Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 135, Hammond, Lake County, 23 November 1916 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE TIMES.
rinn-sday. Nov. 23.
" 1 ik.
Get a Can
TO-DAY WiftaJl
From Your Hardware
or Grocery Dealer
5$
THE TIMES' FINANCIAL COLUMN
TTT TV TIT 1- 1ITMIITP
I YORK STOCKS CHICAGO
i GRAIN MARKET, i S .
Xo ember 22. ' oh t son ,10 4', American Beet Sugar lOJ'i merican .Locomotive 91 l naconda 09 S merican Smelting 118 American Tele. Teleg 123 Mrookiyn Rapid Transit S3S4 Baldwin Ijocomotive S44 ''.altimore & Ohio ,, SSg i anadian Pacific . . 171 1 i American Can Co 63 '"handier Motors 112 '"f-ntral Leather H3' 'hesapeake A Ohio , 67'a I'orn Product 25S '"rucible Steel
'Erie 37 ! General Electric 179V j Great Northern 118fc i Illinois Central 104 j.Maxwell Motors 75 Mexican petroleum 108 ; Norfolk an dWestern 139H ! Northern Pacific Ill Pennsylvania Railway 66 T i Pullman 166 ' Republic Steel Sg' i Heading 107 ; I nited States Rubber 66 American Sugar 118 ! Sears-Roebuck 23 ; Southern Pacific 397m ; Southern Railway 287 , Chgo.. Mil. & St. Paul R. K 93V, Texas Ooil 233 ; union Pacific 14?', United Slates steel 125V , I." tali Copper 122 V Western Union 103 Willys-Overland z ; ''lose Chicago grain futures: WHEAT. December I S3 May IBS I July ....158T, ! CORN. ! December 94 May 9 7 J July 97 OATS. December 57 S ; May 624 Chicago live stock: ! HOGS Receipts, 50.000: market, j strong to 5 higher: mixed. 9.10 to 10.- ' 00; good. 9.10 to 9. S3: rough, 9.35 to : 9.55: light, S.40 to 9.65; pigs, 6.25 to ; S.30: hogs tomorrow, 44,000. CATTLE Reecipts, 27,000: market. ; steady to 10 lower; beeves, 6.50 to 12.'00; cows-heifers, 3.65 to 9.50; stockersj feeders, 4.60 to 7.70; Texans. 7.33 to S.T0 : calves. 9.00 to 13.00; canners. 3.75 j to 3.25; western steers, 6.60 to 10.15. j Chicago produce: ; BUTTER Creamery extras. 11 to ;41'; creamery firsts. 40 to 40 '2 ; firsts. 38 to 39; seconds, 36 to 37. EGGS Ordinaries. 39 to 39'; firsts, j 37 to 3?. LIVE POULTRY Fowls. 1 1 to 14; ducks. 3 to 14. geese, 12 to 14. springs, 15; turkeys. 22.
DANGER SIGNALS OF BIO 0L0Q0 Pimples on the face, hunches in the neck, sallow and swarthy complexion, sores, ulcers, mucous patches, copper colored spot, scaly skin affections, constipation, inactive liver, dyspepsia and stomach troubles are all indicu.tions that the blood is poisoned. There Is no remedy offered today to the pun. lie that has so successfully cured these diseases as Number 10 tor The Blood. An old doctor's prescription containing tli ' most reliable alteratives known to medical science. Put up by J. C. Metidenhall, Kvansvll.., Ind.. 40 years a druggist. Sold by Jo-. Weis, Hammond, Ind., and Central Drug Store, Indiana Harbor, Ind. Adv.
RID STOMACH OF
SS.
AND INDIGESTION
Tape's Diapapsin" ends all stomach distress in five minutes.
