Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 183, Hammond, Lake County, 25 January 1918 — Page 3

i'Agc Thrca

Friday. January 'Jo. 1018. THE TIMES ' '

I vni to RANkT Accm iixnr S

y JLi UL i.;: M UL A. . XX JL IfceV yS 33 "w S. ' A i II

tin

An account in a strong, well m&nvg4 bank is ft graat s&Xegu&rd. If you already have one, eo much tfca better 4f not, trtart today. Ha&a it your bosinesa to add to it regularly and enjoy tbfeaiimr of g&fetv voa can tre. no other way. Oome in and uea na. A talk with us on finances will do you eood. Yor the convenience of our natrons ve are ctxn TuasHat a.n PHHan Trr,

... V , y " " ' J - J

3 INTEUEST ON SAVXN&S A0C0UHT3 COHPOTJITlftJD 0H2H -A1HHJ ALLY

LAKE COUNTY SAVINQS AND TRUST COMPANY phtos v? hssxt, prsaut

petes w. mm? 7 Q BELHA2?

A. IX. TUEIIEU

DAVID 7. 2MEB3T Albhet iiaack:

COB. STATE & HOHHAN STS. HA2X2IOHD, BfDIAKA

OTTO H. DUEIiEE F&AHH6. B2TZ

LtfS

I

L'XU'JB-Lgg-

TWIN CITY NEWS NOTES

Kataarloe HownrA. csis oicott eve. Ptva SS3, will be pleased to writ aaa receive aoeial news and adrertlstBSJ Ibe TinM. ooitXrasBiA tueatkh Miufar'a special feature will 1a Mary Flctrford, ittim In te "I-lttU FKllcau, Also a Fox Sunshine Com 4y tit led i "Baoucedi No Good.' Xattn.ee coaunenclivff at a i8( CoutlnHoSLa, 1-24-3 TOLT TAXI SERVICE. IVMnnW. .ill calla promptly taken are of -where roada are passable. Phono East Chicago BO. R. F. Giorgio. 471S Forsyth avenue, la advertising a Shoe Sale which will no doubt appeal to our citizens see fcia advertisement in today's Issue. Coaunlttse of the Welfare Association he'd a day ago at the homo of Mrs. W. TV. Smith in Beacon street where rwenty-sevsn ladles met to discuss the advisability of piecing In the field. & third nurse, owinj to the heavy demauds made during' the past month, for nursing care. Great interest was

maniTested at this meeting aa is shown i "hen such & goodly number would come j out during this unfavorable weather.

Miss Arundle the supervising nurse, was present and gave a report of the past month's work. An excellent report, showing no lessening whatever In the need of the work In this community and should there he placed another

nurse, the public will greatly benefit i

as It will give & night service, often very urgent. Letters bearing relation

Oust

Tho entire stock of Men's Ladles' and Children's Shoes sold at cost and below cost. Sale now going on. Going into another line of business.

J.Giorgio

4716 FORSYTH AVENUE EAST CHICAGO.

to the sew service were read but ne definite decision has been made as to when or how saon It may become advantageous. For publio good It can, nut come any too soon far fatnllle who have now become aooustomed to these trained and efficient nurses coining into the homes when their service! are absolutely of permanent value, t'ae the tidings of the new service oanuot be hailed with any but great Joy. There is no mother but who feels at time of sickness and strtfe In the family that there Is no one other, than the family physician to prescribe to take the pleoe of a, capable nurse, and since we have them In our field the realisation of their value is becoming more noticeable e-rery day and the people are giving of their time and needs in the furtherance of the work as was shown by the 'meeting and Its good attendance a day ago. Mrs. Smith reported thirteen new members. A book on publla health nursing by Mary Gardner, an officer of the national organisation led the Introductory chapter. There wu a general discussion by thpse present and at the next meeting Mrs. J. T. Thompson will give a review of a half hour allotted at each seslon. It may he added that owing to the heavy toll of nurses seeded tO(Jrneet the Red Cross demand that the new service may not to as speedily adopted a at other times hut committees are working Industriously along the lines and announcement maj- be eipectsd in the near future. The Messrs and Mes3air.es Dale Flicklnger and Roy Stephens are entertaining at a dancing party for their friends tomorrow evening at the KL of P. hall in Michigan avenue. There will be, about fifteen couples In attendance and McKlnley's orchestra will Play the dance music. Miss Myrtle Dunck has received a letter from Private William Oeorge Harris, to the effect that the hoys have

arrivea over v-.ere ana mat they are happy and well and find the cHmate better than here at Camp Robinson.

