Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 248, Hammond, Lake County, 1 April 1913 — Page 4

Tuesday, April 1, 1913. PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPOSITION IN THE MAKING; ARMY OF WORKMEN CHANGING AKING; ARMY OF WORKMEN CHANGING VA&f GROUNDS INSIDE GOLDEN GATE A THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS r In LaJko CnMr Frlnttm and Path llahlna Company. HEARD BY RUBE Assisted ty HENNERY COLDBOTTLE

THE TIMES.

Toe Lake Oountr Times, dally except noday, "airtered u aecond-laNB matter Jane IS. The Lake County Time, dally exedpt Saturday and Bun--day. entered Pea. S. 1911: The Oary Ewealng Time, daily accept Sunday, entered Oct. t, HOI; The Lake County Timet. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO. 1911; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. IS, 111. at the poatofftce at Hammond. Indiana, all under the aot of March S. 17.

Entered at the Postofflce, Hammond. In., as eooad.-claea matter.

TORSION ASVBRTISIirS OFFICES, 12 Rector Building . - - Chicago PUBLICATION OFF1CKS, Hammond Building. Hare mend. Ind.

TELKPBOMES, Hammond (private exchange) ...... CCeUl for department wanted.)

Ill

Gary Office TeL II? East Chicago OXfl.ee TeL 140-J Indiana Harbor.. .... TeL 4-M; 160 Whiting TeL 0-ht Crown Point Tel. S Hegewlsca TeL tS

ONLY thirty more days left to eat oysters. WHEN" this suapenders skirt fad gets prevalent wonder If It will be necessary that the wlfles come down to breakfast wearing a coat? PU'MBKR has been elected president of a humane society In Gary. A humane plumber ought to get $1,000 a week on the vaudeville stage. "THK OUTLOOK FOR MONEY." Headline. We are better versed as to the Lookout for Money. AFTER vainly trying to read The Timbs -while riding on the Gary-Hammond division of the Gary & Interurban we have come to the conclusion that the spasmodic lighting In the cars

ought to make 'em popular with young couples accustomed to riding on railway trains that pass through a num

ber of dark tunnels.

"NO ROBINS IN GEORGIA." Head

line.

Happy, happy tarheel editors! No

ubiquitous subscribers to bother you in the spring time with first robin

stories.

Advertising eoltertors will be sent, or

rates given on application.

"I snOVLU WORRY" JOHX T. Trenton, March 81. The Standard Oil company announced to Its patrons in New Jersey today that In order to comply exactly with the provisions of one of the new corporation

".STORKS STOPS."-Huntington Herald headline.

This being the rapid age, distance Is

annihilated and the stops are few and

far between.

GUI-: AT CAESAR! How the women

folks to rave over the Bulgarian color fashions. Six months ago they wouldn't use colored fabrics like them for attic

window curtains.

"MARSHALL, STARTS FOR DAY

TON." Flood dispatch headline. Evidently the Hon. Thomas Riley

Marshall lias begun to realize that! Washington can get along verv well

without him. "IF the promoters back of the Por

ter. InT., race track are really sincere

in tneir intention to stage a spring

meeting, now is the time to do it.

while Governor Ralston is busy with

flood troubles." Chicago Post.

Tut! tut! the Hon. Armanis F. Knotts

is the soul of honor.

micmng posts allowed. says a Rensselaer paper. Thought that all

the Jasper county farmers owned au-tos.

If yu hare any trowble retting The

Times notify the nee-rest office and

have It promptly remedied.

Ol'R SPECIAL COmtF.SPOMiKNT.

Fort Wayne, Ind.. April 1. Special.)

l.ifeaver today reamed roe from

the Ilerghoff brewery. Owing to the

lack of good drinking water I have taken up temporary quartern at the Centlllvre brewery. Mont important un

laws passed at the instance of Presi- j uouneement for the day Ik that all lodent Wilson it would be necessary to ' " brewerien will be nble to rename

operntlons next week.

UIIOBR PAID VP CIKOtTUATIOJf

TBAIf ANY OTMEH TWO NEW).

PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.

AJfONTMOUS communications will

at he noticed, hut other will e

printed at discretion, and should be

addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham

mond. Ind.

raise the price on all its products, including kerosene, gasolene and lubricating oils. UNDERSTAND that the mayor of

Gary gets very little sleep these nights. Spends most of the time, 'tis said, won

dering whether his new acquisition.

