Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 278, Hammond, Lake County, 12 May 1920 — Page 10
Hace Ten. THE T1MFR Worlnrsday. Mav 12. 1920. V
J r 'rat iv Ay .-m ill sum of nii'ticy. 1 Put individual iiivffMrs wiil also be
WISH THE MAILS WERE AS UF.r.TTT. AT?
q IIIC IT 1MTQ !;UM''- contenders for the tlrst ohanco AO llib IlAlillO ,,!ir,-!KlSl. sc.n,e ,,f th.- splendid brick
land fr.-.nio tour ;'.p. rt m.-nt houses. These
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as scuii as th.- general public ran get a ehamo ;i t t Iit'in. The price;- include all street improvements i-oid frr in full. is emit rHsttrt
im n bit pur.h!i!f. ftv'tu $.! .oit to $u.. null tho Kt-n.iHl vist.nn of vinK th7 ; t t firt, v.Iim !i im.ms tlt.v m.iy 1' h;nl j rup. r; y n:if r pay frr bis strr-ot 1111-f"i-,in initial . h pa; im-nl -f $i'io.nrt I pi-nvc'tiKMit at. t)i fativ time be is pry!,i $ l.t" n.MO ami tlio rem that will It;- j it, fop In.- boipc. ! c. i . 1 fi-otn Ui'iii will maRc all ;t" thf I.YITDOH.A A TINX DISTRICT su';s iim nt p.iinvls. J In Ilanuii"tiil tho K t rtmiciit conrfnCOST OP DUILDITTO HI Oil jtriU-d all .f its buil'iinss in a 5iriKlo ThT'.- is -itv m!icat ton thnt t!i c'.t vuii,)i !!,, that has Iv.'ii l:ii4.l out aftrr
tin- ub as .f tii -' most ovpPt t4ii n pla'i-
lss than it w.iuM CC5t to fprf.din'ff j is but four blocks away and the Statultboi., t.'d.iy. win bo 4-HKcrly pi. k- d up ai d Stcr-1 Car cnirativ ro inainta.inins
fi)r th uw of th. RonT.iI public tho U.Nn.l.'ia hol.-l. a modfrn host.-lry of Oiio l ooms, v hich has wmo to be a real
mmi uni t y fr-ntT and a cry i'0 ular
I
(. I" hmidiiii; will b- hiKh an.l wdl
irain sm for th to xi la oars ( iii.. ' tt rs. a r.-li 1 1 o.-1 .- and landscape K-ird'-ti'T".
Tlos i- bound t4 4-mi I in tbo hri."!,! il i 'l.iso by is tho C"-a4-ro Mayv.--i.r p irU ii.4-P4 t" all rootals until tin- piaitittl that is n,.v h.Mtij; iiniTfofl by th- !,! ins i"'int is r a. h-sl. Tho da v of Hammond city ortb-ia!. Tbo 1 larmnond
I 4'hi-ap 14 111"- all 44-r th- cmintry is a boaial 4f o.iiaati'in is a!.-n l"inn its j ihi ic i f tto- -iM. Hi iH-4' Wi'.mIs. M.i run ' shaia- by undertaking the imno .liat.- i..n- , I'omo.itiy p. 'in! out That th. so Kia-at j struct nm of a trailo s,1k,o in tho dia-
I cov i rntro-nt bars tins, uhii h arc b. inc J tro t thxt will o.st $ -;rtf.MM.
j MUNSTER 1 1
A characteristic snapshot of Postmaster General Burleson. This recent picture of Postmaster Cer.eral Albert Sidney Burleson '.'.f-ws him dressed as he ha, beet f;r over a quarter of a century. He as carried an umbrella every ilav riln or shine, since he vas force: '.- use a cane temporarily as a your,;' n-.pn. He has worn the same mode! hat far many years until only cn; little store in San Antcnio. Tex . r.n supply hira. His shoes are clJ rryla, too.
CHANCE TO BUY FINE RESIDENCE
1 for b-f-s than cost nn.l for a Huial
Tho
3
mmoiol industrial hich s. hool
I"'' oi temporary pisirieiioo. BIO SA1E MAY 22 AND 23 Tho iiM-fSKiry I- sal blanks that the Rove rnnu iit prc-sordio.s liavo arrivod. tlio 1 r. hminarv work is brjn d-no and tho salo will bo put on May 22 and L'J, Ii -fcardhss of tho woathor. It Is really 1 4,rnai k ablo what a largo number of advam-o inquiries have boon toooivoi. ,nd tho iioiuirK-s como nil i f tho wny frmu Ohieaso and 'from th" rntu-e Calumot district. Tho hiK'n rents that arc l.einfr ohare.l all ep 'hicao an- partn uhitly reflected in tho acluc iiiiuiry fro ,, that sn-tion. n the 'nr.rn-u-p: of tho first dny of the salo applications will bi- takon in tho order mad? with. ..it rr Terrneo or f -n or.
