Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 73, Hammond, Lake County, 9 October 1918 — Page 10

Pase Ten.

THE TIMES. Wednesday, October 9, 1918 nd's Greates Trading Event!

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r7 atch the Tongue of your Younr!

Your little Pets need Cascarets

'Children think Cascarets just dandy, 'They are safe and mild cathartic candy. Sell for a dime "work" every time.

lYMKEE HOSHTAL AMAZES I i

MOTHERS! Clean the docged-up places. Do away with the bile sour fermentations and constipation poison which is keeping your little one cross, feverish and sick. Children love Cascarets because to them it is like eating candy. Cascarets act better than castor oil, calomel cr piils on the tender stomach, liver and bowels.' Cascarets never gripe, never injure, and do net disappoint the worried mother. Give harmless Cascarets to children one year old and upwards. Each ten cent box contains full directions.

What One Dollar Will Do I

at THE HUB Dollar Day

All $1.50 Shirts $1.00

All Heavv Fleece Lined Underwear $1.00 1

All $1.50 Silk Ties $1.00 All 75c Ties 2 for $1.00 15 off on any pair of shoes in the house. 25 off on anv suit or overcoat Dollar Dav onlv.

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527-529 Hohman St., Hammond.

B.t Frank II. Taylor. 1 United Press Staff Correspondent) By FRANK J. TAYLOIt I'mUd Press Staff Correspondent. ) WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE. Oct. 9. "Madame" is a devoted ai.d intelligent French woman. She is a war veteran in addition, and now a sWiunch pro-American. When the war broke out and "Madame's" husband and son were mobilized at once into the French army, "Madame." could not be idle. Hastily she gathered the women of her town about her, and offered their services for hos-)'ilnl work. In that dark period of the first awful shock against the barbarous German waves, she and her cohorts, with practically nothing in the way of equipment or medical supplies, cared for thousands of wounded Frenchmen. Then "Madame';;" health Rave out, after almost three years of service in French hospitals without any paym- nt, Knd she was discharged about the time her husLand was released from the army. Together they recuperated, while their son did the family share, operating a machine gun on Germans. A few days ago "Madame." now in health again, appeared at American Ease Hospital 66. "Madame" wanted to visit the wards and "see how Americans run hospitals." "We etuld rf't bring visitors to cur hospitals," she said, "but I have heard the American? are very free. Could you possibly let me see how ;u run your hospitals?" Visits American Wards. A congenial . nurse took "Madame" through the wards. She saw Americans, French, Enslish and all allied nationalities bcinj? cared for by American nurses nnd according to American standards of medical treatment. She saw men com? in. she saw them after first treatments, and during their convalescence. Everywhere there was an air of contentment, and even the worst patient seemed to feel at home. Men of all nationalities were enjoying themselves at the hospital. She saw them eating, and noted the quantity and the quality of the food. She did not wonder they ate it with relish, she said. The instruments used by doctors and nurses were a source of amazement for "Madame." "It makes everything certain," she declared. "We did not have such instruments and had to guess. You cannot make a mistake, can you? Your wounded are certain to get well." W'omlerf ul Hccord. "Madame" thought the hospital food was remarkable, and asked some French patitnes how they liked it. "They say they want to stay in an American hospital all the time," she stated. "They have not had sue!? food since the war started as they are eating here. Eook. they are all getting: Tut on it." Th fact that all the American nurs-

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Special Bargains for Dollar Day eQfMITIFl?! Ladies and Men's Tailor . kJlilli Jb&BJBliJFL and Furnisher. 79 State Street, Hammond, Ind.

Dollar Day Specials For Men

1.00

MEN'S WINTER CAPS All wool, $2 sellers for

MEN'S 50c SUSPENDERS-f 1 f 3 pair for . . . .31 .U

BIG BARGAINS IN MEN'S AND BOYS' OVERCOATS AND SWEATERS.

Dollar Day Specials For Ladies

$2.00 WAISTS Special

LADIES' SILK STOCKINGS in tan and gray, :j pair for. .

