Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 65, Hammond, Lake County, 30 September 1918 — Page 6
THE TIMEa
Morulav. SoDtrmbov HO, 1:
j
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING &. PUBLISHING COMPANY. Th Lake County Ttm Dlly xcept Saturday nd Sunday. Entered at the postotnco la Hammond. Juna 8. 108. Tha Timet Eat Chlcaro-Tnd'.ana Harbor, daily except Sunday. Entered at tha poatoffica in East Chicago. Novtmbcr It, 1813. Tha Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the postofflca In Hammond. February 4. The Gary Evening jTtai.a Dally except Sunday, t-n-Ured at tha postofnea in viary. April 18. 1K1J. ' All undar tha act of March 3. 1878. a ecoml-cla raatter. FOREIGN AnVERTHHO OFFICE. IIS Rci?r Building Chicago
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CaH for whatever department Gary Office Nassau b Thompson. East Chicago F. L. Evans, East Chicago East Chicago, The Times Indiana Harbor (News Dealart
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wanted) . . .Telephone 13T . . .Telephone 31 .Telephone 43-H . . .Telephone 3 i 3 TVlenhona SOI
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Large- Pald-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papert In the Calumet Rea'on. If you have any trouble getting The Times make complaint immediately to the circulation department. Tue Times will not be responsible tor the return of any unsolicited articles or letters and will not notice anony. toous communications. Short ilgnsd letters of genera laterest printed at discretion. XOT1CE TO SUBSCRIBERS. If you fail to receive your copy of Th Times as promptly as you have In the past, please do not think ft kas been lost or was not ent on time. Remember that tha railroads are engaged with the urgent movement af troop and their suppllas; that there Is unusual pressure !n various parts ot tha country for food aud fuel; that tha xallrcads have more business than they can handle promptly. Tor that reason many trains ere late. Tub Tikes has Increased Its mailing equipment and Is co orat!nr In evecy wav with the postofrlce department to expedite delivery. Evan bo. delays are Inevitable because of the enormous demand upon the railroads and tha withdrawal of men from many Unea of wark.
SAY, WHOSE WAR IS IT? There is one thing we would like to put up to you cold Whose war is this, anyway? East Chicago hns rone far over the top in the fourth Liberty Loan. Is it Eust Chicago's war? I? it her war any more than it is Crown Point's war. or Hammond's war, or Dyer's war, or the war of any other town that has not gone over the top. Is it the war of SOME of the people on Main street in Crown Point and not the rest? Must SOME of the people on Calumet avenue in Hammond buy bonds and not the rest? "Why must SOME of the people on Oliver street in Whiting buy bonds and the others not? isn't it ju.-t about time thai ALT, he people all the men, all the women, all the boys, and all the girls of this neighborhood got it into their heads that it is TIIEIK war? Why is it that say Bill White at Crown Point, worth a half a million dollars, is permitted to get away with the purchase of a measly amount of Liberty bonds, or no more than Jim Jones, who hasn't a thing, not even his pants, that isn't mortgaged? Why is it that you can go up one street and down an other all over Lake county and find Liberty bond slackers, fellows who have bought a $50 bond when thev should have bought a $500 bond? Good God Almighty, how long is Uncle Sam going to stand for this kind of thing? Again we ask, and we ask it so it can be heard--WHOSE WAR IS THIS, ANYWAY?
shelled our hospitals and killed the vvouuded, the surgeons and the (sisters; they had thrown poison shells into our lines; they had offered to surrender, and then killed our boys who went out to bring them in; they had lought treacherously until our boys were fairly wild. "'And then we got the word to go after them. Say, I wouldn't have missed that sight for a million dollars.
