Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 38, Hammond, Lake County, 25 July 1918 — Page 4

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THE TIMES. Thursdav. Julv 25, 191 F.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING &. PUBLISHING COMPANY. - The Lake County Times Daily except Sat-jroay and Sunday. Entered at the postofnce in Hammond. Juu The Times East Chicago-Indiana. Harbor, daily Sunday. Entered at the postofn.e la East Chicago. -ember 1. iis. potion Tha Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly J" Entered at the postoftlce in Hammond. February . The Gary Evening- 'rimes Daily exc-pl unaa. tered at the postofrtce in Gary. April 13. 1912. . All under the act of Ma.ich o. 1ST3. a seconl-Uisj

matter.

: willed it fo the only answer Is one his fury will respect

and comprehend. "Blood must win."

And not un'il the Germany of Wilhelm Hohenzollern,

and hi? assassin crew, is drained dry of Its lust for co'4 quest, and dominion, shall peace enfold the world.

Ludendorff wan right. Victory must emerge from a deluge ol Wood. The tainted blood of Germany's royal murder bund. The shedding of which will bo its first

and only worthy service to humanity and the world.

11!

FOREIGN ADVERTISING Rector Bui. ding

OFFICE.

. Chleasra

TELEPHONES. .,, Kemmond ("private exchange) ildO. S101. (Call for whatever department wanted.) Gary Office Telephone 14 Nassau & Thompson. Klisi Chicago Telephone si F. L. Evans. Eat Chicago Telephone -- East Chicago. The Time. Telephone -i Indian Harbor Reporter Telephone. 23 Luker.s' News Agency and Classified Ads -. Phone 113S-J Indian Haro.J Whiting Telephone iO-.M Crown Point ." 1'"" i':'

Larger Paici-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Paper in the Calumet Region. If you have any trouble getting The Times make complaint immediately to the circulation department. Tile Times will not be responsible for the return o. any unsolicited articles or letters and win nt notice anony. tnous communications. Short signed letter of general interest printed at discretion.

you

NOTICE TO SIIISCRIBEHS. fail to receive your copy of Thb

Times as

promptly as you have In the past, please 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 thSr .supplies; that there is unusual pressure 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. Thb Times has Increased Us mailing equipment and Is cooperating in every way with the poatoffice department to expedite delivery. Even so, delays are inevitable because of tha enormous demands upon the railroads and the withdrawal of men from many lines of work.

Where They Are IVews of Lake Co. Boys In Uncle Sam's Service

MflS WJMP' Js WJe

thousand l,aitr rwnnw mn in the U- S

admiration of t h:r gallantrv j A. or v. s. 21. Tin me tooya keep potecl i i v. j - - rtthf

I piquancy is .civ n to their jway cf jetting 'the news, "it 1. a letter'

lroiu home for them. They want tne newa of the boys they know. You want ( the news of your boy and your utigh. j tor's boy to get to them. Give It to ( as for them. let us keep each other posted as to the cotuir-trs nci golriKS of our boys In tha service. Write ,

act of patriotism. Do it now. jHaan :n r"(l

isjSv 31 &

THAT'S WHY.

We heard a man (?) ask the other day how this country got into this awful war anyway. Well, to be brief, it wa? that such skunks as te may he permitted to live out their miserable days in the land of the free that the virtue of their wives, daughters, sisters and mothers nay cot be subjected to the unspeakable and unprintable outrages which the women of Belgium and France have been subjected to.

THE ETr GUETTE OF SURRENDER. The Germans are said to be very much annoyed by the fighting methods of the American troop?. They complain that we do not fight according to rule, anil worse Still, do not surrender according to rule. It is the German custom, whenever a small band is cut off from the main body and surrounded by the enemy, to surrender without more ado, just as "men" on a checkerboard are given ur when they are cornered. Individual Germans yell "Kamerad" a? a matter of course. They even go around looking for somebody to surrender to. Then when they get a chance they stab their captors in the back. The Americans stubbornly refuse to follow this rule. A company, platoon or squad, or any fortuitous aggregatlon of soldiers separated from their comrades, go right, on fighting. When completely surrounded, they proceed to fight their way out. Little groups carry on euerilla warfare as long they they are able to pull a trigger or push a bayonet. If they lose their puns, they try to capture others from the enemy, end generally succeed. Individuals go on fighting alone, in utter disregard of death. They will not hold up their hands. Even when forcibly disarmed and haled away as prisoners, the Americans refuse to stay captured. They seize the first opportunity to knock their guards down, take their guns away from them and fight their way back to their own lines. They sometimes get hold of machine guns, and turn the tables on the Huns in a surprising fashion. It must be extremely irritating. Americans are such barbarians! If they had a little more German kultur in their systems, they'd know how to surrender.