Mis. T. Kl.iotwylt has re-turned home, alter being- at the hospital for several wrks. idie is tec-i-. vt-riug very tapidiy iroiu her operation. Mirs T'farl BurtfB spent the week er.ii at her h'-me in Crown I'ulnt. Mrs. II. K. Ka.'lvi wus in J latum. uo. on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. r. Hrho-in and Mr. and Mis. C Scho.-n spent Saturday ev enin in 1 la iiimon 1. Mr. and Mrs. It. Weathers were in Han.rnon l'on Monday cvi ninj.
Advertise in The Times and ad vertise again. Results come witr. constant effort.
PROGRESSIVE EVERBEARING STRAWBERRY PLANTS
I prow not hint; but I'ro-
gr. ssive .and hae tweKe acr.s of th.m at present and o a n mi ppl y any am. .lint of plants f"'"rair.d. and Ku'iraroco that: you can g-t no bett. r auj wlo re. o i our plants in the spr.iiiK" and th.-y will be t'res'n v. lo n they rea4-h you. and will p row if nr. n.rl v
planted. l'rorrissiva
.-a al t t.. arintr n
tns'ead of w
ti'-M year, am! h.-ar all siininnr until the ground
freezes in th. fall. will iruarante them t. do this or refund youf Money.
PRICES. 15 p'ants Ji en FO plants j 50 1"ri plants 75 2n0 tdants ZZ 5 Oa "00 plants ? fta
. - t S '. ti a r. i .' '
. v.. - - . V ' l'""L 1U.00
rici.t awiv? I r.l t f,'VV!raU-for 1 Prices f;.-.P until t , V large amounts.
V 'i" 1" sent peistpaid on r-ceir.-t of nriop
Send all orders to J. R. BRANT. Phone 12S1Y3. Hammond. Ind. R.F.D. No. 1.
(Continued on page two.) r f v.- days. It is expected that many f t ie local industrial concerns will in-t-rost themselves in looatin their men ::: ihe rifiv hollies. A well known Indiana Harbor industrial concern has in'ited its men to irake a selection of a homo and it wiil out up th money for its purchase, matvarrangements for the employe to pay th" company back in small installments. The very fact that tin? employe of an industry may g-et permanent possession of r. inod-.m comfortable h.mc on a payi;!.t down of only 10 per cent of the t on base price and then may pay out the biilanei. as rent makes it r-cssibh? t.. !'. nance the purchase of a number of 1 omes for valued employes for a eim-
RHEUMATISM
A HOMX CUBS GIVXH BY OKS WHO HAD IT. In the eprinB- of 1S33 I was attacked by Muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism. I suffered as only tlmso who have it know, for er three ears. I trifd remedy af'rr remedy, and do. '.or after iloclor, but such relief as I received was only temporary. Finally. I found a remedy that cured me cumI 1 e I e 1 y . anil it has never r turned.
I ha.e given it to a number who u mre terribly afl'licteil and even H bedridcien with UheumaUsm ai.d it 'A t iuct ea a cure in e very case. J I want f .fry suff'ffr from any H form of rheumatic trouble, to try Q this marvelous licalmi? power. j?l Ivn't send a cent: simply mail M our nam- and address and I will send it free to try. After joi have used it and it has proven itself to fg
kj be that long-le-oked-t'or means of
4'uritl44j year I ii'.-uiridi;.-iii. 4"u may send the price of jt. one dollar, but understand. I do not want your inonev- unless you are perfect I v saiisfied to send it. Isn't that fair? "Why suffer any lunsi-r when positive relief is thus offered you free?
M Don't delay. Write today.
.Mark i-i. .laeKson. .no .ii,r, uurnev Hid.. Syracuse, x. T. Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above statement true. Adv.
j M O N TAN A Stampede
Cat Creek the sensational new oil district is bow the center of
U world wide inter-??t. The early "I bonanza days of Texas and Oki lahoma are being duplicated in
Montana.
MILLIONAIRES in the nakinj
!J industrial frontier. The Giants
of the oil world are mobilizing
il their forces. Within 30 days
Cat CreeK will be the scene of a seething swirl of Titanic activity. WE ARE PIONEERS our 3,500 acres cf Patented Lands, handpicked. represents the
A cream of the field.
I
Shallow drilling, big production.
remarkable oil of hieh value. B I
Your opportunity to snap up our limited offering of shares at 10c par (fully paid and nonasessable) to b? used for IMMEDIATE development. Get QUICK ACTION. Write or wire
for prospectus, map and appli- fj !
cation. Address
Cat Creek Consolidated
Oil Co. of Montana 1442 Main. Lewiston, Mont.
