Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 181, Hammond, Lake County, 19 January 1917 — Page 6
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THE TIMES
Fridav. dan. 1!17 1 .... mue
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Our Optical Department is in charge of an eye specialist whose v;!no time is devoted to the fitting of eye glasses and spectacles. Our eye specialist has had over twenty years of constant, successful 'practice, Avhich assures all our patrons of satisfactory results in all their optical work. We solicit your optical lmsines, because we are fully equipped to take care of your optical wants satisfactorily and promptly. We make all our ow n lenses. Opt-u evenings. o charge for examination. S. SILVER Jeweler and Opterrjetrist 177 State Street. t Hammond, Ind. Opposite K. 0. Minns Dept. Store. Phono 700.
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HOTCHKIS PERSONAL IS $389,239 IN VALUE
(Continued from rase one.)
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1-raisers to bo good, amount to S -5 1 .0'-'. . . . t 11 t. , -i. ; 1 .1
I tif.se are usieu as imiu. v . -. v .v Co.. a Main.? corporation. $2.5fi'i; Lehigh Stone of l'ast Chicago, $5,nmi; I ?. Kxpnnded Steel Truss Co., $500; Hail Joint Co. of New York. $50. "Oo: Atlantic City Co.. a Delaware corporation, jio.nnf); Philadelphia Land & Improvement Co. of Kast Chi'-ago, $15,600; K;stern Indiana Co.. cardial stock. $66.-00;
First State Trut - Saving? Co. of In-; liana Harbor. S.'.o.io: Allman-Gary Title i Co , 11,000: Osbot n Land Co. of Kast i ("hb-ago. $2.00": Kast Oiieago and InUi- j
"TIM m TO SOBEJI RED FEET Use "Tiz" for aching, burning, puffed-up feet and corns or calluses.
Mood-bye. pore feet. burning feet, swollen feet, tender feet, tired feet. Good-bye. corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. Xo more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. "Tiz"
is magical, acts right off. "Tiz" draws out all the poisonous exudations which
puff up the feet. I'm "Tiz" and wear smaller shoes. Us "Tiz" and forget our foot misery. Ah; how comfortable your feet feel. . Get a "3-cent box of "Tiz" now at any druggist or department -store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, nev r gt tired. A year s foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded. Adv.
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ana Harbor Water Co., S6.000; OaiunietKeiuiedy Laud Co , of Kast Chicago. $0,OiH); First Calumet Trust & Savings. Hank of Kasi Chicago. $6,000: liiscluyLrick Co. of Michigan City, $10,000; Gibson Land Co. of Kast Chicago, J1O.000; Clark Land Company, an Indiana corporation, 15,000; West Gary Land Co., l".::ort; Indiana Land Co. of Hammond, $15,000; Turtle Lake Club, of Michigan. 51.0OO; First Calumet Trust & Savings Hank of Kast Chicago, capital stock, $2.000; Virginia Hallway Co., a Virginia corporation. $500; capital stock in the First. State Bank of Tolleston, Ind., $5U0; fommercial Club Auxiliary Association of Indiana Harbor, stock. $100; Richmond Light and Itallroad Co.. a New York corporation, il,00; Indiana Harbor Co. of Indiana Harbor, $1,000; bonds of the U. S. Steel Corporation, $10.00i; bond, note of the Commercial Club Auxiliary association of Indiana Harbor. 56,000. Money Sue on TTotes. The inventory shows that there was due Mr. Hotchkiss on promisory notes, sight drafts, and secured and unsecured loans, which have been appraised at their f:iee value, the sum of $37,979.73. Some of these loans are evidenced merely by memorandum, and evidently were made to friends. This is the total listed pprsonal property with the exception of goods and personal property at the Summit farm. AC this farm he bad personal property, in his own name, to the value of $1.9.j,".- !'.'. Property owned by himself and Mary Jayne Hot hkis amounted to $584. SO, of which one half goes to his estate. jp? and G-org "V. Coicman owned pn erty at the Summit farm. $7.71 7 . 5 f ' of which, one half, goes to Coleman and the other half to the estate. Tins property amounts to $ii,107.f'O. all told, which the storks, bonds, cash and other collectible debts amounts io $3s!i,2:::t.s:!. Not All Investments Good. Not all of Mr. Ilt hkiss investments were gn..d. He held stock in many con
cerns. Not all of the loans he made on notes find in other uajs are good. The appraisers designated as of tio value, stocks, tiie face vulue of which amount to yiti7.1i0. j;-ul notes asfc-rcyate 6:H.S7. His papers contained a memorandum of one loan of $10,750 which is appraised as of no value. A judgement secured m court for over $1.0n0 is put down as worthless, also a personal loan of $tl ;.nd other loan;3 amounting: i'u $ti.'.i). These are m addition to the worthless notes mentioned above and total $1;',4:12.50. Stocks that arc marked as worthless included $3;,3li in the Automatic Kimncialor company, an Illinois corpora t Ion. This does not necessarily mean that he paid this amount for the stock he owned, listed as of no value. He had $;;5,otil) in the l.Vring Coal Co. a Delaware corporation. JIO.OHU in the Paragon Coal Co. an Indiana corporation. $ll.60 in the "Webb-Jay Motor Company. $1.0!0 m the Oorrington Air Brake Co. of Xew York. $25, (mm) in the capital stock of the C. M. S. Mining Co.. and smaller amounts in other mining concerns, end $22,500 m the capital stock of the Chicago & Northern Pacific railroad. No value was placed on any of this by the appraisers Seal Estate. The inventory of real estate gives 0 lots in Inidana Harbor, 21! in East Chicago. 0 acres in Osborn, Ind.. 00 lots in "West Hammond. 21 lots in Detroit. The Summit farm amounts to about 5t)0 acres. The inventory states there is some dock property in Michigan City but that the parties making the inventory were unable to say at that time what the property was. There are three lots in Chicago and included in this is his residence property fit 4537 Grand Boulevard, which has a rental value of $150 a month. Practically all the other real estate is unimproved property, bringing in no income.