You don't want a slow remedy when your stomach is bad or an uncertain one or a harmful one your stomach is too valuable; you musn't injure it with drastic drugs. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmlessness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy; stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble has made it famous the world over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor 'n your home keep it handy get a large fifty-cent case from any drug store and then if anyone should eat something which doesn't agree with them: if what they eat lays Pke lead, ferments and sours and forms gas: auses headache, dizziness and nausea; eructations of acid and undigested food remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin come3 in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. Tts promptness, certainty and ease -n overcoming the worst stomach disorder is a revelation to those who try t. Adv.
I B.r United rr. ! NEW YORK. Nov. 22. Two full j months during which stock exchange (trading has averaged over a million shares a day. 129 dollars steel common, 21 cent cotton in the greatest market the cotton exchange has known since
Daniel Sully's pool operation and record trading on curb, insure Wall street
the most prosperous Christmas the present generation on the street has ever known. Not since the trust forming days of 1901 has money flown so freely Into what has become the speculative center of the world. In volumes of business and in easy to spend millions pouring into the pockets of the brokers and speculators the present movement far exceeds the more spectacular 'war bride market" of 1915.
COICILI
FAVOR PIP Lin
There are six scarlet fever cases, three of diphtheria, and one each of smallpox and chicken pox in Hammond at present.
NEW NICKEL PLATE FREIGHT HOUSE The new freigiit facilities of the Nickel Plate Road at the junction of Oakley. Fayette and Russell streets, will open for general use on Saturday morning. November 25th. The new house, platform and team track are modern in every sense of the word and will add materially to the freight facilities of the city of Hammond. A high class, dependable freight service on in and outbound freight will be established. The freight and passenger service of the Nickel Plate Road at Hammond will be handled by Mr. P. Thompson, agent. 1 1 :23:2
No. C47S. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK At Hammond, in the State of Indiana, at the close of business on November 17, 1916.
RESOURCES. Loans and discounts (except those shown on b and C $1,619,675.21 Total loans , 1,619,675.21 .oies and bills rediscounted (see item 53 6,490 00 Herdrafts, secured, i ; unsecured, $1,297.68 ... U. S. Bonds: I'. S. Bonds deposited to secure circulation (par value) 150,0'io.OO I . S. bonds pledged to secure U. S. deposits (par valu 87,500.00 Total u. S. bonds 'lends, Securities, etc.: Ponds other than U. S. bond3 pledged to secure 1. S. deposits 49,000.00 Bonds other than U. S. bonds pledged to secure postal savings deposits 116,000.00 Securities other than lT. S. bonds (not including stocks) owned unpledged 192,824.77 Total bonds, securities, etc .-' ock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 per tent of subscription) Kpal estate owned other than banking bouse Net amount due from approved reserve agents in
New York. Chicago, and St. Louis Net amount due from approved reserve agents in other reserve cities Net amount due from banks and bankers (other than included in 10 or lSi Kxchanges for clearing house Outside checks and other cash Items Fractional currency, nickels, and cents Notes of other national banks Federal Reserve bank notes ,. Federal Reserve notes Lawful reserve in vault and with Federal Reserve Bank Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from U. S. Treasurer Other assets, it any
$1,613,185.21 1,297.63
:37,500.00
92,202.95 85,345.52
8.607.58 957.53 157.19
TOTAL
357,824.77 9,750.00 7.0S7.58
177,548.47 6,949.39
1,114.72 33.000.00 2.000.00 1,000.00 163.S54.S4 7.700.00 S50.52 $2,629,270.76
39.779.67 9.0S7.S6
LIABILITIES. Ctpital stock paid in - Surplus fund Vndivided profits Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid , mount reserved for all interest accrued Circulating notes outstanding Net amount due to banks and bankers (other than included in 29 or 30) Demand deposits! Individual deposits subject to check Certificates of deposit due in less than 30 days ... Certified checks rnited States deposits Postal savings deposits Total demand deposits. Items 33 34 35 36 37 38
S9 and 40 1.270,094.82 Time deposits (payable after 30 days or subject to 30 days or more notice): .Certificates of deposit . 163,144.56 Other time deposits 596,881.63 Total of time deposits. Items 41, 42 and 43 760,026.19
1 50.000.00 175,000.00 30.691.81 5,041.18 145,400.00 93,016.76 1.016,923.76 48,224.10 3.S13.32 125.000.00 76,133.64
TOTAL - Liabilities for rediscounts, Federal Reserve Bank..
