Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 44, Hammond, Lake County, 8 August 1913 — Page 13
Friday, August 8. 1913.
THE TIMEa 13
GLASS IN MUCH DANGER Okcar Flageman had the shattered glass window In his Hohman street barber shop replaced yesterday afternoon and was viewing the work when a motor oar climbod the sidewalk and started for It. The fighting councilman put up a Kreat battle and with
titlER TS!
Direct from our Packing House to you, thus saving you the Middleman's Profit.
UEMLEM
Special Only for ',5919 NO. 1 FRESH PORK LOIN, per pound NO. 1 FRESH PORK OUTTS, per pound NO. 1 FRESH STE,WINQ CHICKENS, lb... NO. 1 VEAL ROAST, per pound NO. 1 VEAL STEW, per pound LAMB STEW, per pound... NO. 1 FORE QUARTER LAMB, per pound.... NO. 1 HIND QUARTER LAMB, per pound NO. 1 LEG OF LAMB, per pound I 4c 1 4c 14c 13c lie ..6c 8c 10c 14c lie 10c Sweet Pickled Bean Pork, per pound...... No. 1 Sugar Cured Corn Beef, per pound Jelke's Good Luck Butterlne, 2 lbs 35c
Moxley's Daisy, A 1 CAN PORK AND 9d 2 pounds for.. 5.C BEANS, 15c 2 for faUU We own and operate forty different ttoree throughout the country. Packing House at Peoria, III.
5 jHaa5Bigl-S " I m $s? z iiii'iii!!. 11! p?ilfiSTl ml m
To get that comfortable "homey" look in a bedroom and at the same time give it the appearance of good taste you need a dresser or chiffonier of the right kind. Tha fashion in this class of furniture has charged in recent times. Come in and let us show you some of the latest styles. Cozy homes furnished from cellar to roof with the latest from the best factories. Everything fashionable and in the best taste. Our prices are right they HAVE TO BE competition is too keen. Just as satisfactory goods are carried here as in the bjg city department stores or mail order, houses and you have the additional guarantee of our local reputation, on which our whole future depends. SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY OF DRESSERS AND CHIFFONIERS. TEN DAY SPECIALS
Solid Oak Chiffonier, 15.00 value. our price only . 8.25 id rubbed Solid Oak Dresser, hand rubbed and polished, 19.00 value, our price... 10.00
II V, o
HAMMOND. IND. 158 East State Street
the aid of a constituent or two was able to head It off. The original pane of glass was broken by a boozy fellow who tried to kits the barber pole. The pola in trying to repulse his advances fell backwards through the window, Oscar says that if the auto, which was driven by C. A. Lockwood, had gone through his shop ho would have claimed the whole automobile for damages.
MEATSI Saturday, Aug. 9 v MEAT TALK If the meat we eell could talk, it would soon convince you that our cuts are always the best. Our meat is proud of its ancestry. It comes from WELL-FED, HEALTHY CATTLE directly to your table. They are prime meats and just full of nourishment. It will cost you no more to enjoy a savory steak or roast, but they will Rive you better satisfaction, it you buy them of us. RIB BOILING BEEF, per lb No. 1 Sugar Cured Jewel Bacon, per pound. 7c 12c 10-LB PAIL NO. 1 PURE OPJfk LARD, 125 5",b Pai'...OUC arxD.s'.L.EAF........i.oo NO. 1 LAMB CHOPS, 4 fti . per pound NO. 1 BEEF POT 4 f 4 . ROAST, per lb U" 1 C STRICTLY FRESH LIVER, J" per pound JU NO. 1 S1PLOIN STEAK, per pound FRESH HAMBUT.GER STEAK, per pound NO. 1 SUGAR CURED REG. HAMS, per lb NO. 1 SUGAR CURED CALL HAMS, per lb.... NO. 1 SUGAR CURED BREAKFAST BACON, lb. 15c 9c 18c 1 3c 18c NO. 1 CAN SALMON, large (QfZ can, 10C 3 cans for faJC ARMOUR'S VERIBEST LARGE Beautiful Bird's Eye Maple Dress ers, 35.00 value, our price 9.00 nut DressBeautiful Circassian Walnut Dress er, 35.00 value, our price ... 22.50
i mm
