Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 90, Hammond, Lake County, 2 October 1919 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE TIMES. Thursday, October 2, 1919.
CROWN POINT NEWS ilAppenings Of A Day In Lake County's Lively Capital.
Directs Big Community Drama, Makes Costumes, Properties and Scenery
Articles of incorporation for the Ham-t at Wellesly. v as made public this week.
-unnuiaciunng n. wore ihcm on ,ir. Aliman is th son of Mayor ;inl ! Wednesday at Crown rolnt. Thomas J. j Mrs. Claude Allman nn.l his Jut l en j Munro of Cl pool, Iiul.. P. J. Munro! releasvd from t,,i!itar sch..cd and i I and (iary P. Munro of Chicago an.- 111''! noiv at srhool at the Inivor.-itv of l!ii-
ii.t-ii icuuiiis i no iMMiijvtny wrnrn :s m-j nc-is. I tie ntarnnqt- will iet c -rpor.it vd for STS.f'fn. The principal j till the young pev.p,. base fit office will be in Hammond Ir.d.. the ' school.
company will manufacture and i ii 1 m! Mrs Fred H.-i
P
ipp'iances ana piaic or. an ports. c.oi- mg at the home of her sister Mr
-truct machine? and install them and a general manufacturer of mach:ner nil kinds.
I'aniel English of East Chicago r. . ei ved a sentence of l'iO days in 'he! .'t
recti farm anil fine $ 1 . ( ' 1 1 d . being found
e t: : ' t y
r Chicago i vis
j Hai tholoir.ao a few das this e. k. fi Eugene Carpenter, the V. K. Purfo
representative of Indianapolis, wis
I'll ! 1 'I
fi
f"i' -i'i i V
4
. 40 WINTERS, 40 SUMI MERS SINCE THEN HAVE ROLLED AWAY i ...
i-i.rty wiin.ra arm rorty summersi h-ie rolled away since persons who are! I IKing arid well to-day iirst took the pre-' I si-nptirm f,.r ' N"ur:'.l..- 4d l-'or Thel : lofio. " "N'liinhi r 40" is compounded! t from imtredienis th..-t are set down in! ! 'he ' ' S I:spen.v.ry and other nu-j , thorifative mrdical l.ooka as fo'Iows: ;
! i:mploe. m disea.'.es of the K'.andular I fx-stem. in Mood poison, mercurial and
CAPITAL BRIDE TO TAKE LONG VOYAGE
or
as.-ault and battery by a jury!
n I'o:n! on Tuesdtay sotting a li-' supplies from the dnYerent Cotinfy lis for the balance of the ear.
Miss Dorothy Uruoe spent the week-
m the iriminal court on Tuesday. Kns-! with her sister. Mrs Harold Martin, l-.idi uas charged with assault and bat-! '1' Winamac. Ind. and Mr-, ltru--.-. wa. tery with intent to kill. He shot Thos. j the guest of her mother at Ladoga. Ind. ,T. OreK-'ry in the arm during a risht.i The death on Friday morr.m of John Allen P. Tninian of East Chic.igo dc-j Emory Perry, the only son of Mr. and fer ied Kr.ghi-h. Mrs. John V. Perr. tmiche.i very dc. ply Mis. 1'uhv Dickenson is assisting in t 'he hearts of this community. This v a i:
V
lead p c;: t.-' : rii dir. a?.o:
n- de.-..
; ha t ha vp i hst
rl i f -appear as if b i be Jos. Whs. Hm Hiot... liidi.-ina Ilarl
oni n j; , st-i -t. mint! pa ! ion.
s. I 'ud r its tumors and
i :
'ul a. rheumatism, liver find stoma-h ll'-l, Soej-s, tillers, rofulous swellings ill other treatment !tie." No, 4'") is sold on, I; fentral Drug '. --A-1'.'.
