Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 144, Hammond, Lake County, 27 November 1918 — Page 6

THE TIMES Wcrlnrsnriay, Nov. 27, 1918.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTINQ A PUBLISHING COMPANY.

The Lake Coanty Times Dally except Saturday and ffundsv. Lntrd at tha postolflce la Hammond. June II, io.The Times Etii Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally x2' Sunday. Entered at the poatofflce in Knit Chicago, iov la, 1911. The Lake County Tlmee Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the potofn In Hammond. February . Tiie Gary vn;nf Tlmaa Daily excpt Sunday. -n-tared at tha poaiofflc In Gary, AptU IS. 1911. . ,... AU un4t tha act of March 1. 1S7. as eecond-ciaas iattr. .

11 P..

-r Bulid:ng. .

ADVKIVriSIJSQ OFFICE.

..Chtcage

TEI.KPHOJSICS. Ham in ant rnrlv.t. . .. S1C0.

(Cail for whittur department wanted ) . Gary Office Telephone lij Nassau Tnompsan, East Chicago Telephone s T. L. Evans, E,.st Chsrngo. .. . . T,lrp,no!IA 7i Eau Chicago. Tn Time ....... 1 PkI 0? Indiana Harbor i.Vsw Dfi'fD J'i'PKS! sgi Indiana Harbor (Importer a Class. Adv.). -Telephone .! Whiting- Telephone -M Crown Potnt Telephone it Larger Pald-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papers In the Calumat Region. If you hav. any trouble retting The Times make com!a!nt Immediately to the circulation department. Tj Times will not be responsible for ti1 "turn or any unsolicited artu-lea or rvtters and will not notice inon; noua com muni eat! on. Short algned latter or general interest printed at discration. XOTICE TO IVBIOUBKRS. If you fall to receive your lopy of Thi Tim promptly a you have In tie past, please do not think It has been lost ec waa not nt on time. Remember thai the railroad are eagaged with the urgent movement ! troop and their auppllesi that there la unusual pressure In various parts ol tha country for food and fuels that the railroads hav more buslnese than they can hdj promptly. For that reason many trains are late. TBI Timi has Increased Its mailing equipment and Is cooperating In evety way with the postofflce department expedite delivery. Eren so. delays are Inevitable beMuse of the enormous demands wpon the railroads an tk withdrawal of man from many lines of work.

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IGNORING PUBLIC OPINION. Some murmurs of criticism have reached us recently because of this newspaper's exceptions to President Wilson's way of treating the people as if he were their Godhead instead of their servant. There are editorial syncopnants and kow-towers who would ppeak of th president as "His Majesty;" who all but bend the kne in servility to him, but this newspaper is not one of them. It has swallowed a lot to share the burden of war-winning and now that the war is won and the administration continues in its relentless course oblivioU3 of askant protest, we refuse to have thines rammed down the people's throats any longer. Even so subtly cautious and conservative a newspaper as ihe Chicago Daily Xews remonstrates with President Wilson as follows: "From Washington is reported the further development of disquiet and dissatisfaction ii the democratic ranks because President Wilson has failed .to put himself in touch with American opinion in respect to home affairs. His characteristic attitude of calm self-sufficiency leads him to ignore American opinion. The world's chief exponent of democracy -at a most critical time In the history' of the human race maintains his curious policy of seclusion while surrounding himself with 'distinctly autocratic and bureaucratic advisers.' Now his most efficient cabinet officer has gone, less spectacularly and far less explosively than went Secretary Garrison but perhaps no less sismificantly. What is left of the cabinet does not inspire confidence among the people at large in the light of past achievements. ' "The president's task of helping to secure for the world a peace of justice is. of course, the overshadowing task that now confronts him. However, he should at least coAe out from the shadow of untrustworthy and erratic advisers and Interpreters in order that he may have the full support and confidence of the great people fromWhom he derives the moral force that makes him such a power in the court of world opinion. In performing a great act of liberation he should cease to lean so heavily upon men of wry methods, the Creels and the Burleson?, and resort to open dealing in all things as becomes a believer in untrammeled democracy."

