Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 53, Hammond, Lake County, 12 August 1918 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
Monday, August 12, 1018.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING 4. PUBLISHING
COMPANY,
The Lake County Times-Dally except Paturaay and Sunday. Entered at tin. io.-tc;nc in Huaowai. Ju" Zi. lio6. The Time -East 'h '.-ago-Indiana Hirbor, dally landv. Er.fr! a: the vLnc-ttic.it :a Lust CWcagc, ovamber IS. 1913. ....
Tk.. ri... !..- T...1.. SiimiiV. kn
tered
All
matter
1 at th- p : !n H fi rr n , , ."rrl. February 4. 1 Gary Evening fim.j 1 a:ly except Sunday. -t the po::.'rKe :n J.i.-t, April 15. 1912. . , 1 under the a.t f ...ir,h 2. lsli. a-- eecod-c
all fides? Many scientists believe that some day a mechanical g.eclu9 will succeed where Garabed Giragosslan and all hie predecessors here failed. If so, the lot of the human race henceforth will be an enviable one. All man has ever dreamed of material achlevment and leisure may become a realitv.
Where They Are News of Lake Co. Boys
In Uncle? feam
FOKKK.V ArVEKTllfi OFFICE.
912 R.ct-r Hu..din.;. . . .
TEii:rnnF.s
nammonl private en.-ittmg-) . . .
Gary Oflce
. ..Chicago
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;hm at i : tnient wanted)
vary rioe Tel?noD Nassau & Thonp ,t. E t ehb'jtfo Telephone 931 F. L. Eati.i. EKt Chi.-.-tg. Telephone iI-R East Chicago. Tn Times ". Telephone Z In ! H.i: m i,r Telephone L'.ikens' .N.-.vs A,-;i.-v and C - s.'.fV-d Ails Til. ... , 1 -3 . T Triran. Vt T VlO T
WhitingC: ,wn Point . . . .
Phone 1JSS-J Indiana Harbor
Telephone a-i , -j.'elepho:i- ii
Larger Paid-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Paper In the Calumet Region. If you have any trouble gettinc The Times miike complaint Immediately to the circulation department. T.ie Times will n M be rpo:is;b! for the return of ny unsr.lU-itni ,rti.il cr ;,;m a:iJ will n.,t uotico anony. nwus comm-Jtii atio.-i. Shori. signed letter of general interest pr.a'.cJ at discretion. iNGTicn to m uciuriEn". you f.T to re.-t-iie your copy cf Thi Times as promptly e y : h.we In the past, please da not think it has been lot i-r w.n not erit on time. Remember that
: vi with tho urtfe.it movement of ; ; . -, that there Is unusual pressure ' ::. ,-; untry for food and fuel; that liici-e Su-ir;- than they can handle t tea..,n r...my trains are late. Thi
tts ma'l'r.ir eq r.pment and Is coway with the post-office department
the railroad n: ?. troops and theiIn various parts the railroads iiav
romptly. For ti.at Time has Infre.ne 1 operating In every
to expedite delivery Even so. d lays are Inevitable because of tiie snorr.ic-Ji demands upon the railroads and the withdrawal cf m a from many lines of work.
$23,000 OF OUTSIDE MONEY. Hammond has not grown faster for one reason because it. has been compelled to finance its own development. Gary ha? secured millions of dollars in the form of investments and loans from cities all over the country where funds have been idle. Eut no ouT?kie money has interested itself in Ham raond. Even the foOO.OOQ thst the government has directed should be ppent here is not welcomed in certain quarter.-. Small minded men fear that the local demand for houses will ! absorbed. Such Idea? are ridiculous. A few days a to it became necessary, in order to complete a twelve fiat building in Hammond, to tro outside of the city for the loan. This notwithstanding the fact that Hammond financial institutions hav financed hundreds of thousand of dollars worth of Gary and East Chicago enterprises. Put it l. to be hoped that this f.rst $2."iO0 of outside money will be followed by more; that somehow Hammond, in spite of herself, will build up new flat huildinc, business blocks and more residences. Ii is to be hoped that eventually Hammond will become a iaree enoush factor ft.- a municipality to attract large outside financial interest? ;:nd open tip the money markets of the world to the tremendous possibilities for investment here. Only in that way can Hamtr.or.d's growth keep pace with that, of its prosperous neighbors. Detroit was not built with Petrol t money. It was built up into the magnificent city it is with hundreds of millions of dollars that were attracted, as metal to a magnet, from the money marts of the whole world. Maybe the first $25,00ft of outside money is one of the signs of Hammond's transition from suburbanism to metropolitanism.
