Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 83, Hammond, Lake County, 24 September 1913 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE TIMES. Wednesday. Sept. 24, 1913 Rvjay FHDadd IH!iijlh Zemtfs fw WEB Stive tEne nDnftieBiiuD rjiy New Store of New and BJp-to-EBate Stoclt of NO URNITUR Which is now Homing in BBaily. To buy conservatively means to see our line first
OPEN
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BEGUN
I am Opening up the Finest furniture Store in Lake County Of? CREDIT. 3 Full Stoch Always on Hand. Call and see, me.
ii
OREMAN
24 Cy. FMSBa Avemstuse
THE FURNITURE MAN
ELOPERS TRAPPED BY OFFICER
took out a marriage license. He then, without further ceremony, according to the police told the girl they had been married and returned ' to Oklahoma. The pair took up their residence in the McCook avenue home, Nowak securing employment at the Llnde Air Products Companys plant where he was at work yesterday when Sergeant Gorman was detailed on the case. Sergeant Gorman learned of where he was working through Balong, who after he had given the Information evidently regretted it. and called up the plant and warned Nowak that the police were after him and that If he had done anything in Pennsylvania or
Homesick and among strangers, most elsewhere than he could be prosecuted of whom could not even speak the Eng-ifor, to flee. The message reached its
lish language, and with all the poetry
taken out of her romance, pretty fif-
object a few minutes before Sergeant
Gorman put In his appearance there.
teen year old Catherine Curray, daugh-jwith the result that on the Sergeant's ter of Georire Carrav an pne-ftvpr of arrival the bird had flown.
Eclinople, Butle County, Pa., who elop- j Figuring that in time Nowak would
u i, mucins aBo wrni ner lover, Joe vislt tne house Sergeant Gorman went Mowak. a few days ago wrote to her . there and waited for several hours, home folks, asking them to forgive thelFlnany through the mother of Balong.
past ana allow her to return to the ( who had her own notion of where the parental roof-tree. fugitive was hiding, a message was The result of all this was the ar-jconveyed to Nowak stating that if he rival yesterday in East Chicago of!WOuld return and be married to the
331 Fillmore street, Gary, Tuesday. Funeral services were held from the Polish Catholic church at 8:30 this morning. Burial was at the Holy Cross cemetery, Hammond. The deceased leaves a widow and two children, 12 and 3 years of age, to mourn his death. Robert Dill, colored, died at the Gary General hospital yesterday. Relatives from Chicago will arrive in Gary today to take charge of the remains at the Gary Undertaking company.
NEGRO BANDITS' DARING CRIME
(Continued from page one.)
promptly stopped by the taxicab robbers and relieved of his money at pistol point. From Second street to Chicago avenue four robberies are known to have been committed. Depredation lit Hammond. The car then sped on at breakneck
tion includes: Bell Manufacturing Co., Ixs Angeles: Roy Ii Bodine, Indianapolis; Frank S. Betz Co., Hammond; The L. D. Caulk Co., Milford, Del.; A. C. Clark & Co., Chicago; Columbus Dental Manufacturing Co., Columbus; Consolidated Dental Manufacturing Co., Chicago; Crown Dental Laboratory, Chicago; Dental Utilities Manufacturing Co., Chicago; Denver Chemical Co., New York; J. Austin Dunn Specialty Co., Chicago; Ft. Wayne Dental Depot, Ft.
student of astrology and a soldier. Leander was in the ministry fiftyfive years and Lafayette one or two less. They are amiable, companionable goodfellows that a young man Instinctively likes. With the world they find no fault and love its accomplishments, the telephone, the motor car and so forth. Say World In Better. "Humanity is better than when I was a boy, people are broader and nobler," said Leander. "This is an age of en-
Curray, the girl's father, and the arrest of Nowak, who today will be taken before the -United States authorities, facing a charge of abduction.
Nowak himself is only nineteen years 1 . - iCatherln
vi age. Incidentally a very neat piece of de
Curray girl in the Catholic church, all would be well. This had the effect of bringine Nowak to the house.
