Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 14, Hammond, Lake County, 3 July 1918 — Page 3
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I 1 Wednesday, July 3. 1918. THE TIMES Page Three i Net Proceeds Donated to AMERICAN RED CROSS notie Pieitie audi 4tEm I July Celetoratiom AT LAKE FRONT PARK, INDIANA HARBOR, IND. - to be given by THE BUSINESS
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EAST CHICAGO AND IND. HARBOR NEWS
Kaarta Bwv4, 4319 Oloott AveI'boue 250, vtII ho pleased to write and . recalv aacial man a aa4 aavertlslas forfis Tha Time, a I a job work of alt daacrtptlon fU-onvlMly and well dome. NOTICE . ro-irth July for India Harbor. All children, who will maxch In parade mnrt t at Uaooln school grotuida.tj 130th ujxA Fir at. at 9:3a All Boy Scouts and Cajaip aire Girls la full uniI arm. T-i nor. a. c. Btraarar. Mrs. P O. Parry of Watseka, I!!.. Is a house gv.es t of Mrs. Oscar Martin of North Paring avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bush of North Oloott avenue, their daughter, Miss Gertrude, and Mr. Eldridge Spencer are preparing to leave for an auto trip to Cleveland and Youngstown, Ohio, to spend a few -weeks. Sens .ind rausbters cf Libtjfy will meet at 135th and Fir streets at 9:30 o'clock to be ia readiness to march in ' "' THAT -HV)s V.-- .70
Squeezing tho Gustomei to swell the dealer's profits 3s Riot WJ&y of conducting the Coal Business. We Believe m Faff Beating and want our customers to be our friends as well. That is why we take such care to keep the best, the cleanest and highest quality of coal to be had. CALL OR 'PHONE US AND WE WILL MEET YOUR DEMANDS.
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has moTed from 3626 liehigan are., corner Block are., to 3318 Michigan are., Indiana Harbor, and will be ready for business on July 4th. Souvenir: will be given. CARL G ALLAN A, Prop.
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Distance fade3 as if by magie before the right sort of car. If you ride in a Case you will marvel at the ease with which the trip is made. When you are looking for easy riding qualities and a car that will make the distance come in and let us demonstrate the Case.
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lh Indiana Harbor rarafle tomorrow. Miss Ev Marcovleh of Cedar street
a patunt ft the Michael ivoeso nos pital in, Chicago, undergoing an operation to have her tonsils removed. Mr. nnd Mm. J. E. O'Neill of 14tth street will leave this rvenlnj! for Munlce. Lid., where the father of Mr. O'Neill Is very I'. I. East Chtoasro Camp, Koyal Neighbors, will meet at K. of P. hell tomorrow morning at 1) o'clock to prepare for entry In the Fourth of July parade. Miss Elizabeth Huher of Pullman Is here fc-r the week, visiting- and In retiming to h-;r home she will bo accompanied by her cousin. Miss Helen Ruth. wh.i will spend a week or more there. Mrs. II. J. Lewis has returned from Centralis, 111., where sha was called on tho sad mission of attending her sister, a Mrs. ' orup who was critically 111 and whu passed to the beyond a day after Mrs. Lewis' arrival. The No Name club met with Mrs. John WAS 77sf r t n -Ll I t BffiR. aJS U3 ?; I B
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North Magoun tvenuo last j Mr. and Mrs. Henry Davis of the RU I Apart i.ieuts t it the proud parents of a baby boy, horn at the 'Washington Park' j hospital. Chicago. Mrs. I)avls ni the j baby will icon bo arriving hon-.e, no promising In both of their conditions. The Indiana Harbor Colored Baptist people met In a grand" Tally held at their church, 1613 137th street, to make announcements of tha success of the amounts of money raised by units of the parish who for convenience divided themselves Into clubs to plan affairs
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wh eh would reap them receipts with j of Europe. Ah. this century muehwhich a In may bo purchased for a lauded twentieth century from which church site. Club No. 1 hud a ehowing so much was expected, mid on which so of $"3,44. Club No. $350.54; Club No. I much premium was laid, how many vicS. S-T5 SO. Total, idi:t.7S. Mr. M. Bra- I tl has it claimed: hat a harrowing mon donated an'-additional $10. The j list of shattered reputations, of destiraator of lh church li ltev I: II H;ir- 1 tute families, of eiled bread-winners it