I
s Service
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to write "in between times " We eure have plenty to keep us buey but we're ell feellngr better for it. Kindest re-!.
gards to all -who may be interested. With very best love, COF.n.. STANLEY P. IRVIN, Co. A. 331!nd Infantry, A P. O. 72. A. K F.
Lake County's Roll of Honor
Mere and Over There
TO rilXNSS
BOTS.
AN ENEMY COURTESY. There have not bcn so many exhibitions of chivalry on the part of t'-o Prt-ssi.-in that wo can afford to permit to pass unnoticed the interment with honors, behind the lines, of the body of Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt, of te aviation section of the T'nited States army. The bravest are the tenderest, and this is not the r?t time the men of the aviation service, both on the Ide of the allies and on that of the Germans, despite f-,e feelings of military superiors, have given courtesies 4o ftallant dead. It is even admitted by the enemy that Lieutenant Roosevelt fell while contending against great odds. Those th!iiS5. c.onfonins to the distinguished parents cf Quontla Roos-evi-it, are also widely appreciated in the United Stat.si. and, while not in any way palliative of the world wrongs done, v.U tend to make the bloodstains show a little fainter wl-en the day of reckoning comes. Enemy, we thank you!
TOC HOT TO WORSHIP. A news item states that Gary clergymen fcave closed ur- , vop for the month and gone on vacation. As no n. liaovs t' d". h" r when the Ixrd will return to ttet v: HI i. o. . :.. .1 might bt well for the min'ste. s to take turns leaving town so some one would be Lore to receive him. The devil's workers keep their places open the year around so why should the churches be closed?
"FREE ENERGY."
"Garabed" has failed. A committee cf scientists, appointed by congressional resolution, ha3 pronounced a failure tho mysterious machine Invented by an Armenian resident of Boston, end much advertised as a producer of "free energy." They were convinced that It wae only one more specimen added to the long; list of "perpetdal motion machine?,' with which Inventive "cranks" baTe occupied themselves from time immemorial, snd which practical science pronounces an impossibility. It is an axiom of science that you cannot get something for nothing in the realm of energy, any more than In the realm of f.nance. AH the machinery evolved by civilized man has never really "produced" any energy; it has merely tran-formed certain kinds of energy into other "kinds, which happened to be more useful for our purpoeea. At r tiir.t ,ln any of the various processes, is there any evidence of any g'n of power. Every successive step la attended by some loss of perceptible power. Actnally, the theory is, the Quanity of power neve changes. Some we use for work; the rest disappears In the form of dissipated heat, electricity, etc. Tou cannot beat Nature's game. The best you can do is to obtain and tap big reservoirs of easily utilized energy, such as coal mines, petroleum wells, waterfalls, wind, ere. And yet. are we aiways to be bound by euch limitation? Granted that we cannot create energy out of nothing, will it be forever impossible to tap unseen Bonrces of energy, after the n.Hncer profeesed by the Boston Inventor? We know that the torld i? instinct with energy, that the Scheie universe IS energy. Big scientists agree that the "ether," which fills end permeates all space from here tc and beyond the outermost s'ar, is vibrant with energy intense and concentrated beyond anything we en Imagine. 8ir Oliver Lodge has worked out by experiment and cornpotation tfco amazing conclusion that every cubic mnilineter of the universal ether of space a volume about as large as the head of a small pin has in it the eQfllva2ent of a thousand tons of matter, "squirming internally -with the velocity of light," and that this squirming represents "an energy equivalent to the output of a million horsepower station for 40 million years." Shall we remain forever unable to tap the merest fraction of this inconceivable energy encompassing us on