The Tribune, will Hop again.

"NO OLD MAIDS IN SIAM KINO

FINDS WOMAN A NAME IF SHE DOES

NOT." Headline.

"While Bangkok may not have any

suffragettes thereby, it has its white elephants just the same.

HK.WERY COLDnOTTI.E. THE number of months that a new

ly-married couple wait before they go

In for society indicates the time It

takes them to get tired of each other.

WE have to make note of the Fish-

Daly wedding at Mount KIsco, N. Y.

This would Indicate a dainty slice of

lemon for this couple.

STATE department at Washington seems to be getting along pretty well.

W. J. B. spends most of hi3 time trav

eling.

" r"; tf I 41C I ki 'jH h jm-'4 k VUWs III iL t&zsz? J k :.x a,, --r- J "n"" ennnnnnnnnjiesnnnnn m seal smsi "nnnHwviHHin mmm m am nnann aw m m nnnKMnnennennMH " fli " 'i " ' yj t r--nfJTe's,lZl?

will be in. fifty years. Then make an

estimate of the saving that would be

effected in gasoline, in horse power land in human effort could that mile

be saved.

There are still a few opportunities

to open diverse streets in the Calumet region that would be a material laid to traffic. These exist principally

1 ! it 1 i . M it

Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. 3I. 1 alUQ5 iue nguis ui was ul ranroiius.

Special meetfng Wedtiesday. April 2, There is a splendid opportunity for a

" Stated meeting Garfield lodge No.

669. F. & A. M.. Friday. March 28. 7:30

p. m. E. A. degree. Visitors welcom

ed R. S. GALER. Sec. E. 1L SHANK LIN, W. M.

:30 p. m. Royal Arch degree.

Hammond Council No. 90 R, & A. M. will hold a ceremonial on. Tuesday evening, April 1st. Stated assembly first Tuesday each, month. J. W. Morthlaad. Rec, R. S. Galer. T. L M-

Hammond Commandery. No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting -flrst And

third Monday of each month.

Political Announcements

diverse thoroughfare between Gary

and Indiana Harbor and Whiting

along the Pennsylvania railroad.

There Is also a splendid opportuni

ty for a diverse thoroughfare between

the business district of. -.Hammond

and the town of Highland along the

lErie rawiiC ? ; t

This Is a matter that should be

taken hold of by the commercial organizations of the region in their city

planning departments.

ANOTHER good old saw was

knocked galley west when it refused to rain the first Sunday after Easter.

AT least one grand, old American

institution appears to have hit the

toboggan slide. The men who are

seeking the offices can't get them;

Editor, TIMES l I dealre to announce to the eOmmia

sionere and anditor of Lke county and the offices that are seeking the

and the people of Lake eonaty that men sometimes can't get them, either

I am candidate for the vacancy ex

luting on the board of commlaslonera. I have been In bunlnena In this county

for 10 years and believe I know It needs.. PASTE HAROLOVICH, , Whiting, Ind.

maintains "a masterly inactivity."

There is no objection to the proper

supervision of railways to insure rea

sonable rates and to prevent discrim

inations. But regulation of railways

illustrates what a thundering em

phasis has been put upon what is of comparatively little consequence to

the man who pays the monthly bills,

while matters of living costs bearing HOWEVER those five babies born

with extreme weight on him and his in the Peru courthouse will be able to

family have passed and still pass un- command some attention if they live remedied and, indeed, almost un- to be telling about it a half a century

studied. So when the cry about the hence

steadily increasing cost ot living reached its loudest the legislator was

unprepared to discuss or deal with the ONE CAUSE FOR HIGH MONEY.

