Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 12 January 1917 — Page 6

V GK SIX".

THE TIMES FHlav. .7;ii). 12. 1017

BRONCHITIS SUFFERER

Cured by a Simple Remedy. lumbus. Ca. ' I am telling evorybody what Vinol has done for my husband. He had a bronchial couR-h, his jynern was run-down and I felt sure ; would die. His father insisted on his trying Vinol. and 1 atn so thankful ho did. because it cured his cnush and built hltn in. My doctor highly recommends it and said he could not take any"h;ns bettor." Mrs. Thomas M.onk. ViiimI, you know, contains beef and it licr peptone?, iron and mari?anis t'optonatest and glycerophosphates. Tt i rirhts and revitalizes the blood and oneys to the system the vital elements necessary to strengthen the body and throw oif the disease. That is the reason It was so successful in Mr. Monk's case. Anyone m Hammond who has bronchitis, a chronic cough, or needs buiidn ST tip. may try a bottle of Vinol. with i ho understanding? that his money will tie returned if ho is not satisilrd. . Joseph A'.,AVeis. T'rugpist; I.,. Harry v is, and X-.Tris Phcy.. Hammond. Also it 'he leading Prus Pi ore in all Indisna, towns. Adv. REMOVES SKIN AFFECTIONS On package proves it. Sold and Cuaraoteeti by abovo Vinol drafif isu SUTTOi HAS RECORD TO HELP REDS BT X. C. HAMILTON (United Fress Staff Correspondent.) NXW TOKK. Jan. 12 If the. Cincinnati Rods don't kick bols in all pr-"i-ous Ohio river records within the next iw years it won't be the fault of Larry K ut ton, recently signed by Manager t'hr:sty llathewson to scout for Jsrry Herrmann's holding. Baseball men agree that Mathewson nade the wisest move since taking hold c? the Reds when he, signed up the foxy Sutton. Larry has a great record for ivory-hunting behind him. Connected for several years with the Hrooklyn club Pulton dug up some oT the most farnous ball players in the country. Among the Dodgers who got their big league chances through recommendation of Suton are Jake Iaubert. JeiT X'fefter. Casey Stengel, Zack "Wheat and Otto Miller. They all have made good, and they don't form the total of his scouting maneuvers by several. Minor leaguers know Sutton better rerhaps than any person now in the scout business. And they know also that when Larry comes into view they've got to trot out the best thoy have. No one yet bps been cAught put-

oo.cl 'T

IT SELLSF-Prof its Are Therefore Daily-NOT OCCASIONAL The Best Gum on the Market is the White Coated Ball Gum sold through National Gum Machines. Seen Everywhere. Returns on the investment are sure and certain. Profits on Gum are fixed and definiteno variation no fluctuation in cost or selling price. A BUSINESS FREE FROM SPECULATION No market to create no waiting for profits These factors combine to Insure large returns on the investment '

UNI

Your Inquiry Invited

tintr one over on the veteran crass comber. He has Ilia eye for voting ball players and he rarely picks a flivver. All his selections, of course, are not doing- duty in the biR.leagntes. but moat of them are. and that's a better record than a preat many of them can boast. Larry spends his -winters in Newark. X. J., where he reads proof on a newspaper. Ho formerly was a compositor. Ho chases over to New York whenever there's anything going on and he usually has the best tips on everything. There are few matters in baseball unknown to him. Mathrwson's Tteils seem booked Tor an upbuilding process that will accomplish something besides seven or eighth place every year.

SOME OF OF' BLODGETT'S MUSINGS lVDl.WAl'Oi.lS. TXD. Jan. 12. "l fool greatly relieved." remarked Kdwin C. Pavis, representative from Lake county, as he watched the soot from the smoky chimneys fall on the snow, "and I have good cause to feel that way." "What's the idea?" a. friend asked. "Well, you see. Jim Goodrich has been Governor for several days and 1 bad not been to sop him. T knew that, he was badly in need of advice and there w-s a good deal of advice that T had on hand that be could have. 1 kept delaying my visit until T could stand it no longer and last night I went to see him." " 'I am sorry I din t get here sooner. I said to the Governor, because I know no one i.-. giving- you :my advice and 1 as neede d.' "Mt is ail right. Kdwin." replied Mr. Goodrich, 'you got her just in time.' BAD COLD ? TAKE II S FOR BOWELS TONIGHT .They're fine! Liven your liv er and. bowels and clear ' your head. No headache, sour stomach, bad cold or constipation by morning. Get a 10 cent box. Colds whether in the head or any part of tiie body are quickly overcome j by urging the liver to action and keep-j ing the bowels free of roison Take I C'ascarets to-night and you -will wakej up with a clear head and your cold will pe gone, cascarets work while you sleep; they cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the, bowels. Remember the Quickest way to get rid of colds is one or two Cascarets at night to cleanse the system. Get a 10cent box at any drug store. Don't forget the children. They relish this Candy Cathartic and it is often all that i?S needed to drive a cold from their! little systems. Adv. . j

in rj nnn n mn rr II A I l : V LmlMiilri nil i. I 'in nr,n mil I Wlln Ml utW - -" L il llill I ' I I J taaMl'lteiUi