WHY IS IT?

The possibili; ies for controlling Information under the sort of censorship that has been inflicted upon the newspapers of the country is revealed in the announcement f:om Washington that the casualties in the American expeditionary forces, at the time of the signing of the armistice, numbers 2nt,117, divided as follows: Killed and died of wounds, 30,154; died of disease, 14,811; died from other causes, 2..0I; wounded, 179,625; prisoners, 2,163; missing. 1,10. Less than ten days ago Washington wa3 announcing that the total casualties would not be much in excess of liio.ooo. This was at a time when the number of casualties already announced was approximately 70,000. Having previously been misled the public does not know what to believe. F'l 'om i O.fKii) the number jumped to 100,000 after hostilities had ceased. Now it jumps to 2.16000. Nobody knows how much greater it will be, but that there will be a good many deaths to be added to the list is certain. .Men are dying every day as the result of wounds or disease. Xo good purpose has been served by thus concealing the truth. The American people are courageous enoueh to bear their losses stoically. Hut this latest announcement comes as a great shock because they have been permitted to believe the casualties were only fifty per cent of what they are now said to be. And these do not include the thousands who died in American camps. In recent weeks there has been a great deal of surprise expressed that our casualties should have been so light In the face of the reports concerning the fierceness of the fighting in which the men were encaged. Put there was no widespread suspicion that the truth was being withheld and this thing will be resented, for the names of the dead and wounded that yet remain to be made public

greatly exceeds the list that has previously been announced. Such methods of deception are contrary to the American Idea of fair play and this Incident will merely tend to cast suspicion upn our war activities in many other directions for the people do not know what to believe. Ultimately they will know the truth, but for the present their faith has .been shattered. If the administration seeks to perform a real service for the public it will at once relinquish control of inter national cables and abolish censorship of the proceedings of the peace conference in France. Otherwise there will be a very universal feeling -of distrust and lack of confidence in the reports that the Creel bureau will disseminate for home consumption. Lafayette Journal.

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SEES NO CHANGE.

Relevant to, and in a way explanatory of, the persistence of German plotting in this country was the dispatch from Harold Williams, a particularly, competent observer of European affairs and one whose Russian experiences have given him the best of rights to speak of the method by which German diplomacy attain its purposes. He said that so far as he could see the new Germany did not differ in any essential way from the old Germany. With the- many sources of information available to him in Geneva, he has not been able to discover that the Germans have any regrets for the part that they played in the war none, that is.' except for failure to win. He can discover no general or real animosity aeainst their fugitive ruler or the class of which he was the head,', and he sees "no recognition of the wrong done by Germany to the world not the fatnteut sign of national repentance." Nor has anybody else seen or heard of anything of that kind. Instead, the only sounds coming from Germany take the form of complaint against the harshness, the cruelty, the injustice, of the terms imposed by the allies on a people that evidently docs not think of itself otherwise than as unfortunate. That this mental attitude is maintained by the Germans is no more mysterious, perhaps, than that , they ever took that attitude; it only seems so because it leaves out of reckoning facts a little better known to all of us than were the circumstances of the war's beginning. New York Times. SYMPATHY? WHY? "You do not seem to, have any sympathy for Germany, not even for her women," writes a reader. Will "Reader' be kind enough to tell us when and

where Germany ever expressed any sympathy for anyone

else? Will "Reader" be kind enough to tell us when and

where before signing of the armistice during the signing

of it or since it was signed. Germany has ever expressed contrition or sorrow for all the havoc, suffering and agony she has created?