A'orne Edwin Knight's office this week, she having ceased work in Gary during the strike. Leslie Sohurr has accepted a position :n the Chalmers Motor Car Works at I)etro:t, Mich , and will work his family
eviaencea ny tre nnusualiy large assemblance of both old and joung thai gathered at the Methodist church Sunday afternoon to pay a last tribute t this manly lad. The boy was s-'i.-.o! early in the week with an attack of np-
at St Margaret's hospital m Hammond early Kriday morning. John was born July 20. 1904. and was just past tlfte.-n at his death. He had finished th-- e, -un-
"SYRUP Or FIGS"
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Lock at Tongue! Remove Poisons from Stomach Liver ?nr tr ttciI r-
there in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. pendicitiw. but in spite of the most
Will Newton will also nwve to that city! Preme efforts to stop it. he passed away
where he has secured employment. The announcement of the engagement of John Claude Allman of this city to
.-lis? . jr: e j j n k ri a m. h. ii'iinni fi- "'- i..... .,- j
Crown Point- girl, now attending school try school where he had Iie,I smce his - i- i birth, and was in his sophomore y-:ir
j in the Crown Point High school. He put J forth in his school life the same stud,ous. conscientious effort that he did in all his work and play, which endeared
him to both his teacher and fellow pupils. as he was to the Foy Scouts. He j belonged to Troop 1. and there was no! harder worker among them and none more loyal to the Scout oath than wi? he. During the war h won war ned lis in the war saving's stamp and two M' j the Liberty loan drives for his patriotic j work, besides several palms awarded
j him for doing even more than hi? bit. and it was in the uniform he lovej so i I well, with his service medais cn r.is ! ! breast. that he was laid to rest. He j was marked for a leader among rr. n. I ' both for the intotUgV-nce and hard work j that won farm bureau contests for him. and also for his cleanness and gentleness. His life was a living proof that a
boy can grow to mannoeu loiay won the sturdiness of his father, and wi'h ' the purity and gentleness of his mother. . for John never uttered an c-arh. nor b-t unclean wcrds pass h:s lsp. His s'rong.
clean manhood will not soon be forg-t- J ' ten by the boys of Crown Point. His)
sister, Ku'ti, and nis niowier arn niner . "cave many, many hearts with thtm in , this gerat sorrow. f "Blessed are the pure in heart, for
they shall see God.
- -
M i .
a 1 1 d !
a.-kir. f for v ry inn- h
pa i t
v.-
V
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1 . T i , da I th.
our help which pprecja ted .
i- sew inn eoinnoii.e wilt meet at i;.-o;-i.;. ii leobis on Friday af0 -ti , i n My:?:.- ,i , n u .- . r Mid M:s. A . M. Marti arid Mr. Mr.-, j: I Lar.g.-hr raotored to Chi1 II. inh's ;:;nl Hiue Island, where -,site,t wit;, friends the latter of list we ll.
Mr. Jann:s Word' n pent last Sat i v in Chicago visiting friends. Mr ii:;d Mi. i. . r:arl-r attended l-Ttliday party at th home of Mr. -1 Mrs .Tames Rvrcn f Hammond.
Mrs. M. Forehour was a Chicago j
pper Monday . i Ir. and Mr. Tforhrrt KKmrn, nee j i Ethel piuck nan. i-f'tirn'd Tucs- ; v from tr.fir h'-m ymc".n trip wht'-h j
y .-p-nt at Lindenwt.cd and Bel e-
v:i, ; if
'DANDERINE" PUTS BEAUTY IN HAIR
Girls! A mass of long, thick, gleamy tresses
.4
i?.
" ?9i?' k fr'
Mrs. Mark Traziuk. Mrs. Mark Trazivuk, fonner'.y Miss Helen M. Dovl. daufehter of Mr. nnd Mrs. T. V. Doyh; of Wa-hir.rton, i.tiii: jut rctfei.t bride at the capitiJ.
