Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 18, Hammond, Lake County, 9 July 1918 — Page 4
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THE TIMES. Tuesday, July 9, 1918
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY.
, The Lake County Times Daily eu-fpt Saturaay and Sunday. .Entered al tile postoitH 1:1 Hammond. Jun
ta, xva. . The T!m Kast Chicago-Indian Harbor d!lr "P Sunday. Entered at the postottue in Kast Chicago. - IS. 191." , , The Lake Counfr Times SnturdiT and Weekly edition. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond. February . The (iwy Rnin rims. iim.'v except Sunday.
tered at the postofMce in Gsrv, April 13. 1912- . Ail under the act of March J. is.it. aa second-c.ass
FOnEKS' ilHKHTlMMi OFFICE. 12 Rector Building C5 !-- TRIKrilONK. , ,in, Hammond Cprtvate exchange) 3100. S10L lu (Call for whatever department wanted) Gary Orflce Telephone 1J. Nassau & Thompson. East Chicago Telephone 3l F. L. Evans. East Chicago Telephone 4JEast Chicago. The Time. Telephon .! Indiana Harbor Reporter Telephone 23 Lukeas" News Agency and Classified Ads , Prion- 1H-J Indiana Harbor Whiting Telephone 80-M Crown Point ." 'i'el-phon- iJ
Larger Paid-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Paper fn the Calumet Region. If you have any trouble getting The Times make complaint immediately to the circulation department. Tiie Times will not be responsible for the return of ar.v unsolicited arti&ies or letters and wiii not uotico anonymous communications. Short signed letters of general interest printed at discretion. NOTICE TO JV115CRIBERJ. you fail to receive your copy of Thi Timks as promptly as you have In the past, pleas do not think It has been lost or was not sent on time. Remember that the railroads are. engraved with the urgent movement of troops and their supplies; that there U unusual rressure in various parts of the country for food and fuel; that the railroads have more business than they can handle promptly. For that reason many trains are late. Ths Times ss increased Its mailing equipment and is cooperating: In every way -with the postoffice department to expedite delivery. Even so, delays are Inevitable bocause of the enormous demands upon the railroads and the withdrawal cf men from many lines of work.
We are surprised only when we discover that they purprlse certain other nations and races, which have rot traveled so far alonp: the road of political evolution. Eventually, we do not doubt, they will be accepted everywhere. The principles on which our own government was founded will be recognized and applied, as our forefathers believed they would, throughout the earth. That is what we are fighting for, generously and confidently, In this second American Revolution, which la a world-revolution.
THEY ARE
News ot Lake County Boys in Uncls Sam's Service
THE SIMPLE LIFERS. Every sensible man and woman today is a simple lifer. There are so many things which are difficult to get, so many controllers are hemming us in with prohibitions that we are making our lives simpler and more simple every day. Curiously enough, the large majority of us are feeling the better for it. 'We walk where we cnce motored, and the exercise set3 the stagnant, blood in our veins running with fresh vigor. We eat less and digest more. So little have we felt the deprivation that most of us are declaring that for th future it is to be the "simple life forever." There are, of course, some who struggle in their absurd vanity to keep the old life alive. Their time is mainly spent in evading the order of the food controller, or in discovering new sources of extravagance. Some day they will realize their mistake and join the happy army of "simple, lifers." You cannot have your cake and eat it. Our cake today is victory the great war for freedom, truth and justice. That can only he ours if we deny ourselves all the other cakes .we once loved eo much. The "simple lifer" is doing his duty and that is why he is happy. His is the vision without which, as Solomon told us, "the people perish:
OUR WAR AIMS.