mon tuid tlie secretary J. I,. Morgan, i Tho present location of the improvised I church is at. 137th street and is called! the Church of the New Hope. Twin City Council, Knights of Columbus, will rn-e! l.oni"rrow morning at tha c orner of 14 4t!i street and Eorsythe avenue, in the vicinity of St. Mary's church, nt lrt o'clock to prepare for entry into the East Chicago parade. Mrs. H. Stroud and her eon. Hillary. hav d'partd for Urbana, 111., for a two weeks' visit. Women of East Chicago find Indian j Harbor are n.sked to show their colors I tomorrow by joining in toe Red Cross parade with those who will march rep- ! reser.tat ivo to their respective chap'ers. Women not having the regula t Ion a. prons ! and caps of the K-'d Cross will wear i white dresses and will bo furnished proper Insignia at the centers. It is imperative that East Chicago w(iitin be at th!r ren'-r promptly at 9:43 and the Indiana Harbor women at their center at the same hour. Mothers who have boys in the various branches of j government service have a special in- i ' vitation to join in the line of march. ; also the sisfrs and sweethearts of same. I Make the demonstration as Impressive i as you can with your assistance. Tha day is emblematic of patriotism. Do j your share. 1 Members of the K. of P. Lodge, 477 iEast Chicago, will meet at 0 o'clock to- : morrow mornln to prepare to take part in the parade at East Chicago.. The j Pythian Sisters will meet with them, j All visiting Knigh's and Sisters are ; asked to Join in this patriotic reiebraI tion. j Carl G?tliari. who for many years ccnducted a fruit s:or at Michigan i avenue, is moving (no noi commodious headquarters at 5.1 1 Michigan avenue
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j long been known as the Indiana Harbor j (Fruit ?tore. The opening will be bi.1.1 i j tomorrow morning. July 4. and throughlout the day tht-re wli: be pppropnate' souvenirs given to all those who ca.I. I Section 3 o e Indiana Harbor M. E. i church will hold a dollar social in the , dining room of the church this evening, j The members and their friends are invited to attend. J The Sons and Daughters of Liberty i of Indiana Harbor will meet in regular She Proved that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Does Help Suffering Women Watertotvn. N. Y.-"Last fall when I was expectir.g to become a mother I was tn very poor I i 1 I'll health. I suffered j ii 1 1 imoi from a female weakness so I did not have strength enough to do my own work and could r.ot stand on my feet for any length of time. Lydia E. Pinkham's V e e e'M i iii i 1 1 table Compound corrected my trouble and I imrroved in health so that when my baby came the doctor eaid he never saw a womn get along " Srl--rr uiuaiu i Know 1C was iyaia jc. i inKnam s veeretaoie Compound that helped me." Mrs. Ernest Beebe. 124 Wvominsr Ave.. Watertown NY Women who continually overtax their ; Btrer.gth until they get into such a weakened condition 6hould profit by Mrs. Beebe'a experience and try this C. J t. 1 i. . T 1: . n iiiuuuo iwi e.uu nciu rpmeuy, iVUia i Pinkham's Yegetabla Compound. For special suggestions write Lydia 1 E. Pinkham Jledicme Co. The result of j its long expedience ia at your service. To Heal Bed Sores For 25 yeati physicians and nurses have never found anything equal to Sykes Comfort Powder One box proves its extraordinary healing power for any ekin inflammation. 25c at the Vlnol and other drug stores The Comfort Powder Co boston, Mass.
TUIQ WnMAM
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SEE THIS FURNACE Before Purchasing 50 per cent less fuel producing 100 per cent more heat. Eurna any kind of fuel. Bottom cf air chamber covered with water. Moistens tho air. preserves health and sanitation. Sella on merit, not in competition. No heat ia lost in basement nor up the fiue. Simple to install. Easy to operate. Warms your home in one-tenth the time of steam, hot water or old style furnace. One register pipeless system. Standard Heating Co. j. tietleman. Agents Wanted. S216 Block Ave., Indiana Harbor, Indiana.