Will "Reader" be kind enough to inform us where

the German women or any German woman ever indicated

that she was not in fullest accord with the appalling

crimes perpetrated on the Belgians and other peoples by their men folk during the unholy, un-Godly and hellish war? The only word that has come out of Germany since the armistice has been signed has been a yelp for food. In fact the only way you can make a German sit up and take notice is to take his food away. His belly is his

God. The German woman even idolizes food unless she

is spitting in it and offering it to the helpless starving prisoners. When Germany comes out and expresses penitence and shame for her diabolical work the rest of the world vill begin to talk about sympathy.

WE UTTER A LOUD AMEN. Some kmd friend, whose character can be surmised from his failure to sign his name, writes this paper a decidedly abusive letter in connection with the issuance of that little "peace extra" on Thursday. Indignantly he declares that it was "a shame to fool the people for the sake of a few pennies." We would like to know very much if this gentleman believes that the hundreds of papers In every city of the country that issued extras on Thursday really had any notion that the news they were putting out was incorrect. If he has all wo can say for him is that he is a fool. The injury the individual paper and tho profession of journalism in general sustains as a result of such a fiasco is incalculable and certainly news so vital'y connected with the public interest as that of Thursday, no one save a mad man would would dream of faking. Tills news was accepted at its face value because of the source from which it came, a reputable press association whose president and star war correspondent, themselves in France, vouched for its truth. There was not a paper in the whole T'nited States receiving the message that did not believe it and at once issue an extra. Before any doubt whatsoever had been cast upon its accuracy, the news was everywhere and the whole country, from coast to cast, engaged in a wild and hilarious celebration. Certainly the gulled publishers are much more chagrined, humiliated arid injured than any reader of the "big news" could possibly be and that the matter is one which will long ranVic in their various bosoms everyone may rest assured. There isn't an editor in the whole United States who fell for the report who isn't still mad enough to murder. The News, and Sentinel especially grinds its teeth, for the reason that it has always been especially careful in the issuance of extras. It has avoided them except where the news has been vastly important and has prided itself on the quality of its offerings. That it should have been stung on the supposedly biggest storj of the year, is galling:, indeed, and the incident will long be a tender point with it. This matter is spoken of thus freely and frankly for the reason that it Is the policy of this paper to take its readers as' fully as possible into its confidence and it Is convinced that there is nothing to be lost by making its attitude perfectly plain. It was deceived, as were all the other clients of the United Press and it regrets the matter more than it can possibly say. Nor is the poignancy of this regret especially relieved by the knowledge that even the correspondents themselves were not to blame. Fort Wayne News.

WE notice a letter from a dar girl

JTOKINO fun at men's legs AND their tiKht pants SO we must remind her thm loss nnd PANTS are not everything in the world. IT scums to be rather a difficult tak TO make the neighbor women BKLIEVE that we were young enough to get In the last 18-43 draft and the consensus of OPINION among them i that we INVITED the draft board to go out and have something IN order to get Into It. ARE all those ordnance bus drivers In Hammond WHO may te Been dafhlng up and down THE streets t an early hour in the morning without a PASSENGER In their cars TAKING the air for their health? WK firmly leliee that ONE of the reasons we have so far dodged THE ubiquitous flu Is because "WE stick so persistently to Mrs. rinkham's Vegetable Compound. WASHINGTON brags that the Hun surrender didn't thrill it NO. thas right, it just stunned it "WAIT till all Its, chances of gouging poor stenographers AND war clerks is gone. "WHAT has become of the old-fashioned WOMAN who wore a "fascinator" AND looked thereby as if she WAS something