BENT ON KILLING GERMANS. The story of how American boys are fighting ovei there will furnish the history of the V. S with the most glorious annuls. On the Fourth of July the Americans captured Vaux. Today there came to this paper from England a description cf how they fought and what the English thought of. them. It is as follows; "'If the Americans showed a fault, it ways, as a'-v;i-with first-class fighting men until they get experience, the fault of excessive keenness, so that th-y suffered some casualties bv presing on ino our barrage. I'ui the

Au-1 ; : liar.s are laush in

.'int. dash, and a certain add-d piquancy is giv n to their performance by the fact that the prisoners taki-n by ' hem were astounded when t'.iey learned who their captors were, as they did not believe that there weto i?iiv ;,ny Americans anions the fighting m n yet in Fi am a. "The men who fousrtar yesterday had never been in battle. They had only their imagination To tell them what the battle would be like, and in hospital today snme of Them, no more than boys of 2o and 21, spoke with amazement of the volume of the bombardment and barrage, which, they said, beat any previous Fourth of July demonstration they had eer heard. But when the time

enrne to go, they were as keen as the keenest of their Aus'ralian comrades, with their hearts set on killing Germans, and 'hey did it. "One American sergeant captured and brought in seven Germans single-handed. Another, a corporal of 21, lies in hospital, happy, with three wound? and the consciousness of having killed sev n Germans it seems to be a lucky number for the Americans in his first engagement. This lad was in the Vaire Wood part of the attack, and his firs, three Germans were cot by bombs, with which he "did in" a machine-gun post hidden in a wheatfield, after one of its bullets had wounded him. Though wounded, he could not resist chasing the German into a dug-out. and killing him There. As he was coming out. he was attacked by two more in succession, one of whom wounded him with a bayonet, but both of them he bayoneted in turn. The last of the seven was shot with The rifle before a third wound crippk-d him. "In another bed close by lies a boy one year younger, being only 20, who had been given the command of a platoon he did not know why, except that he had surely

wanted to make a good soldier, and had worked as hard as he could. He fought at Haruel up a ridge and down j a dip, where barbed wire impeded them, and then over j another ridge into the villace, where there were bullet.: j enough flying, but not many Germans willing to come to hand-to-hand fighting. At last, however, he Told joyously j of how, when he had been wounded in the foe', two j Germans came at him with bayonets. Crouching on the i ground, he shot one as they came on, and 'hf n. stagger- ; ing up, somehow managed to keep his balance and parry j the Germans bayonet thr u?t. and brea . t Jus head with'

himself fainted. To wake on his wav

I it '

...

i ! tJt ,

HUN SHELL FUSES ARE WAR SOUVENIRS

o.

jr T''"r1

- W

Lake County9 s Roll of Honor

'4

1

i

r& and Over There

TO raHITDS Or THE BOT3. , in. I.ut exie.-t uu f. !- eiy

V.

,

1 he i.-nd.

r. I t : i,-al

to o;s of .a:s Jr.. is ;i and ' at Ft. iy.:

I.oiiln Itoth, Ilam- - i - '. :h'-: r C"'inj Prnm e i r. the ins : g i n t in t h o. K! Pa.-o, Texi.