They were calling the Huns everv vile name they could i
think of, and adding some new ones. And the look on their faces when they went over, with fixed bayonets, showed what they meant to do. And they cleaned up the Prussian guard and the Bavarians and everything else the kaiser had sent down there to whip them cleaned them up, and took very few prisoners. "'The French gave them the credit for practically saving Paris. And 1 know that their fighting has put new spirit into the whole of the allied army." "The only peace to make with Germany is the peace that comes when she is thoroughly beaten, gets out of Prance and Belgium and Russia and all the other placets she has seized, and offers to do whatever penance the civilized world may impose. There can be no 'peace with understanding' unless we are willing to let he robber
keep most of his plunder, and see him organize another
raid on humanity. "What those terms may be no man can jet say. Public speeches by various statesmen indicate these terms, among others: "Belgium to be vacated, her towns rebuilt by the Germans, and the more than $441,000,000 'fines' and 'war levies' returned. "France vacated, her towns rebuilt by the Germans, and the people repaid for property wantonly destroyed. Alsace-Lorraine restored. "Russia, vacated, the provinces of Esthonia, Livonia, Cuiirland and all the others made independent instead of :nu. governed by German princes, and the treaty of Brest-Lit o sk repudiated. "Austria-Hungary set free from the German yoke, and her various nationalities permitted to form independent states, if they choose. "Turkey taken from under German dominance, and her Christian possessions assured of humane treatment. "Germany herself to gie ahiple guaranties 'put under bond' they say in criminal court that she will never again attack a helpless n&rir-n. nor u- subti.r.rir.3 boat.; against unarmed ships, nor burn churches, nor murder civilians, nor carry off girls to be slaves of nor any of the other horrible things she has done. "That is an outline of what we are fighting for. Germany will talk of a 'peace by understanding' which means simply that she will try to bargain with civilization that some of these things be not done. "Don't let any one talk to you of such a 'peace.' It means treacherv."
'Wm' ! HONESTLY it would lil.OYVS from the north i Tv JlT f TO A YH 0 1Y1 MELT the hrart of a stone to go whoR thoy ,urn ,hHr v ! j JjfXtJlIlUX lCllll TO see the anguish displayed by so me house I
of our , WILL get the full benefit of the . K. RIi H people , WHEN tlirv siencd up for a $r0 or . .. . , , . , , , , j . , AND the whole !nrnrd fnmilv. inlud$Kn bnn.l. 1 inp l he WE guess from some faint mftwin? t , . . , ... , r. , LITTLE wnr pf.oi-h from BU -k Onk. sounds we j ,,r, , WILL smell for a vfk like H lot of! H LA H from the dirert.ion of the nf w IIALtr.t'T. I THAT the nMVhor' cat is oversub-I (
sen muz it It elorinun a io th Hritish
j f'i:i;.I to tie wiplns up the Hunf,
COME, GET BUSY! Lake county is facing a big task in raising $7,000,000 as its fourth Liberty Loan quota. We don't like the way some of the communities are going at it. It is going to require the faithful help of everybody in the county to raise it. These first trickling streams must swell to flood-tide. There is no reason for delay, no excuse for postponement cf action. Each person knows today what be can and must do in this emergency. It is easier to perform a duty promptly than it is to w-orry and debate and then finally acquiesce. And acquiesce we all must.
The allotment of bonds has been equitably tioned according to the we. !th and the earning
and circumstances surrounding the individual. In some cases it is going to cause inconvenience. In some cases it is going to approximate sacrifice in order to toe the mark. But it must be done. It requires money, and lots of it, to train, equip and maintain a vast army overseas. Our soldiers are giving their lives; we must give our dollars. Don't ask the committee to reduce your allotment: rather if possible increase it voluntarily. If you haven't the money use your credit. It could not be summoned to service in a better cause.