merer Young Hammond Man Had Been All Over the World and Was Exponent of Wanderlust That Could Not Control. He (Special to Thb Times.) Rensselaer, Ind.. Aug. 8. Misses Flo Conklin and Maud Jones, of Ft. Wayne, arrived here yesterday morning, to identify the corpse of Clem Ensley, the young Hammond man. who waa killed by a Monon train east of Pleasant Ridge some time Tuesday night. Miss Conklin is the sister ot Guy Conklin, a piano and musical instrument dealer at Ft. "Wayne, and Mrs. Conklin is the mother of Ensley, she having been twice married. Miss Jones is a friend and accompanied Miss Conklin for companionship. They were taken directly to the Wright undertaking parlors, where they identified the body of the young man, his face not being so badly bruised but that it was readily recognised. The absence of the first two fingers of the right hand and tattoo marks on his left arm were also positive identification marks, as also was the letter which the man's mother had written to him the day before he was killed. Ensley was only 25 years of age. but his head was quite bald and this made him appear considerably older. The young ladles who came for the body reported that the boy had been given a fair education and that he had many advantages, being an only child. He was possessed of a love for travel. however, and had been all over the country and almost all over the world. The tattoo marks on his left arm were received in England some years ago. Above a girl's picture on his left arm and in plain letters was tattooed "Ethel C," but neither Miss Conklin nor Miss Jones were able to say what young lady of his acquaintance bore that name. They said that Ensley waa a great reader and read good books, not trashy ones, and was an intelligent and interesting man, but that his wander ings had been the cause of much con cern to his mother and that the outcome was not very much of a surprise, Ensley had lost his fingers some years ago while working in a factory at Ft, Wayne. He had not been horns since last Christmas, but had been in Kansas until recently when- he returned to Hammond. He had written to tell his mother where he was and it is believed he was on his way to Ft. "Wayne when he met death. His mother was at Hamilton, Steuben county, . visiting relatives when she wrote and it was at that point that the message telling of his death was sent. Mrs. Conklin had returned to Ft. Wayne, but was notified Wednesday morning. The body was shipped to Ft. "Wayne, leaving Rensselaer on the S o'clock train, and will be taken to Fleasant Lake, Steuben county, where he was born, for burial. WOMEN WANT VOTES. Conkeyville women want the vote. What's more their husbands want them to have it. And further than that they are going to get it, at least in community affairs. Last evening Mrs. McConnell of "Van Buren street had all the folks at her home at a meeting which was strictly for women. It was there that the male inhabitants of Conkeyville re ceived their first dose of suffrage rule. While it was an open meeting not a man got a word in, not even between talks. First Worker Crin Prise. Mrs. Ray Wells was presented with a sliver set of fourteen pieces ror pio neer work in the suffrage cause in her neighborhood. Mrs. Wells was first president of the Monroe chapel socie ty. After the talks a two course luncheon was served by the men. That clapped the climax. Every man jack or them went Home ana kicked the cat. But they're in for it now. Once woman gets her hand In its all off. The women in Conkeyville are all church workers and the best wives and mothers in the world and If they say they want the vote what can the men, who are not all good church workers do? Nothing, absolutely nothIng. Being good fathers they are their daughters husbands and kind up against it for two are taking a stand by mother. Flan I!lg Picnic. The neighborhood civic league which met last night is arranging for a picnic at Lake Front Park for the benefit of the Monroe street chapel at
R n
which their husbands are going along.