$2.00 CORSET COVERS of finest silk and lace CORSETS $2.00 and $2.50 sellers

BIG BARGAINS IN COATS AND ALL WOOL SERGE AND POPLIN DRESSES

DAILY HEALTH TALKS The Troubles Women Have

EI L. MAC LEAN', M. D. Probably no man in America was ever better qualified to successfully treat the diseases peculiar to women than Dr. I'ierce, of Buffalo, X. V. The cases that come to him run into many thousands, giving him an experience thet rarely comes to any one man. Dr. I'ierce found that In nearly every case there were certain vegetable growths which rarely failed to give prompt relief in those feminine disorders from which so many women suffer. lie combined these roots and herbs into a temperance medicine that he called Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, for that is precisely what it was. This medicine is sold in both liquid and tablet form by druggists everywhere. 1'avorite Prescription is a distinct remedy for women and acts directly upon the organs that characterize! the sex. It i3 not necessary to take a loni? course of treatment with this standard medicine. A weakly, sickly, baehachy, headachy, nervous, despondent woman, with resular or irregular pains with feminine disorders that come in youth or middle asc is pretty sure to find in Dr. I'icrce's Favorite Prescription the exact remedy that her condition calls for, and to find it after a very few doses are "taken. "Why women ihould allow themselves to slay sick when a very little money spent for this remedy will probably make thein well, is something no one can explain. All women who suffer from feminine disorders are invited to write the Faculty of the Invalids Hotel. Buffalo. X. Y-. for free confidential consultation and advice, no charge lein made for this high professional service. This will enable every woman to benefit by the advice of the distinguished corps of physicians which Dr. Pierce has fathered about him in his celebrated Huftalo institution. When constipation is present with feminine disorders. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets should be taken along with Favorite Prescription. Try them now! Adv.

til we scarcely knew when it was day, when night. In fact, I cannot now recall the days and distinguish one from tlie rest. As I look bark over them, they all run together one long continuous day. with 1:0 break at all for night. At last, though, we were rewarded. Order came rut of chaos, as order must. i:nd we hod the satisfaction of hearing the chief surgeon say, 'Well, boys, we may rest a little now. Every urgent case has been attended." "What satisfaction that announcement really did bring I can hardly expect you to imagine. I'nless you were actually ;n the work it would be next to impossible. There was, in a word, the feeling of gratification for work hard work well done. "N'ow, too, we ere day by day seeing the effects of our work. I see it perhaps more than some of the others, for I am all the day long in the midst of the patients as they f lowly wend their way back toward health. What a revelation they are! A1iat a demonstration of that electrifying spirit of America! "There is no complaint. The ones who suffer most grumble least. Sometimes it is unbelievable. To them the Germans are no supermen. They have been nmr enough to see. At the same time there is no braggadocio. Instead, we find simply a philosophical acceptance of realities and a determination to win the war at any cost. If ever anyone entertained a lurking apprehension that there might be a remote possibility

of disaster for the allied cause, one moment with those young chargers who went through the fire and came back to us would convince him of his folly."

AMERICAN BASEBALL MAKES HIT IN ENGLND By United Pre.-.I hOXDOX, Oct. 9. American baseball in Great Britain is a paying proposition. AVhtn the Anglo-American Baseball League closed its season here a net prolit of nearly $15,000 was turned over to British war charities. So 'confident are promoters of baseball's future in Great Britain that they have bggun plans for an English-Scotch league, similar to the National and American leagues in the United States, II. E. Booker, who once ran a roller skating rink in San Francisco, has engineered baseball operations in this country, and after a review of this season's history he is confident that after the war baseball will be a paying enterprise here. Booker Is general manager of the league, but what he doesn't know about baseball. Arlie Latham, who used to cavort along the paths in the States, can tell him.

WARTIME RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR

Actress Gives Simple Inexpensive Recipe for Screaked or Tailed Cray Hair.

Even the Boys Who Are Fighting Are Buying Liberty Bonds.

