Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 78, Hammond, Lake County, 18 September 1919 — Page 6
Plage Sir. THE TIMES. Thursday, Sept. 18, 1919.
LIVE NEWS FROM THE TWIN CITIES
BOAKEMW 1XJI RED Two brakomen of th Iake Shore w-tre injured at Indiana. Harbor last r.lght when a freight enplne poing -.vent into a split trog and turned on its side. Prakeman Whitmeyer suf1 fered an Injured leg ond it is believed that the leg was broken. C. H. I.entz suflerei Internal injuries, apparently not serious. IT. J. A. Teearden attended the injured and then Whitmeyer was taken to the Mercy hospital in Gary and Mr. Fonts wan taken t" St. Margaret's hospital in Hammond.
LEGION imiYG STARTS A monster membership meeting; of the- American Legion will be held 'n the Indiana Harbor Civic Club rooms t'Els evening at eight o'clock. Pr. J. M. M'n la. will be one of the speakerand will explain the purpose and Tinflts of the American Legion.
Coming to the
Family, Theatre
Now that the city council committee, has taken steps toward th construction of a. community house it will not be hard for the speakers to explain the benefits to be derived from the organization. Not only will there l benefits from the Civic government but there will be national benefits which will be explained. Other large meetings are planned for next week and it is possible that speakers from other cities will be seemed. Pr. Raleigh P. Hale will have charge of the meeting this evening and will have some interesting information to Impart.
DANCE IS POSTPONED The open air dance which was to have been held at the Lake Front Park this evening has been cancelled because of the weather. "The Live Wires'" had planned on making this last open air dance of the season a huge success and the threatening weather was too much for them. Rather no dance at all than a poor one" is their motto.
Mon. Tues. Wed. Sept. 222324
HOISE IS ENTERED Miss Helen Bielski. 3702. Guthrie st.. Indiana Harbor, reported to the police that some one had broken into their home while the family were at a wedding and stole $29 in cash, a gold watch, a LaVallier and a bracelet.' Kntrance was gained through the kitchen window. The family suspects a man who was near the house several times during the day. His name Is known to the police.
he End of
the Roai
Tells the Truth Whole Truth Nothing but the . Truth. Untrimmed and Unadorned. Three Nights
Twin City News Notes
OC3.ce, Room 222, Calumet bldff. none 2 S3. Residence, 4318 Olcott Are. Paon 313. The outgrowth of a meeting held in the Gary library yesterday afternoon of all past club presidents of Women's Club of Lake county resulted in the establishment of a permanent organization with the election cf officers of which Mrs. J. A. Patterson is presiding chairman and Mrs. J. O. Thompson of Hammond Is secretary-treasurer. The scope of the organization will be to hold one meeting a ear purely social. The aim will be directed for all women holding office in the capacity of past president t their club to meet and keep in touch with the club happenings throughout the country. East Chicago women present at the meeting of yesterday In representation of past club presidents were
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Extra Big Bargains for
Friday and
ali
Potatoes, per bushel-
Ripe Bananas, per dozen.. Blue Grapes, per basket.
Malaga Grapes, per basket.
..$1J35 and $2.10
Apples Jonathan, Maiden Blush and Grimes golden, 3 lbs. for 25c Pippin Apples, 4 lbs ..25c
Oranges, per dozen oc, doc, 4oc
.25c 32c 65c 75c : 30c 5c 25c 25c 25c 30c 10c ..20c, 25c, 30c 15c 5c 25c 10c 15c
Fancy Tokay Grapes, per basketPeaches, per basket
Onions, ner lb.
Sweet Potatoes, 6 lbs. for
Blue Plums, 3 dozeu
Large Red Plums, 2 dozenHoney Dew Melons, each Cantaloupes, each
Cauliflower, per head-
Tomato Plums, per quart-
Celery, per stalk-
Head Lettuce, 3 for Crab Apples, per lb Green Peppers, per dozen.
i
Space does not permit us to advertise our entire stock
IAIN- PRODUC
CO.