The peiJ Iir!it'):e.x if wnr newn i ti n - ' ri -e tt.3t ? .1 : r-. t -r :' I H.-ian. ; ;ti; ti e d.v.'si.-Ti ei' IT." i iiiv ..m-! ri'Sii .-.'1ier nitifST fiom ''i-.'n-: in and ln.ina r.v i ;n the f on' ; :t:.d.-t the ! tic ii-. i,s.; -over ti'.-re r.d that I.:? ccrtimand is 'iv.tig n g'xw) , count 'f t i-,' rr.s"i vf. M:J r-Oerieral

s a Lake c -nnty boy rai-. d and i en a f'urn between Ioiveli an 1

Crown I'olnt. re'-eH ins; J.'s ed ; at ion i frr:r. th T.-i ke c -:nt v i 5 ."',,- and wa I.i'er r: e.-i-i-t a' West P.'rit. At one! time he li.fd v. I'h tlie :-;'e n. II. ! Ilasou of i!, ,

JA

. .""N

Tri nk in ! 'i .i rtiib ry, For. .

villi Hi.tte . r a nn

of H n mm oiid. J ry A. Kth Fie'.d Expedi? .onary

lr. Mnr' MaloneT K.is' ?tat .-t i ee i. ;

Inmninnd. of 1115 it her r.f r:-!.ite

Tlie folloi Intf In-s from left for I-ci.f-v il. Ky.. with d b.. T'.. dii" mr.rnir- -' K' r y, iU i :?.-in Mueller, VYs: 1 t'r. A la:s-- number of :

1 iinfter. th- draftAlbei t nn Ki'io.,- ' e n d j and

went t

th" drafted hoys

from him Matine

hit s i ef-ei ?i a o hs safely a:

With the tveo briit:n!-s of

ver June

ship i.e was on sailed I

organized a

'th.

I

lr. William Hart, of Hemlork street

Indiana llari-T. is haprx in the receipt of piours sent from across the sea bv her v -n F; ank and which arrivd

there -1 . T . i d n -. H r p.

t li r that

SO Wei

f.izhx enjtinters of he does nt fear i.ed the very bestir

wholesome food. All

-.iiinft in the pi-ture j j.

ess I .

ris diri 1 :'.e , h i com ivi n v

j r at wh.i : t hey r of rare a nd good I I of the o-.' s are c

! which :- an ass name -hat prog

I is hems: taade over there for the downi fall of Prussian ism.

a r,i ;. S 1 1 - r

he fir. id nenV. mtb r wav, th- -iib.i.i rmed sr""n and the

to he in emirs" of foi mil

i i bedy is now watching for ; ri ' f t r.e new -n;. r;-i t Ind:-ina and 11. me: ; the men of th- 'rganizati

I it fan try

Ian, Aiababatra'.ion re pelice to trams soon i'.r. nr;.'the appeartiar genera! en c o :r. p o s r.

A. R. Ahrend. former detective ft-tieui-t in the Gary p. Ob .l'partment. ard lat-t-r a deputy shr:ff at tne Ae'na rx;'bfivrs plant has . v.. 1 a commission a first 1 eutenant in th T. S. arm and ordered t ; ' t st Ft. o( i -bwi f r da'-.' at once. T.e c.-nant i:r-rd- -s w e!i known tn nry having i , i.'.def ;b" r s-.a-i-al ears and , r.t:,s li:i- t(,.n diiii mas,,f th- linv P.-.v . - ..its and oetive in the- crganixation f !. boys in I-ike . -.r.:y. He .ero.il in t!o Fr.it' d H'a'e.; smtv for sr-v.-rnl years and being ?-n--rsant with military tactics, will be assigned to a-tiie service at "nee.

Cnmp nt-hary Ttylor. here no mnny

-aite county !: w-nt tb.s wfK, will

have more troop in th' ir border? by

lay evenir.jr than at anv time since

the v i'-:n:ty h"..-ainp a military center. The strength "f the two places, allowing f. v the r. itgoii.a; transfers, will ! :r..-n and ffi'-ers. Five thou sand of th;ese are aT West Point, an.i

The two ""ierman shell fuses, rproduced above, were tsent by Lieut. I Richard H. Habbe from France to ! his father, John F. Habbe. The up- ! per one did not explode and was de- : t ached without mishap from the explosive container. Both were found ! outside the dugout occupied by Lieul tenant Habbe, who is with Headquarters Company of the Fifteenth ; field artillery. The device for reeui latinr the time to elapse between Wi ins fired and exploding is plainly , visible. The fuses were on 77-miii-meter shells.