Wisconsin. This is the first letter re-.

ceived here since the boys landed and will be of general Interest to their many friends In this city, that all Is well with them. The Mesdames D. C. Morris and Reese Willalms are spending today In Chicago. Miss Lcis Acker of S814 Fir street will have the King's Heralds with her torr.orow afternon. All are urged to be In attendance. The Indiana Harbor Red Cres Center is a very busy plaee these days, regardless of the cold Wfather. Iast week there were one hundred and twenty-seven workers In all. "Wednesday alone there wre thlr7-seven work

j day alone there wer thirty-seven j workers with the Mesda-mes John Bi Favovid and P. W. Dupes instructing in the making of gauxe dressings. Monj dey there were thirty-eight women (working and four hundred and twenty-

one gauze dressings made with the Mesdames A. A. Clark and W. E. Jewell directing the work. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Jamleson of Beacon street celebrated their wedding anniversary which ocurred yesterday, by having dinner In Chicago lest evening and later attending the performance at the, Colonial Theatre, seeing "The Brat." The Ku Klux Klan will meet with Miss Clara Teterson at her home In South O.'cott avenue this evening. Miss Idresse "Williams and Clara Peterson of this city were among those who attended the dance given by the Whltlrjg Owls last evening. Mrs! J. E. "Worth of Canton. Ohio, !s the guest of Mrs. H. "W. Tant In AJdis avenue and Is leaving shortly for California where she Is to spend the winter months. Mrs. Hughes, wife of Dr. W. Ia Hughes of Michigan avenue, underwent a very serines operation at the South Shore hospital yesterday. Advices from hr bd!de are that she withstood the

ri u n i i i i . . um. n m lit jumr . n .uni

NEW RECORDS Jbr your TJILKING MACHINE

r? . . ..-.rr1im f , nJ

Hammond Han Would Rather Fight Than Work "I suffered tot years with t omasa trouble and could not eat and just hated tor anyone to say work to me. I would rather fight Since taking a course cf Itayr'a Wonderful Remedy I aotually want to work and talk about eat. X am the list one to leave the table now." It ! a simple, harmless preparation . that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the Inflammation which causes practically all stomaoh, liver snd Intestinal ailments, Including ap

pendicitis. One dose will convince or

money refunded. Summers Pharmacy. Rldgely Drug Stores In Gary, and Central Drug Store In Indiana Harbor. Adv.

Tamaki Mhxra, Japanese prima donaa, bsa sung for Columbia the evqukit "Cn Del da Vedremo," from "Madam Butterfly." It was, naturally, in the rd! of "the little Japanese bndo that this singsr from the land of the cherry blossoms mad her greatest rucoece in Boston opera, and once one h&rs her sweet, beautifully-modulated tonee in Puccini's famous" sons oi the deceived yet trusting maiden, it is easy to understand how she has touched the hearts of her audiences. This js Mme. Miura's first record, but others are promised by Columbia.

Vernon Stiles, row in Garenuaent service as singing instructor at Carop Devens, has made aa enjoyable double record tor Columbia's February offerings. It contains Balfe's bffauttful love song, "Than You'll Remember Me." from "Bohemian Girl," and the equally popular old Irish melody, "The Minstrel Boy," words by Ton Moore. Stiles ht one of the finest tenor -voices known to the American concert stage and a gift of expression which makes him a master artist in just such numbers as these two.

Fully up to the standard of Columbia dance musio are "Over the Top," onestep, nd "Since I First Knew You," fox-trot, played by Prince's Band. The former has the military swing and

.dash so much in favor ju?t now, and

introduce the popular melodies. lJixie Volunteers'' and "Nephews of Uncle Sara." Interpolated in the fox-trot are three other favorites of the day, "My Little Indiana Rose." "The Land of Wedding Bells'' and "There It Goes Again.''

"Oh, Come My Heart's Delight," sines Maria Barrientos, in her newest Cofimbia record, the soliloquy of impatient Susanna, from the last- act of Mozan's sparkling "Marriage cf Figvro." The clear end brilliant tones of tbe Metropolitan soprano could scarcely be heard to better advantage than in this gem of melody from an opera which for more thsn one hundred and thirty years has delighted lovers of music. Moiart's music, it might be said, was written for just sucb sincers a Mme. B anient oa.

A world-faao-os singing organisation, Father Finn's Paullrt Choir, is now making records fox Columbia, and contributes two numbers to the newest list of Columbia offerings. These choristers, who hare won honors in international competition abroad, are heard in Cherubinii "Veai Jeau" and "Alleluia Haeo Dies," the latter the work of Father William Joseph Finn, who won high rank as a composer before he organised the boy choir which has given him added 1 distinction. The freeh, clear voices of the choristers are excellently reproduced, and their records are sure to delight lovers of choral musio.

