sacks, 70 lbs, 75c $1.10;
string . beans, green, box, 35c; wax
box, 40c; tomatoes, cases, 4 baskets, 70
86c; peppers,, boxes, 80c; lettuce, leaf.
box, 15c; head, box. 2585c' turnips, 100 bunches, $1.00; green peas, bu bas
ket, $1.602.75; cauliflower, cases, 60c
1.00; parsley, dos bunches, 10c;
sweet corn, sacks," 40B0e. Melons Water, per car, $125 200
Gems, baskets. 25S0c; flat cases, 36
75c -
Veal calves 6060 lbs. llllftc;
8d110 Iba, 12rl3ftc: 60200 lbs, 83 10c: 6080 lbs, llft12c. Potatoes New, bu, southwest, 76 83c: new, -bu, Minnesota and Illinois
6572c; new, -bu, Jersey cobblers, 90
S5e; sweet, brls, $3.60 4.00.
i (Special to The Times.)
Lowell, Ind Aug. 14. The Lowell
Lodge of Odd Fellows will be host next Saturday to the Lake County Odd
Fellows Association, which holds Its
annual outing there on August 17th. A
good delegation will go to the down
county city from Hammond, Whiting,
East Chicago and Gary, and the Lowell
Is making preparations to show the
visitors a good time. Band concerts and dancing will be the feature of the
afternoon and evening's program. In
addition there will be games and con
tests and a drill by the Rebeckahs, WOMAN HELD
HI MYSTERY
f Con tinned from Page L)
ene insists sne gave her baby to a woman whom she met at the Pennsylvania depot, but was unable to give the name of the woman or tell where
she resides. .
The woman was arrested at 3:45 this morning by Officer John Lazaar. He saw her on the street at that hour car
rying a trunk to the depot. The hour being such an unusual one for a woman to be abroad. Officer Lazaar thought the trunk might have been stolen. He stopped the woman and
then recognized her as one he had
seen last evening In front of the Har bor hotel. At that time she had had i baby In her arms.
The officer asked the woman what she was doing with the trunk. She
explained that she had stopped over pight at the Harbor hotel and was taking her trunk, to the depot. ' The
explanation did not satisfy Officer La
zaar, who took the woman to the sta
tion and then went to the Harbor ho
tel to inquire about her.
Mrs. Winen, who conducts the place,
nformed the officer that the woman
had left at about 3 o'clock with the baby. Half an hour later she returned
without the child, and said she Vwas
going to take her trunk away. Mrs.
Winen asked what she had done with
the baby and she Informed her that
she had left the child with a woman
at the station, who was going to take
her to Chicago.
As the depot was not open at that
time and no trains leave then, the cir
cumstances seemed mysterious ancf the police decided to keep the woman and
sweat her as soon as her nervous condition would permit of her being put
through that process. In the mean
time they have tried by gentler means
to get a confession from her. They
sent for Mrs. Winen to try IT possible to get the prisoner to tell her exactly what she has done with the baby, but
thus far she has stuck to her story
that she gave her baby to a woman at
the depot. Who the woman was she
will not tell, nor what her object was in meeting her at so unusual an hour.
The woman is a Roumanian and
says her husband aiea aDout eignt months ago. She says she has one child in the old country. She came to the Harbor from Gary.
HERE'S WAY TO
REDUCE HIGH COST OF LIVING . (Continued from Page one)
1CONBT TO LOAM MONET TO LOAK MONET TO LOAN CALUMET LOAN COUPAMT DO YOU KNOW ITT WHAT IT 8TAND3 FORT ITS RKfUTAIONT NOT THEN LISTEN. Hammecd's largest .and most reliable company whose terms and methods have satisfied thousands. WHTT
1
$
$
FOR RENT Six-room flat, $19 Line st., Hammond.
State 8-9
FOR.SALlu Orgar,. 6-reed; will se
cheap. Apply 493-lf0th ct.. West Hammond, III. 14-3
FOR RENT Modern 6-room flat In i Lockmar bldg.. If p., 11 Waltham St.:
14-6 ( steam heat, hot water and janitor
service; private garage on premises.
11 i
WANTED TO RENT. WANTED At once, by two adults, 5 or 6-room cottage or flat; bath and gas, Hammond. Address C W, Times. Hammond, Ind. 14-2
WANTED Three furnished rooms for . light housekeeping, in Hammond or East Chicago. Address 4828 Forsyth ave., East Chicago.
SITUATION WANTED By experienced stenographer. Phone 466J, East Chicago. 11-3
FOR SALE One and half story house;- hot and cold water, full basement. Call at 4B3-150th St.. West Hammond, 111. " 14-2
WANTED, POSITION Young man. as bookkeeper or shipping clerk; business college graduate. Address J. H., postoffice box 108, Whiting, Ind.