Private Jom-ph Govert, tirifflth. 'wfco has been at Fort Constitution. Portsmouth. N. H , has been transferred to Bat. B.. 73rd Artillery, at tbe eame fort.

the butt before ho

to hospital. "The men who tell these tales are not bragging. They are merely relating happy incidents of the ereatest ex

perience rnat nas come to tnem in me, am everyringj Forman i ru.ure or uirr mreet, in) thev sav is borne out hv the Australians, who are bv i C.ary. has tec ived notice that he has!

ray r.f being judges, and say they never saw such 1 '"'on

the rest are 'i iara-o d at. Camp Zach- ! ary Tayb r. . Phynlcnl requlreiiient for drafel ai-n ha"-' b-en amended s'i as 'o make !:.e t;.!ni:if.rn iKht sixty : n--b.es and the ivo t i :n i ni w-''ut i 1 ci j., Instrne-t:-ns have h-en sent t meJ..-aI nd- 1 v's. iy V - a-ds tb. i',.r. .- r 'r.trv. i i'i;:,' r:Mi(t ;!"rri to .'O' nr e- nrall niil.a: y p'rvirc nil rt uistrants who co a.. j ui'li.n these liiiibs. Ti.e minin -um v iriiremont. as to height for the I reg'.bar army retna.r.s at sixty-two tn-'b.es. !

i

(.rorcr M. Death c-, of Lowell, writes from Company G. Ordnance Department. Aberdeen Piovms Grounds. Md., statins that he and Ed P.ei! of East "hi'iapo, are now wcrkinsr as auto mechanics in the garage. He liken army life in Maryland, hit says he'd rather be "over there" with the other Purdu? boys at the front.

NEW MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED

i r.

a r r y navii

..w.- ... .e."wW "-- ' '""-''-- -"ru- 1 "r I Training- S-'hool and imprrssiou made en The army by the Americans' per- j ,i,,tv next Monday, formance is nrofound."

d as a skilled mediant'service at the Great Lakes

will

port for

BLOOD MUST WIN.

An

AND THAT GOES DOUBLE. Wa-h a fresh fish, split, season, dot with fat, placo on greased broiler, find broil until 'he flakes can be easily separated. Sliced lemon maks an attractive garnish and gives additional flavor. "Consor,!tjon'' hint by the federal food board. We know all that. Fnless the F. F. B. can tell us where o go?, the fish and lemons and gas and seasoning at reasonable rates, it had better conserve paper, salaries md printers ink by ceasing to cut up cook books and olemnly send out the clippings to a harassed public as original brain work. Some of these food hints and conferva ion 'a'.ks sent out by the government give us a pain.

l otil Illamond, of the 3Mt Infnntrr ar..l son of Mi. and Mrs. Rubin Diamond. ?.2fi Mi b'.gan avenue, Hammond, has reached France.

Arthur I.Itiseiiuiii. forinerly of the Citizens' National Bank of Hammond, is now in California. Arthur says "tVe arc fretting: pas mas'; practice that bodes no c ! for the kaiser." Insportnnee of Intrllltcence neetlon work has been ersoi on refrimental commander? at Halt f -shut g-, and a division school for oft'i.-er-' and men of inte',! ipence gri- .ips has boon oiganized.

tit

v n

- n o r -

Eldon West, Port Honpltatl. Klllnton Field. Houston. T-xas, ir where

one HaFt Choago man Tiir.esp.

?ptnm, To The Times! CROWN" POINT, IND., July 25. The following couples were granted marriage licenses:

jijlin 31. t oic, .,851 nica&o, ana 3iary

Milott, Chicago. Geo. Luba and Victoria Fritz, East Chicago. Chas. Hayes and Marie Taylor, Gary. Olyndn C. Hailer and Ada Bel. -3 Stewart. Indiana. Harbor. Edw. Ijfolop and Irma Koelbke. GaryJames Fadigta and Anna Bratina. Gary.

j Win. Hawkins and Mattie Lorkey, i Gary. 1 Stove Benzea and Anna Sentesy. Garj'.

end Genev-

(rettins his

f'larenre

from ovei?.-: te write hi' Train. 4 14 A.