Mre. Brunner ef the Ilrnnt apartments. ?ixth avenue and Van Biren streets. Gary, has received word of the safe arrival of her son ?ergeant Otto I Weber had arrived Fafely in France. He writes that they ore stationed at a camp where Napoleon In the heights of his triumphs prepared many battles. "Nothing in all the phase of the new life struck the boys Just arriving as the sir.ilne of "Kail. Hail, the Gang's
although he has disbursed libera! largess in the wav of n Here vri' Pold er wehcr. The
Yank who had pa5?d through the towns before had ta'irht the song to the little children to welcome the new
STOCKHOLDERS NOT IN. Althoueh Mr. McAdoo has been acting as director general of railroads for some months, although he has jacked up the price of ticket? and the cost of freights,
or THI
THU TTJCXS g-oec daily to over a thousand X.ake County men in the U. 8. A. or TJ. 8. N. Thtee boye keep poeted by this means. They have no otne way of g-ettlnr the news. It Is a letter from home for them. They want the new of tho boys they know. Tfoa went the new of your boy end yonr neighbor's boy to get to them. OSve It ta ns for them. Let ns keep each other posted ee to the coming-s and going's of onr boys In the service. Write briefly or cell up THE TIMES as an act of patriotism. So It now. John Tittle Is mother finry eoldler boy who h-ts arrived psfely overseas. A card to his brother here announces that he had a safe and enjoyable voynire. ?o!dier Tittle is a brother of Joseph Tittle. James and Frank Tittle of the Tittle Brothers rack ins Company and left with the first contingent l:it May. He Is a member of Co. K. l 37th Infantry.
writes that he Is well, hear from his friends.
He desires to
Dan Mramnm, WhHtncr. hoe been transferred from Kelly Field and Is enroute to Camp Meade, Baltimore. Md.
Mrs. Frieda Vater Sehnell. WhltlnK, has returned from Lafayette. Ind.. '.vhere she visited her husband, who Is in the motor mechan'c school there.
Whltlna; relative hove received raids from Carl MacFarlane of Co. E.. tilst Artillery of his safe arrival over-teas.
From 0. N. Taylor.
Paris France. July 13. 1318. j Mr. James Patrick Uel-en,
j Ka-nmond. Ind. i j My Dear Roy. Father end Mother: I
Tour kind and welcome letters, rench- j ed me yesterday. I was glad to receive i Them I assure you. I have been Koln I some since I latt saw you. I bv seen I much of England and London, some of j Scotland and Ireland end very much of j Sunny France, have traveled over 1.219 ' miles In France since my arrival, an; !
I traveling auditor aid it has been my ! I good fortune to see much that I othor- ! wist would never have seen. This cer- j
tsnnly is r. beautiful country with its . rolling country, beautiful little stream; and rich fertile valleys. The foothills of the Alps are ftrand Indeed. Pnrls I j think the most beautiful city I have ever seen. It has none of the American i skyscrapers, the buildings ere from 3 to j 5 f-tories high, very few higher. All bulit of stone or cement. The streets ; are all macadam or block cf some kind ! very, much surprised nt the condition of ' the roads and streets. They are very much better than the streets in any of j
ft: 1 1
increased wages, he has not yet entered Into a contract
with any of the roads which he has seized ?nd is running, and no road knows under what terms the government is carrying on the business. Everyone connected with the railroads seems to have been considered and cared for except the stockholder? who own the property.
Anthony O'Brien, Whitlni. has notified friends of his safe arrival overseas.
our cities. I mean by this ell the
street. None better than Michigan toule- ' vard out all are good, no bad streets J here. ,
The people are fine end I would en- j Joy them very much if I could speak i
i French, am learning a little but it is The K. C.'s, Whltlnar. nre edittctir a j very difficult to learn. I hope to gather ' pamphlet containing items of interest j a little as I go along. I am too busy to ! to the soldiers j give it much time. When I tm not ;
working I always have many letters to !