THE cat had just dragged in? TEDDY ROOSEVELT has the lumbago WE hope he doesn't have to take as many colored pl'.lu AS they give neuritis victims. PEOPLE are foolish to dlo Just now, WHEN the price of coffins IS so blamed high. SYMPATHY is a great thing after all A YOUNG wlff was told to I't'T castor oil on a fern THAT was fading and she SQUEEZED the juice of a lemon Into 1 he CASTOR oil before she GAVE the dose to the poor fern. WORRY is like the CHINA egg TOU can't batch anything out of It BUT it keeps you from GOING to Flcep on the nest. A' MARRIED woman would almost rather have her husband MIXED up in a town scandal THAN" pb-k up a piece of food off his plate when he's out In company AND rat it with his fingers. ANY man who had TO flgllt all the tough kids In THE neighborhood because h!s mother made him WEAR curls when he went to school CERTAINLY can sympathize AVITH the poor poodle whose owner make it wear a SWEATER so thK other dogs WILL regard It as EASY picking.

liHrlRotqSoiJiH?s'oS.4iioRS

Lieutenant II. A. (irrrn, of Camp Taylor. Iiu!sville. Ky., was selected to go to Fort Sill. Oklah., for a ten weeks' training course. Mrs. Green returned to Hammond anil is at the home of her mother, Mrs. A. N. Huteou in Drackert streeL

Mrs. Mcry Sennit, I.anKlntr. received a letter from her son. Private Edward Schultz, 132 Infantry. U. S. A.. American E. Force. France, that he was .till in the hospital and that he Is getting along fine, and helping work a little in the hospital. He says the Red Cross surely do their bit for the soldier boys.

II Flora Schults, of l.analng. received two letters from Pte. William Schmueser. Company I. 3 9th Engineers, A. P. O. 721. A. K. T., France.

TvfO letter from Private William Schmueser of Lansing, have been received from Prance, saying be was well and waa attending a band concert at which some Yankee girls were singing for the soldier boys.

Roy Kindt, Landing, vraa visiting; hU

parents Sunday, from a military ev'4

In Evanston.

icjft-ol

George Mortenson, WhltlnK, nU was taking np motor transport work at the Interlakcn school, has returned home from Valparaiso to where he has been transferred, to remain over Thanksgiving.

ln (Wllette, Whltlnar. who waa in tha merchant marines for several months, and who lias recently enlisted in the U. ' S. Emergency Fleet as a ouartermaster. was released from ser

vice and -has returned to his home in Central avenue. His company was demobilized in New Orleans.

Mr. and Mm. i II. rrle. Merrlllville, received word from their son. James, that he was In a base hospital in France and had been wounded, but was doini? nicely and expected to be out soon. He has been at the front for some time.

Brier Whitakrr, Hammond, had a letter from his brother-in-law, Ancel B. Jackson, In France. He is fine and dandy and If he saw a Lake county Times In No-Man's-Land he would go after It.

Outgoing trains oat all railroads from Valparaiso today carried a number of rookies, who had been sent to the lo

cal training camp but failed to pass

the physical examination. A total of

183 men were sent back home.

Mlaa Myrtle Troat of Detroit atreet.

Hammond, has received a letter from

her brother. Elmer Tost, telling of a

visit to Paris recently. While there he met a young man from his brother's

company who told him of Just being

back,from the front line trenches.

In a letter to Hammond relatives.

Charles Dietrich, who is first cook In

Hattery B. 25th Field Artillery, Camp McClellan, told of receiving 99 per

cent for cleanlines and good cooking.

Private Wil'liim IVter Jlock arrived home on a ten-day furlough from Camp McClellan. Ala,, on account of the serious illness of his father, Emll Bock, K35 State T,!ne street. Hammond.

Rheumatism Back on the Job ' With its Old-time Fury

tion, and routs out the disease germs.

No Let-Up In Its Torture. Pretty soon you will be reaching for the liniment bottle again, for the millions of little pain demons that cause Rheumatism are on the warpath. Winter weather seems to awaken them to renewed fury. But your Rheumatism cannot b rubbed away, because liniments and lotions cannot reach the disease. It ia ir the blood, and only a remedy that goes deep down into the circula-

can rid you of this disabling disease. S. S. S. haa given some wonderful results in treating Rheumatism. Being a purely vegetable blood remedy, it purifies the blood of every fT1and thus removet the cause of Rheumatism. Get a bottle to-day at your drugstore, and start on the rie,n treatment that will get results. Free advice about y our case can be had by writing to Medical Director, S3 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.