Including those with
$2,629,270.76 6,490.00
State of Indiana, County of Lake, ss: I. V. C. Relman. Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. C. BELMAN, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn Xo before me CORRECT Attest: this 22nd dav of November, 1916. A. M. TURNER. DAVID T. EMERY. PETER W. MEY.N, Notary Public. C. KACFMANN. Commission expires Aug. 24. 1919. Directors.
Hammond City Dads Take First Vote on Franchise for Sinclair Cudahy Company Which Will Bring Oil and Gas Through the City. The Hammond city council tast evening passed to second reading the pipe line franchise for the Sinclair Cudahy Refineries Co. which has purchased a site of 110 acres just across the boundary line in East Chicago and is preparing to commence tne construction Of the regions newest industry wiij.-h will employ sec-rat hundred men and will be of wi.ie-soread benefit. Attcrnej Warren Tease, repi esn t ir s
the company, explained to the city council that the pipe line from Tulsa, Okla.. will enter l,ake county at I'yer and pass through Munster and Hammonl to East Chicago. He stated tna village of Djer has passed tne franchise and the court y commissioners have given the right of way from Munster to the Hammond city limits. The village of Munster will act tonight on the matter. Member I nanlmoua. The members of tne Ilainm'ond eoun-! cil were unanimous in support af the pipe line franchise. Attorney Pease explained that the clause giving the company right to maintain telephone and telegraph wires for pipe line business only was a provision thut in all.lik'i-i hood would never be made use of ipso- I far as wire space can be rented from j the Western Union much draper. The clause was inserted in the franchise)
contract so that in the event that the company could not obtain Western Union service It would have an alternate course and be able to have intercommunication between its power plants located every forty miles alons th way. Tiie agreement as signed by the board of public works and Joseph Cudahy, president of the Sinclair Cudahy
Pipe Line Co., and the Sinclair Cudahy Refineries which are kindred firms,
stipulates that the pipe line shall be! HndtrrrAiind anrl for fh mirnnijA nnlv f
of transporting oil and gas. The route tnrough Hammond is over Columbia avenue to Gositlin street and east to the refineries. The pipe line must be laid near the curb and the pavement replaced in the same condition as found. The usual responsibilities named in franchises of the kind fall to the company. As City Attorney Gavit framed the franchise the Interests of the city are well protected by It. Smoke Ordinance. Tne ordinance on smoke abatement was heard at first reading and referred to the Judiciary committee. P.y it the building inspector is made smoke inspector and tbe ban Is put on smoke with a veangencw. Factories, office buildings and railroad engines would have to be outfitted with smoke consumers if the proposed ordinance became a law. A $200 fine is attached. The ordinance is so flamboyant that it provisions would make it a violation to smoke, a cigar without a consumer on it. The traffic ordinance, providing that vehicles be allowed to stand no less than seventy-five feet from a street intersection or a fire plug, was laid over and looks to be about as popular as before it was revised. An amend-
BREAK ft CHILD'S . COLD BY GIVING MOP OF FIGS Cleanses the little liver and bowels and they get well quick.
When your child suffers from a cold don't wait; give the little stomach, liver and bowels a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When cross, peevish, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, eat or act naturally; if breath is bad. stomach sour, give a teaspoonful of "CaPfornia Syrup of Figs." and in a fon hours ail the clogged-up, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well. playful child again. If your child coughs, snuffles and has caught cold or is feverish or has a sore throat give a good dose of "California Syrup bf Figs" to evacuate the bowels no difference what other treatment is given. Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless "fruit laxative." Millioins of mothers keep it handy because they know its action on the stomach, liver and bowels Is prompt and sure. They also know a little given to-day saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a aO-cenl bottle of "California Syrup of Figs." which contains directions for babies, children of all ages and for grownups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get the gen
uine, made by "California Fig Syrup j Comnanv." Adv.