JO

GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT! j STOP DANDRUFF AND BEAUTIFHOUR HAIR

Hair stops falling out and gets thick, wavy, strong and beautiful. Tour hair becomes light, -navy, fluffy, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just try this moisten a cloth with a little Panderino and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Pesides beautifying 1he hair at once. Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff: cleanses, purines and Invigorates the scalp, forever stopping Itching and falling hair. Hut what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use when you wrll actually see new hair fine and downy at first tys -but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a -5-ceut bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any druggist or toilet counter! and just try it. Adv. Now. of coure, having saved the Governor. I am feeling pretty good." The friend did not know whether the Lake county statesman was talking along kidding . lines or was really in earnest Davis, of Lake., does not have, a reputation In the house for being a jcker. Kit i!is. Jr.. lawyer at Monticello, and Republican chairman of the Tenth district, arrived in town last evening for the purpose of getting his friend Price the appointment of warden ot the state prison at Michigan City. Mr. Sills had not, been here long until he learned that there is no warden to be appointed. Kdward Fogarty, the present warden, has made such a fine record in the management of the institution that Governor Goodrich has asked him to remain Every time Kdwin D. Hush. Lieutenant-Governor, sees n crowd from Lake couaity he can not help recalling the trip h took through Gary and Bast Chicago while be was campaigning. That is an episode in his life that Mr. r.ush will never forget. Mail Hidden for Years ! by Tired Carrier. I RLOOMIXGTOX, ILL.. Dec. ?!. j Charged with failure to deliver i mall. Isaac N. Ives, a veteran rural j free delivery carrier, was taken j in custody today. ! Postal Inspectors found a la-ge quantity of mall hidden in his barn, ! some of which had been on hand a ' doien years or to. j "That truck, oh. hum. it wasn't ! i worth the trouh'.e of delivering," i explained the tired Mr. Ives. j Lloe-s E GRATZ

There

I AHA THE UNIMPROVED

HIGHWAY

BT IS. O. ANDREWS (la tha William Pens Hlg-bway Bulletin, Harrlsburg, Fan..) (Copyright, 1916, by the William Pann Highway Association) 1 am the unimproved highway. My name is Mud! The feet that pattered in primeval slime nave me birth. Unchanged while the ages passed. I have endured. Time has but served to increase my . infinite variety. .Earth born, and without a soul, yet have 1 lived. From the beginning have I been man's enemy. A dust-colored python am I, stretching my length across the hills, waiting my time to rrxish endeavor. I have snared carayans that left bleaching bones in lands now desert. Empires have fallen because of me. T have turned victories into routs; I have trapped mighty leaders and have crushed armies. I am without faith; and those who trust me I deceive. Today I am fair to look upon; tomorrow a, steaming bog. I add Difficulty to Distance. With Isolation do I conspire to un,joint the endeavors of man. I tug at the wheels of the grain cart, that bread may be dear. I hamper those who would feed the race. I am an enemy of church and school. I mire the healer on his rounds snd delay the coming that little ones may die. I am a disrupter of Home. X speed the first-born to the cities when I am fair to see; and when he would return I face him with my forbidding depths. I minister to Bitterness: and lay a tax on all the world. There is none w ho lives who docs not pay me tribute. Use Cocoanut Oil For Washing Hair If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what jou wash it with.' Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle and is very harmful. Just plain mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and entirely grea.seless), is much better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can t possibly injure the hair. Simply moisten your hair with water and rub it In. One or two teaspoonfuls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily, and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. Tou can get mulsified cocoanut. oil at most any drug store. It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last everyone in the family for months. Adv.

13

amci oJude For Yourself

GUM

E

Special

TO STOP BAD COOGH

SOOTS DT, IB.JUTATZD THIOAT WITH FAJIMINT STXTP. SATS THIS OLD FASHIONED COVOK ' MKDICIBE 13 THS BXST. We are told that the old time remedies are best knd Invariably contain less harmful yet better medicine than those which are in use today. This being so, undoubtedly the following old fashioned recipe which is quick acting will be welcomed by many as there seems to be a regular epidemic of coughs at the present time. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce Parmint (double strength). take this home and add to it a quarterj pint of hot water and 4 ounces of gran-i ulated sugar, stir until dissolved. Take 1 tnblcspoonful four times a day. No more racking your whole bejiy with a. cough. Clogged nostrils should open, air passages of your bead should "Clear and your breathing become easy. Parmint syrup is pleasant to take, easy to prepare and costs little. Every person who has a stubborn cough, hard cold or catarrh in any form should give this prescription a trial. Summers' Pharmacy can supply you. Adv. A hen men ploughed with a crooked stick I was there. AVhen the ancients covered me with stones I slipped away to other lands. 1 am the oldest Lie that lives today. Men count me cheap. I know the price they pay -who count rne so. I am the unimproved highway. My name is Mud! IKES HIS T The report of the Kast Chicago city chemist for December, 1D16, to the mayor and the city council, is as follows: Curing' the month of December the department of health was without assistance of a deputy inspector from the police department and owing to pressure of laboratory work and duties contracted by release and tnforcement of quarantine, very few inspections were made. X&apactioat. Food establishment . Plumbing and miscellaneous g Contalou XMaaaaaa. Nov. Dec. Quarantines ig 21 Releases and fumigations 14 19 Cases of diphetheri 7 7 Cases of scarlet fever J Cases of typhoid fever ;o 9 Total cases contagious dls. 35 J7 laboratory. Diphtheria diagnosis 1 J4g Sputums for T. B XVidal blood test 1 4 Mlscellaenous examinations 6 Total microscopical analyses 187 Milk analyses r, Vater analyses j