613 CHICAGO AVE. j EAST CHICAGO. We Deliver to vour Home FREE
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MAIL PLANE DESTROYS TWO HOUSES; FLIER IS UNHURT
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Tiro houses destroyed and wreck of airplane which hit them, lying between thmu
the Mesdames E. L. Roid. William Meade, J. D. Kennedy. Charles Fichter. H. 1L Clark. K. N. Canine and W. W. Smith, president of the East Chicago-Indiana Harbor Welfare Association. The month of September, chosen by
"many Twin City couples, has proven!
most ideal for nuptial settings. The one on this week of- interest was that of Mi?s Esther Dixon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dixon of Beacon St., to Rae K. Cadman, son of the late. William Cadman. The bride-elect, an ardent worshipper of the First M. E. church of this cily, chose the sanctuary of that cliurch for the ceremony with the pastor. Rev.
George B. Jones, officiating. Miss Dixon!
was a charming hritle and hrr brunette beauty was enhanced by the choice of a Bhimnieriny white satin bridal gown, embellished with trimmings of pearl
beads. ihe wore a veil, entrained, and
carried a shower bouquet of bridal roses. About her neck was suspended a strirs of beads, the gift of the groom. Her attendant was Miss Florence Cadman, sister to the groortf. and she was gowned In hues of softest pink, carrying ross to match. Percy Cadman, a brother, was best man. The lead to the altar whs made by Rev. Jones, immediately followed by 'Master Llwalof Johns, who, f rocked in black velvet, carried' the ring embedded in rose. The groom-elect and his brother supporting were next In line, with the nnlj of honor behind them, then came little Miss Dorothy Dixon, bristling in crisp organdy and strewing rose petals, performing the office of flower girl. Tho bride way led by her father and given away by him at the altar. The organist for the occasion was Alvin Thomas, who preceding
the entry into the church, played "The i
Rosary" and as announcement was made of the party's approach, started the strains of the Mendellsohn Wedding March. Banked about the alar rails were ferns, palms and pink roses. The church was well filled with relatives and adoring friends of the young couple. At the conclusion of the church ceremony, a wedJing reception followed at the house and the home was arranged most artistically in floral arrangements with the choice of sweet pas predominating. There was exchange of many handshakings and best wishes offered and then Mr. and Mrs. Cadman departed for a brief honeymoon to be spent at Waterloo, Wis., the residence of Rev. Thomas Caximan. uncle to the groom. Upon their return here they will go to homemaking at 1106 Beacon St.. the old
Cadman residence. Many beatiful and j
costly gifts were presented the newlyweds and will enhance their home in remembrance to the donors. The last day of the mission being conducted at St. Patrick's church in Indiana Harbor this week will be tomorrow evening when a most befitting sermon. beneUiction and the papal blessing will bu given. The attendanra during the entire week has been most gratifying. Tonight the missionary father will conduct services at 7:30 o'clock and masses tomorrow morning will be celebrated at the usual hours. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Williams of Kennedy ave., who have just returned from a vacation trip of a few weeks spent at Terre Haute, entertained friends at dinner last evening, among wljom were the Misses Elizabeth Williams of Brazil and Helen Hawkins. The A. C. Orays home In Xorth Ma-