MISCELLANEOUS. FOR FIRST CLASS MILLINERY i goods. Call' at Miss Harrington's dressmaking parlors, 420-119th St., Whiting, Ind.
WANTED TO BUY. HOUSEHOLD GOODS BOUGHT. SOLD and exchanged; get our prices. Hammond Furniture Co.. 242 E. State St.. Hammond. Phone 643.
WHY ARE READER T
YOU NOT A TIMES
FOR SALE Will- sacrifice for cash, corner lot 69x125 ft., frame cottage 23x34 ft., with brick basement and cement floor, hot air furnace, sewer, water, gas and electricity; also one frame barn, open open wagon shed, one
closed buggy shed, one tool
shed and chicken shed. In first class neighborhood, paved streets and cement walks in front and in yard. All improvements in and paid for. Big Snap. Martin H. Finneran, 30-152nd st. Phone 566.
Phone HUM.
tf
LIVE STOCK-MARKETS.
Cattle Choice to prime steers, $9.25
10.40; medium to good steers, $7.25
9.00; Inferior to fair steers. $5.857.25;
fat cows and heifers. $5,00 4? 8.75; can
ning eow and heifers, $2.B04.15; na
tive bulls and stags, $3.00(6.75; feed ing cattle. 60001,000 lbs. $4.1007.10.
Hogs - Bulk of sales. $7.858.40;
heavy butohers, $8.30(9 8.45; light
butchers. $8.808.60; light bacon, $8.35
8.65; light light, $8.158.46: heavy
shipping, $S.10.:0; heavy " packing.
$7.65 8.00; mixed packing, $7.80 8. 05
Sheep Lambs, gool to choice, $6.75
7.25; lambs, fair to. good. $6. 10526.75
lambs, common to fair, $5.656.10
lambs, feeders, $5.85 6.50; lambs
culls. $4.8006.00; yearlings, fair to
best light, $5.0xiS.50.
FOR RENT Two 6-room flats; modern, $18. 145th and Carey st, two blocks from car line. Phone 141 Indiana Harbor. lftf
MONEY TO LOAN. MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS and watches. 65 State st., ' Hammond, Ind.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
GARY. 2, Grant Park add.
Touche to Charles
PIANO SALE One new Knabe piano
$350 (cashl. Three new 1450 pianos,
$185 if taken at once. Five slightly I Lot 20, blk 13, C. T. L. & I. Co.
Lot 31, blk
Eunice A.
Csontas . $ Lots 1 to 32, blk 3; lots 1 to llT blk 4: lots 15. to 20, lots 22 to 32, blk 4. South Park add. Henry A. Vossler to South Side Trust and Savings Bank...... Lots 7 to 10, Kriewitz add, Caroline Kriewltz et al. to Smith-Bader-Davidson Co INDIANA HARBOR. Part blk 73, James W. Maxwell to William C. Harding Lot 9, blk 19, 2nd add. Max Glass to Frederick Galuski TOLLESTON. Lot 22, blk 17, C. T. L. & I. Co.'s 3rd add, Frank Cleslelski to
Bronoslava Levendopsky
HAY & GRAIN MARKET
Open High Low Close Sept wheat. 92H 3 92 9344 Dec. wheat. 92 S3 92 93 May wheat. 95 B6 95H V Sept. corn.. 69U 71 69 71 Dec. corn... 64 5 54 84?, May corn,.. 5414 54. 54 Si' Sept.' oats... 31 33 31 iUs Dec. oats... 32 '32 32 82vt May oats... 34 14 34 84
first occupied the station house. No. 4,
there was a sandhole beside the station house big enough to bury a ton
of hay. Today it is an inviting grass
plot with flower beds and a cool looking ,ivy crawling up the south side of the building. In the back of
the lawn is the garden. Some ay tt Is really less than an acre, but even conceding it to be an acre, the horticultural results are marvelous.
In their spare moments the firemen
took turn about working in the gar
den. Two of the men are constantly
In the fire house. Last spring they borrowed a plow to plow their field,
which had been richly fertilised with the manure from the barn. . The fire horses, not being plow horses, at first thought they were going to a fire, and it took five men to guide the plow and
regulate the horses.
Work With Community Iatereat. The weather was propitous. The re
sults were watched with intense inter
est. As the season advanced those of the firemen who are married began to
take home onions and radishes. Beans
came along in due time, and the po
tatoes, being of the early kind, have
all been dug and are nearly all sold. ,
The bachelors took their share of the garden truck to the boarding houses her
where they sold their , share.