Herher, as. H"

F.

Hammond, write wants hie friends IS Motor Sapply , via New' York.

and

Uach infantry vu

ganlz'-d. V.nch infnn'ry r ptment will! V.'m. Henry, Butlor. Pa

hao an exti a capiain and lieutenant j lev Bareme, East Chicago. for' Intelligence work. F.rst Iieutn- j Hubert Prove. so!dir, Hammond

ar.t A-ist.n I.. Lo'.r. in t rli isrence off i- 1 Helen Lucy, Gary. t".- of the I'.ift infantry, has been rf - 1 Frenk Kellog and Jennie Logan, Gary. oiirr - -d. d for p rca.-.o : on f. n oaptatin-i Tony Krusznski and Bertha Adamf v and so lias Fi:.-: Lieutenant John t ezyk. tlary. W. lieiioi. inteiiitenee offu-er of the i Henry Table. Fast Chicago, and Ruth

Jcolc ( itmitilnK. one of the Time i

!c.M Lieut n F. a n v i .

- n a n t I .o h r - newsi-npe,

to

merl' k Mercer, Chicaieo.

coa n and was

THE czar is reported to he murdered again. Goodness gra: tons," but Those bolshevik! are brutal! Howmany times i3 ir necesary to kill the poor fellow? It reminds u.- of the time we tried to shoot the dog and af'er firing five bullets into it finally had to crack it over the head with a club or something.

WE recall vividly the reception we got once when we took a dear girl aside and whispered that somethin J with -rimming on if was showing below The bo'tom of her dress, and probably it would go hard with us if we were to stop some of them these days and tell them that they had forcotten something altogether.

IT seems to us that whenever we go out .,n the street we hear more men say They are almosT heartbroken over being on old to be on the west front right now than probably really are, especially as most, of them don't seem to -r,e more Than 32 or thereabouts.

"Blood must win!" And so it must. That is the challenge of barbarism to the world.

amazing ultimatum. Unbelievably brutal. .But 7,000,000 dead men and twice as many wounded have verified the kaisers code with their lives. Most cf them scorned the idea as inhuman. Again, they prayed it might be false report. At last . There is no other answer. "Blood must win." Some of it will he American blood, mingled with the blood of France and England, of Belgium and Russia, of Italy and Poland. But most of the blood of victory and finally all of It, will be German blood That which surged against human ity and all the reason of history. The blood of the worlds great victory over the code and claw3 of tha Beast will be German blood but the victory will not be for the Prussian Eagles or for the Hohenzollern arms. The blood of Germany will be the price Its ghastly ambition pays to the outraged decency of the world. Four years ago no sane person believed we ever egain would go through the red shambles of death to establish world peace and world decency. The progress cf ideas. The economy of life itself, guaranteed peace. The enlightenment of the world proposed equality accepted the spirit and the service of democracy. The scars of the last great sanguinary struggles of nations were a sure promise of better understanding and gentler ways of reconciliation and adjustment. But once more the tranquility of earth is torn asunder and peaceful lands are drenched with human blood. In

sanely, ferociously, hatefully, the power of the Beast has 'he's a deadly enemy of indigestion.

star ftervr e rr.en F.rtr.t.iiiit Depot, 3

is new stationed at 9, Camp Tavlor, Ky

. SerKennt Charles See of the Humnior.d police d-pn 1 tment has received word from Private Harold Fle-n. Company I. olst Infantry. A. E. F.. that he likes the service fine even if it is not as soft as drtvintr a taxi cab, hut Charlie thinks it is softer Than dr'.vinET a street car, something of which Harold knows nothing about, nut Charley does.

h

f-i'iid lieutenant when tumps wer.' blized. Lieutenant Hehel was an 1 tutor in Cornell university and end in the Indiana National Gaard ie b&ck.as a private.

NEW CASES IN CIRCUIT COURT

J. It. Conitrove, Hohnrt. who linn been -vi siting with f 1 -.ends at Hohart for the past lew dnva returned yesterday to F-rt Lee, V.iginia.