It would be a fine thing if American war alms, as eet forth by President Wilson in his Fourth of July address, could be printed in attractive form, and hung up in every home and every place of public assemblage In the United States. A frequent and careful perusal of them would serve as an education in the basic principles of government for those who have never given thought to such matters. It would help all to hold clearly In mind the big things for which we are fighting: First. The destruction of any arbitrary power, anywhere that can separately, secretly and of its single choice, disturb the peace of the world: or if it cannot be presently destroyed, at the least its reduction to virtual impotence. Second. The settlement of every question, whether of territory, of sovereignty, of economic arrangement, or of political relationship, upon the basis of the free acceptance of that settlement by the people immediately concerned, and not upon the basis of the material interest or advantage of any other nation or people which nay desire a different settlement for the sake of its own exterior influence or mastery. Third. The consent of all nations to be govrrned in their conduct toward each other by the same principles of honor and of respect for the common law of civilized society that govern the individual citizens of all modern states in their relations with one another; to the end that all promises and covenants may be sacredly observed, no private plots or conspiracies hatched, no selfish injuries wrought with impunity, and a mutual trust established upon the handsome foundations of a mutual respect for right. Fourth. The establishment of an organization of peace which shall make it certain that the comrined power of free nations will check every invasion of right and serve to make peace and justice the more secure by affording a definite tribunal of opinion to which all must submit and by which every international readjustment that cannot be amicably agreed upon by the peoples directly concerned shall he sanctiond. There is no question that this declaration expressps the matured opinion of the nation. The president has merely put into precise and polished English the ideas that nearly all Americans who speak or write have uttered over and over again. They might be put bluntly as follows: First, militarism must he destroyed. Second, all peoples shall freely dotermin their own fate. Third, governments must art as smarely and decently as individuals. Fourth, there must be an armed caguQ of nations to enforce peace. There is nothing in these statements to occasion any surprise in America. They are as natural as the air we breathe. They a:e a part of our political atmosphere. .. -CIS .. . . ..
AWAY WITH THE BEGGAR. The public has too often confused the idea of a cripple with that of a beggar. The resulting reaction has done a great injury to the cause of the self-respecting disabled man in regardiug him as a subject for charity,
but not for trade training and employment. To be sure, there is historical precedent for this attitude, for in past decades and centuries various peoples have condemned the cripple to the status of roadside beggar, or at best employed him as jester or court fool. And in our experience there is justification in the view, because we have seen many cripples at street corners making public exhibition of their deformity or amputation and soliciting alms of the passers-by. The number of these beggars is small in comparison to t hegreat body of physically handicapped men who are usefully employed, hut the few have vigorously advertised, have made a considerable impression on the susceptibilities of the community, and have reaped a profitable harvest. A bank teller reported recently the case of a crippled street beggar who deposited in a savings account, after paying his living expenses, forty dollars weekly. That the beggar cripple has been permitted to ply his trade Is a great injustice to the disabled men of character and independence. The practice should have been stopped in the past; it is absolutely necessary that it be prohibited in the future. For with 'he expectation of our soldiers who will return disabled from the fron', the public should have no excuse for associating their prospective career with that of the mendicant. On the contrary, every influence should be brought to bear upon the public to show that physical disaability is an obstacle, but easily superable with character and ambition: and that the cripple may be made into a useful and productive citizen. In several cities there have been inaugurated cam
paigns to arive tne cnppiea neggar from the streets, and give him the alternative of productive employment or a stay in jail. Such efforts should be imitated in
every community and persevered in until the unfortunate i
conception of the cripple shall exist no more.
WHAT
! HERE and OVER THERE
THEY ARB DOIINQ
j ling, Minn., and Is with the 86th In
fantry Division. ,
Tbantaa nllnn. formerly a foreman j at the Villon Drawn Steel company, ;
et clary, is training at Camp Lewis Washington.
ITIt le William Ott l Dn1liii five day furlough with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ott. 2123 Went 10th venue, Gary. Soldier Ott is stationed at West Point. Ky.
to ruiiNDs or the bots. TUB TIUXB g-oe dally to oyer a thousand Lake County men in the V. S. A. or V. S. BT. These boil keen costed.
by tlila means. Thay hare no otbes
artillery officers" school from civil life should addresa their communications to Captain B. H. I'lbblee. off.cer in
way of getting the new.. It 1. a letter J -
110m noma for them. They want me;trai anuiery uuuers muo-i, '.oj news of the hoys they know. Tfon want : z9Chary Taylor, Ky.
mo news ci your boy ana your neigu- i - ; u;r'?orbotU ff.ttou,bek?.p - r - i posted a to the comings and goings all 1 nftd is to pet on my marK,' is; of our boys in the nerrice. Write the WOrd that comes from Coiporal 1 briefly or call up THE TIMES a an r ,,,,, , j act of patriotism. Do it now. j u J "rrv' ac af75P -1.11s. "n8 I land today. Hts company had bf n !
phort 75 men and these had arrived
rrlvate Albert Carley TUlteJ orer Sonday with lils parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Carley, S21 Connecticut street.