subject. , t.7 ... , - In speaking of "high money." it is

He was bewildered because his ten- pointed out that people who have in

year assault on railway rates had Quired into the source of this increase

proved the prophecy of railroad man- in loans say that a very great propor-

agers by producing no effect to the tion of it has been caused by the num-

benefit of the man who pays the bills, berless new buildings that have gone

The statesman was outclassed by the up all over the country, for many of occasion and the opportunity; and which there has been no need. It is

nothing definite or practical is being suggested that it is necessary to go done to correct the wasteful and op- no further than the downtown section

nressive methods of business that are of Manhattan to find an excellent

a real back-breaking weight on the example of this craze for overbuild

consumer. ling. New office buildings there have

Workmen Laying Mains, Niche la the Great Statuary Court . of Four Seasons and View Through the Portico of the Service Building, First of the Expo Structures to be Completed. The worM la watching ths Panama-Pacific International Exposition in the making. An army of men Is busy on the site, extending almost three miles along the shores of San Francisco bay. The preliminary work la finished. All fourteen of the main exhibit palaces will be under construction by the coming summer. All will be completed by June. 1114. W. D'A. Ryan, who has charge of the Illumination of the Panama canal, is working out a marvelous night lighting plan in harmony with the glorious color scheme created by Julius Guertn. There will he no glare arrf no dark places or shadows by night. Eighty conventions already have voted to meet In ltl In the $1,000,000 auditorium to be built at the new civic center. The Welsh National Eisteddfod Is offering 150.000 in prises for Its chorus competitions. Twenty-seven nations already have accepted Invitations to take part In the exposition. This beats all records and signifies the great Interest with which America's work at Panama is regarded. To care for motor exhibits a huge Motor Palace, covering five acres, will be constructed, it is said that no single industry will have ever presented an exhibit go vast lr. extent. The Machinery Hall, which is to be the largest single building on the grounds will be S67 feet In width and 970 feet long. AU exhibits of machinery are to be shown In motion. Beneath a huge tower, the visitor will enter the exposition city through an arcade. 125 feet in height, to the most splendid of the effects of the exposition, the Court of the Suns and Stars, which will stand out among the most brilliant creations of the great expositions of America and Kurope. Borne of the towers and minarets will rlst 135 feet. 150 and 178 feet. Concessions will occupy 65 acres. The Santa Fe railway is spending $250,000 on a representation of the Grand Canyon of the Arisona. A model of the Panama canal will cost $250,000 Japan is to spend million

and a hair on her display. France nas requested twelve acres.

LIFE.

We get out of life just what we put'

into it. If we sow love we reap af

fection ,and if we plant kindness ten-

THE barber who was given a

thrashing by an actor in Los Angeles

is probably one of the kind that cuts

you one day and asks you whether

;Iyou shave yourself the next.

lVT"tTTT-Vm DTTVTT TXT XiTrKtWrM "

UJiA Ul U XfUAAk MM AfVllUVilii

In an article in the Saturday Even

derness blooms upon the plants that inS Post a few weeks ago, Samuel G.

spring from the seed. A smile will t Blythe compared the methods in the

create a smile, and a laugh will echo English House of Commons and in

until other laughter sounds afar, its tne American Congress. After many

influence sweeping on, until the end years spent in close cortact with tLo

of time. Plant flowers and their frae- American legislator he went to Eii;

rance will bless not only you but lnd to take a close look at the legia-

many others who Dass alone- vmir lator and legislation ibere. He con

garden fence. J eluded that while ttt re may be

question historically whether it was

the English parliamentarian or the

T I JL111 t Al i . t I

ii "eiy mat me ground nog American congressman "who first mit

will be considered when it comes to the bunk in bunkum," there can be selecting a new head for the weather no doubt, that at some time or other

bureau. Only one who is a hog for r,.

i- - - . uuul tut ik 4 u caaAta iuaw tuj cut; wuni rnl. A V 1 I.- n.i i . !

auu wuuuic ib avauaoie ior tnat sedulously keeping it there. Con-

JOD prpssmpn ar heine- BKBistpd In tht

country by the state legislatures and

NO hope for a safe and sane Fourth many ther puMiC offlcIal3

in Washington. Congress intends to For a number of years men seeking

remain in session all summer, tinker- t0 acQIre or desiring to retain office

ing with the currency and the tariff. nave employed the spectacular means

of going after "big business" or "the

man higher up." This gives the

DIVERSE THOROUGHFARES. statesman a position in the limelight

In the planning of every modern does not detract from the voting

city diverse streets are coming to Pwer nebind mm, and consequently

multitudinous class called "middle

men." Sometime ago a railroad offi

rPr hnnirht a nm.nrt nf r.iifmi Jtry. In Seattle, for instance, they

cherries in Chicago for 30 cents. The have bullt skyscrapers far

man who had invested his monev in tbeIr requirements, in Waco. Tex..