Jacob Blum of Highland, and Albert J.ibaay of Munster. have enlisted in the A. M. M. C and will go to Indianapolis where they will take three months training in auto mechanics.
write, T am answering all letters that
I
Crnnn Point la belna; frennrntly visited by soldiers with motor detachments eastward bound. They stop over night at the fair grounds.
Tony J. Miller of Hisrhland ro;n Limoges. France, where h .-in auto trair.nsr school.
writes : is at
troops with.
IMAGINARY FEUDAL TENURES. The usually prosaic records of the federal court in the district of New York contain an indictment which reads like a romance. It is the charge against the German who was employed by the kaiser to foment insurrection among the negroes of America. The agent was prolific in promises, among them being one that the negroes, in case the kaiser wins the war, shall have several states to govern as they will. Giving away territory which belongs to others is the kaiser's easiest task. "When engaged at it he reminds one of that ancient episode when Satan took the Saviour up into a high place and promised Him all the kingdoms of the world. And this at a time, as one irreverent commentator has observed, when the poor devil didn't have title to a single tcre of land.
Ml Mary Werd. flary. has received
la cablegram announcing the safe arj rival of Sergeant Harold Evans to ! somewhere in France. Sergt. Evans has been in quarters at Camp Green.
N. C. and is a member of i:th Co, 4th j
. M. M. f. M. A. '
THREP - v?. men in rreen a'd'- -' !n wMc the murderer of Policema -- Chnr'er Rajchniet: :' :a; -Chicago rode the fateful morning of August 1 may bable to prove themselves innocent. The sooner they inform on the man who did the shooting the better it will be for them. The federal government never quits an investigation. Sooner or later they will be apprehended for the government is interested, as it is apparent they were transporting whiskey into Indiana. The trail is getting hotter every day.
Andy Kirkham. of Orlfflth. who stationed at Camp Taylor, writes 's enjoying army life.
Regiment.
Will and Rutherford Walters of Ft. Pnelling. Minn, and Chauncy Walter
of Fort Caswell, N. C, all of one fam-
write cheerful letters of army life.
Ambroi Davis enroute from a furlough to his home at Washington, Pa, to hla camp at El Faso, Texas, stopped off In Gary yesterday and was a guest of his uncle K G Bayton. Poldier F'avis is a cavalryman.
Rev. P-uI V.. Benedict, pnsfor of the Monroe street M. E. church, Hammond, has received his call as V. S. arrav chaplain and will leave Augus-t ;o for training at Camp Ta'lor. Louisville. Ky. Rev. F.ened:-t will receive the commission cf first lieutenant.
Arthur Wolter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wolter. US? Harrison street, Hammond, 's -A Firt Constitution. N. VT. Wen co -.-red V arn-.y ,4 yur a G-.e 1 . weig... . l$- Ha has gained 35 pounds.
Edward J. Mcstll of Company G
c. C. T. P., No. 2. of Indianapolis, Ind..
w-. ites home "that he's eurely enjoying life and that he has hen promoted to corporal."
Mm. Robert Tnrley and daughter. Mrs. A. Judson of Rohert sdale. returned Pfturdsy from a week's visit with Robert Turley at Fort Snelllng. Minn.
Frank Mllees, Whltlnc Company 4. lVn F'eld ArtMlery. A. P. , K F .
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P. May, R61 Tyir street. Gary, announce that they have recently received word from their son-ln-low Lieut. Richard C. Allen who about f.ve weeks ago while doing exhibition flying in his plane fell a distance of 1.700 feet. He Is reco-er'.ng nlcel-.' and will jnnn' be doing more exhibition flying. Lieutenant Allen is stationed at West Point. Mies., and is detailed by the department to do exv"Mt:on flying and give instructions. His captain who was in the fall, was killed.
Robert F. Sommer, Company C. RWth Engineers. 7th Platoon. A. K. F.. writes t" Officer C. Carlson of the Hammond police department that he has been up to th front line trenches for the fourth time and Is still feelinc fine, also th?.t he met Sam Prenans if H"ff--rn street ever there.