appor-ability
BEWARE OF TREACHERY. When they talk peace to you just remember this from a letter written to an East Chicago man: "If you only knew how our boys are fighting, and with what spirit they are going about the job of putting the Hun back into his kennel and a muzzle on his nose, you would feel differently. You wouldn't want them to etop until they had whipped him soundly. They are not prattling of peace. "I talked the other day, with Col. Robert U. Patterson, U. S. medical corps, just back from the front. He saw our boys go over the top at Chateau Thierry, and at Belleau Wood, where they thrashed the best troops the kaiser could put against them. Here are some of the things he told me: '"They were the maddest, men I ever saw in my life and I served in the Philippines, too. I never heard such language as they used when they finally got the word to go after the Huns. "'You see the Germans had been "fighting dirty" as cur boys say, and they were awfully sore. The Hun had
WAR ON FILTH. Sanitary homes mean the eradication of typhoid fever, says the North Carolina state board of health, 'mi-typhoid vaccination gives immunity to the person treated for a period of three years, but a community that is thoroughly sanitated is immune for everyone of its inhabitants. Commenting on the progress made in sanitation and mcing even greater efforts in this direction Dr. E. F. Long, health official, says: ' Why continue to permit ourselves and our neighbors to be exposed to human filth, which is the only source of typhoid fever, dysentary, hook worm and other testinal diseases, when vaccine will not be necessary after all the homes are protected by sanitary disposal of filth? 4 "It is as important to safeguard ourselves against preventable diseases and keep ourselves in condition fo. service for our families and the nation as to do the many other things we are learning to do so nobly." We will fight more ably against the HUN "over there" if we at the same time wage war upon filth over here.
A BLEAT FROM BILLY. Pilly Bryan plays up quite prominently in his personally conducted paper. The Commoner, the following quotation from a friendly contemporary in Kansas: The public knows that a large number of the socall great papers have entered into an agreement to pnore Mr. Bryan as far as possible and avoid giving publicity to the work he is doing. The pubi c knows, or could know, why this is true and that it is a very high compliment to Mr. Bryan. Apparently the Peerless One is pining for publicity, which was his meal ticket in the dear, dead days before the war. But the old feller takes himself entirely too seriously if he imagines that "the so-called great papers" are conspiring to keep him in the dark and to relegate him to obscurity by denying his name and his activities space in their columns. The chief trouble with Mr. Bryan seems to be that he can't realize that the European war is of more moment to the American public than he himself, his family, or his ?400 heifer which, by the way, is probably a rnotherh' old cow by this time. It is true that Mr. P.ryan hasn't received very much free advertising of late, but for that mater neither have certain other people who once figured just about as conspicuously in the headlines as he did. Who reads today of the doughty achievements of Jack Johnson or Jess Willard? In what paper are tha amours of the bewitching Gaby Deslys chronicled? What papers are telling us of Harry Thaw and child wife Evelyn? Who knows from newspaper recital how John TVs golf game is these days? or what Ty Cobb is batting? or what Billy Sunday is saying? or what young lady is on trial for murdering her faithless affinity? Really, Mr. P.ryan is not alone in being deprived of profitable advertising for which he doesn't pay. There are other folks claiming public attention just now and they happen to be engaged in the promotion of a holier cause than that of the Divine Ratio and opposing even a greater evil than the Crime of '73 Fort Wavne News.
A QUESTION. According to the Christian Science Monitor, it is reported from Washington that, in all probability, an end will be put To motorlesa Sundays east of the Mississippi at or about the close of the present month, for the reason that there is no longer any reason to fear the tremendous shortage in the gasoline supply predicted by Dr. Garfield. In letting itself down as softly as possible, the fuel administration assumes, it is said, that, of course, there will not be so much motoring during the fall and winter as there was during the summer. Of course not, but some of the very finest days in all the year for motoring are yet to come. All of which impels one to ask, in the poet's words, slightly paraphrased: If the motorless Sunday was so soon to be done for, What in the world was it ever begun for?
HER Quota to the Lean.
Liberty
British
TEEM to be wiplns tip the Hunf, Turks. Bulbars jiml LoMiryiki so often
WE are rained to udmtt AT this writing THAT old Hindenburp no worre AND the rlown prinz 1?! still TALKING through- his lace pants. THE mornlnps are jo cold that WE no longer enjoy ARUGING on tin- almost wrrlfl-oid fjucstion as to WHICH is Mie hotter, corsets or rants. NEARLY everji iie in our blork LS ficurinp. we imagine, on vnitmc until a pood stronp wind
ontempt ihle
THAT we suppose the kaiser is so
THESE days with that little a rmy"
G Hi ) t "i 'H Y he won't kiss the kaiserin n-Hid-b". e WHEN he starts out to his daily work WITH Karl Rosner and Cott. SOMETIME soon MA Y HE within th" next few days AVE are going out and see how near w e ca n Ci iMK to temptation without touching IT if our pastor will Rive hit? approval WHIi'H we know he won't.