I (iary. He is with the 851st Provisional
Prjuadron. Aerial Machine Gun School, Dayton. Ohio, and has Just finished a special six weeks' course at L'tUa, N. Y. He will return to his company at Dayton, and later will return to Gary on a furlough.
Lake County's Roll of Honor
Ir. A. W. I lord, a Hammond physician was notified today that he had been appointed a captain in the medical reserve.
from Boston Tech Institute, and were ' beintr dealt out their supplies. "We ! have got our winter caps, gloves, g-
I pins." said Parry, "and are ail fixed John I.eeren. Itohertadnle, Com- fnr oi-,r stay in any old kind of pany K's musician st Foi t FnellinK. ' wea t her. Hrlnir on your Huns." is in the hospital with a sliKht disa- I bility but expects to be out soon. ' William n. reterwon. Lowell, write I 1 rem San Antonio. Texas, that he en1. Melyille Rrenner and l.nVerne joys soldier life immensely. H has Gillette. Whiting, of the Great Dakes ! recently been promoted to a corpora!.
Naval Trainini? Station, spent Saturday and Sunday at their homes here.
O
Cdnnrl MlnliiRer. Lowell, has Just
i ben transferred from Jefferson Bar-
Richard Klelber, hltlnK, of ( amp racks. Mo . to a camp in New Yojk. Custer, Mich., on a two day furlough) . isted his parents. P.. H. Kleiber of' Lorenro Kersey, Merrill vllle. from llfMh street. -.Camp Grant. .p-nt last Saturday vlsliting with his aunt. M'ss Angle OUHenry OUon. lllehlnnd, motorcycle zlfr in this place. detail. Fort Omaha. Neb., is enjoying a fhe-day furlough at the home of j Cordie n. Coffin. Whiting now writes his parents. Mr. and Mrs A. Olsen of his mother. Mrs. E. D. Coffin, front Highland. His brother Arthur, is in Camp Mad. Md . whre he is with th 45th Infantry, now at Camp Sher- ! Company E. 4l3th Division, all ready idan. Montgomery, Alabama. John to go across shortly. Hook and Andrew Platki. of Highland a
are also at Camp Sheridan, in the 45th
Machine Gun Company.
Mat Herman. Dyer, sent a farewell letter to his home here, stating that he would soon leave for France, from an eastern embarkation camp.
Lieut. L. A. WIltMe, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Wittse. 110 Detriot street. Hammond, is here on leave He Is stationed with the field artillery. Camp Jackson, South Carolina.
I iam I . Cooke. I . U. o. I. iiammona, ! has received word from his soldier
Such activity may well be undertaken as a first step ! boy. Harry U Cooke. Company a. 5th
in preparation for the return of our disabled soldiers and sailors.
Oeerge Kingston. 80 Truman axenue. Hammond, who was registered at Columbus, Ohio, for physical dis
ability, and
chemical work
Flosroe rlemstock, Lnke county's ren'al and popular deputy county rlcrk, has just returned from an eastern trip. He visited the I.ake county
nearly a score of assistants and obtained for them com- ' boys at Camp Mills. Long Island and.
HOME SOME "LIEUTENANTS" ARE MADE. There is one major in Washington who has picked
F.n:inr Hocr'ment at Camn Humph
revs. Va . that he ts enjoying the train- I "man. Chillicothe. Ohio.
now drafted, is doing in the office at Camp
! John Prommer. Hammond, has neen ' transferred from Fort Constitution. N. H . in the quartermaster's corps, to the ' department of enlisted specialists. ! chauffeur's school. Fort Monroe, Va., for a six weeks" training course.
THE PASSING
SHOW
I!
ONE with
cf the most popular sayings
missions as lieutenants and captains. Eighty per cent of them are either from his home town or from his college. Few of the eighty per cent are experts. It was not necessary in these cases to offer uniforms in exchance for indispensable services but if is safe to say that if there had been no uniforms connected with the
job these people would not have been offered the places 1 I and in most cases would not have accepted them any- j how. Thus the country would have been saved the j
they were delighted to see him. Roscoe
i may enter the V.
If lie does w,:I every particular.
M.