PRISON YAWNS FOR GERMANS IN I J. S. , WHO VIOLATED AMERICAN NEUTRALITY
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With Every Suit Ordered During January TO KEEP OUR TAILORS BUSY In spite of the high cost of woolens, we will sacrifice our profit and make your suit at the regular price and The Extra Pants
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HOME QUARANTINED The horn? of Mr. and Mrs. I! 1 1. Mc-
j Hie at St4 South Hohtnan street, has i been placed under quarantine owinij
to the illness of Marsaret, -their dauRhter. who has a mlid attack of scarlet fever.
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BAN JOHNSON RETURNS; STRIKE NOT LIKELY CHICAGO. Jan. 19. Pan Johnson. American League chief, returned yesterday from New Tork, where he divided his time arranging schedules and discussing the I-'ultz menace with President Tener of the National. Johnson liad nothing- new-. He reiterated his New York statement in which he said the majors would have no further deal-
Vice Consul E. N. von Schack (top left), Baron Wilhelm run Brincken. and Consul Franz Bopp (right). Franz Eopp, German consul at San Francisco, and four of his attaches or employees have been found guilty by a federal jury of having violated this country's neutrality by planning to blow up munition plants in America and Canada, steamships carrying supplies to the entente allies, railroad bridges, and military trains. Aside from Bopp, the most important figures at the trial were Vice Consul E. II. von Schack and Baron Wilhelm von Brincken, both of whom will servs prison terms.
ing with Fultz or the frat. He is not
j inclined to believe that Fultz is strnnu ! enough to bring about a strike and that to affiliate the players with organized labor would not be practical. .TohiiP n ' said that if the strike menace assuim-s dangerous proportion the International
Leaguers plan to keep their parks closed this doming sumun r.
SENTENCED TO
DAY IN JAIL
WHERE CAN I FIND RELIEF FROM ITCUE. TERRIFYING ECZEMA?
This Question Is Ever on the Lips of the Afflicted.
Eczema, Tetter. Krysipelas and other terrifying conditions of the skin. are deep-seated blood diseases, and applications of salves, lotions and washes can only afford temporary relief. without reaching the real peet of the tre.:l le. Hut Ju.t because local treatment has done you no good, there is no reason to despair. You simply have not sought tins proper treatment, that is within your reach. You have the experience of others who have suffered a.s you have to guirlf you to a prompt riddance of Hood and skin diseases. Xo matter h-w terrify
ing the irritation, no matter how unbearable the itching and burning of the skin, R. S. will promptly reach thsent of the toruhie and forever rout from the blood every troce of the disease, just as it has for others -who have .suffered as you have. This grar.d blood remedy has been used for more than fifty years, and you have only to give it a fair tri,.l to le restored to perfect, health. Our chief medical officer is an authority on blond and skfii disorders, and he will take pleasure In giving you such, advice as your individual cas.- may need, absolutely without cost. Write today, describing- your case U medical department Kwift Specific Co., "j7 Swif! Laboratory. Atlanta. ia. Adv.
Ueorge Allen, colored, aged .',2, served a sen'enee of one day in ja.ll yesterday after he had been found guilty in ti.e c.ty court of steal in a can val
ued at SlTo) out of the Xagdeman
Clothes shop, in 1."1 State strict.
SEWER LAID OVER AGAIN
The d,4y lal positio:
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of pui'ii.- works vester-
over lor sixty days the proto construct a deep sewer In
North llo'.inian street. It is presumed ilKit within that tin:e x,- deep sewer case will have been settled by a decision of the taie supreme oji ?.
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Same Well Known, High Class Workmanship.