One nice thins about the suffragist movement in ConkeyvlUe is that the women do not exclude their husbands from the fold. When the South Side Improvement Association meets again it is said that women will set in the gathering and take part in the voting. A. 0. 0. H. Organized. At a meeting of the Irish folk of Hammond last night at All Saint's Hall a lodge of A. O. O. H. was organized. Fine talks were made by I'. Bellley, John Kane, J. E. Fitzgerald and others. The officers are: John Carroll, president. Christopher Moran, vice president. Eylvester Leaky, recording secretary. Tatrick J. Itooney, financial secre tary. John J. Malloy, treasurer. Robert Emmet Kelly, chaplain. Frank Dally, sergeant at arms. John Dlnlgan, doorkeeper. , B. Galvln, marshall. BASEBALL FANS FREE AT TOBACCO STORES "Bull" Durham Week Being Celebrated in Calumet Region. J Martin of the American Tobacco Company, is in Hammond and vicinity this week, advertising o-d "Bull" Dur ham Tobacco. This week, at tobacco dealers all over town, purchasers of a 6c bag of ""Bull" Durham are being presented with servlcable fans, which have been dubbed "Fans for Fans." The name is flue to the fact that on each fan there appears the likeness, in colors, of some famous baseball player. These fans have made a big hit with both men and women fans, who are collecting the likenesses of their favorite players. "Do you know," said Mr. Martin, to a Times reporter, that 'Bull' Durham is the most extensively handled article in the world? Sounds pretty big, doesn't it; and yet it la a fact. More than 600,000 dealers handle "Bull" Durham in the United States alonw. "You might think that salt, or sugar, or flour was more extensively sold than 'Bull but such is not the case. Salt and other products are sold only by grocers, of which there are perhaps quarter of a million in this country, 'Bull' Durham is sold by nearly all gro cers, and by tobacco stores, restaurants, news stands and other places bo that the total sums up about 600,000. "Last year the total sales of this famous tobacco were 852,000,000 sacks, nearly a million for every day on the calendar. It is the "universal' luxery being smoked by every class, from col lege professor or millionaire to the cow boy on the plains. It is a regular ra tion in the Army and Navy, and a bag of "Bull sticking out of the sailor's blouse or the soldier's khaki suit, is i familiar sight. "Better buy a 'bag of "Bull" a your dealer's this week and get one o the baseball fans. Improvements Made. Roosevelt avenue residents will neve forget Thb Timbs for its exposure of conditions existing at Columbia Park in connection with the city dump that is located there. As a result of the publicity -the following things wi done by the city. Garbage piles In park covered by sand after being burned. Dump moved across the river where it is less offensive. Slight improvements made in park, benches cleaned up. Of course things are far from ideal in the neighborhood of the dump bu a change for the better is noticed. Ham marid is built up solid to Columbia Park and the river and the citlsena there say that the city dump exists right unde their collective noses without excuse. Baileys to Live Here. A valuable acquisition was made to the Kenwood colony when Waldo C. Bailey of East Chicago purchased th corner of Kenwood avenue and Mor alne street. Mr. Bailey is a member of the Ham mond Country Club and is taking up his residence in Hammond on accoun of the advatages that are offered for wholesome out of doors sport at th country cltrb, only a few blocks from Kenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey will be a valua ble acquisition to the social circles Hammond. Mr. Bailey is assistant sup erintendent of the Grasselll Chemical Company at East Chicago. He regards the cities of Hammond Whiting and East Chicago as one community and believes that citizen of one town Is really a citixen of all three. Look for Tire Thieves. Yesterday the Hammod police department were on the look out for a Thomas automobile ccontalnging five men who were charged with stealing three automobile tires from a garage at South Bend. Word was received from South Bend that the automobile was . headed this way and to place the men AN HONEST LOAF full weight bread baked from pure wheat flour is what you seek, what you're entitled to get. Do get it here, because It's the only kind we turn out. It will pay you to trade with us, for you'll get 16 ounces to the pound when you buy here. If you question that statement buy a single pound, a single loaf, and, prove it for yourself. The Hammond Modern Bakery 86 Stat Street. Phone 26S. BAKERS & CONFECTIONERS. HAMMOND, - - IND.