I,er ' Danderine" save your hair and double its biauty. you can have lets of Ioiir-. thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don't l.-t it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly or fading. Unn; back its color, vigor arid it'ility. Get a S'.-cent bottle of delightful "Dandfrine" at any drug or toilet counter to freshen your s a!p; check dandruff and falling hair. Tour hair nee3s this stimulating tonic; then its life, color, brightness nnd abundance will return Hurry '. Ad v.
i diere. 111., with relatives of the latter. the- will row he at home to their friends on Superior street In the West i Park Addition.
p T.w.c A. Pe to smtwem
Don't throw your paper awa?
rageantry aril the drama can be This Is also done for educational without reading the want ad page.
niadi potent l'orces in community
life." says Hazel MacKaye, sister cf Percy MacKaye the dramatist and poet, who is herself head of the department of Pageantry and the Drama of the Young Women's hrtstiau Association. To this end Miss MacKaye is putting on a big program of community pageanta throughout the United States. Sue Ann Wilson Is one of the directors of this work. She is staging a pasreant. The Blue Crusaders, in Marietta, Ga. It is not only a community affair but one which draws upon two or three surrounding counties for its actors and from ail the south Atlantic states for Its audience. The entire community assists In
makinz the stage settings, the cos-
reasons. When the pageant is over
Mis3 Wilson expects to organize classes or clubs which will continue dancing, designing or whatever part of th-3 pageant most appealed to certain groups in order that, the community may continue to have big entertainments. Miss Wilson has done recreation and social work in large New York settlement. houses. in summer camps and schools. She ha3 been a member 0f the Greek chorus of the Granville Barker Players, played with Ethel Barrymore In "Our Mrs. MeChesney," with Otis Skinner m "Mister Antonio," and with Frank Bacon in "Lightnin" ". Similar pageants are being staged in various parts of the
Everyone Should Drink Hot Water in the Morning Wash away all the stomach, liver, and bowel poisons before breakfast.
F7.ll! WIIIH11TIII IIHIWIlllliM WUfciP i i'WWI lUBWfliMllUPWI 1 1 jjT"''' fr "" nin niiwrnmnotiim iiiiim m jj
.rill!!
9
1 ..jtiLSr
i f. 1. 1 ,i ma -
1:
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'i .-.iitornia ;.-rjp of i-:s: for the name California on j
ge. tn.-n vou are sure your
i.e pa
child is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach. liver and bowels. Children 1 e i-s delicious fruity taste. Full direct ion? for child's dose on each bottle. ;-ve it without fear. Mother! Tou mu3t eay "California." Adv.
I Times news service is Tne best
tnmei and rronertiee. so that all 'country, among them one in Pallas,
will feel an individual respor.sihil- Texas; one In Westchester County, lty for the succv-i of the pageant. H. Y.'t la Portland, Ora.
Amazo Corn Oil Best for Salads and Cooking Buy in five gallon cans and save money. American Maize Products Co. Phone Hammond 238. Rjoby, Ind.
h.?t money can : effort can furnish.
:y and honest
fc
"SLOAN'S LINIMENT NEVER FAILS ME!"
Any man or woma-i vho keeps It . andy wUl tell you that same thlnfl
ESPECIALLY those frequently attacked by rheumatic twinges. A counter-irritant, Sloan's Liniment scatter the congestion and penetrates without rubbing to the afflicted part, soon relieving tne ache and pain. Kept handy and used everywhere for reducing and finally eliminating the pains and acheis of lumbago, J neuralgia, muscle strain, join stillness, sprains, bruises, the result of exposure J to weather. Sloan's Liniment is sold by all drugjrists, 35c. 70c.. $1.40.
::.:.;3
COMB
SAGE TEA IN
FADED OR GRAY HAiR
Mrs. Iiussel McCarthy and Mrs. W. Tlmm were Chicago shopper on Tuesday . Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Hansen of South Chicago visited with relatives here the forepart of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Jewett havirg sold l their horns on Indiana boulevard, and
To feel your best day in and out. to r- i clean inside; no sour bile to coat you tongue and sicken jour breath or lull nour head; no constipation, bilious a 'tacks, sick headache, colds, rheumatism or gas.y. aeld stomach, you must bathe on the insid-i like vou bath ont-
! Ti.i"-, is vastly more important, be.r; cause the skin pores do not absorb im-
1 purities into the biood. while the bowel j pores do. I To kep these poisons and toxins j well flushed from the stomach, liver, j kidneys and bowels, drink before break- : fast each day, a glass of hot water with ) a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In i it. This will cleanse, purify and fresh-
If Mixed With Sulphur It Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell.