I
DAY
URDAY
HANKSGIVING, Certainly is
as important to the outer
as to the inner man. A good suit or overcoat is as essential to the comfort and well-being: of the first as a good dinner is to the latter. And while we are content to leave the turkey and the mince pie to mother or the good wife, when it conies to the clothes-that,s us.
Kirscbbaum Clothes lOOfo All Wool SPECIAL, SALE Suits and Overcoats $25. value $19.95 $22.50 valueS 18.50 $20. value $17.50 R!ow is lyour opportunity tolhuy your winies apparel at a gg'oat saving. ESo not delay before it is too late.
THings Men Need Por Thanksgiving
FURNISHINGS SWEATERS V-neck roll collar $3.00, $3.50, 54.00, $4.50, $5, $6, $7. $8. GLOVES Undressed kir chamois $1.50, $1.75, $2, $2.50 and $3.00. UNDERWEAR 50c, $1, 81.50, $2 up to $3. HOSIERY 15c, 25c, 5Cc, 75c and $1.00. SILK AND WOOL SHIRTS $1.50 up to $3.50.
HATS. A Complete Line of New Soft and Stiff Hats. STETSON $3.50 up. CROFUT AND KNAPP, $3.00 UP. ITALIAN BORSALINO, $4.00 NAGDEM AN SPECIAI $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00.
SHOES Shoes here achieve a position of undisputed pre-eminence among local footwear displays. STETSON SHOES REGAL SHOES PACKARD SHOES THOMPSON SHOES Black, Tan and Chocolate $3, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, f 5 to $7.C0.
We Give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps
Fri. and Sat, Double Stamps
Nagdemans
Clothes lop
15! Sfa'O!.
Hammond In ,
Fri. and Sat. Double Stamps
ment changing tiie name of Charlotte tieet from its north end to May street to "Maywood avenue." was attached to the street re-naming ordinance on motion of Count iiman Hoone, and the act sent to second reading. Councilman nil!ey introduced the question of the need of a runabout automobile for Chief of Police Austgen and nis captains:. The matter. was referred to the fmanf committee with the board of police commissioners. It took tlie council over an hour to handle the purely routine business of ratifying contracts for material for the new 38-inch water main and the appropriating of additional monies to the various funds to tide the city over until t he first of tne car. The (ontract for a pew boiler at the pumping station to cost $!20 was read for ratification and passed to final reading. The franchise for the construction of a switch track by the Indiana Harbor Kelt Railway across Marble and Fisher streets, was ratified. Councilmen Edp.r. Kolauko, Ueiiiey, I.everenz. Muir. Kockler. Boone. Plageman. I.und, Nordstand and Eggers were present. DOCTORS TO SEE WAR REELS Six reels of war surgery, takn in the hospitals of France but not permitted for exhibition in the allied countries, and on exhibition in the United States only before students and medical bodies, will be shown at the Tenth District Medical society meeting at the Hammond Country club this evening as an exiraordinary feature. The pictures have been shown. only a few times in tbe middle west. The subjects Include: Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller; Foundation with the American P.ed Cross in France, demonstrating his latest methods; plastic surgery of the face and jaw; corrective exercises devised especially for the cure of functional nervous condition contracted in the trences; extraction of a shrapnel ball from the region of the heart; functional conditions contracted from life in the trenches; American method of bone grafting as performed in F.uropo war
hospitals by Dr. Fred H. Albee of XeV was employed York. ! Conkey plant.
as a printer at th'
Funeral of Wm. A. Spring.
I The funeral of William A. Spring is ! to be held tomorrow with services at
the Stewart chapel at 9:30 and at tne chapel "at Oak Ridge cemetery, Chicago, later. Rev. C. J. Sharp will have charge of the service in Hammond and the Masons in Chicago. Interment will be made at Oak Ridge.