C. an
A. service and ideal man In
i
spectacle of a dozen or more fellow townsmen forming !
tclson Gillette. Whiting, who has
enlisted 1n the Merchant Marine,! write that he is now enroute from , Tampicn, Mexico, where he has been for a load of crude oil. to the Boston; Harbor. His trip was made on the Walter Hard-astle, but he Is training;
E. F.. F.vans. ft. L. chalble, of Gary, O. O. Melton. A A. Young of Hammond. Dwight Mai key, Hobart. H. Mervis. Indiana Harbor. C, G. Mackey, W.hiting. have been commissioned as first lieutenants in the medical reserve corps. Dr. F. H Fox cf Hammond was commissioned as first lieutenant but it is understood he will not accept.
a non-combatant officers club in a Washington office. Thank God not often, but now and then, you find a lieutenant in uniform who is a disgrace to it.
I on tf
Calvin
Austin.
--
NO PREMATURE PEACE. There is a great deal of confusion in this tense time. We should expect to find conflicting views, but at the same time we should strive to be logical and consistent in our national thinking. We should not lose sight of certain fundamental considerations. One of the most important of these is the fact that the question before the house at the present moimm is war, not peace. There can be no honorable or lasting peace without the total destruction of the Prussian ideal of government. The Prussian militarist is not content to "live and let live." He must dominate. He must crush other nations and compel them to accept his much vaunted kultur. Ho is baffled at the present moment and has run up a signal of distress in the form of a peace "feeler." Eet us not be deceived. He wants a respite, but we would be foolish to give it to him. We would have the war to fight all over again at some future time at a time when the Prussian militarist had recuperated and was ready to start another war against the world s peace. Almost the same situation obtained in the midst of the Civil War when misguided peace advocates were pressing: President Einco'm to bring the conflict to -n close. Lincoln desired an end to the war, but not until it had accomplished its purpose. H saw that a compromise wrould be a calamity. Everyone now sppi that he was right. John Bright, the sturdy British Quaker, wrote to the same effect to Charlps Sumner in 1 St1f when he said, "I want no end of the war, and no compromise, and no re-union till the nesro is made free beyond all chance of failure." So at the present time we should listen to no peace proposals savoring of a mere truce. There is no use in crying "Peace, peace, where there is no peace," and there can be no enduring world peace while the Prussian militarist, like Frankenstein s monster, is crushing his victims. The best thing about the pope's peace proposal was President Wilson's reply to it. This is no time for the pacifist obsessed with his pride of opinion to ventilate his views. That man. who, at this critical time, obstructs and embarrasses the operations of the government, is a traitor to his country and a foe to human liberty. Let us win 1he war first and make peace afterwards. We can then make the kind of peace which we want and the kind which a civilized world ought
I to have.
I Edward Abrnms, at Eort Snelllnir. (Minneapolis, of Indianapolis, in Com'pany K, got a ten days' furlough and
the following also obtained furloughs the last week: Arthur D. Asheraft. Muncle. Company D. five days, on account rf the serious illness of his tno-
Adnm Eberl. Jr.. of Hammond, nowjtr.er. ceie 1 neon-re. t.on.pany x.. wi.
at Camn Purdue, has be. n assigned to Men days; Howard F.aker. comrany .
Frankfort, ten days, account or his
.Walter Rohde, Hammond, Camp Purdue, at Lafayette, is with a conrrfte construction branch of the service.
j the telephone signal corps
Thousands of xdsitor from Kentucky, Indiana. Illinois and Pennsylvania visited Camp Phrman. Chillicothe, "h1". Although having accommodations for ?'"" the community group rooms were reserved several da s in advance, and many of the visitors hid to go to nearby cities for lodging
mother being reported as dying
Julins . Chevlgny, It. W. Chldlaw. j A. W. Lloyd. Hugh J. White. W. E. ! Nichols, ail Hammond doctors, havej been commissioned to service as cap- j tains in the medical reserve corps. j
Members of the lWtK Field Artillery, a Kentucky regiment now at Hattiesburg. Miss., expect to be ordered to
the artillery center at Camp Zacha ry i brothei Tavlor soon. The move indicates thatlrlained
the Indiana Artillery regiments also will be sent to the Louisville cantonment.
Prlxate Lloyd C. RlickenteiT. Elmer Herschberger. Homer B. Curtis. Jesse L. Bienneman and James Cook. Camp Sherman, at Chillicothe. all of Camp Zaehary Taylor. Ky.. have been found guilty by court marshal of refusing: to obey orders of commanding officers and have been sentenced to from ten to ftfteen years each, headquarters announced today.