tho orchard tkin the rick, an a rw,.-Khich is a small city, they have a

formed the labor of production, sold twenty-tnree story onice Dunaing

the cherries, for four cents. The Such enterprises are, comparatively

I i 1 i ii. . ii

carrier hauled them 2,500 miles for speaKmg' Dwn-Broauc"ve- Ior lue-v

1.15 cents. The middle-men got the brlng m a very low lntere8t return

other 24.85 cents Thi la not an .-r- alla a larSe amount, oi capital is suiik

even mqre wonderful is the film's record of it. The very cathedral of 1483 furnishes the background of the play flashed on the theatre screen. Actors costumed in the Paris of that day once more invest with life characters long since' dead. The whole pageantry of life in mediaeval times is enacted on the films. Notre Dame, unchanged by the coming and going of the centuries, is there for modern eyes as it was for those of the middle ages. . -

Probably no production of the motion-film maker offers such pleasure to the imagination as this causes the screen spectator to forget the present

and beckons him back through the centuries to witness the stir and bustle of life of the mediaeval city. It is as if time could be turned back

ward and the curtain lifted to dis

close to the eye scenes "full of inter

est and brilliancy, of grand charac

ters and striking situations."

dent Franklin Pierce died. Born Dec.

5, 1757. 1873 White Star steamer Atlantic

wrecked off Nova Scotia, 4 SI lives lost.

1894 Loupls Kossuth, Hungarian

patriot, buried in Budapest

1903 The award of the coal strike

commission went Into effect in the an

thracite region in Pennsylvania.

1904 Premier Combs ordered the re

moval of religious emblems from the French courts of Justice.

191S White Star liner Titanic makes

final trip in British waters, before go

ing, into commission..

Take, for example, the case of the been BOing up constantly for years.

Much the same conditions appear to have existed in all parts of the coun-

A NEW Jersey girl was told by a

doctor that she would die if she re

fused to have a leg amputated. She

beyond declined, is alive and getting well.

traordinary case. The common car

rier's charge which enters into the food and clothing and other neces

saries of the average family is trifling.

Nevertheless, for about ten years the

!in them.

CABLE announces that the Duke of

Devonshire has quit racing. Well

that is the difference between the

Duke of Devonshire and the Duke of

Mineral Springs.

have great importance. These streets

are in reality cross lots thoroughfares. They save distance and hence time. A small town does not need them. The city which spreads over great distances does. To illustrate: From the business district of Indiana Harbor to the business district of Hammond by

present routes is six miles. And yet were Michigan avenue in Indiana Harbor to be extended on through in a southwesterly direction to Hammond the distance would be onljf five miles. j Just estimate the traffic between these cities now. Estimate what it

has become the most popular course

to take. But many a quack statesman went into office and achieved distinction by spectacular assaults upon the carriers. The railway companies were largely defenseless; for, even

their employees often voted against

their interests down to a year or so ago, when many of them began to see on which side their bread was but

tered. So the legislator was free to go through his upectacular performance without suffering a loss of votes. Where his activities would alienate voters, or affect unfavorably the interests of those who control votes, he

THE little Washington girl who gave President Wilson an Easter egg is to be rewarded. Well if the

interest and political activities of a esteemed executive never gets any-

school-bred and college-bred country thing worse than an egg handed him

nave been turned toward the ham- he can afford to reward the donors

mering down of freight rates. If

something had been done about elim

inating that 24.85 cents on cherries and a similar part of the cost to the

consumer of vegetables, eggs, butter.

poultry, meat, fruit, and other neces

saries, the cost of living might be quite another master today. Most of the complaints against the rates of carriers made before the Interstate Commerce Commission and before the state commissions have been made by the middle-men, and most of the decisions of the commissions have tended to strengthen and entrench them. The noice of conten

tion which has all but cracked the

firmament during the fast ten years

has not been, as so many think, the sound of combat between freight-

payer and carrier between a people struggling to be free and predatory

corportaions fighting to maintain

thralldom. The strife has been

chiefly of middleman against middle

man, with the carriers and the real

freight-payers bearing the burden Railway Age Gazette.

BEFORE the summer is over Con gress, in order to have its tariff de

bates read, may be compelled to pass

a law requiring the newspapers to print them between the scores on the

sporting page

YONKERS man was arrested for kissing his wife on the Btreet. Well

that's no place to kiss a lady

A "DRY" ELECTION.