Good adviee and good melody both are found in the new Columbia offering entitled "Don't Try to Steal the Sweetheart of a Soldier."' This quite up-to-date ditty is well sung by the Sterling Trio- The same record ha a livelv patriotio song, "The Dixie Volunteers,'' in which the Peerless Quartette displays plenty of animation.

while the grenades explode with cavernous roars. These missiles fly Into a hundred pieces each and wipe out life for rods around. II ore machine gruna are tapping their warnings or having their "tryouts" here and there along the line. The Bocau again, as if nervous, is doing It too. A half hour follows without a single spark cf fireworks. But It breaks out again both sides watching, flaring.

bombing, machine gunning

NOSE CLOGGED FROM A COLD OR CATARRH

Apply Cream in Nostrils Open Up Air Passages.

To

A new record of the famous quartette from "Rigoletto" is offered by Columbia. It is sun by the Boston National Grand

rOpera Company Quartette. The voices

are well balanced, and the number receives capable rendition.

Oscar Seagle has sang two numbers for Columbia's February group of records, and his rich baritone voire is heard to splendid advantage In each. One is th.- masterpiece of melody and sentiment, "There s a Long, "Long Trail," and the other the ejallv touching "Calling Me Home to You.'' Conno'wurs of "inging will tind real delight in both numbers.

"Slidus Trombonus" is the appropriate name of a trombone solo played by Leo Zimmerman, with band aocompamment, for Columbia. It is good brass music. So is "The Four tArs," a quartet of cornets and trombones, on tre ssme record.

Charles Harrison contributes two pleasing numbers to the Columbia rbruar hat. One is "Little Mother O' Mine," the other "God Bring You SaMy to Our Arms Again." Both are sung with all the tenderness and emoticp for which this young tenor is noted.

WEEK-END SPECIALS AT C. E. LARSON'S GROCERY

PHONE 7.

4737 OLCOTT AVE.

MONARCH COFFEE, 3 lb. oontalners 932 YELLOW CORN MEAL, 3 lbs. 32o sVRER RABBIT PURE NEW ORLEANS MOLASSES, 18-oz. can . 14 2 TOMATOES, No. 3 cans, 3 cans . FANCY RED ALSAKA SALMON, 1 lb. can 29 RICHELIEU GRAHAM FLOUR. 5 lb. ack... 36d LOG CABIN SYRUP, large size can, per can -4TC MONARCH SWEET RELISH, per bottle FARMHOUSE ERAND PREPARED MUSTARD, pint Jar 19 FARMHOUSE BRAND APPLE BUTTER, full quart Jar 32 VAN CAMP'S HOMINY, No. 3 cars, per can X3C FULL CREAM AMERICAN CHEESE, per lb 35 ARGO GL083 STARCH, 20-or, pkg. JQ

16f SWEET 23c 12c

RIVERVIEW BRAND CALIFORNIA ASPARAGUS, per can 5 RYZON BRAND BAKING POWDER, 1 lb. can 35C STANDARD BRAND CORN OR PEAS, 3 cans 40C CRANBERRY BEANS,

per lb "- RICHELIEU QT. BOTTLE CIDER BUCKWHEAT, per peck .-. OLD COUNTY SOAP.

per bar 51 ROME BEAUTY APPLES, 10 lbs 60c LIBBY MILK, large size, 3 cans 40 C BURN HAM & MORRILL LIMA BEANS, 2 lb. cans, 2 cans 25C MONARCH PINEAPPLE, Ne. 2 i tins, per can 31C MONSOON BRAND BEETS, No. 3 cans, per can "16C SNOW WHITE HIGH GRADE CREPE TOILET PAPER, large rolls, 3 rolls 27C

effeota of the anaesthetlo very well and was resting. Mrs. Delia Sirlio, wife of Alphle SlrHn is a patient st the Mercy hospital in Gary where she has undergone an operation and Is reported to be doing nicely. Saturday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lowery of Northcotte avenue will haviy a large fathering of friends to assist in the celebration of their eighth wedding1 anniversary. "U'hen asked what the eighth year signified. Mrs. Lowery replied, "just a general good time." It is not necessary to announce which one it will fe. the folks who have attended the past seven will know. Evidently they do for this couple' hospitality Is well recognised by their neighbors and friends. Mrs. BssMe Ifeyden. supervising deputy for tho Royal Neighbors and who has heen here in the Interests of both camps of this city for several weeks past is leaving today for Lowell to be In attendance at the festivities .being arranged ehere for Lieutenant O'Brien of the English Aviation Corps whose escape from Germany has made hiin the center of Interest of tbe entire world. Mrs. Harden will return here in a f?w deys and resu-..e her work.