nder arrest. The machine is owned by
the Slegle Taxi Company ot Chicago, but no trace of it was seen in Ham mond. Will Shoot Sunday. aiemDers or the Hammond Gun C1UB will hold their regular serai-weekly shot at Sharpshooters park Sunday afternoon and providing the weather man does not interfere the members are anticipating an enthusiastic time. A feature of the day will be double target shooting. The Lake George Gun Club will also hold their regular wekly shoot at Kindles Grove Sunday morning and afternoon. Everything ia in readiees for their first annual picnic at Kindles Grove Saturday afternoon and evening. PROJECT IS QUIESCENT Mrs. H. E. Granger, president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, has been confined to a sick bed for the two weeks past and the selling of stock in the new hospital has been temporarily suspended. It is planned to make a united effort in September and the leaders believe that they can make it a go, having pledges from prominent men for .large subscriptions of stock. Dr. Mary E. Jackson is In Europe traveling in the interests of the Ham mond W. C. T. U. that they may have up-to-date information on the scientific management of hospitals. The Frances Wlllard hospital ot Chicago has taken the project under its wing and will aid in the organization. Golf Events. Beginning next Saturday a series of four handicap matches will be played for the August cup. The cup will be won by points, medal play with regular handicaps. The winner each Sat urday will score as many points as there are players that day: the tecond man will score one point less; the third man one potnt leas, and so on down to the last man. who will score one point. Players who are tied will score the top points at the tie, and the point below will be disregarded down to the player who Is next under the tie. Going Into Vaudeville. The Columbia quartette, a local vo cal combination. Is going into vaude ville thl& fall to sing tor twenty or twenty-five minutes twice a day on the big circuit. The big four but recently returned from a concert tour which was successful from every standpoint. Tom and Will Warrllow, Louis Scheerer and Will Humpher compose the quartette. They have as their trainer and director A. W. Cords, and sing every evening in his studio at the Hammond building. DISALLOWS THE CLAIMS Refere in Bankruptcy Harry C Sher. idan of Frankfort, who sat" as special master in some of the claims against the Calumet Institute has returned his findings and disallowed the claims of John Brown, the Crown Point banker. Mrs. Elizabeth Cree, and Albert Put ney. Mr. Brown held a second mortgage for $5,200 and Mrs. Cree claimed $1,300 money by both having been advanced according to their statements rith the understanding that it was to be ap piled on the building. The claim of the Prof. Putney, author of the Law Li brary of his name which was used in his Institute waa disallowed. Mr. Sheridan is scheduled to be in Hammond next 'TOpdneaday afternoon to sit in the matter of the Interstate Construction company. ' LET FOURJJONTRACTS. (Special to Thb TiMBa.) Crown Point, Ind., Aug. 8. County comlssioners left early this morning in motor cars for an. inspection trip over several bridges and roads that are said to be in need of reconstruction. Contracts were let yesterday for the building of four roads, one the Randolph road to Courtright, another the Rusell road to Port. the Rennault road to Heine and the Humpher road to Torti. A Great Picnic. A storm that threatened to break at ny rr.inute yesterday forenoon and afternoon formed over Lake county ana kept down the attendance of doctori' and their wives at the medical society picnic in Lake Front park. In fact the clouds in the sky cut the crowd in half. Thpse who went in spite of weather indications enjoyed the outing Im mensely. There were about twentyftve physicians and an equal number of women. Mrs. Thomas Kohr of Robertsdale won the prize for the largest lunch basket, Mrs. Andrew Hoffman of Hammond won a prize for guessing the average age of men, and Mrs. C. W. Hoffman won In guessing the average age. of women. The spring chicken seasort was offi cially opened per custom by the picnic oi Qoctirs. i ney patronizea xne not dog stand in spite of the fact that lunoh baskets contained choice fry. The beach was popular as ever. As for the prizes you will have to ask the ladies later on. Board Meets Today. A busy morning session of the board this morning cleared up a number of city matters that have been on deck for a few days. The gist of business
was the largest of any recent meeting. Contracts from the Tri-Clty Electric company for the Hohman street lights, from Ahlborn for the paving of Glendale and from the Calumet Sewer Construction company for Logan street sewers, were accepted along with bonds to cover the improvements. Bids were opened on the Logan street section "B" walks and the contract awarded to Newell Brothers. The work of building walks on Dearborn street will be done by Nash Brothers. S. E. Green was given the job of
inspecting the Pine street walks and Herman Gross placed an inspector on the Beal avenue sewer. Another important action of the meeting was the laying over till September 6 the Kennedy avenue widening matter.
