Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 233, Hammond, Lake County, 15 March 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUK
THE TIMES Timrsciav, March 15. .111.7
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS ET TEE LAKE COUim PKIIITINO & PUBLISHING COMPANY.
A MOTHER'S LOVE.
The Times East CVtlctgo-Indlans, Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered t the postofflce In East Chicago, Novambar 18, 191S. The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and Sanday. Entered at the postcfU:e In Hammond, June 28, 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Kntersd at tha pes to flic a in Hammond, February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the poatoffice In Gary, April 13. 1912. Ail under the act of March 3. 187, aa second-class matter.
POHUGS ADVERTISING OFVICK. 912 Rector BuUfilng Chicago
Love is the greatest thing in the world, ami i In great -si love is mother l ve. Catastrophes like tjiat -which visited the thriving city of Now Castle may be depended uion to furnish striking examples of a mother's devotion to her child, a willinguess to lay down her life for tho sake of her off .-Hiring.
We, are informed that in the Castle tornado a mother who hail gout- I
to her son's home to nurse him as he lay near death with pneumonia "aw :md heard the storm attack their home and realized tint ir meant, death to remain in tho room with her patient. She might have escaped, but made no effort to' leave. Instead she. t!l''ew herself oil the bed beside her son. her Hrms about him. hi- arms about her. and together they went, down in the wreckage and perished, says the Lafayette Courier. Even death could not break the tie that hound them, for when their bodies were found they were still locked i;: a loud embraee. 1 was just an incident, bin. what a wonderful truth it emphasized. We don't have New Castle hurricanes every day, thank fortune, hut a mother's love goes on forever.
PLOT NET SNARES ANOTifi;?-: ;ERMAN
TELEPHONES. Hammond (prlrte excitant) S100, 1101. S10J (Call for whatever department wanted. 1 Gary Office Telephone 13T Nassau & Thompson. East Chicago . Telephone 540-J F. L,. Evans, Et-at Chlcftso ' Telephone 737-J East Chicago, Tho Times ..20 J In liana Harbor (News Dealer) S03 Indiana Harbor Rerorter and Classifi ed ' Arts) Telephone l vVhUlr.jf , , Telephone 80-M Crown Point Telephone O j HepowlsA Telephone 13 1
. -'It
THE SOLDIER'S MOTHER.
LAEGEB PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHEU NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET 31EGI0N.
If you have any trouble getting- Th Tmts m !t e complaint Immediately l the circulation department. Trs Times will not bo responsible for the return, of any unsolicited manuscript articles or letter and will not notice anonoymoua communlcatlona
""ral 'nterept rrtnf1 ut t 1 aertin
V' c Z jf e int V V- "viJ-!' Jjsr i v ill
PESTERING THE PRESIDENT. Vv notice that Miss Milliolland is going to head a woman's delegation to insist, on seeing Prepident Wilson about woman suffrage. That's right; lady pester the life out of the president. He has no troubles, lie has nothing To worry about. With the' country on the verge of war, with a great railroad strike impending, he has nothing to do but to ta!k with you about woman suffrage. Keep after hLtn and you will be sure to get your name in the papers one way or another, nnd there's nothing like notoriety. Some people live on it and some would die if they did not get it. Keep on nagging, ladies.
HE DOES NOT UNDERSTAND. A writer in the South liend Tribune says he does not understand why prohibition does not prohibit. "Why," he asks, "should there be any reservation as for church purposes? "A drinking person might, join a church and be honestly trying to reform, and a sip of wine at the communion table would throw him down aenin. If it must be used in church, let the old priest and the old preacher who insis-. on its use drink it and they could do as the Dutchman did. He drank cider and passed the empty mug to his friends, saying: 'If you don't pelieve dot ish good, schust shmell dr mug I mean no disrespect, to the ri?rht kind of priest or preacher, but only to those that advocate the use of wine, for my father was a Methodist preacher and I'm Methodis bred and 3Ieihod!st hern, and an unafraid Methodist 'for all t.rue."