The monks in . the cloisters of the
olden days never worked with more
community interest than the- boys at No. 4. They have been happy In it. and deserve a lot of credit for giving
the people of Hammond this valuable lesson how to hit the high cost of living specter under. 'the belt, and that
they are ready to earn a little more than Just their salaries. 1
The seven firemen, at station No. 4
are: Assistant Chler wiiuam p. m, Jo
seph Pyplatjt. William Bachman. Charles Raasch. August Bakala. Wil11am Koch and Paul Sklabinski. j
BECAUSE THHTY Guarantee no publicity. Guarantee to treat you right. Guarantee quick service. Guarantee courteous treatment
Guarantee Guarantee
Guarantee
easy terms, reasonable . charges, largest rebates.
FOR THE (SERVICES RKN- ... DERED. t We will loan you $10. $16. $29. $25. or larger amount on easy monthly payments, on furniture, pianos, or any household goods, without removal. Tou receive the money the am day you apply for it; o red tape; no delay. Private room for consultations. No charge for advice, which we are always glad and ready to give. CALUMET IX) AN COMFA3TT
Largest and Most Reliable Northern Indiana.
la
til Hammond Bldg. 333. Open Kveaiags.
'Phoae
WILL CHARTER BIG
BOAT FOR PICNIC
first husband out of the way to
that she could live In piece with the second one. Upon her arrival in Ohio she had her husband meet her in a city park. There, she claimed, he tried to assault her, and In the scuffle that followed she shot him.
Death at Hammond. In the meantime Fred Schrepfer, husband of Mrs. Radeloff's sister, went to Hammond to secure employment. On June 25 he was killed while working at the Standard Steel Car works. Mrs. Schrepfer, sister of thedefendant, then went to Pittsburgh. Today District Attorney Carl Jacobs of Cincinnati, is In Gary for the purpose of having Detective Eisner accompany him back to Ohio as a witness. The attorney predicts that Mrs. Radeloff will get a life sentence as the newspapers are fighting for the abolition of capital punishment.
AGED HISTORIAN TO
BE GIVEN BENEFIT
used pianos, $76 to $125. One Checkering Concert B Grand, 7x3. a snap, $275. Kimball organ, $10. Call at J. M. .Wilcockson Music Co., '185-State St., Hammond, Ind.
6th add, rie G. Sproat to Sam Cohen Lots 37 and 39, blk 1, Tolleston Land Co.'s 2nd add, Tolleston Land Co. to Peter Stanclk.....
650
8,000
'70
900
Hay Receipts, 401 tens; shipments, 40 tons. Offerings only fair an ddemand good; market steady,. Choice old timothy at $122, and new at $16.6017; No. 1 old, $1930; new, $15 16; No. 2 and No. 1 mixed, old, $16 17; No. 2 and No. 2 mixed, Old, $12 13. Kansas and Oklahoma pralrie Choice. $14.5015:, KNo. 1. $1414.60. Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and Dakota prairie Choice, $1414 60; No. 1, $12. 60 13.60. Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin feeding prairie $8 9. Packing $7 I. Straw Rye. $9.50 10; oat, $7 7.60; wheat, $8.50 1.
i . (Special to The Timer) Crown Point, Ind., Aug. 14. The fol
lowing self-explanatory i notice nas
been sent out by worthy citizens here today and the project is deserving of
warm approval and recognition:
"To The Public:
"Rev. T. H. Ball has been secretary
of the Old Settlers' and Historical Society o Lake County during the last thirty-seven years; during this time
he has published half a dozen or more volumes, giving the history of Lake county from the earliest settlement by
the whites to the present time; without
him there would be no record of the early history of this county.
"After the meeting of the society, at the end of this month, Mr. Ball will leave us and go to the Southland, prob
ably never to return, when we consider the fact that he Is over eighty-six
years old at this time.
"The undersigned consider his services to our community so valuable that
they entitle him tJ a practical recognition "on the part of our citizens, and
they have therefore constituted them
selves a committee to solicit, among
the people of Lake County, contribu
ttons to a purse to our venerable
friend, to py h!s expenses on his trip
southward and somewhat more.
"We request contributions for this purpose to be made by payment to the First National Bank of Crown Point
and earnestly request a suitable measure of generosity In this behalf. "Respectfully, "JOHN BROWN, "OSCAR DINWIDDIE. "JOHANNES KOPELKE."
Employes of . the Inland and their families are looking forward with much eagerness to a monster picnic that is being planned for them to take place on Monday, August 19. The picnic Is the third annual one given by them and the steamship
Theodore Roosevelt" has been char
tered for the event. Also a number of trains on the' South Shore lines will be held in reserve, the destination be
ing Michigan City.