Woolen Mills
171 State St., Hammond, Ind. Open Every Evening Until 9 O'clock.
Opposite E. C. Mina3 Dept. Store.
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No Time for Pleasure. Neighbor "Dues your man tske you to the movies?" She '"Not much. Time I get my dishes washed and the house redd up and the babies to lied and the children's clothes mended. I'm
dead for sleep. And besides, you know, j
he's so busy agitarin' for the eight-hour day." Judge.
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How the Permanently Disabled Soldier of Europe German
Is Being Instructed In Such Professions and Trades As Befits His Condition.
surgeons have used their best
j efforts on the men blinded in battle
and in some instances the sight has been restored, but these cases are rare
at present one leKced men adapt themselves to standing at a printing case or working at a carpenter's bench. Most of the one lesrartd men,
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and the greater part of the blind men j nowever. prerer to work at tailoring -iti v .ihti. tnr- r, f e,i. or Bhoim3klnr. TTsii;illv a. wounded
win i-" JiftU'....') nic i . j i. uicu : - ; . . , . . . ,
lives. They must be educated as chll- soiaier prefers some labor aKin to mat , . ' . .
UcbtLihllng Faces In France the work of rebuilding men is Koine on in a literal sense, for soldiers whose fares have been shot : to pieces are actually bavins new: faces made over the old ones as well i as being trained to be self-supporting-The mutiliition of war is often so horrible as to make the wounded . man's appearance so repulsive that ; oven though he might be- able to work
:. ir!T by T ie International Sjediea'
naiioiis iiow,war, for ther are miJitary duties to
war soon r-ni zeri that the Da pertormea ail during tne aay. in
conflict would be a lone and
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c.vjJCi.nc uut, UfMUtJl llivic, ifiilnnra nennlci nr frnm fh.m hnr i Via n-ao tn-ano r.i f,r- Ilfttnt-
arcss tiir nv tne aid or rne lett nana is . - ----- . -- .... ; -- . .....r11.a,5u
urn employment.
wouiii be hundreds and b.ur.dreds of
thousands of wounded soldiers ulinn
productive power wouid be 'greatly. of hls food an'5 learnlne t0 hanJ!e hls diminished. In fact, unices sometiiiii? knlf and tor at the b'was done at once to te;:ch the arm- , '"'hen thl3 has been acquired left less, the legless and the blind how! band writing Is taken up. nnd it i to provide for themselves the burden I remarkable how Boon the men be-
of the Government in caring for them
t t f. t, dv whicn he rn.iile his living ueiore i
Ui ru miu . j iivcuiiaia am u:c
blind where a course of training Is
cj.se the right arm Is gone the man Is Riven mem. uen RS ,erniiiK vo reaa
htiiis dpi m t ii mm in np-i ri it i
this wonderful work.
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i flrst learned. Next comes the cutting j
and their dependants would be a heavy one. Kow Germany Trains Her Cripples. Germany was perhr.ps the fir3t country to attempt the preat work of rebuilding the shattered Uvea of her .permanently disabled soldiers. To those who were crippled in the lejrs an electric treatment was prescribed and under it numbers of men who had been tent home as helpless as a child wer able to walk one more. While many recovered there were Thousands who had lost their Iin.bs entirely and had to be provided with irtiflcial arms and legs. Thesa men after being fitted up are sent to the home for special cripples. There a special course of training- befrins in which the instructor tries to awaken an ambition In the patient to become
come accustomed to this. The most Important In this Instruction, however, begrlns in the workshops connected with the homes where the blacksmiths, tailors. Joiners, baskettr.akers, bookbinders, etc., are afforded n opportunity of plying their trades under
the new conditions of artificial limbs, j Those who all day long work there
I this they are Instructed In basket-
making ana in weaving straw cness j drawinp-s f0r them. A mason who: boards. Making brushes Is another j had iopt njs arms became a stone de-I trade in which they become expert. I Blfiner w,iie a man who bad been aj The trades which can be carried on J walter ln a restaurant and who had i by the blind are so limited that many ; lost hlg lcg, waB turripd out to bo an j of these men will have to be taken I excellent sign painter. Men who
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the war. lPrar.ce !.- guard:;:? against this by An Iron moulder who had lost his ! making- her heroes presentable. Sevarma hram a m,M leaner While ! erftl American burgeons are aiding in
the
moulds he was able by the
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use of his artificial arms to mahc !