I receive but do not find time for many j r.ew correspondents. , Glad to hear about the good prospects j
of a good crop. That will help win this great war, but I think we can begin to
see a gradual turning !or the better. Good spirit seems to prevail everywhere among the French and Americans, therefore we are gradually getting better and stronger. Glad you have an ice plant so close to home, so you won't have to (to so far for it after a long day's work.
I often think cf you folks and the folks !
down home. I must write them a letter Boon. I have sent them a card, both Clyde's and papa and mother. The time is so long in receiving letters that I almost forget, bo try to answer immediately. We have been having a very much needed rain, also some war weather, the nights are ouite cool. The crops are
( lookinff- fine, all farming Is on a smaller
scale than at home, but the wheat looks very good. Not much corn, some fine felds of alfalfa, lots of potatoes growing all looking fine, but can't tell about them till you dig of course. I haven't se-n many hogs, many cattle, some eheep and horses. I have not felt badlj' a day since leaving so you Eee so far am O. K. Give my best regards to inquiring friends. Pat, don't forget your music, especially your violin as I want to hear you play it much and fine. It is the finest music played by any instrument, stick to it end you will be glad later in life. Seme of these French girla can make a violin talk, that much of their entertainment I can enjoy. I am on the road about 10 days each month and the rest of the time I am in Paris. My address remains the same. 12 Rue d'Agusseau, Paris. With love and best wishes. ' O. N. TATLOR.
FRANK G. JONES of Memphis. Tenn., who is described as a millionaire horseman, is to be summoned from the race track to take charge of the fuel administration for the District of Columbia. The heats with which he is most familiar are not the kind which have j
to do with the coal supply, however. Nevertheless, with a college professor at the head of the fuel administration, there is nothing strange in the selection of a horseman for a subordinate place.
THE proposal to discontinue Flattsburg as an officers' training camp and to transfer its activities to a Southern sie goes well with the continued rustication of General Leonard Wood. With Wood immured in Kansas and Flattsburg. with which Wood's name is indissolubly connected, abandoned, maybe the country will forget about Wood. And then, aeain, maybe It will not.
PEOPLE often insist that newspapers are chary about telling the whole truth. One illustration of how the precise truth may convey an erroneous impression is the statement for instance that comparatively fewwomen chew tobacco regularlv in war time.
Letters from Soldiers Written to the Home Folks From This Side and the Other Side of the Water.
AMONG the reason why women's war activities are so much more circumscribed unless she wears overalls is that their skirts are often so short and so tight and their V necks so loose that they can neither stoop down nor bend over without, being visibly embarrassed.
THE action of the Hammond cvy council in refusing to ratify the government street car ordinance will be far from satisfying news to the city's 2,500 soldiers and sailors. And all are voters or soon will be.
THE Ansonia Sentinel says that "Ml?f 5'annie Booth, who is confined with illness in the Cer.'r. is doing as well as could be expected." We hope Fan does much better than could be expected.
From Stanley Irvin. This letter was received by Mrs. Alvin Lightfoot of Griffith, sister of Stanley Irvin: Somewhere in France, June 131S. Pear Sister: I haven't had a good opportunity to write for several days, so I'm taking the
first chance to tell you what I can about i
how things are going. We're getting
along very well over here, comfortable Quarters, good eats, everything in act,, better than I expected j We hd a very interesting trip over. I j saw at least two ionest-to-goodnes9
castles and. oh, yes, some German prisoners, too. We came through England on our way. It's a beautiful country and entirely different from our American landscapes. The fields are small, not over ten acres and all fenced with stone walls. The houses too are mostly stone, and in mcst cases both they and the walls are hundreds of years old. The trains are small nd the coaches divided into compartments, extending clear across the car. These conches are about three-fourths as large as a Chicago street car. The engines
certain, the Amerlc&r.s have already mad- an enviable reputation over here, everybody agrees to that, even the Americans themselves. It's amusing the way we get stuff here. We go with a French book in our hands, pick out a sentence like "Give me some esgs. nlease," show thm the sentence in French, give them about a dollar
i-ard iret a handful of change and every
body's happy. I went to get some milk ye"erday without my book and had an awful time. But finally made them understand by making motions like milking a cow, and the French women show
ed me that they would ha9 mill: the j
following morning. We have two baseball tesjns picked from two companies and we play most every Sunday and holiday, and sometimes we have foot races. Jumping, tug-of-war, competi'ive drills and occasionally band concerts. From the newspapers everything looks favorable row, and a lot of the boys thln't they are going to eat Christmas dinner at home. I don t look for anything that lucky, but it's only a question of time until we'll be eating dinner In
look like the model of '64. but they make 1 Perlin. Oh. yea. General Perching !n-
WE have one suggestion to make those r.ho force pro-Huns to kiss the grand old fiagt bring them around to this office and make them kiss the printing office towel on Saturday.