The Indiana cities that have been

scrapping over the wet and dry propo

sitions all these years should have

saved up their elections until now.

Wonder how many of them would

go dry after a flood like last weeks?

One guess.

A PRESIDENT of Honduras has died a natural death. But he could have avoided that disgrace by the

simple expedient of moving into

Mexico. .

RECALLING THE CENTURIES. Those who can should witness the

Pathe Freres' wonderful motion-film,

'Notre Dame de Paris," adapted from

Victor Hugo's masteryiece of that

name, published in 1831.

The great French novelist wove his

story about the stately Cathedral of Our Lady. His romance takes the

reader back to 1483, toward the close of the reign of tho eleventh Louis.

At that time this magnificent edifice,

which has looked down upon the stormy history of France for 730

years, had already witnessed the passing of more than three centuries.

Hugo conducts the reader through the aisles, the galleries and the roofs of the cathedral; along crooked streets long since vanished and of

others still existing. And, interwoven through all is the tragedy of the dancing girl, the archdeacon of the cathedral, the captain of the king's guard, and the hunchback, Gringoire.

l Wonderful indeed is the tale but

ANOTHER serious problem, which

may yet keep Woodfow Wilson awake nights, is, whether or not this nation

shall recognize the reign of Emmeline

Pankhurst in England. i

down his re

PITY 'TIS TRUE. The republican boss of a state county has announced

tirement from politics. Well, we must confess it looks lik

a darned good time for disappearing,

as far as republicans go.

Today's Birthday Honors. Congressman Charles Henry Burke

of South Dakota was born on a farm in Genesee county, N. Y., April 1, 1861; was educated in the public schools of Batavla, N. Y. ; moved to Dakota ter

ritory in 18S2; entered, and, settled up

on a nomesteaa in ueaaie county, ana

moved to Hughes county in March.

1883: was admitted to the bar in 1886, but has never actively engaged in the practice of law, having had charge of closing up the affairs of a farm loan company, and engaging in a general real estate and Investment business; Is married and has three daughters and one son; was elected to the legislature

In 1894 and re-elected In 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth congdesses; was defeated in the convention in 1906, but was again nominated

in June, 1908, in a state-wide primary.

ans elected to the Sixty-first and re

elected to the Sixty-second and Sixtythird congresses.

S0

665

35

285

The Day in HISTORY

April 1 191 0--Nepoleon

In II In lory. married the Arch

duchess Maria Louisa. 1815 Prince Otto von Bismark, German statesman, born. Died .July 30, 189S. 1839 Benjamin Pierce, governor of New Hampshire and father of Presi-

REAL ESTATE TRAMSFEfiS

EAST CHICAGO.

Lot 23, blk 1, Osborne add. Wil

liam C. Caldwell to Glen F. Redman ., .... l

Lot 15, blk 7, n w 32-37-9, Paul

B. Lipinski to Stanislaw Anton 1

Lot 41, blk 5, n w 32-37-9, East-

Chicago Co. to Joseph Wadas 37.50

Lot 18, blk 7, n w 32-37-9. East

Chicago Co. to John Bernal. 380

Lot 32, blk 4. s w 29-37-9, John

J. Snyder t John C. Goulding.. 2,000

Lot 4. blk S, n e 32-37-9. Charles

Jordan to George H. Jordan... 1,500

HAMMOND. Lots 38, 39, blk 1. Towle's 2nd add, Oliver W. Holmes to Se-

weryn J. Molicki 650

Lot 39. e lot 38, blk 1, Highland add. Max L. Kline to Flotilla B. Swaim 4.000 W 25 ft. lot 12, e 12 ft. lot 11, blk 2. Rediv. Helberg's Oak Ridge add. Charles Beyers to Otto Duelke 2.275 Lot 18, blk 3. Riverside add, Marlon H. Carmody to Anna C. Moon shower 1,400 GARY. Lot 28, lk 3. Condit-McGinnlty 7th f dd, Condlt-McGinnity Realty Co. to Joseph Stalmnh.. 700 Lot 13, ilk) 103, Gary Land Co.'s 1st sub, Giary Land Co. to Caroline LJ Shearer. .. , .' 725 1 NEW CHICAGO.