treads In daylight. The low dirt ridge just behind a tangle of wooden stakes and barbed wire ovr across melts quickly Into the failing light and nothing is vis'.bl" except your own sandbagged parapet end the ragged naze of your own barbed wire. A battery of French guns bark sharply in the reer. Firefly faihes wink a ni!!e behind the ' enemy's wire. The French gunners are saying '"GoodNight" to a Bo'che battery and the dull "Boom, "Eoom," "Boom," then the squeal of enemy steel above tei's you the Boche Is answering. Unless unforseen thinrs happen tonight the gunners will "rest on their arms" until day

break. One 'julet" sectors like this It often happens. With darkness down the night shift are eating supper in their dugouts and rigging out In sheepskin jackets to begin the llnt night watch over the parapets. The dugouts corrugated steel and sandbag construction at Intervals a few yards back of the first line are smelly and dArk but filled with life. It's human life and Insect life, the latter making little difference so long as steel and standbags hed vagrant shells. Men say they can get accustomed to Insects but the bite cf a shell is different. The United Press found the Inevitable American elan Jn these dugouts to

night. Penciled names on the wooden bunks augrgested New York's east side, St. Loj:S. Cincinnati, Milwaukee and other purer American names suggested early settlers on the praliies cf the middle west In fact, it was in the trench just o'ltside that i small body of American "Sammies" on November t fought desperately cgalnst overwhelming German odds In America'a first little battle of the big European war. Tonight the po'.lus of France ere again eating their evening oup, meat stew, bread, cheese and- drinking their rations of Finard on the bunks where names like Janovlcy, Meyers and Mead

ows are penciled. Probably soon, khakied f gurss will again occupy these dugouts carrying on the watch over

the wire ahead and over a historic little American graveyard, two miles In the rear, where eleven silent earthmounds He under as many rough hewn crosses, each bearing a name and the entwined flags of America and France. The night po'.lus have taken their places a few yards apart along the parspet. The day pollus have filed Into the dugouts fcr food and rest. A machine gun is "rat-tat-tat-ing" Its evening tryout. All mach'.ne guns are frequently tetd at r.iht. A faintr

"rat-tat-tat-tat" ehov.s that the Bodhe Is doing It too. A bright fiery streak roars

up nearby and a small white parachute floats gently down with an Incandescent

flare lighting up No-Man's Land for a hundred yards around. SomebnTly saw a sujpiclous move beyond the wire, an

orncer eipia'.nea. me orn-er orders few rifle grenades fired as a warning to prowling Boches, perhaps trying to learn something or to cut the wire. The pollu heads, eilhouettlne' over th parapet at Intervals against the blackness beyond, "duck down" for an lnstar.t

things in that uacanny black stretch of

"Ko-Man's Land" fringed on each e'.de with night watchers who trust nobody but themselves. Another period of silence except low voices of men talking In "th wh'rpers." They've learned to "t," - titer" hy constant practice. A po.iu apologetically explained, as he re-arranged his nest of black ejg-like hand grenades on the trench fhelf before hiin. that American soldiers talked .too loud at first. But they finally learned to "parlor doucernent," he added. The Boche Is active again. A flock of hsnd grenades roar themselves into silence on the other side ss fiery i;ght streaks perform arcs like Roman can

dles end then float gracefully down under their parachutes Into the German wire. A rifle grenade explodes half way across No-Man's Land and Boche machine guns take up the tune. The Boche having told the French by the dlsplar that r.o German soldiers are prowling in this part of No-Man'e I,and there Is silence against unt.l time makes things

uncertain. The Bcche has no reason to be nervous yet." whispered an officer. "Our f.rst patrol goes out at 2 o'clock. Tould you like to gf along?" Patrolling Is one of the milder games ef hide and seek in No-Man's Land at night, and It's something most all American trench soldiers will learn before the war Is over.

Ah! What relief! Tour clogged nostrils open right up. the air passages cf your head are clear and you can breathe

suspicious i freely. No more hawking. snufTlluK.

mucous discharge, headache, dryness . no struggling for breath at night, jour cold or catarrh Is gone. Don't stay stuffed upl Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from - our druggist now. Apply i Itttie cf iV iragrant, lr. roar iritrils, let it penetrate through, every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, lnfamed mucous membreca, giving you -instant relief. Ely's Cream Balm is Just what every Cold and catarrh sufferer Las been seeking. It's just splendid. Adv.