W.here They Are !V?ws of Lake Qo, Boys In LJnclfe? Sam's Service
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Mere and Over There
5STC7mfE5''iWB'l-TE'Wg
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Letters are coming to THE TIMES from overseas in the last mail by swarms. Our friends must have patience. We'll get them all in. Just watch. EDITOR. Are you doing jour ltf Are you vrrltlnK any letter to nolJIer boynt AV.- know one man who worka 10 to IS hours n ln. who flnU time to write 5 or lO letter a weeK to moldler boy lit France. How many do you writer o not .to relative. ut to olillers! The Time ha published the name nml ndlree of over 2MtO Lake eounty olllr boy. Jt pick out a few even though they bo ntrancer and drop them a few line each week. Show your Interest in them. If other can find time can't youf Some write a letter a day. Appreciate thec letter? Men and women, you don't know how much Rood letter do woldler boy. AArlte to them often.
Hubert AA llll.inm, ton of Mr. T. E. Williams of East Chi.aBo, has been called to government service at Camp Columbus. South Carolina, and placed in the position of typist in the officers' eorp of the court-martial branch service. Mr. AVjlliams enlisted some time ajto and since that time has been employed !n the government service of the Swift Company of Chicago. He departed this week to. his row assignment.
Camp Mills. He is a member of Co. I., 51st Infantry and win n they land on Lens Island, you know what that means.
J. J. I.iiron. Hammond, in with the 9th Rat.. Co. 34. 13 Depot Brigade. Camp Dodge. Iowa.
If. J. Dedelow I a well known Lake county boy who can be addressed care Q. M . C. Camp Taylor. Ky,
Oeorge II. Jolley, 41 Eng. Ry. Co. f, V. of F. W., via New York, is the way a hoy you all know gets his mail.
E. K. l.lplnkl. Hammond, one of the famous twins, has a new address. Here it is for his friends: A. S. S. C. 1106 Eer. Sq.. A. I O. 713, A. E. F., v i a N e w York
John J. taey. to. 17, Fort Alillfi, Manila Ray. I. I. is where a popular Hammond boy gets his mail.
Alrgll Groat, Jlnmiiiond, I with 22 T". S. Aero Sqn , A. E. F., via New Vork.
.Max A. Ivtihn may hp nddrccd 14th Cav., Troop M, Fort El is?, Texas.
"Tell them. Mr. Kdltor," Say Frank J. Loda of Hammond, now at Washington, D. C, that I am on my way to Rerlin. as I have an engagement with the clown prince
take County's dead la the war with Germany and Austrla-Hnryaryi ftOnEHT MARK LET, Hammond; drowned c.T const N. J.. May 2. DENNIS HANNiiN. 1 rid. Harbor; died at Ft Ojrl-t h irpe. Tenn . June