goun ave. was the scene of a merry gathering of guests last evening, members of the Northside Birthday Club, who were entertained in view of the hostess' soon departure from the city. Came? and contests comprised the diversion of the evening and for which awards were given. A delightful twocourse luncheon wss served with Mrs. lora, Sheffield of the Marks subdivision, niece to the hostess, assisting. A gift to Mrs. days from the club members was a choicely chosen cut glass vase. Miss Mary Crays. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C: Crays of North Magovn ave.. has entered the Danville, 111., Training School to become qualified as a nurse. The D. C. McClellsjids in Elm st. have guents, Edgar Whittinser of ApPolo. Pa., and his bride. Mr. Whittinger is nephew of Mrs. McClelland. Tonight Mayflower Camp, Royal Neighbors, will meet in regular session and after the business is disposed cf there will be the serving of refreshments. All members are asked to be present. Mrs. G. W. Schillings, Mrs. John Hartman and daughter. Mies Mabel, motored to Blue Island yesterday and. .'pent the day at the home of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ackroyd. of South Baring ave.. have left the city for a few weeks with their son Harry and are bound for Omaha. Neb., to visit tho homes of their daughters, Mrs. Ismert end Mrs. Losch, who frequently visit here. Mr. Ackroyd is having his vacation these days and will return her? at tjie expiration of two week. It is believed that Mrs. Ackroyd and son Harry will remain for a greater length of time. The Tri-Kappas met with Miss Margaret Dickson cf Grapevine street and transacted the usual routine business of the order. The members are making early preparations to take over the Columbia Theatre for one night and stage a benefit performance to which they apply the money for charity. The date has been selected as October ISth and as the time nears they will ask the liberal patronage of the public that the receipts might be worthy of application. With the ushering of October 1 which occurs on Wednesday, the Trio Club of which Phil Nagdeman heads, will give the first of their series of dances at the Indiana Harbor Auditorium with talent secured from Chicago as a special attractive feature. The Sterling Orchestra will rendtr the music. The committee Is lookinr forwttrd with rrent .nntiri-
pation for a whirlwind success of the!
first affair and similar ones are to follow. Miss Doris Miller, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Miller, has returned to Milwaukee-Downer Seminary for tho year. Miss Nell Fulmer has returned to Mil-
wnukee-Downer College for the ensuing year. Keith Snyder of Des Moines. la., is stopping a few days with friends in this city. Well known couples residing in the Calumet region have been visited by the stork this week, among tfiem Mr. and Mrs. Steve Horvath of 4 737 Kennedy ave.. a boy. and a girl to Mr. and Mrs. John Bodanr of 4S15 Melville ave. An engagement of interest in East Chicago Is that of Miss Elizabeth Thomas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Thomas of Northcote ave.. to Mr. Chas. E. Haller. associate partner of E. L. "Reid, conducting a pharmacy in the Calumet building. 'Mr. Haller comes from Attica, Ind., originally, but has been In this city for soma time. The date Is set for Sept. 23 and will be a quiet afTair. Miss Thomas is pres'ent employed in the office of the Tri-Ci'y Electric Co. Frank Thomas, son of th James Thomas' of Northcote ave.. who completed his college preparatory course at the Wester State Normal School at Kalamazoo, Mich., has left to enter Notre Dame to take up the study of law. Milan Musulin. Interpreter of languages for the Inland Steel Co., underwent the second operation at the Presbyterian hospital. Chicago, this week and his condition is rather uncertain to be reported definitely at this time. Several of his frieds from Indiana Harbor have called the past few days to visit him. Among them Mr. and Mrs. Johft Golder of Penn ave. Mrs. George H. Lewis. Mrs. John Hartman and daughter Miss Mabel are guests at luncheon at the home of Chicago friends today. Mrs. Richard Bates of Beacon street will be the next hostess of the Beacons whose meetings occur weekly. She has chosen next Monday for her day of entertaining.