Chadley Forsyth and Whiter Miller. two Hammond hoys In the last draft.
nre in the hospital at Camp Sherman, i pects soon to leav
Chillicothe.
When Andrew Bothhalrr, So. Bend. enlisted in the army today he made the fourth man from his home to be in some division of the I'nited States
fighting force?. "My other three j
are in the army." he ex- ! 1
to the recruiting officer. so
I thought I'd better get in. too, and I want to go over to France right away." George R. G-rrett. C.V Washington street. Gary yesterdav enlisted fn the coast artillery nnd left for Ft. Benjamin Harrison and Jefferson Barracks at once. His hrother enlisted several months ago and is stationed st Fort Casey, near Seattle. Washington. - Tommy Lucas, who hns been visiting his brother. Attorney B. A. Lucas in Gary, left yesterday to finish his furlough nt his mother's home at Milwaukee. Soldier Lucas is a member of the Canadian Engineers forces and ex-
for the front.
Indlin.i women who desire to Icm to be Bed Cross nurses will now have the chunce at Camp Zacha ry Taylor.
Lieut. Harold G. Maozy, of the Gnffin and Mauzy P.eal Estate firm. Gary, who has been training at ("amp Sherman with the 325th Machine Gun Co,
Miss linker, superintendent of nnrs ),,, been transferred to the motor
transport school at Baltimore, when after three months he will be returned to Camp Sherman preparatory to going to France.
at the base hospital here, has Just returned from Washington, where she went over plans for th opening of a training school for nurses nt this ramp. Rules, regulations and length of the course will be announced in a frw days. Corporal rtliur Wolter. Hammond, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wolter. of Hsrtison street, is home from Fort Constitution. N. H . on a ten day furlough. He enlisted with the Hammond high school boys over a year arn and this is his first visit home, since he enlisted last year.
Indianans x
ho desire to enter the
Private JuiUon Miurtz, Gary, who has been training at the Great Lakes. has been transferred to the municipal pier at Chicago. - J. S. C'upplcH, formerly of the Gary Y. M. C. A dormitory has been made sergeant in the aviation camp at Dallas. Texas.
A WOMAN who has been MARRIED about ten years is: "I HAVEN'T anything fit to wear to a dogfight." IT is quite possible THAT the girls are dressing in such shape NOWDATS that they stand ready TO show how high they can kick in their rejoicing WHEN the Tankees smash the HL'NS back of the Rhine. AFTER gorging on war cornbread WE never can understand how hogs can be FATTENED on the stuff BET of course it may be because we are not THE right kind of hog. If anybody wants to raise the PRICE of anything and get away with It, now seems to be the time. WE get so worked up and EXCITED some times AWAITING news from Charlevoix TO see how poor hard-worked TOM MARSHALL IS spending his xacatlon. TO add to our woe a SHORTAGE of silk hats is reported AND we suppose we shall have to con'inue WEARING our last year's straw THROUGH the winter thus keeping up OUR faith in our weliknown democratic AND republican SIMPLICITY. SOME japester wants to know if we saw Theda Bara in "Under Two Flags'" NO, but we saw her in a blamesite less. IF this war keeps up much longer
AND continues to affect our mentality XV E suppose one of these days WE will be wandering over to the
NEIGHBOR women to taxe up WITH them what shall he done with THE community cat AFTER the war. AFTER all a fellow must be humble in this world WHEN they accuse the wiff of writing this DAILY chamber of horrors IT'S no time for us to be PUFFED up b'gosh. THE average man IS apt to believe what the world WORLD doesn't say about him. SOME of our oldest topers WHO never knew there was such place AS West Hammond ARE discovering a great deal about it now. Trs. it's hard to be ordered to EITHER work or fight BUT it is hell to have to do both. WE recently saw AN old-fashioned girl SHE wore one of these thin shirtwaists BUT she had been vaccinated on the