Zwji, the Ideal Home of a Disinherited People By Rabbi Bernard H. Rosengard.
' (Conclusion.) j. ARTICLE IV. This metaphorical passage is a sad ! j but true description of the state of our j , people in many parts of the continent! has brought to light: If we could but gauge a tenth part of the sorrow and dismay which ths tyrannous system of Russian misrule has caused our suffering co-religionists, we should listen to the poet and "Be up and doing-, with a heart (or any fate. Still achieving, ttill pursuing." Anil we would not fall to give a further hearing to this Inspired bard : "Let us In life's earnest labor Still be sure to do our part." J,"Lt us work with nil our might session Friday evening at K. cf P. ha'l. i Mlchi4an avenue. There, will be instal- ! la'ion-of officers nnd initiatory desree , work postponed until a later dau-. The Woman's Guild of the Good Shepherd Episcopal church will meet with Mrs. Harvey, 4520 Forsyihe avenue, Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kiernan of North Baring ave1 nue was baptize! Sunday at St. Mary's church. The sponsors were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McDonough of Hammond. The litt le one bears the name of Irene Cecil. Mrs. Fred Unseal! snd Mrs. Lesh Has - call f Drumrnond street are Chicago v isj-.ors todav. Mr. and Mrs. James Arney of North Baring avenue are leaving today In their car for a trip to the southern part of i Illinois, stopping st Stared Rock and ; Vandalia, and expect to be gone for ! about two weeks. j There will be dancing throughout j the dr.y and evening, a drill y a rompatty f'f fifty Jackie from the Gre;i'. j Lakes Training Station, a vaudeville pel t'ormance of Ave acts at three and j seven p. tr... an open 1 1 aps!. ': ing con test at 5 p m, at the Willi I.nu 1.AKK X l'.' lNr I A I . rv, JU.y , 115 All are lunch. Mr. and Mrs. George Roop of Fir street and their son, Cecil, have returned from an outing at Klinger Lake, Wis. The mother of Mrs. Koop, Mrs. Georg? Durst, and her son, Joseph, of Chicago accompanied them. The trip wns made in the. Roop automobile. The Misses Teresa Gofry, Bee Gorman and Teresa Artlbey have gone to ! the Great Lakes Training Station to : spend the day. Mr. Co!' Joyce accom panied them. Mr. nnd Mrs Thomas Turner of North Magoun avenue have purchased farming ! land at Nw Haven. Mich. Mrs. Turner ! lias gone there to t ike care of the place. Mr. Turner ir police cffii-ei at the East i Chicago satin and will remain here for the present. East Chicago B. P. O. Elks will meet at the club rooms In Chicago avenue at t 1 o'clock tomorrow morning to prepare for the line-up in the parade at East (Chicago. All members of this organiza tion residing in Indiana Harbor will be expected to be on time for the parade, and East Chicago Elks wi'.l participate
in the festivities held in the Harbor, ! and the lo'ty cedar in Lebanon, both afternoon and evening. Every loyal Three times a year did the husbandElk knows his patriotic duty. man come to the f g tree, and three Ticket No. 74, held by Mrs. Norton h gather its fruits. Blckell cf North Todd avenue, won the! Ev,?r-V "! th ower was
beautiful quilt recently made and disposed of in shares by Mrs. John Vanseloiv of North Tod avenue for the benefit r.e y Trt CrnKfl fnn The flrroiinf of
$35 was rea-.izel and turned over to the j 1'nsthlly upon its granduer. the fertilisecretarv of th East Chicago center.!1- and mexhau-tibl- powers ct the soil The donor of this quilt Is very well ! of PItin-. as described by numerous r-.-.,.. .,- .rr,r( cf rnnV ! Christian 4-avelers and explorers. Were