IAMES MAO KENZlE. Gary; killed In action Franc-. May ?,. EM 7. KARL WI.LSRr, AVhitltig. V. S. I ; died at I t. H-.usfon. July 2S. l.'MT FRANK MeANLET. In. Harbor; killed In France, imile r.f I.iHe. .u. 15. RTHt'It RASELER. Hammond; died at Lion Spr. lists. T x., August 26. rOHN S A M 1)1:' H KS, East Chioruro; killed in Fram e, Sept. IS. RTJIFR EORERTSO.V. Gary; killed in I rarre, v-r. 31. -IKVT. JAMES VAN ATTA. Gary; kiii.-d at Vimv Riie. :'LEH HIEKZTKI, East Chicago; killed in France. Nov. 7. 2 It FUTON, 1 1 FNDLEY, Gary; killed a via. sc. at Ev.rman. Tex Dec 1317. rJARRY Ct.'THIJE RT LONG. Ind. Harbor; killed at Ft. Bliss. Tex D c 1. ? ; vw!tw.I,!n;,V""X' J'"U: omwhere in Franc-. Dec. 12. 1317. r 'ST HA DE, Honart; killed by exploMor. in F.an.-e. IV,-, - nmMAS V. EATC-EIKEE. Gary; killed somewhere ,, l--.rre y. h 2 1 rr.KD SCHMIDT, r. Voint; died in nr..c.klVn. March 7. on torr-i ed boat rnri EDWARD M. SFLLIVAN. Gary; killed In France. March R. POtrr;r,:r,''H- Whit!n- Taylor; pneumonia. March 1 t. P, .'AV, r- ;NG'"'5'' r' K lr',M Inf- CP. Shelby; tvrboid. Man h 17. C-LIM ORD E. PETTY. Hammond; T". S. cavalry, died Delrio, Tex .. April 3 Vir-rr I'TOX' T"!!,on: '"" Marfa. Texas. April 6. 191. SHr'TI-'r'E. Gary; killed at avla. camp. San Antonio. April 131?. JOSEPH P.ECKHART. G.-iry: died at r,-,c;rrn cantonment. April 0. 13tS. LIFT T. TP. A It. KING. Gary; r ported ktl'e.l in Erar.-e. April 21 VS NEWELL PEAC-HF.R. Gary; Graves P.eeis. Fnit ?. i dl, in N. J. I CM ' E. UtRCTI HIGT'tte. Gary; ord. dept.; d;ed in 1 "hi ladelph ja. 1S. IX MlSKELJirir. Hammond; Kill, d en Ealkan front. May 15! s. PAFL GALL, Eagle ''reek Twp ; killed in action. France, Juno ic, li.5. I'VTE. FRANK TfCKKlt, Hi(rhlanl. Ind.. Euks ; killed, Fran. e. Jr.e s. JOHN MAC, VI RES. Gary; buirlrr; killed in action. France. June 25. JOHN GAILES, Gary: died at Camp Tailor, Kv June "6 V r F pVl'iC vt't " "2,A,7 CrrS; k"' on. Era, co, July 21. ,315. H. IERCH .CKI. Gary; k.lled at P.ochester. N. Y.. R R fCdent Tulv li 1 1 A I J E Y H A RR I S N , Hammond. F. S. Navy; droe l. pedoed t. S. AVestov.r. July 11 in war zone LER..Y T-.V.-VOVFR. TIrrrror:d; I.iMrd iv. ,c?,nn. Trar-'ce Tulv 14 CRPL. GnOHlE ALLEN. Gary; kilbd in action. France Julv'l4 AVILLIAM STEXDEHFOV, Lov. 11. V. S. Navy; drowned at submarine base near New London, July 1:.'. lit is. HAROLD GO ,DRI- 1. M.rUIlvilie; lt(!!. ; arttcn. Franr j,.,v 1; ,,ls CHARLES QFIGLEY. Ind. Harbor; killed in action. Fran.; ju'"v n C. J. TEUNONES. Fast Chicago; killed in action. France July 4 in, , CHARLES BAZIM, Gary. Co. H. tSth Inf dl.V J , "?' J.Ul "3' 1313 PHI I r IP pftppsav tt oC uunos. France, .Tulv C) 111J-LI1 PETLRtoON. Hammond; died of wounds rece,ci t , SERGT. MARCUS VALEXTICH Garv kin Juno 3- tran"-
cident in South Chicago while on fr,'..u ' ' .1" u 111
OSCAR E. SHOVER. Indiana Harbor; F .s Mannes' kill d , PLIEZO TSIORIAS, Indiana Harbor; U. S Ian r"kH " ' J y AIcWOV t-nr i-i- Jn.antrj, kihed m action. GUP F rrir - Engmeers; kilhu in action June. CHARLES BOCCA. Gary, F. A.; killed in action Julv k HAwnSvLT"KI,EU'ry! d'Cd FrE f d''' 1"
France, Au,. 1. . o. ed from wounds,