The Harry Lauder we know is the ,-inginu, mirth-making Scotsman we've gone io gee in vaudeville or whose voice ei, livens the homo through the good offices of the Victrola. It H a different Lauder who writes of the mother of his soldier boy, the young captain who gallantly laid down his )i!'.o "somewhere in Lrauce." There is a am, ship bet wee a all mother of men, aad mothers always hold first plrce in their hearts for 'he male being from the time he is a helpless babe nestiing in their arms till on through the years. This maternal regard is sensed j,v Lauder, who writes in an appealing vein in the Tnited Prct-by-terian. The ul).:o:ned throws a new ib. lf on the man, showing that behind his In a iz'a-!'-. his p;ips and pun-, thei" a saddened and reminiscent feeiitm for the little febiiW who .-leu to be a man only t i die in battle; "Hut fno mother's loss! My dear wife bears it, very quietly, and very quietly at such moments as there ?he e!!s me a little of what she feels. "From birth up the child is so near to her from the lime when somebody tells her 'It's a boy,' to the time when she tells her husband with glad and fearful wonder: 'He's a man riow, John,' or "Harry, as the 'case may he. 'At tirst he's just a wee bundle in her arms. And how she has to care for him then! Every moment of the day and night her thoughts are with him. Such a to-do with feeding and minding and soothing! Such a dressing
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Hans Schwartz.
With the arrest of Hanj Schwartz the police of Uoboken, N. J., believe they have completed their chain of evidence against Fritz Kolb, the German recervist who is believed to have blown up U. S. munitions factories.
mil undressing! Such
ssing and undn
sing! Such a making and mak
ing of fine baby clothes! Such a ceaseless watch and guard to keep away the thousand little ids that, baby flesh is heir to! The wee baini is still part oi her, and his faintest cry goes through her heart. "Oh, be sure that Cue mother of a dead soldier sees Iter son as he was in those oid days. T,e sure that in the b nely night watches, in fancy she still holds him against her breast, rocking him .;ently to sleep, and crooning over him the old world songs her mother sang to her. He was a great strapping fellow when he went out to the war six feet, maybe, with broad shoulders and fierce moustache. Hut to his mother he is always, first mid foremost, that wee bundle in her arms. "And then lie learns to toddle. That's a grand day when first he toddles from his mammy to his daddy and back again. And he learns to talk. Was ever poetry as wonderful as those nonsense baby words? An i now he's hanging at. her skirts all day, peering ftom behind them at the great world and the postman. And now he's breeched. His daddy s a proud man. and maybe Ids mother is proud, too. Vet she sighs as she folds up the baby petticoats snd puts them in the press with a sprig of lavender and a tear. "Care for him! How a mother has to care. All the childish mi. -haps, aye! and all the childish naushtir.ess. fail upon her. "lis she niu.v send him out to school with shining morning face, and welcome him back to dinner black from head to foot from a roll in the mud with lang Sandy Tamson's Sandy. Oh, he'll vex her often enough (what lad that is worth his salt, doesn't?!; but she's proud of him, lie's the apple of her eye, and even her ;evere?t repn ofs are caresses. "All this the mother remembers now, as she sits with her man. or maybe by herself, at the fireslJe. Those childish hands still pull at her skirts, that childish treble still echoes 'round the house. A heavy-footed young rascal comes clattering down the stairs, and a beloved little voice seems to ask, Mither, should I buy some sweeties wi' rna penny?'"
KHEI'lll sV
Oandom
X Things and Flings (
Gold weather aches foI!cv7 exposure. Soothe and relieve them with Sloan's Lini
ment, easy to apply, it quickly j
penetrates mahout rubbing. Cleaner than mussy plasters cr ointments, does not stain the skin. For rheumatic pains, neuralgia,
out, lumbago, sprains, strains,' bruises t.:d stiff sore muscles, have! Sloan's Liniment handy. At ell druggists, 25c. 50c. and $1.00.
or: 8 g
--- mntr-mni aa a itt e tnn lir-fc-'-t-i 'J
If There Is
i one tliinp; on this earth
I Tiiar is important to you
a it is gooa eyeignt, and
if thorp is one thiiig
f-asily injured lr
H glort, it is vour ores.