1 . " " ' , .v ?:''.' i satisfactory. i Wolf Marcovlch cf Cedar street 19 : home f rem an extended eastern trip. j Virginia Fraur.walder of Chicago la visiting her aunt. Mrs. W. A. Mcintosh in 144th street. I JSSft evrf Jesse Dewey, past exalted ruler of the ! R r- O. Elks cf East Chicago, is de parting Friday for Atlant.c City, where t ho goes as delegate cf the local order ,' to the national convention hems held in that city, the 9th. iftCi n,t 1 it'i nt bia month. The trip is to be made in an auto and other brother Elka of this city will accompany. Mras. E. N. T'urreM of 144th street has a cousin Miss Errra Wohlgemuth, of i Cleveland, Ohio, here oa a visit. Miss Alta Specter, North Bering avenue, will leave Sunday next for Indianapolis), where ehe will spend a couple of weeks visiting relatives. NOTTCE In compliance with the spir it of tha day and to allow our clerks a j holiday, Nassau & Thompson will clos-v j their place of business at 1 p. m. July 4. ! All members of Calumet Chapter, j Daughters of American Revolution, will I meet q 9:3ft fharp tomorrow morning; ' t the corner of 145th and Magoun to ! i prepare for partlcpanon in the parade at East Chicago, especially those who i '.re to share in the float honors. Mrs. ! W. J. Funkey, Jr.. Rf'gent. 7-3-1 ?OB THB COLOBED PEOPLE. Srecial Fourth of July evening. Shirt i Waist Ball. Special music, by Prof. I James Adams' orchestra of Chicago at "New Colored Hall." 3602 Flock avenue. Admission 0 cents. Everybody wear a tnin waist. i-j-j i NOTICE. There will lie no automo- i biles or any other vehicles j nor tbe passing of same al-1 lowed on streets outlined fori march at Indiana Harbor to-j morrow morning, July 4th. I bet ween hours of 10 anil i j 1 1 :30. This rule must rigid-1 jly be enforced to safeguard
all those participating in this celebration. C. E. POTTS, Marshal of the Day.
Lest the wretched faint and perish In the coming stormy night." "Lest before tomorrow's sun We, too. mournfully departing Shall have left our work undone." It is exceedingly gratifying to read
the testimony of many explorers and ; travelers, as to the productive powers of the Holy Land. They all agree as ft j result of diligent personal investigation, j that the remarkable productiveness cf i the Palestinian soil is even now when ! mailing due allowance for its idleness j flui ing many centuries the same as o(f I vn:, with but slight and almost imma- i terial deterioration. I The Holy Land, in th opinion of ; scientific explorers, combines under the j same eky, the climates of Rll countries, j the climates of the tropical, temperate j and frigid zones. As a consequence of; I all this, fruits proper to all regions I grow there In ebundance. j This variety of climato. which distinI euishes Palestine, Is responsible for the growth of all conceivable fruits of the I world. Thus, the production of the soil In the Ice-bound parts of Russia, the delightful am! luxuriant center of Italy. i the salubrious ppots of Greece, and the j wealthy tracts of France In bri'f, the i united capabilities of all countries are I reflected in the yielding powers of the ' terra sancta. i The consequence of this variety of climate Is that the plains of Palestine are covered with plants native to all countries. The Heaths of Lapland are found growing on the Fummits of j Lebanon; the productions of the tropical countries flourish in the low valley ; of the Jordan, w hile the , , .- bracing ! air of the mountains in the interior of 1 'he count ry is equally favorable, t e' fr pasturage or for grain whe:h- ! or tor j olive. And to its boundless fertility we must acid its unrivaled advantages of position, i In th? one respect it is the center; in 'he other it is, or might soon again be come the diadem of the earth. It is, in truth, to quote a Scriptural phrase, "the perfection of beauty, the Joy of the I whole earth." ( Lament, ch. ii., v. 15 ) j To continue, Palestine grows magmficent paims. the olive nnd f.g trees, and ;ine, which flourished abundantly In j the ancient soil cjf Judea, and which are ; found at this day growing wild on some I part of the mountains. j The cotton plant is cultivated everyj where. Great parts of Lebanon are j planted with the mulberry tree, from which a beautiful silk Is obtained, i Near the ancient Beth Shan, adjoining the Jordan, the indigo plant grows wild. i nnd the sugar ane is cultivated around Bevrout and Sidon with great success. The gardens of Jaffa (or Joppo) produce lemons, enormous citrons and watermelons. The produce of the celebrated