'SP; Chicago. Co. L; killed in action July 13 JOH"- ( Ol VIM larbor; killed in action in France. JuIv , 18 FORCE P In vnvov V k!Ued in aC,i" in July J. ' Jl list li. IS liA.N U., A p?t i rpL C t t I'l-T-i r w ? tw. . J ,C - V " A"' k,,Ic1 ln action Julv 15. THOS. LISTER. Hammond. q Z C. ; C . ARTHFR O. AVI SH MAN, Hobart. Co. K. F. A, pnuLa 'cr Shdan. MISSING IN ACTION. JOHN ZBROAVSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France JuK. KARL DUPES, In. Harbor; enlisted July 1317 in tt' ?' " - ' notified July 16. 1318. k ' U S' roarines. brents E. MASE, East Chicago; mlssin in action in France, July 1913 O. A. DUEl'PE, Hammond; missing in action, France Julv iqis .CORPORA Ij JOHN NESTOR. Gary; reported musing Auk S in Fr.n GEORGE REAL, next of kin. Andrew Kocalka Garv- "' JOHN GENICl ANKHIS, next of kin, AVm FIi u-c -WM. PAPKA. East Gary; found mit u.y ' ? Frn .c0""'HOMER FRIEND. Co. L. J:ast ChicaKo; missing .since R.iv 13 STEVE SZITAS. Co. L, Fast Chicago: missm since JuH i6 SAM TODOR. Indiana Harbor; reported missing France" TK- 11 VirTroAU Chicago; missing i ..J, y 15. STANLEY rOfAAANrwI. Co. L. East Chicago; missing since Julv 1 MI LOS M LA DEN, Gary; missing since Julv -1 France ' ANTON OWERNS. Indiana Ha, bo:; i.,ssing sine, m.ddle of July. France WEST HAMMOND. JOS. S. LIETZAN. AY. Hammond. F. A. ; killed !n action France Arrll -FRANK MIOTKA. AVest Hammond, V. S. Field Artillery; died at DouVlai Ariz. Jan., 17. 131S. ougias.
1.) ac-
in
Roland Summer, nil Imllnnr Harbor young man. has safely reached the other side. Such was the official communication forwarded yesterday t his relatives here. rienry AIer write hi mother, Mr. Lena Merz. of 33 AVarren street, Hammond. Indiana, from somewhere in Franco of a most pleasant surprise. He had the great good luck to meet old friends of his, namely AValter Kussmaul. of Crown Font. Robert Reatty and James Nordstrand of Hammond. Henry has been over there for a year and two months and these are the first Hammond buys he's met. He says that he wellany happy and is serving as orderly for a captain. As he closed his letter h added that Arnold Kunert of Hammond had j'ist passed his tent.
Raymond Dlneeii, AVhltlnsr. on of Mr. and Mrs. D. Dineen, of Sheridan avenue, has been transferred from the. Great Tvikes to the. navy yards in Philadelphia.
Ir. and .Mr. A. II. Mevcn of ." Gostlln street, Hammond, have received word announcing the safe arrival overseas o their son. Captain . M. Stevens. His address is as follows: Captain O. M. Stevenson, 326 Field Artillery, ?4th Division, A. E. I. via New York.
AAord ha been received In Hammond announcing the safe arrival over seas of Sergeant Joseph A. Fiileheck, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Fillebeek of Ingraham avenue. West Hammond.
Guy Cant of Kn hicago, ha n new address. It is Replacement Unit. 5. A. E. F., via New York.
Corporal Riifu Klempner, a well known East Chicago boy. is now at
Leslie Campbell, AA'hltlng. ha been home from a South Carolina camp visiting his parents on Pennsylvania avenue. -
AVilbur ntchcr, AA'hltlng. ha now been promoted to a sergeant. His address is Co. 62. Eng. Camp De Grasse, A. P. O. 717. A. E. F. He is in th same camp as Albert Sr-holz of AA'hlting and they have met th Griffith Pros, and all have had a pleasant time together.