Don't put it off. Vo on (he safe side and make up your mind to come to us and have them attended to this week.
John E. McGarry
' 1 JfiWflor - nnfomotriot
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v.v'iim7 if'; A i i immi m n mm niinri
o u t
a e n . n V; o Z t
IF THE military resources r,f this rountrv wire nh well pr'i"ircil as Its :taTikiri resources rere wo'ibl be r;othing to worry :ibout.
(Ui'ili H r.T" i'us! in? lent, on ;e.-i-ou of fifls are! scs.
They'll hf al).-.llsh-t of th i.ih cost
ALAS' Just wheti w get heade 1 for prohibition corro the department stores advert isinft taffeta s:!k skirt!! with l).irrel iieiite:.
'!"R rimy la. !; I'.eeiis sailors: the;
to run oir uiiriPs an-1 re; .ire r !.( niori !. g for werkt:epatriots su y that what needs is birth control. 'TRrrAMK ye ;r eo ie-h b.crtie," savs tt.e M-.)neic-vi-e is a little li-. f-arlv. not in force in IiiJiAna. i; lrtl..
sol'i.f-rs; o ' : r r.a ar'n't enough rn
St'
1 te.iilS t seme
1- -' r r,t fit Prr-s. A'l1 'rohibition atil April 1,
LOWELL
i a
r was a Chicago b
Klmer v were
FRAXcn rb-iitns anotlr Joan of Arc t-i ,';e;i ,i her ;irris. Tbe dame better wat'-ii out "r ,if';l w itei up v. ;th l-urt; in at the stak.
HKKtVPTF.l:. ! n ti'ee'icss t lie barber rt ii THIN-OP -ere
tiiat Ane r b a be pa ra uiimn grf :--s.
a s invent-Y-s, but
;. so ;npp t re-n; selves i ti fl a.; eventually will in tie' Unittd St a tt'S eeti-
J. A
visitor yesterilay. A. fiiil-iress aii'i sens. Leu e;-, and J,,-. I.. I,. I;. r ivur. Yh-itor? ! ' r "1 a ' .biiin A. Khr.met i.t
teyr'r. ;- or. r. es.ness Mr. ml '-s. V.. X. !!-v b-jrst Mrs. Ir. in Hr-i', -;- A. Lrow torncy J. W. 1 leisen . N: k ify : :,,! : ' v : :: ; .-
f l.i imiidti'!. ;. st i-r !:f Mrs. c-.:er!es Fit.-'-, ' Sileiiiv, Lowell visiter V'-" r:ay. i' n Ni- life? rer-nee 1 ;. estej-da a ;;t with frietels ;: Ko.its. In 'pV-e ffiielr r-i:u'er of the e ile-'i e-e:ir e e U ;-e ' be I tie- 'iru'ui tlie-itre roniaht.
TOO WEAK TO FIGHT Tlifi "Come-Fe-" man was ree.i!y n'-r 'lown-snd-out. His weskened ro 'iition btcause of overwork, lek of -.x-ercise, imiirofpr rating and livle e-
luoeis . ? imulatmn to sr.tljfy the cry "'r a heahh-giviup Hpretitc nnl the re', 'reshiiiz sleep essential to strength. ;i)L'l VKIl.it. 11,11, l-teirl r,!l I'nnanl.i
antry j the Nat u.na.1 He!:--jy of Holland, wi';f . do the verk. They are w nrlerfut: Three of t.pf.p eftvules enrh iv will
, '"i- a foan mi r.,5 nci Derore r.o knows it; whether his trouble conies from urlo icirl p-'-isonlnar. the kidneys, gravel or i stone in the hiadder. t tonuch derwn-e-. rner,t or other ailments 'hat befnil t!.o ! over-zealous American. Pon't wa.t until you are entirely down-and-out but take them today Tour druggist v.lll gladly refund your money if they j0 not help you. 25c, BOc and $1.0:) jer j oox. Accept no .ibKtitutes. Ixiok fo ; the name (;oir MEPAI, on everv box. , They are tho pure, original, lmportest
; imai i"ui vii suies. AflV, less MwHwnMMM
and ; Chi- !