Chris C. Petersen, D.C. Chiropractor 3415-17 Michigan Avenue, Barker Bldg. Indiana Harbor. Office Phone Indiana Ilarbor 885. Res. Phone East Chicago 1112 .

In Hemoriam

&afca Connry'a dead In tha war with Germany and Auatrta-SConiraryi ROrsEP-T MARKLEY, Hammond; drow"M eft coast N. J, May 18. DENNIS HAN. VON. Ind. Harbor; died t Ft Oglethorpe, Tcnn.. June 11. IAMES MAC KENZ1E, Gary; killed in action France, May 3. 1917. KARL WELSBY. Whiting. U. S. I.; died at Ft. Houston, July 28. 1917. FRANK McANLEY. In. Harbor; killed in France. Battle of Lille. Aug. 15. IRTHUR- BASELER, Hammond; died at Lion Springs, Tex.. August 26. rOHN SAMHROOKS, East Chicago; killed In France, Sept. IS. IHTHL'R ROBERTSON, Gary; .killed In France. Oct. 31. l-IEUT. JAMES VAN ATT A. Gary; killed at Vimy P.ige. DOLPH BIEDZYKI. East Chicago; killed In France, Nov. 27. . BURTON, HUNDLEY. Gary; killed avia. ac. at Everman. Tex., Dec 1917. TAT' I V r'I'Tir UT' r,T t . . - .....

- fi.i.z.t ina. liarnor; killed at Ft. Bliss. Tex.. Dec la

4 !nw nn n ,-t'- LOWe": diC1 France. Dec. 12. 1917. 3 r?,, OSTBArK- k1" by explosion in France. DeC.2t I "IOMAS . RATCLIFFE, Gary; killed somewhere In France Feb 24

b112iUUT- c- roI"t: "ed " Brooklyn. March 7, on torpedoed boat. CRPL. EDWARD M. SULLIVAN. Gary; killed In France, March 8 MICHAEL STEPICH. Whiting. Camp Taylor; pneumonia. March 14 ROBERT ASPIN. Gary. Co. F. 151st Inf.. Cp. Shelby; typhoid. March 17 CLIFFORD E. PETTY. Hammond; U. S. cavalry, died Delrlo. Tex , April J. PAUL FULTON. Tolleston; died Marfa, Texas. April 1918 VICTOR SHOTLIFF. Gary; killed at avia. camp. San Antonio, April HU. JOSEPH BECKJIART. Cary; died at eastern cantonment, April 20. 191U. LIEUT. IRA B. KING. Gary; reported killed In France April 21, 1918. NEWELL PEACIIER. Cary; Graves Regis. Unit 3u4. died In N. J, 1318. E. BIRCH HIGHER, Gary; ord. dept.; died in Philadelphia. 1918. D. MISKELJICH. Hammond; killed on Balkan front. May 25, 1918. PAUL GALl Eagle Creek Twp.; killed In action. France, June 18, 1918. PVTE. FRANK TUCKER, Highland. In. Engs.; killed, France. June 8 JOHN MAGUIRES. Ga-y; bugler; killedl.i action. France. June 25. JOHN GAII.KS, Gary: died at Camp Taylor, Ky., June 26. ABRAM FRY, Gary. 182 Aero Corps; killed In action. France July 21 1918. H. PERCHOCKI. Gary; killed at Rochester, N. Y.. R. R. accident. Ju'ly IS UAREY HARRISON. Hammond. U. S. Navy; drowned in sinking of tor pedoed U. S. Westover. July 11, In .war zone. LEROY S. CROWNOVER, Hammond; killed In action, France July 14 CRPL. GEORGE ALLEN, Gary; killed in action. France, July'l4 WILLIAM STENDERSON. Lowell, U. S. Navy; drowned at eubmarlna base tie&r New London, July 13, 1918. HAROLD GOODRICH. MerriUville; killed In action, France! July iS -ail. CHARLES QUIGLEY. Ind. Harbor; killed In action, France July 19 C. J. TEUNONES. Last Chicago; killed in action. France j'ulv i, CHARLES BAZIM. Gary. Co. H. lath Inf.; died oi wounds Fraa! Jul. PHILLIP PETERSON, Hammond; died of wounds received YunH BERGT. MARGES VALENTICIL Gary- klnPri , V,?!