AVm. Kletrmnn. and Carl Znrdte, of Hammond, are hnm-i on a three-day furlough from Camp Taylor. Hill and Chuck are doing clerical work at the camp headquarters. These two were great boosters for th silent army o-.d navy dr.ve. of the St. Paul's Lutheran church, which took place yesterday.
AAllbiir Iloolln, Lowell. ha been transferred from Camp Forrest. Ga., to a camp in A'irginfa. Air. nnd Air. Guy Ie laser. Lowell, have received word from their son. Adrian, who was wounded several weeks ago over in France, that he has entirely it covered and was able to jmti his reglrrent.
AA'ord ha been received from Private William Sullivan, who is stat: r.ed at Zachary Taylor camp. Louisville. He has been separated from the ether Hammond boys who left with him on Sept. 6. Private Sullivan is the first among this group of boys
1 o leceMP n t:uck ana 13 inucn taKen
up with his new duties. They havj been Fleep'.ns in tents r tt since hi transfer he has been put in doors. He sends word the other boys are getting along fine nnd that he has escaped the Spanish influenza. Private Sullivan's present address is Motor Truck Company No. 34.1. Zachary Taylor Camp. Louisville. Ky.
I II. OWelll, of I.o Angele. Calif.. came yesterday for a visit with his brother-in-law, B. F. Carlin and sister-in-law. Mrs. J. P. Degnan and tamilies.
Joe Gmgel, Griffith, from Camp Cuter, visited home Sunday. He is looking fine and speaks well of army life. Ralston Todd, of GrlfTilh. at Camp Sherman, writes that he is getting fat and advises all th boys to join the army. Y
A my friend who have been writing to me and those that have not written and wish to. I take pleasure in giving them my address as follows: Private Chauncey D. Walters. No. 4361 ". F?rt Casw. '1, S A. R. D, C. A. C, American E. F., via New A'ork .
campaign will be resumed again. Delves have been conducted by both the Democratic and the Republicans t" get the entire voteregi:;terod. "According to reports reaching headquarters the Republican organization was never in better condition in Indiana." said Secretary Henley of the Republican state central committee. Fr-d A" an Nuvs. Democratic g;a-e chairman, expresses himself as entirely satisfied with the manner in which the eampaign is proceeding and declared that he was confident the voters of Indiana wouM "stand by the President" this autumn" by electing m 1 the president supports for yon-
REGISTRATION GOING BETTER RT Fnitkh Pbfss. INDIANAPOLIS. I Sept. 28. Regis? ration of voters in Indiana for the November election is proceeding more satisfactorily, according to reports reaching here today from all over the state. Political activity generally, has been slack because of the Liberty Loan Campaign. Roth parties decided they would not attempt to attract interest from the loan campaigns by political meetings. However, now that the actual sale of the bonds has started, the
INDIANA ABLAZE. Rt I'nitkd Press INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. Sept. 28 Determined to raise the Indiana quita o' the fourth Liberty Loan in record tltne. the actu.-.i sale of bonds was started today. A spirit of competition was in th.j cr.'. th:s 11 Iiom the start between the counties of thy seventh reserve distr1 t of Civcago and those in the St. Louis t i tret. Campaign directors ith the H'c". of the, intensive publicity and advertising campaigns conducted duiiig the lst month, confidently expect counties to raise their amounts in one, two or three days. Coiin1i in the seventh district expect t-' raise a quota of $108. 750, 001"1. Tin lari-est quota is assigned to Marion county with t'-2. T'i.ri.-io Allen is second with a ojota of $7,600,000 and lake third with T.OOn.Oy".
The man Avho helps his city and his country by buying a 4th Liberty Loan Bond is for them, the man who doesn't isn't.
Petey Wants to be Nothing less Than a Brigadier-General.
CAPTAJW
OOCOkltTL .
VOO OOGMT "TO OlET
UWCtE PUTEV VOO'RC 6ETTIU6
Too SVouT TRtNtc WHAT TkEX U-
HAVE R DO IZ) 1QO wew Now AR&
' T
51
7 "S
By C. A. VQIGHT 4. etof?! i J vm0AWAWfAWA
1