Enli't In The Woman's Atzay By Conserving Foods.

Grand American for Chicago Aug. 5 to 9 KIW TO, Jan. 22. Sates Tor the Grand American baadicap tournament of the Interstate Trapshooting association have "been set ' for Ang. 5 to 9, inclusive. The tonmameat will "be held at Chicago, under the auspices of the South Shore Country clnb. There will be 4,000 ia added money, of whdeb 1,500' and trophies will he divided among the first five place winners.

How Butchers Sharpened Knives. In the sepnlchers at Tbches, Egyp butchers are represented ss sharpenlnf their knives on a round bar of metal attached to the!r aprons, which from its bine color Is supposed to be iron.

Break a Cole in Few Hours

First Hose of 'Tape's Cold Compoun'd" relieves the cold 2nd grippe misery Don't stay stuffed up!

r.ellef comes inetantl. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the hend, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogrged-up nostrils sr.d air . passages in the had. stops nasty discharge or r.ore running, rellovs sl"k headache, dullness, feverish-

ness. sore throat, sneezing, orer.es and

stiffness.

Dor.'t sy stuffed-upl Quit blowing end muffling! Fhs your tbrebbiag head! Nothing else In the world gives ?uch prompt relief as "rre's Cold Compound," whif-h costs only h fow c.nti at any drug stor1;. Its arts without a?sistan-:e, tastes nice, cause no inccn venience. Be sure jou get tho genuine. Adv.

ar to

Mailed By U. P. Men To The United States

BOTE EOT HF TOM BESME A KOSY C0MPlLE2dt0H

Saya w can't help but look better and feel better after an Inside bath.

1VOTK The following story by W. S. Forrest, laltrt Press Staff correspondent, tells of his experieaeea during; a night In a front line Irenes in close proximity to that section of Ike front bow fceld by American troops. Editor. By W. s. FORREST fUnited Press Staff Correspondent.) T.'ITH THE FRENCH ARMIE3 IN

lo look one's best and feel one's best is to enjoy sn inside bath each morning to flush from the system the -pre-

j vjous day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins tfore it Is abJ sorbed Into tho blood. Just as coal, v.hen it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of Incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken eaeh day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxin and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts : which are intended to suck In only

nourishment to sustain the fcody. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom Jn your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a teasroonful of limestone phosphate in It, which Is a harmless means of washing the waste material end toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, before putting more food into the stomach.

We Giv8 S. & H. Green Trading Stamps.

THE FIELD. Dec. 16. (By Mail.

Night life in a first line trench has Its I Mn women with s.sllcw skins, little bag of thrills for the toglnner. j liver spots, pimples or pallid comples-

Fc llus say night trenches are raonot- ' ,ou' are tnose w no wa.ee. up witn a

coated tongue, bed taste, nssty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, scid stomach or constipation should begin this phosphated hot water drinking. A quarter-pound of limestone phosphate costs very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap snd hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on Trie outside, so hot water and limenstone phosphate act on the inside organs. Adv. .

onous,' but all pollus ha e seen Lveiler things tftsn trench life. To an American correspondent, spending a first night on the fringe of No-Man's Land precisely as no doubt hundreds of thousands of Americans will before the end of the war. a nocturnal trench has all the melodramatic elements needed to keep up Interest and drive monotony away. Darkness seems to settle down quickly over the frowsy, weeded, grey strip In front wnlea nobody ewns and nobedy

tion of Broken Sires, lines, which is but

Onr next step now is to close these out so that re Trill not have anything left over at the end of the season to occupy valuable space which we shall

need for Spring models. We have therefore cut the price on every pair to $2.45. That's a mighty, low

priceforabonafide S4.50 value but when

cut prices, we do it VIGOROUSLY and get it over with. You will get a mighty fine $4.50 pair of these NEWARK shoes if you come TOMORROW.

rm '',: : - b CT A -,; ,yfcf ' i i -i -.! iimi-t-T -r- ' -i- n-i-i - "y -j """" " r I A FTER a record fall business, our inventory jj ff I k shows an enormously increased accumula- 15?. y. f I I

Odd Lots and Discontinued Ji f 0 i f

I J? Crt ss Uu i I jf jr i w 7c i I tP'tZr ' tie Br.lwfiftnsin. YQwsr (is ui Iik im..7o VStll,1, I'll ' 1 SSa" lit Uu imifot BSc Slae SboDBbGi 1

Men's and Women's Stors is H?Emond-

5G6 fftahman Street, neat State

OPEN NIGHT8 DURING, SALE. 257 Stores r 97 Cltle

SjkJaissVssr1

'i

2