invalid
uiers is chiefly
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; care or cy tr.eir rammes or ry tna ; WOJid become bookkeepers, expert ac- ' Gorerr.ment. : countAnts and stenographers are Pnt Belgian Machinery. i to a special school, after which they i The Belgians are practically maklr.e I re given pla . s ln the Government
! men over by machinery at Fort Bllles. ' offices and State bnnki. The
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uu iiie 9Uiiit; IJI Llltll 1CLL. 1 i . , t A I .- . , . 1
.inui( ijtftiiixii sr,OOi3 jlrt.v-; u?pti established, and some of the wounded
a little town oetwn Kouen and at iron tJinez is regaraea u
P.rl. Some fifteen hundred wound. ! abort of marvelous. Indeed, it Is
t!on of the study of symmetry of mind and body. It is a study of 'he utmost importance at any ti-n" for e-ery year dangerous trades t .- a
'heavy oil of maimed and n-;' 1 ! men. C:i of th studies i- !r m-.11-lar tnovenn-nta. o-. :: -'r!- w,rds. how to perform a -i!vei w't'li tie ; least eip?ii hture of notion and force. I Another the training of men in the ! 11 40 rf artir.Ma! arm a H ga that
tural colonies of the men who were disabled in battle and a fund of 000,000 is being raised for this purpose. Kxperi sriculturista will aid the farmers who wfU settle ln colonies md work. 0.1 rti.j ccntnunity plan, having a g-;n?ral cominunity ho"Je whr living nac:v;S.) may be purchased ejid farm producta sold for shipment. With t?:is end iu new lirge numbers of wounded rasa ara learning the art of cardering. Artificial
a -Rotr(Nn anlriior mrn mr. iuki.4 selentin- Lourdes in Its m'.racies in tne
at the anvil or carpenter's bench soon ... ar- ,t t,.. . K-. I rehuildinc of men.
lobe the feeling of invalids and fresh hopes for the future come Into their lives. Aside from the practical instruction there is gymnasium work to maintain the remaining parts of the body in good condition and to keep up the spirits of the invalids. Whenever it is possible the men are given their old trades. Blind Soldiers The Problem.
Of couria, tha greatest problem to
mde over ror some usemi occupation. ; curing me iege wn'i5 In the various trades 51en who have The Belgians have always been f am- ' Belgian soldiers became insane and tceu -s- are ,!owin recovering, ous for fins mechanical apparatus ar.d 1 these are housed in a special hospital ; and evfn af.er th. h,VK rerovere(i heie they have showed their genius ' "d treatment is given in trying to 1 rft mQj!t. sugce fl Q bronch!al trou.
bles and can only perform light tasks. Xext to the blind soldier the "gassed"
i have, already become self-supporting 1 being carried on, especially with the j
In this line by the usa of seven or restore their reason, ela-ht new sclentlflc Instrument which been little success
indtpendent of his family and friends, all nations Is that of the blind soldier. There is enough exerclte to keep him I and there are thousands of these unfrom brooding over his misfortunes In fortunate creatures ln the war zone.
measure precisely the efficiency of a wounded man. The use of these novel instruments is only one phase of the great work being done in the training of men for trades. Men who have lost a leg were at flrst taught a trada ln which little standing was required but later this wss found n h a mistake snd
So far there has
in this line and
many of the men have died. The blind hare a hospital of their own tn charge of a noted Belgian eye spa-
man is the greatest problem. Americans Aid The French.
cialist. who has made some remark- j France too has thousands of blind able cures among the men. Hun- , soldiers, seme of whom have head dreds of cases are hopeless and where j wounds as well, and this class will these men are ln good physical con- have to be taken care of by the State dition they are being taught aket- ; a3 their brain capac;y hs been so making and weaving. weakened that !r is Impossible for
rhem to be re-educaled. .Special hospitals for the blind have been opened and the men are learning to use typewriters as well as basket-making. Mrny of these men are well edue-ited nnd aro anxious to do clerical woric, and it wps found that they .mn learn the uso of special typewriters f ?r the blind, which, of course, have raisfd letters. Miss Winifred Molt, of New York City, who has done such splendid work among the blind ! that c!y
is at the head of one of ths French ! lgs and arm" are g":ven to the men.
hospitals for the blind soldiers, who j Many have become adept ln wearing have been sant to Paris. j them and walk about the streets of Over ln Engla.nd the same work l London without the aid of canes.
Haly School For The Disabled. Italy is educating all of her disables soldiers, teaching them while they are still bedfast In the hospitals. "There is little pain to some mounds," declared an Italian surgeon, aod if the minds of the men are kept busy they soon recover. This teaohing has really been a Godsend to some of the peasants who are rapidly acquiring knowledge." Their treatment In manual training Is not unUl.e that of other nations, and as the Italian is quick to learn ln mechanics hundreds of the men will b self -supportinf.
sightless. There the men frequently
take their exercise ln rowing boats under the guidance of their nursea and there have been several spirited contests on the Thames between crews of blind soldiers. This keeps the men ln fine physical condition during their training in trades. British Trained In Agrlcnl tare. The maimed British soldiers and sailors are being taught some occupation and large numbers are bedng Instructed ln - farming as it is Great Britain's plan to have larse ajrrlcul-