FRANK S

OSCAR E. SHOVLR. Indiana Harbor;

rI .1 l.-.VO TKWIWIAU r.j; ir- . . '

, " " r; u. to. infantry; killed la action. J. Z. AicAVOY, Gary. U. S. Engineers; killed in action Juut CHARLES BOCCA. Gary, F. A.; killed in acuon July S

vi.hwhit., ury; aiea in France of UJsease. Jni .,,

'A1l-W VALLMiQl. Gary; killed in action. France- JuU- To,? bLN SANTA, Whiting; killed in action. France, E ," ' riAMSLAWSKI. ind. War.; Cav.. klJled by auto. Ana

uy auto. Aus:. a

U. S. Marines: killed in

- - nviiuo,

H. Wii.ft.JN, Gary, with Canadians; kilied in action. France July V,UJrVKr' ,Ha,nmond; died f wound.. France. Aug i SIEVE falRLPI, Last Chicago. Co. L; killed In action July 19 HOY NOEL. Indiana Harbor; killed in action in France. Julv 18 JOHN COLV1LLE, Hammond. 1st Can. Bat.; k.iied ia action Au- so" PAYTON DAVIS. Gary. Co. F; killed in action in France Jul v if" GEORGE R. BRANNUN. West Creek. Great Lkes; pneumonia. Bent, it WALTER KLEIBER. VV biting. U. S. A.; killed in action Juy 15 CARL A. G. CARLSON. Gary, U. S. F. A.; killed in action July 16 RUSSELL WALDO COON, Gary; killed in action. France July THOS. LISTER. Hammond, Q. M. C; died at Camp Sherman. Sent" tc ARTHUR O. WISHMAN. Kobart. Co. K. F. A.; pneumoniacn flh.,M.-

. ,..n,

THmilllHK SCM1FVCT VVitln. I .. i. . . ..

, panisn Inn.. Sect, an E. J. HAWLEY. Hammond; R. C. overseas worker, Spanish Inn s.r,t ! LLOYD COLEMAN. Crown Point; Spanish inn.. Fuget Sound Oet ,