REMOVAL NOTICE
jj--er yesit, Mr. and
.ell. , r- ' M i n r. i r. -w ' re in
from high 1 11 in
Eugene S. Cooper, arehlteet. 302 Hamtv.erel Building, has moved his office to Room 2. Sfrnube Building. 2-l-3-".
Hammond Furniture
Hospital 323 W. HOKVEA1T ST. For up-to-dite Upbolstering. Furniture repairing. Mattresses made to order. All work called for and delivered.
THF.KK
one tn:
to on s: ier:
-re were any t'-hents ia the path
th ark none of us woub!
-.ere.
If . f There nre 10.000 I.nke Tonnty people I rrho nre Hvins nil over the U. S. A
SIX r erson
H ! ' N I 1 1 K H TmP.TY-THREE have r.-sked IaKoI'ette to get
uhscrlptlon to THE TIMES will nare
you the trouble of writing a letter t :
mi n y one of them.
M1
laintam
four
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i Tim" ill -1 r - IIl" ,i.v .
DOES IT PAY TO "KID?" Tr.e other day this paper in a jocilar mood carried a picture of Mary Pickford whose riicture has been in the newspapers more than anv other r.ctress in the world. The picture carried the caption: If you guess the last nftmn of this girl we wi'. give you an au' 'tie 'bi',. providing each guess Is accompanied by a ZuQ check. Now conies lh joke. It seems that it is really useless to attempt to be funny or flip. The day's mail is loaded with g uesses from ail points of the compass aivinsr the correct, name and asking us to send the automobile, or soekinsr information as to the most, convenient day when they rr.ight call for the machine. Some even ask us to describe the machine more carefully, and we fully expect to be r-.tizzerl yet, whether the rear axle? are floating and w"iaf hind of u !hting system the machine carries. Not one of t.-.p letter writers all of whom seem to be perfpet,- prions read the caption carefully, for all of them Ignored the last clause--"all guesses must be accompat :ed by a check for $.500." Question why try to be a kidder?
CALLOWAY OR CARAWAY AGAIN. Editor Tim ns: I have nofb-ed you r arraignments of Congressman Calloway of Texas. "Why don't the newspapers dare him to publish tho nam en of the papers be says nre subsidized by England? FiEA T'F. H. "Reader is informed that Calloway has been offered $1 boo if he will give the name of ary American paper or papers subsidized by England or the allies. It. was a very excellent way of. closing Calloway's mouth, for he made no answer to the offer, and thereby showed he was lying. Incidentally Calloway wa.s beaten by a big majority at the last election. That, is what makes him so sore. In these newspaper charges, Calloway o is it Caraway ? evinces a lark of information comparable only to his i,ertorrne of all the principles of preparedness about which he ranted so much in Washington. He was defeated largely because of his opposition to the "O-called preparedness measures and his tenets were completely reircted by the people of his district.
Look Trell to the food? that enter your body. Sec that they are not harmful in any way. Impure air and harmful food "will weaken anybody 's.health. You may breatho the purest of air and eat the most beneficial food and still poison your body if the nutrition has to pass through diseased membranes. The mucous membrane protects every part of your body exposed to the air. Through it you breathe and through it you absorb your food. When it Is unhealtlrrthe air is unhealthy, and the food is poisoned by your own body. An unhealthy membrane has catarrh, which is stagnation of the blood, sometimes called inflammation. When your food and the very air you breathe go through a diseased membrane, how can they be healthful?
ourse
If If It Isn t the
Hundreds of people suffer from systemic catarrh. Nature makes a great struggle to throw off this disease, but she cannot do it unaided. PERUNA is a reliable remedy for such conditions, tested by 44 years. Read what some of the restored have to say aout it.