But at this point the irate parent of
e, entered into the plans with
a stern refusal to allow his daughter to wed with Nowak. Nowak was taken
tectlve work stands to the credit of j to Hammond where he was brought be Sergeant Mike Gorman, in locating and fore united States Commissioner Sur
apprehendlnf Nowak.
ine young people met and fell In rhipoim ami nn effort mart to denort
love with each other in the Pennsyl-j him back to Hungary, his native land, vanis, town. They wished to marry but j Nowak Is said to have been in trouble the girls parents would not consent. ; on numerous occasions before in Penn-
jsylvania, and to be out of prison on
oratory Co.. Indianapolis; Johnson & Lund, Chicago; Kress & Owen. New York; Lavorls Chemical Co., Minneapolis; Monarch Electrical Manufacturing Co., Cleveland; Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co., New York; Telton & Crane Co., Detroit; Pinches Dental
. .. , .... Randolph. Toledo; Ritter Dental
Wayne; C. L. Frame Dental Supply Co., ; lightenment and advancement," said Chicago: Edwards Instrument Co., In-j Lafayette. "My brother rode a circuit dlanapolis; L. O. Green. "Indexo." Chi- ! the first year for $70 and I received capo: Harvard Co., Chicago; H. M. j $114 for my first year, partly in trade. Heller. Chicago: Mrs. W. M. Herriott & jour great-great grandfather came from Son, Indianapolis; Hoosler Dental Lab- ; England and settled in Virginia and
The result of the parental opposition
was the elopment of the couple who came to Oklahoma, East Chicago, where Nowak. had friends. Nowak took the girl to a place In McCook avenue, occupied by a young man named Balong and after the couple had been, there about a week they went to Crown Point where Nowak
parole at this time.
MICHAEL MAZUR PASSES AWAY Michael Maiur, 39 years of age, died of an affection of the liver at his home.
GARY THEATRE
LAST NIGHT TONIGHT ''DON'T LIE TO YOUR WIFE" A turn 'em a wa v. .show. 10c 20c 30c COMING THURSDAY
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1
ACTS OF Vaudeville
Motion Pictures Grey and Peters Riley and O'Neill Twins Hutchinson & Co. Elsie Shirk & Co. Three Flying Fishers
5c-
Two Shows 7:309:15 -10c 20c 30c
a man named J. Bortt was held up and robbed. From Hammond the route led on through Hegrewlseh and then to So. Chicago. In the meantime a general alarm had been sounded' by the Gary officers and when the pirate auto cruised into Southern Chicago the South Chicago police captured the quartet. This morning Captain Newman of the Gary police went to South Chicago to bring the negroes back to Gary. They are believed to be Chicago blacks. The
prise, who advised that he be taken lojpjrate car was observed about ten o'
clock by Desk Sergeant Miller, who saw
it near Seventh avenue and Broadway. Because it was a car of the $5,000 class and negroes were riding in It the fact
attracted the.police official's attention.
The South Chicago police were stationed near East 92nd street. Fugitive Fight Police. Policeman John White and James O'Brien were stationed at this intersection. They waited breathlessly until the machine was within a hundred feet
of the corner and then darted from their hiding place. In a few seconds they were on the running board. "Coppers!" screamed one of the men. "Push 'em off!" The occupants of the automobile went to their task. They tugged, wrestled and fought with the Muecoats, but the policemen clung tenaciously to the macine. The chauffeur turned to watch the combat on the running, board. Stop f'nr with Revolver". It was at this moment that Sergt. William Fox made his appearance. He saw the struggling men and whipped
out his revolver. "Stop that car!" he yelled as he sprang before the dazzling headlights with a revolver pointed at the chauffeur. There was a purring of the motor and the car fell to a snail's pace. The negroes then surrendered. Within the car the police found two revolvers. The automobile used by the negroes Is supposed to have been stolen from the Emory Motor company, 3819 South Michigan avenue.
ana
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FORTUNE SMILES ON TWO HERE
every Buckles in the United States as far as can be determined is a descendent of him."
(Continued from page one.)
o
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DENTISTS IN FRONT OF PROFESSION
(Continued from page one.)
sr m
raY.tarVaten
ARCANB 808 Broadway
HOTEL
II I
aeJk?ll&,y.F.
Gary, Indiana
Mrs. J. Arcand wishes to announce thfat she has opened up the new ARCAND HOTEL at 808 Broadway, with forty-eight guest rcoms. All nicely furnished and lighted; baths, smoking and writing rooms; all modern conveniences for the comfort of the public. Rates $3.00
per week and up. PHONE, GARY
nual convention of the Northern Indiana Dental society will be brought ro a close. The latest wrinkles in dental appliances and machinery, which mean nothing less than contributions to painless dentistry, are to be found at the Northern Indiana dental convention In Gary. All of the third floor of the Gary Commercial club has been given over to the exhibits of the various dental houses.