very good time at that, for they have hardly any grades to climb, everything is tunneled, and cno noticeable thing all the road crossings are either elevated or beneath the tracks. I know now why they call this the old country, its old in Its way of living, and In everything else. The r.verage church In a French town must bs at least three or four centuries old. And the people live in cne place for generations. They Lke the Americans very. well though and wit! do anything they can to help us One thing
LONDONERS DO NOT HAVE TO BE HUNGRY ANY MORE fT"NiTEr Press Caflf.oram LONDON. July 15. (By Mail.) It Is as easy to get a sood. big meal, in a restaurant in London as In Chicago or Kansas City. It probably will take three times as long (London waiters and waitresses consider It unseemly haste to serve an order in less than three-quarters of an hour) but In the end the food
will be the same and quite as plentiful. . The only discrepancies noticeable to' an American are the absence of sugar and drinking water. Water doescn't seem to be used internally In England. It j never appear on the table. ; Sugar may be served only w') pud- 1 dings and cocoa. The reason u ..... i ens ; to be permitted with cocoa Is thut hen the present restrictions were drawn up j
there was no cocoa In the country. Consequently, it was not mentioned among the ncn-sugarable beverages. Now there is plenty of cocoa and the law does not forbid serving sugar with It. A few confirmed sugar eaters fill out a sugar ration card and rrry their rations for the week with them In a bsg.
The average Londorer seems to think this more bother than It's worth, however. Meat may be had twice a day. or thre times if ham Is used for one meal. A coupon Is no longer required for ham.
Bread, potatoes, peas, "flat" (lima) and j "French" (string) beans, and other vege-
tables are as abundant as In the United States. Fxcert that .food Is more expensive.
the food situation in England la as good j
as in America.
spected this battalion a few days ago. He looks exactly like the newspaper pictures, ona recognizes him Instantly. I'm glad Esther has her program all arranged for next year and I suppose she's fully aware of the dignity neoessary to bo a senior. Tell her to remember me to Mr. McET-roy, Miss Basset. Miss Burhsus and all the others the next time she has a chance. Write me all tho nervs for we beer little indeed over here, and don't worry if my letters
are somewhat irregular because I have
Join the War Savers array.