FLOWERS GIVEN TO EACH LADY at the last dance of the season at LAKE FRONT PARK Indiana Harbor
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Strike, Riot, Civil Comotion Insurance We offer a new' kind of indemnity for the protection of property corners. The f eelmg of unrest in many parts of the country suggested this form of insurance and those having it in several cities have found I such protection to be very advantageous. ! Let us explain Riot, Strike and Civil Com- ! motion Insurance. Act now! 5 Of INTEREST Y7 7o savings nisrLUMEr Jrust
and CAV7rajrC DAW
EAST CHICAGO INDIANA Capital and Surplus
:-e ji;rt-5-EM MEM1
mm
$100,000.00
BONDS INSURANCE TRUSTS
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
MENU HINT Breakfast. Cantaloupes. Shredded Wheat Biscuits with Top Milk. Toast. Cocoa. Luncheon. Nut and Egg- Salad. Warmed-ovir Eolls. Arpe Sauce. Sliced Peaches. Cookies. Dinner. Strffed Peppers. Corn on the Cob. Cabbage Salad Baked Apples. CANNING AND PRESERVING. To Can Corn To ten cups of com add one cup sugar and one-half cup salt (scant). Add enough water to almost cover it and boil one-half hour. Also try usinc: a stiff vegetable I rush to take silk off of com. Wild Crabapple Jelly Wild crabapples are green and fall from the trees in October. It i3 well to gather them late in th fall before a hard freeze, store them m the cellar till sprinsr and then make both jelly and preserving of them in sujrar and preserves of them in susrarmakinjr time. Maple sugar is very high and you may want to use other sug-ar. Wash and boil i-pples about fiftn minutes or till fender; cool, peel and core. Cover with sugar, let stand over right. Drain off half and cook for jelly. Add more sugar to rest and cook quite thick, add apples and a few raisins; cook not more than five minutes. Cooking in syrup makes apples
hard.
Tomato Preserve Select aixilint
pounds of nice firm tomatoes; wash well and remove the skins. Then
cut out the hard green parts or core, ;and. cut up tha tomatoes in quarters.
Add one cup sugar to each eup of tomatoes. Put on to cook. Wash three medium sized lemons, remove the seeds and cut lemons in pieces into tomatoes. Cook over a slow fire until done, which yon can tell by taking some out on a cool dish, when the syrup arouni them jellies. Have pint jars ready, pour preserves into them and seal. Utensils for canning: One mixing bowl, one sharp paring knife, one preserving kettle. Canned Tomato Soup One peck tomatoes, one large stalk celery, one onion, six cloves, one-fourth cup salt. Boil all together until thin enough to strain. After straining it take one-half cup granulated sugar, onehalf cup flour and mix the sugar and flour with a little water. Put this together with one-half cup butter and one-fourth teaspoon cayenne pepper into strained tomatoes and boil Mowly fifteen or twenty minutes. Put in pint jars and seal whale hot. To um it add one-fourth teaspoon soda and one pint of milk to a jar of soup.
TRY THESE In cleaning old jewelry make a lather of warm soapsuds and add to it half a teaspoon of sal volatile; brush the jewelry in this, afterwards polishing with an old silk handkerchief or piece of wash-leather. Polished floors bhould be nibbed with a mixture of one-third raw linseed oil and two-thirds paraffin. Afterward polish with a dry cloth. When you wash silver or glass add a teaspoonful of borax to the suds. Rinse well in hot wa&er and polish with a linen cloth which sheds no
Clean chinchilla furs with talcum
pewder well rubbed into ths skin and then shaken out. Hot talt will clean seaiskia and beaver beaot'njly.
Save While the Making is Good
To- use a slang phrase, save while the 'making is good." Thousands now earn wages they hfirdly dreamed of getting. Such wages may or may not keep up for them. But whether they do the man wh 'saves part of hi pay check each week, deposits it in a savings account, will be prepared to meet the future.