I Subscnne For i lie limes
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By William L Ferris, Vice-President and co-worker in the L. E. Waterman Company from its beginning
The world has always taken an unusual interest in inventors, probably because it recognizes that inventors, as a rule, are unselfish and that whatever reward they may gain through their invention has to be a by-product of a greater service or saving of time and labor to his millions of fellow men and women. Howe invented the sewing machine, but the whole world enjoys the benefit of it. Likewise is the case with Morse and the telegraph; Bell and the telephone; Edison and the electric light; Fulton and the steamship. There is no use trying to arrange them in the order of their importance in the world to-day because to deprive us of r.ny one of them, even for the briefest of periods, would amount to almost a cai amity. I do not hesitate to add the name of
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FRANK D. WATERMAN Lewis Edson Waterman and his invention. Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pen, to this list of world benefactors. The history of Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pen has. a peculiar personal interest for the people of Illino because she can rightly claim Lewis Edson ("atcrman as one of her sons. As a child, he came with his mother and younger brother and settled in Kan-
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to better sen-e a constantly growing number of dealers and users in the middle vcst, and on Monday morning, May 10th, what .will be known as the Waterman Building, at 127-129 South State Street,' will be ready for occupancy. To meet the demand, the Company found it necessary to erect their own building, and on the property directly adjoining the old Palmer House, , a modern, up-to-the-minute seven-story building will become the new Chicago home of the U. E. Waterman Company, and add glory to the best traditions of this splendid old organization. The New York service store of the L E. Waterman Company, at 191 Broadway, known as the Pen Corner throughout the world, has often been said to be one of the most artistically correct and magnificent display rooms to be found anywhere, but the
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kakce and it was in the little old wagon shop, conducted by his brother Elisha S. Waterman that the first model of Water
man's Ideal Fountain Pen was turned out name Waterman started as a man be
in wood. came a pen and is now a world-wide mour, Connecticut, and one in Canada. Back in those old days, the gold pen institution." How true that is can be Ground has been purchased in Newark,
and rubber-turning industries were lo- shown by the great growth oi this truly cated whollv in the East,' requiring that wonderful business. From the earlv be-
the business of fountain-pen making be ginning in the little wagon-making shop ering 500,000 square feet of operating but thc "flection of the man himself
carried to the source of supply, and so in in Kankakee, and the equally insignifi-
WATERMAN BUILDING, 129 SOUTH STATE STREET, CHICAGO
iories; two in New York, two in Sey-
New Jersey, whereon the Company is
about to burld another great factory cov-
FRED S. WATERMAN architects promise to out-do even th'at last crTorr, and Ch?-";7 '"'ill hvf every reason to include this newest addition to its already long list of show places. With the upper floors devoted to stock and assembling rooms, the Company will be better able to handle the great volume of middle-west business, and the new Waterman Building is but another evidence of the keen judgment that anticipates conditions and maizes good the statement satisfied customers everywhere. Mr. Frank D. Waterman, President, and Mr. Fred S. Waterman, Secretary, of thc L. E. Waterman Company, through combining their unusual abilities and mastery of detail, have given evidence of what team-work can accomplish, for after all is said, a man's business is
space. In Chicago, the business was first
the smallest possible way the L. E. Water- cant work-bench at the back of a cigar established and carried on at a desk in
The fidelity of hundreds and hundreds of employees testifies more eloquently
man Company's business was established store on Fulton Street, New York, where in New York. Mr. L. E. Waterman pens were made by hand and the total made his principal headquarters in New output then was 200 in a year to 5,000,York up to the time of his death, while 000 Waterman's Ideals sold during 1919, his brother Elisha S. Waterman, assumed is an achievement that tells its own story, the interest of the Company in the West It would be interesting to show the buildfor the short time he lived. The Chicago ings, step by step and year by year, that office was opened at the same time the have been erected to care for the physical
business was started in New York, and growth of -this splendid industry. The
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the Tear of the Congregational Buok Inan anmmg eie now me personality Store, on Wabash Avenue. After many of the Waterman boys has . fixed itself vears at that point, a new location was uPon the5r organization, found over on State Street, at the present Jt iwhat miSht be tcrmcd the WaterNorth American Building site. When man wa' of doinS things establishing the new North American Building was the highest standards for themselves and being erected, the Company moved to the then living up to them. You know it is Republic Building, going from there to because of these qualities that success has 115 South Clark Street, where offices come to them, and their product, because
for many years was conducted in the most first factory was a little, two-story, frame have been maintained for the past ten a record of stcadilly increasing sales, year
modest circumstances. building; to-day the business of the L. E. It has been said by some writer, "the Waterman Company occupies five fac-
years. Then again it was found neces- after year, and in one country after the sary to seek enlarged quarters in order other, carries its own answer.7