tAka CotLBty-a daa.il i tHa wmi ' with Orermany Aaatria-Haa. ga-ryt ROBERT MARKLET. Hararnend; drowned off coast of New Jersey. May g. DENNIS HANNON. Indiana, Harbor; ptomaine poison, at Fort Oglethrope. Cbattacoog-a. Teno-. June 11. JAMES MACKENZIE. Gary, killed in action in France while &Ua witi ta iLa Scottish i-uica. May 3, 1517. KARL WELSby, W'hltlnc; U. S. I. Died at Fort Sam Houston of spinal menlcgitla, July 2s 1917. FRANK MANLEY. Indiana Harbor; killed In France at Battle of Lille. Aug. 16. ARTHUR BASELER. Hammond; died at Lion Sprinrs. 7ex., of spinal meningitis, August 2t. JOHN' BAilliKUOKS. Lui Cmcago; killtd - France, toept. li. ARTHUR ROBERTSON. Gary; killed in France. Oct. 31. LIEUT. JAilES VAN ATTA. Gary; killed at Vimy Ridge. JAM Li 2AAC KLNZIE, Gary; killed at Vliny Itidge. JX)LPH iilEDVivl. ast Chicago; killed in France, Nov. 27. E. BURTON HUNDLEY. Gaxy; killed in aviation acciant Taliaferro fields, Evermao, Tax,, Dec. I. 1917. HARRY CUTHBERT LONG. Indiana Harbor; killed in accident at Ft. Bliik, Texas. Dec lt. DERWUOD DICKINisON. Lowell; died somewhere in France, of pneumonia. Dec. 12. EDWARD C KOSTBADE, Hobart; killed by explosion in France. Dec Z'i. THOJIAS V. RATCL1FFE. Gary; killed surnewhere is France. Feb. 24. FRED SCHMIDT. Crown Point: died of pneumonia in Brooklyn. March 7, after being on a torpedoed steamer. CORPORAL EDWARD M. SULLIVAN, Gary; killed somewhere in France. March 8. MICHAEL 6TEPICH. Whiting; Camp Taylor; pueurnonia. Marea 14. ROBERT ASFIN. Gary: Co. F. 151st Infantry; Camp Shelby; typhoid; March 17. CLIFFORD E. PETTY, enlisted at Hammond, Jan. 8. ia U. S. cavalry. Died at Delrio. Tex., April a. PAUL FULTOjfc, Tolleston. died in hospital. Marfa. Texas. April 6, 1918. Sergeant, machins g-un battalion. 8th calry. VICTOR SKOTLIFF, Gary, killed at aviation camp, San Antonio, April 18. 1S18. JOSEPT BECKHART, Gary, died at an eastern cantonment; week ending April 20. 1318. LIEUT. IRA B. KING, Gary; reported killed in France, April 21. 1918. NEWELL PEACHER. Gary; Graves Registration Unit S04. died In New Jersey, 1918. E. BIRCH HIGHES, Gary, ordnance department, died in Philadelphia. 1918. JOHN MAGUIRES, Gary; bugler; killed in action somewhere in France, June 15. JOHN GAILES, Gary; died at Camp Taylor. Ky.. June 56. MISSINO ZN ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France, July 4th. WEST KAHXOSD. JOSEPH s!EIETZA.N, West Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery. Killed in action, France, April 27. FRANK MIOTKA. West Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery; died at Douglas. Ariz.. Jan. 17, 1918. WOUNDED. ROBERT M. EEaTTT, Hammond. Trench mortar. France. Feb. 25. R. A. SPARKS. Highland. Trench mortar. France. Feb. 27. HENRY BAKEMAN, Hammond; CLn, engineers. France. April 7. EUGENE M. FISHER. East Chicago; severely wounded April 22. 1918. by shrapnel, while in a trench in No Mans Land. ENGENE M. FISHER. East Chicago; wounded in Picardy. April 22. JOSEPH A DA MIC. Indiana Harbor. Artillery. France. May 2. PHILLIP PETERSON. Hammond; severely wounded In France, June 3. EMIL ANDERSON. Gary: wounded In action in France, with machine gun batallion June 25.
Clarence Wood, formerly with the Union Drawn Steel company. Gary, writes that he is located at Ft. Snel-
DR. ROB'T J. CARROLL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. 155 State St., Hammond, Ind. Phone 2238. GIVE MY OWN MEDICINES.
MEMQRIAVf
2
Dollars and Determination spell doom for kaiser. Buy War Savings Stamps.
PETEY nr7K Hurry Up, Pole, and Cnf-h Up With thr Timf-
By C. A. VOIGHT
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