jund. Oet i

JOHN KRAK. Gary; killed in action. July, France. . JULIAN FRUTH. Whiting-., Camp Taylor; Spanish. inlL, Oct BENSON MIITCHELL, Gary; died at Camp Grant, Spanish lnfluenxa. JAMES PIRIC, Cedar Lake; died at Camp Lee of Spaniah influenza, PETER REHO, Gary; Camp Sherman. Spanish influenza, Oct S PERCY SURPRISE, Lowell. Camp Grant; Spanish inn, Oct 9. ' HAROLL MAYBAUM. Ainsworth; pneumonia, England, Sept 8 LIEUT. H. P. MARTIN. East Chicago. Camp Custer; influenza." Oct. ia W. D. PETERSON, Lowell, Camp Taylor; influenza, Oct 18 JOHN WESTERHOUT. Griffith, Camp Custer; Spanisa infll Oct 11. IRTELL WILLIAMS, Whiting; Spanish Infl Aberdeen. Md Oct 15. RAY JACKSON, Indiana Harbor, Fort Bliss. Tex.. Span Infl. Oct 1 RAY K1LBOURNE, Griffith, Fort Bliss, Spanish Influenza, Oct. 18 FLOYD LAMBERT. Lowell. Columbus; Spanish influenza, Oct 16 EMIL BIALKA. Hammond, Camp Taylor; Spanish influenza, Oct O. C. HEDEEN, Indiana Harbor; died after action, July 16 France. SERG. WELDO.V A. TURNER. Gary; killed in action. July. France A. N. HATIPILIAS. Gary; Spanish fcifl Camp Custer, Oct' 17 ANTON MATESKI, Gary; killed In action, France, July IS. X. C. XENAKIS, Indiana Harbor; -Spanish infl., Jefferson Bar., Oct 18 CARL HALFMAN, Crown Point; Spanish infl. Camp Custer, Oct 20 HERBERT KEILMAX. Dyer; died French hospital of wounds Sept J2 J. TROCHEO, Hammond; Canadian Ex. F., died of wounds, September IC LOTCHOFF. Hammond; Camp Dodge. Spanish infl., Oct 21. EMIL MASE. East Chicago; killed in action. France, July. CARL SMITH. Gary; died on. warship, Oct. 9. LIEUT. FRANK KNOTTS. Gary; died in France, pneumonia, Oct 10 MILO THOMAS, Lowell; died in French hoepitaL JOHN QUIGLEY, Gary; died in camp, influenza, Oct. 81. SERGT. ROSS BOYER, Gary; missing in France. MAX BOSSARD. Hammond; missing in France. GUSTAVE FRANSEN. Gary: killed in action in France. FRANK LAWS. Hammond; Camp Mills, Nov. 13, pneumonia. WALTER BYRNE. Hammond; dies from wounds, France. Oct U. EDWARD LARSON. Hammond; died In France, pneumonia, Oct 25. GEORGE STOLL. AVhiting; killed in action. France, Oct. 10. ROBERT JONES, Gary; killed in action, France. Sept. 12. CLIFFORD DAVIS, Gary; killed in action, France, Sept 30. CORP. JOS. AUSTGEN. Hammond: died from wounds. Oct. 9, France. PATRICK GETZINGER, Hammond; died of disease, France. axxssxxa xx action-. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France, July 4. CORPORAL JOHN NESTOR, Gary; reported missing Aug. 5, In Franco. GEORGE BEAU next oj kin, Andrew Kocal. Gary. JOHN GENIC1ANKHIS. next of kin, Wm. Elisa. 1056 Grand at, Gary WM. FAPKA. East Gary; found missing since July 21. 'n France, HOMER FRIEND, Co. L, East Chicago; missing eince July 19. STEVE SZITAS. Co. L, East Chicago; missing since July 18. SAM TODOR. Indiana Harbor; reported missing, France. July 19. LEON ANGOSTINA, Co. L, East Chicago; missing in action, July 15. STANLEY POSWANKI. Co. L, East Chicago; missing since July 15." MILOS M LADEN. Gary; missing since July 21. France. ANTON OWERNS. Indiana Harbor; missing since middle of July, Franca. CLEMENT BEAM. Crown Toint; missing in France. July 24. PAUL SPART. Gary; missing in action, France, July 15. LOUIS MISIK. Indiana Harbor; missing in action, France, Oct 15. MIKE LALAEFF. Hammond; missing in France since Oct. 15. HARRY O'HARA, Whiting; missing in action. XIT GEBSZAIT PSXSOIT CAMP. KARL DUFES. I. Harbor; U. S. Marines, prisoner, Cassel. Germany. July. WEST HAHMCND. JOS. S. LIETZAN, W. Hammond. F. A.; killed m action. France April 27. FRANK MIOTKA. W. Hammond, U. S. V. A.; died at Douglas. Ariz, Jan. 6ERG. CASIMER WARRAS. W. i:-.mmond; killed. France. July. B. WOJCIKCIIOWSKI. W. Hammi.d; killed in action. Oct 2.

Advertise in The Times

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She Eeally Ought to Have. Tipped Petey Off.

By C. A. VOIGHT