Lot 15, blk 11, 3rd add. Marinos Karas to Nicholas BUanes 400 HAMMOND. Lot ll.i blk 3, Towle & Young's add. Ola May Emmerlihg to Sebastian Rascher 2,500 W Vi lot 2. blk 1, Sohls add, Mary Deeter Vieth to August Schreiber 1 Lot 16, blk 2, C. Hotiman's 2nd add, George Drackert to William jKleihege 1 Lots 19, 20, Marble's sub. Towle & Young's add. Frank A. Stakemiller to Henry Soelker. 1

TOLLKTON. Lots 17, 16, s 6 ft. 3 In. lot 15, Co.'s 6th add, Ora L. Wildermuth to Emma P. Beutelspacher Lots 1 to 10, blk 11, Toll, on the Hill. Harry King to Ida Rettis GARY. Lot 31, blk 4, 6th So. Broadway add. So. Broadway Land Co. to Henry Graham WHITING. Lot F. Davidson's Western add, Charles D.' Davidson to " John ' Szymanski

JACKSON PARK. Lots 45. 46, Seroscynski's 1st add, Timothy W. Englebart to Walter Acker and C. K. Schmidt... 1 INDIANA HARBOR. Lots 4. E, 6. 32, 33, blk 72, Wil

liam J. Whinery to John D. Kennedy 30.00 EAST CHICAGO. Lots 52 to 54. blk 4, n e 29-37-1. East Chicago Co. to Annie Joyce 1 Same real estate as last deed, Anna Joyce to George Oswego 1,700 Lot 15. blk 5, s w 39-37-9. Bast

Chicago Co. to Vincent Conces. Lot 5. blk 1. Walsh 2nd add. Redmond D. Walsh to Bernard Heytnan Lot 7. blk 1 ,n e 29-S7-9. East Chicago Co. to Piotr Troyanow-skl

Lot 4. ex. n 184 ft. lot 6, blk 7. n e 29-37-9, Adam J. Dittlinger er to Emll Swanson 2,400 TOLLESTON. Und. 4 lot 5, blk 15, Co.'s 4th add, Theodore Nering to Nlcol Nering , 2.J00 Und. Vx lots IS to 16. blk 4. Prldmore. Orr & Ullrich sub, Richard T. Davis to Anna H. F. Ullrich 1 Lot 9. blk 2, Co.'s 5th add. Steve

Yurchenko to George Szabolcslk ,

GARY. Lot 6, blk 2, Broadway add, Harold E. Hammond to Larney C. Evans 1 HOB ART. Lots 17 to 19. blk 24, Geo. & Wm. Earle's Lake George 5th sub, Gary-Hobart Investment Realty Co. to Anthony J. Larson 540 HAMMOND. Lot 0, s M. lot 61, Stafford St Trankle's Sth add. Louis H. Stafford to Americas F. Murden 600 Lots 11, 12, blk 2, Homewood add.

Mary E. Nelson to Mary R. Cox 6,000 Lots 4 to 6, blk 2, Oakland add, Becker & Tapper Realty Co. to Clarence I. Hoffman Const. Col. 267.50 Lot 11. Stafford & Trankle's 6th add, Louis H. Stafford to Mary Dunfce 300 Lot 13, blk 2, Towle & Young's 3rd add, Mary M. Dahlkamp to John M. Dahlkamp 909 Lot 44, blk C Hoffman's 2nd add, Clara Rucleski to Fred Barnett I INDIANA HARBOR. Lots 3. 4, blk 8, 3rd add, Pauline -

M. Wood to Wincent Andzeiew-

Lot 4. blk 54, Charles Saager to Llppe Levin 550 EAST CHICAGO. Lots 25 to 34, blk 1, Osborne's add, Walter Acker to Clarence W. Austin 1

GARY. Lots 19 to 27, 30 to 33, blk 1: lots 1. 5 to 8, 10 to 14. 19 to 32,34. 35, blk 2; lots 1 to 5, 8 to 37. blk 3; lots 1 to 35, blk 4, Sanford Tubbs' 2nd add. Hobart Realty Co. to Fred Seabrlght.. 1 Lots 120. 121. blk 6, Lincoln Park sub, U. S. Land Co. to Eliah Slepatowicz 35

SSI

800

WHY ARE P.EADERT

YOU NOT A TIME