Analgesia meahines are the center of interest among the dentists. Analgesia is the new gas which makes dentistry absolutely painless. The gas is safe even for a canary bird to Inhale and it is a notable fact that the patient retains consciousness while under the influence of analgesia. Various new appliances include electrical improvements on drills, hot and cold air sprayers and sterilizing vessels. ,- A Finger Toothbrush. One of the novelties of the dental exhibit is the rubber toothbrush ex
hibited by T)r. Lelan Otis Green of Chicago. This brush is a rubber cap which is slipped over the index finger. It has bristles attached and the user merely rubs the capped finger over his teeth. The enterprising salesmen and demonstrators have sold several thousand dollars worth of goods to the delegates. Representatives of the Frank S. Betz company of Hammond have been particularly active. The list of exhibitors at the conven-
switchman for the Monon. He Is about
fifty-five years old and as far as his Hammond associated know he is not married. To retire to a farm has been a grawing ambition with Crowe and two weeks ago he went to Glascow to register. Goodbye Old M30.M "I'll take a chance anyhow," he told his friends here, "and if I am lucky it will be the simple life for me. I'm getting to the stage where I prefer to hear the crow of the rooster to the
screech of the whistle and I would sooner hitch a bay team to a plow than
couple old No. 30 to a drag. When the
time comes boys you can all come and visit me and I'll treat you to the buttermilk." Crowe was joking, but hls dream became a reality yesterday. He did not get nearly so excited however as many of his friends. He rooms at South Hammond and telephone calls could not arose him out of bed alst night. "The land won't get away," he told Mrs. Schrelber when she informed him that his friends wanted to talk to him over the 'phone. He went to work as usual this morning, but returned the highball from the men In the yard with unusual vigor. He was among the first 8,000 to register. Owing to a Glasgow dispatch received by one Chicago paper, Crowe will have to explain to his friends how it happens that he is rt'ported to be an Indian. Crowe they say is of Scotch and Irish extraction, but the dispatch would make a re.dman out of him. In part it says: "A freak of fortune today gave back to the Indians IPO acres of the 1,200.000 acres of the Fort Peck Indian reservation which the government today threw open to the settlement. There were
40,298 white people registered for the lottery and Just one Indian. The Indian drew. first choice. He is Samuel C. Crowe of Hammond. Ind. His tribal connections are unknown in Glacow, but his application blank shows his to be a red man. Crowe was in Chicago today and could not he reached for an explanation. Harry Moran, the Crown Toint winner. Is the son of James Moran, a far-
Jmer living about five miles east of the
county seat. He is single and hearing of the opportunities in Montana went there to register.
GARY MAN HONORED. Terre Haute, Ind., Sept. 24. The Indiana branch of the plumbers' union last night elected the following officers: John Haray, Indianapolis, president; Charles Shafer, Anderson, first vice president; Charles Watson, Gary, second vice president; James Ray( Lafayette, secretary-treasurer, and Lewis Jentz. Terre Haute, sergeant-at-arms. Resolutions were adopted urging more effective sanitary laws.
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ADVERTISE III THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
The
IHOMC
In accordance with our announcement of last week, which appeared in this paper, we offer the following choice residence lots for sale: Lots 37 and 38, Block 80, fronting; on the East side of Madison Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues South of McCormick apartments:
Price Lots Rio. 37 Price Lots lllo. 38
$1,225.00 $1,292.00
0
TWO MEMBERS OF "BORROWED TIME" CLUB COME
(Continued from page one.)
proud that he died tov his country. The father was an educated man, they will tell you, and what Is most remarkable he got his education from one book. Think of it! In this day when a new and complete set of expensive text books are demanded each year in the public schools! All From One Volume. That volume, Ieander Buckles recalled yesterday, contained first the alphabet, then a few lessona on spelling, followed by simple readinfr and ftarures. It ended with latin and ancient history. The father was known after that as a surveyor, an expert mathematician, crack speller of the district, a
Lot 25, Block 100, Second lot South of Fourth Ave. on West side of Monroe St. $765.75 Lots 9 and 18, Block 27, East side of Tyler St. between Seventh & Eighth Avenues $875.00 Lot 30, Block 99, East side of Van Buren Street between Fourth 8c Fifth Avenues $7O0.00 Remember the price of each lot includes streets, sewer and water. These lots will not last much longer. They are the choicest residental sites left in First Subdivision, j
Qarv
a a
5th, Ave and Broadway
aed Co
Gary, Indiana
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