1 What About Ycu?

Sirs. Hackle, the well known .v York actress, now a grandmother, and whose hair is still dark, recently mail"1 the following statement: "Gray streaked or faded hair can be immediatIy turned black, brown or light brown, whichever shade you desire, by the u?e of the following simple remedy that yi'U can make at home: "Merely get a small box of Oiie powder at any drug store. It costs very little and no extras to buy. Dissolve it in water and comb it through the hnir. Full directions for mixing and use come i neach box. "You need not hesitate to use Orlex. as a 1100.00 gold bond comes in each box guaranteeing the user that Orle powder doe3 not contain silver, lead, zinc, sulphur, mercury, aniline, coal-tar products or their derivatives. "It does not rub off. is not sticky or greasy, and leaves the hair flurry. It will make a gray haired person look many years younger." Adv.

Put a larger Service Star on your Pocketbcok.

AILMENTS OF WOMEN. There is no denying the fnct that thousands of American women drHg nlong day in and day out suffering with these ailments peculiar to their sex which make life a burden. If women who suffer from dragging-dow n pains, inflammatory, ulcerated or catarrhpl conditions would only give that greatest of all remodips. T.ydia-E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound, a trial, they would readily find relief from such suffering, as the many letters of commendation

constantly being published prove. Adv. j

cs had comp'eted long training courses to prepare "for their w ork w as amazing I" "Madame." lltr assistants had no training. Vour nurses are ready for the war. They know all about medical work. Then you will not lose the men that France has lost, for we were not ready for the war. "It is marvelous to have nothing to worry about. And it is doubly amazing to us French people, when you come thousands of miles and do things so well and so carefully about it. It makes us happy, you see. We have much to learn from your young American ways."

51.00

1.00

51.00 $1.00

We also carry a full line vf Sweaters and Underwear for ladies, men and children and we sell them at the lowest prices. SPECIAL OFFER FOR DOLLAR DAY On all purchases for $10.00 you get a cash discount of $1.0-3 or $1.20 in goods. Se us on Dollar Day before you buy. It will pay you.

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LOTS OF WORK III BASE HOSPITALS

By FRANK J. TAYLOR (United Press Staff Correspondent.) AX AMERICAN' HOSPITAL. IN FRANCE. Sept. 3. (By Mail.) Base hospitals, far to the rear of big offensives, play an important part in the fighting. The way an offensive looks from a big base hospital can be pictured from a letter written by a non-commissioned officer in an American base during the C'hateu-Thierry offensive. The writer starts his letter by telling how emergency surgical teams from the hospital were called for service at the front, departing one by one. "Thus we had an inkling that something big was tfoot," he writfs. "We. left behind, waited. Perhaps it was only a local I'iSht requiring immediate surgical work, we 'hought. In a few days we should know. "Then came the wounded. The first train was light.' At the time our wards were but partially filled, hence we had no difficulty in receiving the Influx wita a talmnesf. that wis Rlniost leisurely. "T.efo;e n .j;ld breath J, however, came ancfiier call from that unseen center of activity which sends us our charges. V.'o weie ready to receie patients, though the number surprised us a little, but everyone fell to with a will and we were ready. All the wounded were received and accommodated in a manner that brought credit to the hospital and to the army. Big Job Looms. "We began to feel a little important end efficient. Then, almost before we had time time to think, came a third order: 'I?o ready to receive patients.' That instantly wiped away any thoughts of self-congratulation. It put before us the greatest task yet. Four teams were organized, with a surgeon in charge of each, and no sooner was one case completed than the next began. Such surgery too! Some of the professional men I heard speak of it as 'beautiful.' For my part, however. I cannot describe it thus. To me it was, rather, marvelous. Never before did I have such an understanding of the surgeon's art. "It truly seemed as if each part of the human anatomy was set out before us as plainly as if charted, while miracles were performed before our very eyes. One after another they cam came so rapidly the surgeons took onlytime enough between to 'scrub up.' Thus lives were saved as if by magic; men were virtually made over on the operating table. "When we looked up at the end of the first day we found wc had been working without a break for 19 hours. It was at this moment 3 in the morning- By S the surgical department was again fully alive. All day long we worked at our posts. Then at midnight came the order: 'Work straight through till morning." Day and aright All Oe. "Thus one day succeeded uatjiw, un-

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Phone 661.

Hammond, Ind.

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