1 O- the natioms. f
Z.Jca Cotuaiy's ded ta t&c wai wit a (rrmny sa A.c..riA-KtLS-garyi ROBERT MARJLLET. Hammood; 3ro-vned off coast ..r New Jersey, May 2. T) E.V.N IS HaNXON". Indian Harbor; ptcnia,lue poison. -at Fori Cglethrope. Chattanoogi. Tean, June 11. JAMES AiacKENZTE. G-aty; kllitci la action u Frinca whi'e KAI;L rt'KLsi. i m Waiting; u E. I. Died at l-ort Sa,a Houston cf wzsu ir. c4uiU6. J-iy is 1317. ' FRANK MANLET. Icdiana Harbor, killed n Fracce tt Built of Lille. A'-g. if. ARTHUR BAitLEH. Hammond; died at Lion Springs, Tex., cf spinal meningitis. August 2! Juii-N isAiltiuul-., i-af ;nitiifco; jkiiicii -n rriQce, SStit. la. AUxHUii tiOBEr.Iau.V, GJ-y; iilea la r'rttuce. Oct. an. LIEUT. J AliLj YAN ATT A, iiary; kilied at Vimy Kid. jAjli.a MAC .h-lNiUii, waxy; killed at Viuiy juufc-. JJULl'H liiiUi. aat Chicago; itu.ea lu i rsujuc, .ov. 27. BL'KTO-N UL.MiLKY, Gaxy; k.iitd lu aviation acciUtnt al l'aliilerro iieias. tiveruiaa, T, Dec. 1, XjLi. UAKkl CUTHBERT LONG. InvUiUi. iiarbci , iucO in acctctul at i t. HiiaK Texas, Dec Is. BEKWuOlJ DlCK.IStouN. Lowell; died somewhere lu Fr&uce, of pueutnonia, Dec li. EDWARD C kOSIBADE. Hoban; killed by expioaioa la trance, Dec 22. THOMAS V. RATCLIFFE. Gary; killed somewhere in France. Feb. 24. FRED SCHMIDT. Crown Point; died of pneumonia In Brooklyn. March 7, after being oa a torpedoed steamer. CORPORAL EDWARD M. SULLIVAN. Gary; killed ctnwhers ui France. luarcb. i. MICiiAJCL STEPICH. Whiting; Camp 'iayior; paeuweaia. Marca 14. ROBERT A SPIN. Gary; Co. F. 161st infantry; Camp Shelby; ty phoid: March 17. CLIFFORD E. PETTY, enlisted at Hammond. Jan. 8. in U. S. cavalry. Died at Dei no, Tex.. April i. PAUL FULTO Tolieston, died In hospital, Marfa, Texas. April 6, 1918. Sergeant, inaciune gun battalion, 8th c.valry. VICTOR SHOTLIFF. Gary, killed at aviation camp, San Antonio. April IS. 1918. JOSEFT BECKHART, Gary, died at an eastern cantonmont; week ending April 20. ISIS. LIEUT. IRA B. KING. Gary; reported killed in France. April 21, 1918. NEWELL TEACHER. Gary; Graves Registratlom Unit 804. died In New Jersey, 1918. E. BIRCH HIGHE3. Gary, ordnance department, died in, Philadelphia. 1.918. D. MISKELJ1CH, enlisted in Hammond April 26. 1317; killed in action on Balkan front May io. 1918. PAUL GALL. formerly of Eagie Creek township; mined la machine gun acticn in jrauca, June 18. 131. JOHN ilAGtTRES, Gary; bugler; killed in action Somewhere in France, June 25. JOHN GAILES, Cary; died at Camp Taylor. Ky.. June 26. ABRAM FRY, Gary. 1S2 Aero Corps; killed in action in Fiance. July 12. ins. H. FERCHOCKI. Gary; kll'ed at Rochester. N. Y., in a rat'road accident July 15. HARVEY HARRISON. Hammond. U. S. Navy; drowning In sinking of torpedoed U. S. 'Aftover, July 11. in war ?onc. WILLIAM SIEXPKRSOX, Lowell. U. S. Navy; drowned at ubmarine base near New London, July 19. 1918. C. J. TEUNONES, East Chicago: killed in action In France. July 23. 1918. ISISoIXO I1W ACTIO!!. JOHN ZBROWSKI. Fs-st Chicago; Somewhere .n France, July 4th. KARL DUPES. Indiana Earbor; enlisted July. H'17. In U. S. Marines, parents notified July 11, 1918. WIST K4UX05D. JOSEPH ST-IETZAN. wei: Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery. Killed in action, France, April 27. FRANK MIOTKA, Weet Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery: died at E-ougles. Ariz., Jan. 1", TJIS.
MEMRIkrVrl
PETEY DTN'K All Is Xot T. N. T. That eposes in a Munition Factory
Sy C. A. VOIGHX
(Take That To ThiZT x fflj. tto) N. t V- 5W So5 SurWiureMOEHT aho E ( P- IYS' gg m nT, f almoLt Doo I I Here's Tv MAV4 ) Fo Twe cov cf- J f T V VT.V4.T. oJ 1 I t T?m VHh -tool- J V