32 r!ifH u IV ft UJUU OF
n
FIRST SMW11$3
OF
FOB THE FALL SEASON 1913 They're here, ready for you, a great variety of the new " , FALL 1913 STETSON SOFT AND STIFF HATS. Advance styles. We pride ourselves on being well in front with the new styles. c . Come in and look them over. As usual the largest stock of Hats shown, in the city.
0 my
"HAMMOND'S BEST CLOTHIERS"
Eugene A. Grisul
DEALING IN GROCERIES, MEATS AND HARDWARE 276 State St., Corner Sohl and State Sts., Phone 480 Hammond, Indiana
Pure Comb Honey, Qflp per comb 4Uu Monsoon Prepared Mustard, quart' 1 flf jar IUU Van Camp's Soups, all flavors, 3 cans LUv 20-Mule Team Borax, onepound H n package Ill Light House Washing Powder, 1 1 A 3 packages 11 Rumfords' Baking Powder, one- pound "1 Qf can I Fox River Evaporated Milk, OC. 3 cans 4uu Best Creamery Butter, Saturday, Q fl f per pound OUU Eggs, direct from the country, OOp per dozen .tu Eagle Brand ORf Catsup, 3 for ZUb Day Light Brand Baking Powder, i-lb 1 QC Water Queen Early June 3 cans: Luw Try a Pound of Our 28c Coffee, QQp Saturday .,uu Quaker Corn Flakes, packages ul Flotilla Floating or Glyerine Tar Soap, tt 2 bars ub
A Gaa Range doe away with dlrwNo. Ind. Gaa & Wac Co.
Saturday evening the members of the Dorcas Lodge of Rebekahs wi'l meet in the I. O. O. F. Hall in East State street for their regular weekly meeting. 3 THE ii My Wife's Salad Dressing a 15c bottle 4 fn for................ UC Fancy Hand Pick Navy Beans, j" per pound .Ob Dill or Sour Pickles, 4 ()n per dozen U C Brick or American Cheese pound . . . 18c Argo Starch, Sat- 4 4 urday, 3 pkgs for. .IIU Peanut Butter, once 4 0.' more, per pound. . . I mU Armour's or U. S. Mail Soap, QCn 7 bars ,Jli Try a Sack Our Cream Flour, CKri 241a-lb sack DOC Best H. E. Granulated Sugar, QOp 5 pounds for LJu Pillsbury, Ceresota, Gold Medal or New Century Flour, H-bbl. sack, 69c; 4 -barrel 4 Q T sack I 3J MEAT DEPARTMENT Leaf Lard, ff 8Va pounds... ..... I .UU Fancy Rib Roast i Tfjn Beef, per lb I 2 if Fresh Dressed . 1 Chickens, per lb. . . I 01 Arnold Bros.' No. 1 Hams, lb.. I $41 Brisket Bacon, per pound I 21 California Hams, 'J QJLn per pound I 01 L Fresh Dressed Spring Chickens and Squabs.
Elyf! IP lij IT
llli