gardens. In th latter article, Is not equaled anywhere In the world, except perhaps in Damb-ttae (a town in Lower Egypt). The hills of Palestine were clothed with olive, or rlar.ted with vines and fig trees, while melons, gourds, cucumbers and grain of all kinds were cultivated on her plains. Her woods were much esteemed, both cn account cf their use nnd beauty. The trees known as the shitta, the box snd the myrtle, were planted in the wilderness; the sycamore grew by the wayside, to shade the traveler from the heat. The gardens of Egendt. and the vale of Jericho, were abundantly stocked with palms and bal sams. The oak flourished In Bashan, seen upon tn r.eins or 'a;estsr.e. ana twice did the bounteous earth yield her harvest. I feel it is impossible to dwell too ..II to attempt to do so. It would exhaust . me. but not the subject. Sufflc:ent, however, has been said to kindle in us emotions of pride at tha inalienable relationship we bear to tha sacred land, the country par excellence. This being so, it behooves us to persevere with vigor in tha noble task we set before us. We must save our submerged brethren in faith from physical disability and from eoclal and civic degatlon. For human fallings and morbid j rassions assert memse.ves in private 1 I'!'. OH uio international ooa.ru, ana in the high councils of state, even in these polished times, Just aa they did in the dark ages, - The eminent roet. Byron, In his Hebrew melodies, accurately voices our agonies. He thus addresses Judah: "Tribes, of wandering- foot and weary breast. How sheli ye flee away and be at rest? The wild dove hath her nest, the fox his coxipoxnn
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OPEN TUIDAYAinJ ParDAT 'EVTrHq&m&&S O'CLOCK.
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Don't believe because your savings from day to day seem small, that the goal of accumulation will never be reached. Like the tiny acorn, that, through years of growth matures into the stately oak, so will your savings grow, and mature into
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First National Hammond, Indiana.
cave. Mankind their country Israel tut the grave." L'r.der these circumstances, we must rely upon our resources, and work out our salvation. Zionism Is an undoubted desideratum, j for it aims in a wise and legitimate j manner to give effect to the yearning' aspirations and deep-seate-i sentiments I animating myriads of our race, for ! whom it has a most fascinating spell. The task before us Is truly magnificeiV? ! and far-reaching; let us boldly and i manfully grapple with it. i Wc will thus be acting on the ad- I monition of America's illustrious bard. whose rousing lines Fhould prove a powerful incentive to us: "Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime. And departing, leave behind us. Footprints in the sands of time. Act act, in the living present. Heart, within, and Go o'erhead." The kaiser it at bat. Strike him out by buying War Savings Stamps.
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HEATED ARGUMENTS ANDiCOALiFACTS , By Phil Binna When we went to school they taught us that there ,were 2000 pounds to a ton. Since we have been in the;coal' huslne53we haven't forgotten it either. But 2000 pounds doesn't always mean aUomof coal on the scales. Dirt, rubbish, clinkers and slate will Increaseithe weight of a load of coal without giving jtni a 2000-pound ton of j pure, screened, heatproducing coal. ' Every pound of foreign matter that i3 Inyour coal means the loss of a pound of real coal. "Pull value" coal is what we sell Justa3 honestly as. if the government made us stamp it aa they do-purefood. Twin City Coal Co. Block Ave. and Washington St., Indiana Harbor.
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ank olTTLE ?ACK MORNER WiU. 5T IN A CORNER With nEAVS his good mother HAS PLANNED' Bkell keeo her WHOLE broooi with the choicest of Foca X5JHICV4 SHE IM HER WISDOM sSa!ea IrTL -WCANNED c .- -x ' 1 l: j i -" t-tr. i s i nil ChrfMT AiTfa;wrtt&,
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