CATARRH OF WHOLE SYSTEM Mrs. James A. Hall, Box 3G, Norris City, Ills , writes: "About twelve years ago my health began to fail. I couldn't eat anything without Kufferinp; for it. I had heart burn, sour stomach, palpitation of the heart, smothering spelLs, pains in my sides and back. "Doctors failed to relieve me. I continued to prow worse until I was able to sit up only a part of the time. "Peruna books described my feelinp so truly I sent at once and got a battle and bepan taking it. "When I had taken two and one-half bottles I began to eat without suffering. I continued to improve. When 1 had taken eight I was like a new person. That was nine years ago. "I think Pe-una the greatest family remedy there is, for so taany ailmenU are due to catarrhal trouble."
TONIC FOR WOMEN Mrs. Mary E. Barlow, 4700 Cham p1 in Ave., Flat 1, Chicago, 111., writes: "I can recommend Peruna a a good medicine for chronic catarrh of the bowels and stomach. I have been troubled severely with it for over three years. I consulted two of Chicago's best doctors, but none seemed to make any improvements wr&tever. One year ago I began to take Peruna, the -wonderful tonic for women, a' e I noticed a wonderful improvement at once. I took six bottles in succession and I always have it on hand to take some now and then when my cough is bad. Words cannot express my praise for your tonic. I weighed only ninetv pounds before taking Peruna, now one hundred nineteen pounds. Anyone who has ch -onic catarrh should try Peruna. It will help anyone."
PERUNA BROUGHT STRENGTH Mrs. II. D. Amoss, White Plains, Ga., writes: "I feci like 3 new woman. "When I commenced taking Peruna I could hardly waik across my room; now I am doing my own work; can walk a mile and a half to church. "I shall never cease to thank you for prescribing for me. I have been under the treatment of two doctors, but never received any benefit until I commenced taking your medicine. "I am now well and able to do my own work."
'Mvw r v?
fA'iL -'rrtrp I-.. iii t' aT, - itwu'ji.-TJUw mi i PiinrwiTOji,, S'v-r-.;e:
H J - J. -- .. " .
nrr" m
U SI
P S L Seven sizes.
60 cits to 600. aad sold as low as S8.50.
PERUNA Strengthens the Weak It is a real tonie; containing the elements that will enable your body to build itself up to perfect strength. It removes all catarrhal conditions, no matter where located. It restores ..,;- u.nut t,otfh Tt eiveq hiack vour rlifestion. overcomes
rtH-Sr inflammation and sets your feetfirmly upon the highway to health. Many thousiTi k'jl'S'f - 1 or-.Hs. how ,,eH ir ,io, toitv an.l fl.lvnnt ape. Their letters furnish the strongest proof
of itsexceller.ee.' Since it has helped them, why shouldn't it help you? Don't drag about half sick. Take PERUNA and bp well.
LJ1HJ.J a
w i'.trl tr
1
IP'JJW:':WK!
I ve run a small "Duckeye sev
eral years and I fcnow it's the best
machine on Ibe face of the earth!
Now I'm going in big and make
money. Everybody uses the BUCKEYE
THS WORLD'S BEST INCUBATOR. hie breeders and little one 11,000 chicks a vearand lot'. Endorsed by Agricultural Coilrccs and Experiment Stitions. Operates automatically ?nd can't wrong. We are so sure of the Buckeye s" never fail ins performRoce that we guarantee it 10 batch more and better chick? than any otticr incubator regardless f price. Come in and et a free copv of "The Verdict ol the Lscr" backed by aifiJaviU BIEKER BROS.
it1 'j -an M:irrjfjacTsitisimui!eu
I
Remember that PERUNA is also put up in tablet form. The Perun Company, Columbus, Ohio
" J
Crystal Glucose for Fine Candy Prompt Delivery Telephone South Chicago 920. AMERICAN MAIZE PRODUCTS CO.
IPETEV DINK! l(lty -Makes It Tough for Henrietta
By C. A. Voih
nj' FxJSiJ )BALC KEEP ) S I i - WeTEP v A EPMVEVE ) I y 7 v C&" Vouc ov v VNour eve. ) V&b ) l 0KJ "Ball , VfSi