GUST

Profit: In

N J

COMPANY

Representative, Mee Hotel,

Miscellaneous antitype Total chemical analyse Total laboratory analyses jgj H. G. OSKOKN", City Chemist.

DEATH OF BYRON E. BURGE YESTERDAY (Special to The Times.) MERKILLVILLE. LVD.. Jan. 12. Kyron E. Murge, a resident of this place for forty years, died today at the jjge of SO. He is survived by a widow and seven merly mond. Harry children. The widow was forMrs. flarriett Gero of HamThe children are Henry and formerly of Hammond: Newton and Scott or Merrill vilie; 15. Burge of Hammond; Mrs. Richmond of Wheeler Station and a daughter wh,o lives in California. Rev. George Streeter of Hammond, will preach the funeral sermon at the late residence Sunday .iftcrroon. Interment is to be made in Oak Hill BODY SENT TO KANSAS After brief funeral services yesterday afternoon at the home. P3 Russell street. the body of Mrs. John V. Younger was taken to the Nickel Plate station for shipment to the La?alle street station in Chicago. From the latter depot the remains go via the Rock Island to Hoi tor.. Kan., Mrs. Younger' s former home win re her first husband, D. Runyan. is buried. The members of the Donas IlebekaVi lodge with which Mrs. Younger was affiliated attended in a body the services which were conducted by the Rev. T J. iiassett of the First Methodist "TIZ" FOR TIRED SORE FEET Use "Tiz" for puffed-up, burning, aching, calloused feet and corns. H-pt! Um "TIZ" Why go limping around vfith aching, puffed-up feet feet so tired, chafed, sore and swollen you ran hardly get your shoes on or off? Why don't you get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" from the drug store now and gladden your tortured feet? "Tis" makes your feet glow with comfort; takes down swellings and draws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. "Tiz" inteantly stops pain in corns, callouses and bunions. "Tiz" is glorious for tired, aching, sore feet. Xo more shoe tightness no more foot It roubles. Adv. V i V J

I w- -.1 V7

Dangers of Constipation and Usual' 'Cures"

Step ilf for an extended peri'"! of the body's natural outlets and consequeii, ( s are serious indeed. V;i ' mattrir retained 111 the intestines produes poisons which contaminate the entire system. Kverv ortan in inn. becomes weakened and diseased. Autointoxication. lull headache-, im-ntal depression, skin eruptions, inflarnmat j . and ulceration of tlw bow.-!-. piles, appendicitis, cirrhosis of the iiver. pirn..- -sis, nervous troubles even insanity are among the rsn!'s of chronic co. tiveness. Xo suiferer can afford to I -lay correcting such a condition. Hut no one car. afford to use drti, purgatives or cathartic. Anvlhtc which acts violently npon the bow-is does more harm than good. It in.inr. s the membranous lining. It weairi: the bowel muscie. in time absolu"e m capacitating it. 1 nr- dose mi-, of; on! temporary r lief, but sooti you are ,,- -stipated again, and must gradual;- increase the dov-e lo yer-iire I'm- ,j. suit. If more propic only k 11 i!. !ie-i t a harmless product known a- l.ix-oia. ' winch really aids N'! nr.. To . . 1 1 oil. 1 1: -constipation. Resides i's mild, p.imic-. laxative action it lias a ben-m-ia! tome effect. It strengthens, insttad of ening. the intestinal wall. I. is pb aant to take, does not disturb' digest ;v Bnd does not encourage il,e "la.at. habit. Lax-ola may be obtained Iron, any druggist. A quarter's worth w,:; do Hem, Hvr'enc Kpiscopal enure!.. Mr. Younger alone n .--co m pa n i M ' remains of his wife to her last restir place. TM1RS ad are personal mesKnge ri the people of tlil community from thmerrhants. WEEPS LIKE BABY AT PLACE WHERE WIFE WAS SLAIN 3 tel.-- ' 'Frederick L. Small. Frederick L. Small, of Ossipee, N. II., wept like a baby when he wa3 taken with the jury to the spot where his wife was slam last September. Small is yn trial for his life. It is charged that he killed his wife by strangulation and then fired his house by a time device, which set the blaze after he arrived in Boston. He hopes to prove that his wife was killed by a tramp. 1i si Hammond

f t v ; r : K"'r -ZT L 1 - J,