O. II. Sizelow of Hohart. writer from Cimn Shelhv. Mi.-. b.at he. soon ex-

j perts to co ?i' ross. b.e says that th

weather in Mississippi is vry hot.

IT is time we are forced to admit that when the world's greatest battle is in progress on the first paa it is foolish to have a paragraph about white stockinss making the legs look larger, on the fourth page.

READING "hat the Americans were in battle all right causes us to utter a never mind about that. Lots of Those. bo-.s have been up all night before when There wasn't half as much fun as they are having now.

Wnril hits been received by Mrn

S.-hodeM, i"; own Point. that her

(nephew. Kns.srn H-ihert s-ci.l. was on I the boat -Manchuria." and on his way ! to war zon Herbert (rrad.iated from i Annapolis- tins sprinsr. with hifth honjors and this is bis first trip across. : Word was sl" r-ni led to Mrs pofcedell ith'i Herbert's f.Vher, M ij or James A. ; nil, had als-o arrived at come port In ; France.

IT certainly is lovely weather to fill the several hundred, more or less, grease cups under our rattling little roadster.

Mm. Wlllbm Hnhn. of Kohertsdale, has received word that hr son Fred Reban of Company B, SI1 Machine "tin Battalion has arrived safely overseas.

THERE is cne nice thing to be said about Hoover j

! Stephen MHIer. Vhl!nK, employed i at the S. O. Co. main office has rei ceiv ed a eel from Washington to gro 1

to the rapnol to enter government work a a typist. He has not yet de-e:d-d upon a date for lejvinz Vhif-

np:itln Fred II Siat.. reserve, in

Purdue, the national armv detach

rneni training station at Purdue t'ni-e-s;ty at Lafayette, .so wfil Fke by Luke roumy ! s who t--.-iin.-d there, v.-as notified today that he had been appointed to the staff .f General Peyton C. Mai eh. ohief of staff of the Ifnited States army, with headquarters at Washington. He was perse.nr.el officer at. hea th, u a rte rs a' Camp Meade, Mr., hefoi e cft'i-inz o Purdue and was formerly city editcr t-f th.- R. ston t Mass. I '.'ib'be. T,ie-u. M. II . Pro. aw will suceed hi tn in command a the Purdue tamp. He is a Spanish war veteran and sered in the I 'u ; j ; ppines for several years.

CROWN POINT. IND. July 25. The following cases have been filed in cirt ti it roil rt r

omnia n.l at Camp! ,, .

i-ij-o riarvey silencer crown ra'.es gi

Thainpxin, I nitetl

Johnson) vs. Nathan Fisher. j 11525 Receivership; Mike Radanovich j (Nur.de & Roy. e) vs. Lupko Zwlsh. 1252TDi vorce: Isaac A. Ault (Knight & Brown) vs. Ethel Ault. I

Oeorfc e stationed is enoyi n:

Ilnrnea, of Hohart, who I at Fort P- uglris. Arizona, r a In-day '-,s Je-usfh and is

home with his parents at H'.bai-I. Monday f.orinK he took the first and sec. end decrees in ). Mmr.n'f Iodise and this evening will take th third degree.

Kflward Knoerrer. Hanimond. Company M, ."."! ittii Infantry, at Crimp Custer, Miehifran. wtites n his people that he is rapidly learning the ropee.

NOTICE TO TIMES READERS

The following men will leave Crown Point shortly, bavins been inducted into service by the local boardi Howard Parker. Gary; Bradford Woodward. Palmer: Elmer Bir-h. Palmer, it to Valparaiso training srhool West Wheat, of Omaha, te Camp Oodsre. Towa and Georpe Mo-m, Chicago to Fisk T'niversitv. Nashville. Tenn.

Owing to increased postal rates and cost of all materials used by newspapers, THE TIMES is forced to follow the lead of other papers all over the country in increasing subscription rates. Effective August 1, 1918, the following rates will prevail : Delivered by carrier, per month. $ .40 By mail, one year 3.50 By mail, six months.. 2.00 By mail, three months 1.00 By mail, one month.. .40 R. C. PIERCE, Circulation Manager, Times Newspapers.