FIRST STATE TRUST 6 SAVINGS BANK 137ta AND CEDAR. STREETS INDIANA HARBOR
Capital and Surplus $100,000.00
Columbia and American Theatres SATURDAY, SEPT. 20th ONE DAY ONLY The Most Beautiful Girl in America OLIVE THOMAS
-in
"UPSTAIRS and DOWN" A clever, rollicking comedy drama pieturized from the play by Frederick and Fannv Hatton "From Cellar to Garrett." A laugh on every step. A picture that will even eclipse "Mickey.5, FOR SUNDAY, SEPT 21 MONDAY, SEPT 22 TWO DAYS ONLY The Mary Pickford Companv Presents MARY PICKFORD in her second picture from her own studio, the ' successor to "Daddv Long Legs" "THE HOODLUM" The romance of a spoiled heiress who drops through a coal chute to real life and adventure. Unquestionably the greatest character study of Mary Pickford 's career. The picture of a "Thousand Laughs."
R
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i. jretersen
Phone 960 East Chicago.
Co
Friday and Saturday Specials
fancy drink, io lb. None-Such Mince Meat, new goods, 2 pkgs 29 Dromedary Dates, fresh new pack, pkg 25 Dominoe Rice, finest grown, 12 oz. pkg 15 Lily Butter, 1 lb. cartons 63 Oscar Maver's Best Lard, 2 lbs. for. 73 Peacock's Silver Polish, per jar 25c Sanitissue Toilet Paper, 3 roll carton ..55 Bob White Toilet Paper, 3 large rolls 25 O 'Cedar Battleship Mops, each 89 Hire's Root Beer Extract, 2 bottles 37? Best Grades Grape Juice, pint bottle 35 Granulated Cane Sugar with $1.00 order, 5 lbs. sugar at, lb
.27
Good Quality Peas or Corn, 2 cans 29c Monsoon Apricots, No. 1 tall cans, 2 cans 39c Monsoon Peaches, No. 1 tall cans, 2 cans 40r Armour's Veribest Re - Raspberries, No. 2 can, each . 45c
Kellogg 's Krumbles, 2 packages
Post Toastics, large famih
package, each 20c Eagle Lve, two 15c cans for 25& Old Dutch Cleanser, 3 cans 27? Batavia Preserves, 5 lb. crocks $2.15 Grape and Apple or Currant and Apple Jelly, 5 lb. crock $1.75 White House Coffee, special 2 lbs. for. $1.10 Karmay Gunpowder Tea pkg. 40
HELP KEEP THE CITY CLEAN. H0"OTrjTHO"IJTQnT IB B VO "JB I'D l'BlB'9,Q' O 'O'H wOTQTBT B I B B B O B B H B 9 B BTBTB B B B Q B B Q H II H B O B
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East Chicago Tea & Coffee Store AND MARKET 714 Chicago Ave., Beehive Bldg. Phones: 24 85. Market Phone 825. EAST CHICAGO
Specials for Friday and Saturday September 19th and 20th
PEANUT BUTTER Made while you wait. Come in and take home a pound at. '. 30
FRESH ROASTED COFFEE 4 lbs. $1.40; lb -38 OUR LEADER COFFEE 3 lbs- $1.30; lb 44? M. R. COFFEE 3 lbs. $1.40; lb.... - 5Q FANCY GUNPOWDER TEA if - -69 WILBUR'S BREAKFAST COCOA 1 lb. tin.. 45 lb. tin 23? AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP with coffee or tea order. 6 bars for. 39 FANCY PEACHES in heavy syrup. No. 3 can 35 FARMHOUSE BRAND SWEET RELISH in full quart Jars 32 PURE PRESERVES Strawberry, Raspberry or Blackberry, 1 lb. jars 38 CORN Can 16c?
33c
LOG CABIN SYRUP Larse size $1.20; medium size. 65c; small
size FANCY TOMATOES
2 cans - 25C PEAS EARLY JUNE SIFTED, 6 cans, 80c; can 14 MONARCH BRAND CATSUP
tall size bottle UN EE DA BISCUITS 3 packages , LUNCHEON WAX PAPER
6 rolls 25C JAR RINGS 3 packages 25C
LIMA BEANS
3 lbs.
23c
25c
KIRK OLIVE SOAP 3 bars . TOILET PAPER 3 large rolls
35c
25c 25c
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