The Theodore Roosevelt Is the larg
est and one of the finest steamships on the great lakes. It was Chartered
twice before for similar outings, but only on one occasion' was it available, last year the lake being so rough and conditions' generally so bad that the steamship people - decided It would be
unwise to make -the trip.' The company
atonce communicated with the South
Shore lines and trains were sent out as soon as possible to take care ot the
picnickers, and the company, profiting
by this experience, has taken the precaution to have trains on the South Shore reserved in advance to avoid delay and to provide for such as prefer this mode of travel to the water.
The Inland picnics have heretofore
been most successful, and this year a larger crowd and a better time than
ever is expected. -
EAST CHICAGO -MAN IS HIT BY AUTOMOBILE " Another man was struck and inlurod by an auto In Tolleston last night, and acording to the Gary police, Louis Ballint of East Chicago, the driver of the machine, made no effort to stop to se how badly his victim was injured. A short time later Balllnt, who is said to be a motor truck driver, employed by Friedman's whiskey establishment at East Chicago, was arrested by Officers Schultz and Pafpas. McGovin or McGovern is the only
name the police have of the unconscious victim who is at the Mercy hospital. He will recover. It has been established that he lives In East Chicago but beyond this nothing futher is known about him. The accident occurred ftt 1:30 o'clock at Main street and Borman boulevard. , Today Balllnt was arraigned in police court, but his case was continued until Aug. 21. A criminal carelessness charge was placed against, him, but later this was changed to assault and
! battery. "
THREE CITIES INTERESTED v IN TRIAL tContlnued from Page one)
man. He knew she had gone to Cincinnati, but believed that she was visiting relatives. Mrs. Radeloff-Stoker, who is a striking brunette. Just past twenty-two, was taken back to Ohio to stand trlat for murder in the first degree. Stoker immediately put up money for her defense, but it is said that since then he has changed his mind. Police believe that the Schrepfers made a match be
tween the two and that after they were
married Mrs. Radeloft went to Cincin
nati for ho other rurprise than to get
THIS CUBS. 4b OHIO RAILWAY. WAY OK I.MIAISA. ' Leaving, Time at Hammond, Ind. Kffectlie June 2, 1912. Subject to Change Without Xottce. 10:45 am DAILY. Limited for Cincin. nati. Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, ' New York, Richmond. Norfolk and Virginia and Nona : Carolina noints.
, Local for Clncln-
9:33 am PAILT
t nati. connecting t with F. F. V. Lim-
iteo ror the Kt18:38 am DAILY, . Local for Cincinnati. 6:40 pm DAILY, Local for Chicago. 6:48 pm DAILY. .Limited for Chicago and West. 6:17 am DAILY, Local for Chicago. Sleeping, Observation-Parlor and Dining Cars on Limited Trains. Sleeping Cars on Might Trains. -
CHICHESTER S PILLS J , . THE IMAUONB DSAKn. a
Lalal Ak yir ururil lor a - fee-tr's llm j Tlrai,dW IMiU In Ked and old mru,hcf honn, rcaled with Klua Riblxn. Tk ether. Bar tf ir V llnirl,!. Aik fr.'III. irKO-TFR'S
DIAMOND HRANU flLLM. far e
yesrs known Bctl, Safest. Always Reliable
SOLO BY DRLfiGISTS EVERYWHERE
HAMMOND FOLKS WERE NEAR DEATH tContlnued from Page L)
FIFTEEN KILLED AT AN IRON PLANT.
DorVftund, Germany, Aug. 14. Twen-ty-,slx workmen were buried today by a fall of a slag bank at an iron works In a suburb. Rescurlng parties extricated eleven men aljve. Fifteen men were killed.
his presence of mind to keep the car from turning turtle, Mr. Conde steered his machine at an angle down the steep embankment, where the front wheels finally stopped in the mud at the bottom of the ditch, seventy-five feet from the starfof the perilous journey. The occupants of the other machine turned their, heads, expecting to see the Conde machine turn over and over, and only by a miracle were the occupants saved from injury and probably death. Standing at the top of the
steep embankment Mr. Conde looked a
sorry plight, the front of his machine atucK hub deep In the mud with a hard
T HE H AMM O N O DI STI LLI N O CO. DAILY CAPACITY 35,000 OALLON3
Lake County Title & Guaranty Co.
- (ABSTRACTERS ABSTRACTS FURNISHED AT NOMINAL RATES F. K. MOTT. rrcjiient FRANK HAMMOND, Viec-rresldent J. S. BLACK MUM, Secretary A. H. TAfPUL Treasurer XOWAKD J. EDEK. Manager
Secretary's Office 2 Tapper Block HAMMOND
HAMMOND AND CROWN POINT, IND