Iam Couaty'e de&4 la tne

with Oermany ad Au.strLa.2uBgryi ROBERT 3IARKLET. Hammond; drowned off coast of Nw Jersey, Way Zi. PKNN1S HANNON. Indiana Harbor; ptomaine pciscn. at Fort Oglthroie. Chattanooga. Tenn.. June 11. JAMES AlacKENZIE. Gary; killed iu action In France while KAKL WELiidi, Waiting; U. S. I. Died at Fort Sam Houatoa of sp;oai memnaUia, Juii 4 1917. FRANK M' AN LET. Indiana Karbor. kiiled la France at Battle of Lille. Aug. 16. ARTHUR BASELER. Hammond; ded at Lion Springs. Tex., of spinal meningitis. August SC. iu, itiilej u irKO.ce. feepu IS. aKTHUH liUBEKTSON, Gary; lulled in lrrai.ee. tcl II. LIEUT. jAilE3 VAN ATXA, Ciar; kiiied a.i Vuny Kidge. JAMES MAC K1NZ1E. Gary; killed at Vuny Kiuge. lXJL.i-H iiiiL4 l Ai, East Chicugu; ku.ed in i ranee, isov. ZI. E. BURTON UtWULbf, Gary; killed ut aviation a.ua.ai at 'Xaliaf6rro Hems. Evtru-a. Tax 1':C 1. 1S17. iiXliiiX CUTHBERT LOKQ. Inaiaa Harbor; kmed. la acc4uei at iu Hut. Texas. Dec. IS. JJEKWUUD UiCKl-ViaUN. Lowell; died acmrware in k'raaca, of fci.cuii.onis, Iu 12. EiWAKI C K.U3TBADE. Hobait; killed by eiiioioo i 1 ranee. iec ii. THOMAS V. RATCLlf FE, Gary; killed somewhere la France, Feb. 21. FRED SCHMIDT. Crown Point; died of pneumonia In Brooklyn, March 7, after being on a torpedoed steamer. CORPORAL ED-WARD M. SUULIVAN, Gary; killed somewhere in France, March. 8. MICHAEL STEFICH. Whiting; Catiip liuylor; pueutnonia. Marca 14. ROBERT ASPIN, Gary; Co. F. 151st Infantry; Camp Shelby; typhoid; March IT. CLIFFORD E. FETTT. enlisted at Hammond, Jan. 8, in U. S. cavalry. Died at Delrio. Tex.. April S. PAUL FULTO, Tolleston. died in hospital, Marfa. Texas, April 6, ISIS. Sergeant, machine gun battalion. 8th calry. VICTOR SHOTLIFF, Gary, killed at aviation camp. San Antonio, April 18, 1J18. JOSEPT EECKHART, Gary, died at an eastern cantonment; week ending April 20, 131S. LIEUT. IRA B. KING, Gary; reported killed in France. April 21, 1318. NEWELL PEACHER. Gary; Graves Registration Unit 304. died in New Jersey, 1918. E. BIRCH HIGHE3. Gary, ordnance department, died la Philadelphia. 1S18. D. MISKELJICH. enlisted in Hammond April 26, 1317; killed in action on Balkan front May 25, 1318. PAUL GALL, formerly of Eegle Creek township; killed in machine gun action in France, June 18, 1918. JOHN MAGUIRES. Gary; bugler; killed in action eomewhere in France, June 25. JOHN GAILES, Gary; died at Camp Taylor. Ky., June 26. ABRAM FRY. Gary. 182 Aero Corps; killed in action in France, July 12. 1918. H. PERCHOCK1. Gary: k'lled at Rochester. N. X., in a ralVoad accident July 15. HARVEY HARRISON. Hammond, V. S. Navy; drowning in sinking of torpedoed U. S. Westover. July 11, in war zone. WILLIAM STENDERSON, Lowell, U. S. Navy; drowned at submarine base near1 New London, July 13. 1918. C. J. TEUNONES. East Chicago; killed in action in France, July 23. 1918. MISSING IN ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France. July 4th. KARL DUPES, Indiana Harbor; enlisted July. 1917. in U. S. Marines, parents notified July 16. 1918. WTST HAMMOND. JOSEPH sr"LlETZAN, 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.

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