BUILDING PERMITS Peter tloebel is erecting two $3,000 frame dwellings on Superior street. Roy C. Witter is the contractor and H. A. Weakley owner of a frame bungalow to be erected in 1338 Amy avenue, to cost $2,500. A frame cottage will be put up in 1122 Indianapolis boulevard by Wiiliam Thomas for Smith-I'.ader-Davldson, costing $1,600.
Come On Back Warton. Mrs. Pearl M. Bailey of Soutn Chirp go, complained to the police that a Clarence D. Warton of S69 Erie atret, came to her home last Sunday and that her daughter while plaving ball put her wrist watch in the pocket of bis coat. Mrs. Bailey desire.) that tne police find Warton and set the wrist watch for her. The police say that Warton
i BOONE TO DEFEND MRS. ROSIE HITZ
Attorney D. K. Boone lias been retained to defend Rosie Hitz, the girl bride who shot Louis Champa, her former lover. Tne woman is held on a charge of felonious assault and It is said Champa will recover from the w ounds. EP WORTH LEAGUE ENTERTAINED With readings and music, the Kpworth League of the First Methodist church entertained a good sized audience in the church auditorium Tuesday evening. A former Hammond woman, Mrs. Margaret Stevens Smith, now of Chicago and ohe of that city's leading concert sopranos thrilled the audience with her art In two groups of songs.
CITY BRIEFS. The W. C. Patton Gas & Oil company is erecting a $15,000 factory building on ground leased from the I. H. B. Ry on West State street, beyond the Hammond brewery plant. Jasper Workinger, aged 54, a widower for more than ten years, a tailor, died of penumonla in St. Margaret's hospital yesterday. The remains will be shipped to Joliet tomorrow for burial. Jasper and Frank, his sons, survive the father. Workinger's place of residence was
j above the Model Clothing store on Hoh-
man street. The board of public works has at last received assurance that the Chicago Erie railroad will comply with its demands that it install night and day watchmen at the Highland street crossing. The B. & O. C. T. R. R. has already placed a watchman at its Columbia avenue crossing as ordered by the board of works.
UNDERGOES OPERATION.
j Sylvester Bellany. aged 23. 547.1 43rd street. West Hammond, underwent an
operation at St. Margaret's hospital today for appendicitis. Drs. Buchanan and Mikesch were the surgeons.
Hammond Marvels at Astounding Story Local people marvel at this story or a business man: "I had to quit work because of stomach catarrh. Everything I ate fermented and soured. Dieting did no good. Finally I tried buckthorn bark, glycerine. etc.. as mixed in Adler-i-ka. ON'E SPOOXFUL helped me INSTANTLY." Because Adler-i-ka flushes the ENTIRE alimentary tract it "relieves ANY CASK constipation, sour stomach or gas and prevents appendicitis. It has QUICKEST action of anything we ever soli. Otto Negele, druggist. Calumet Ave. & Fiyetl street. Adv.
MAX BLOOM'S HORSE NOW HAS A COLT Manager Ixiveridge of the Hammond Orpheum Theater stated today that Max Bloom, the tabloid comedian who is a well known favorite here, is the proud owner of a young and promising colt. SIsx Bloom's horse. "Betty", has been seen here in numerous productions, mainly, "The Sunny Side of Broadway." The colt came while
'Bloom was rehearsing h:s new- show.
"A Dog Gone Dangerous Girl" in Chicago this week. The new show will be displayed at the Orpheum on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. Five acts of good vaudeville are on the bill the last half of this wefli storting tomorrow
Dandruff Heads j Become Hairless j If you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do m.uch good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sur way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring': use enough t moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the linger tips. By morning, most if not sll, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications -will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every singie sign and trace of It. You will find. too. that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquij arvon at any drug store. It i inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never
1 fails. Adv.
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