Grandnio'her k"pt her hair beautifu1ly darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sag" Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streayed appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeih's Sage and Sulphur Compound." you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe. Improved by 'he addition of other ingredients, all ready to use. at ery httie cost. This sinipls mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and b'auty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist
sa s everybody uses Wyeth's Page and
Pulphur Compound now because jt dark
ens so naturaly and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied it's so
easy to use. too. You simply dampen
comb or soft brush and draw it through jnur hair, taking one strand at a time.
By morning the gray hair disappears
after anolhrr application or two, it is
restored to its natural color and looks
glossy, soft and bfautiful. Adw
en the entire alnnentarv tract, before
having to vacate, at once, are going j timr more food. to move in with Mrs. BuchUr on Amy Gtt a nunrtr rounil of limestone
avrnu. unui mey can una some mu- ; phosphate from your pharmacist, able p. ace. , j iiu xrensn e and almost tasteless.
Mrs. B. Lane was a Chicago visitor last Saturday. Are you hclpirg to make the little
It is Irink
Kobertsdale church bazaar a success? I tion. Adv.
phosphatcd hot water every morning to rid your system of these vile poisons
and toxics; also to prevent their forma-
THE UNIVERSAL CAR . Most of the Gas Companies throughout the country use a fleet of Ford Runabouts. The same is true of other big corporations. The reasons are very practical. The Ford Runabout is the most economical solution of quick transportation from manufacturer to retailer. For soliciting business, for the Collector, for the Doctor, Contractor, Builder, and almost every( ether line of business activity, the Ford Runabout is really a necessity. We solicit your order for one cr more. We ask your repair business. We would like your motor accessory business. We can serve you- we believe, to your best
advantage.
Bunnell Auto Sales Co.
5C6-5C3 Hohman St., HammondPhone 650. Runabout $500, f. o. b. Detroit.
U3
N R
FOR THE COURSES YOU WANT IN THE
Hammond Free Evening School
ON
Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday, Oct. 6-8 AT YOUR Nearest School Building OR AT THE BROOKS HOUSE Classes will be started in Drafting, Blueprint Reading, Stationary Engineering, Cabinet Making, Carpentry, Electric Wiring, Shorthand, Typewriting, Cost Accounting:, Commercial Arithmetic, Bookkeeping, Business English, Penmanship, Citizenship, English for Foreigners. Ladies' Tailoring, Home Cooking, Home Sewing. Courses are beimc planned in Machine Shop Work, Armature Winding, Auto Repairing, Gas Engine Construction, Millinery, Advertising, Window Dressing and Show Card Writing. Enroll in the Indiana University Training Course For Foremen who train men on the job. All trade workers who wish to instruct others and qualify as a Shop Teacher in Vocational Schools and Industrial plants. Good positions open. Classes begin Monday, Oct. 13th. Free to residents of Hammond. Enrollment fee of $1.00 returned if you attend three-fourths of the class meetings. For further information ask your nearest school principal or see THE VOCATIONAL DIRECTOR Room 15, Central School.
ROBERTSDALE
LOST: A little red kitten somewhere between Roberts avenue and Pearl street; finder pb-a.-e return to 758 Indiana boulevard. 10-2-1 Corpora! Edward Horlbaek returned, to his home on Indiana boulevard last Sunday. Corporal Horlbaek served eighteen months overseas, being vith the sixth d' ision at f.rst, then to be ens of the five hundred men selected by General Pershing, called "Perfhlng's Own" or the Composite Regiment This regiment headed all large parades overseas. New York. Washington, D. C. .Everyone is glad to see Ed back again for he was one cf our first boyB In ser Ice and one of the last to return . A boosters meeting will be he'd at the Kobertsdale church tonight for the purpose of making preparations for the fall festival to be given in the near future. Howard Lott was !n Chicago on business the fcrepart of this week.
ii.-vafL 0 i,l3-?A-L'.-X'Af, v"?Jt - ;4,fMlM fA.t.'.'ttj.ii.iirli. et5.i'i. 7s . ? ii.,nir rtM.r ,i .huCtMtniW .... ;-:' is
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OUNDING nail-studded leather heels on
hard pavements all day robs you of energy
-1L you need. Every step is a shock not only to your feet, but also to your entire system. Every shock consumes your energy and produces fatigue. It adds just that much more to the strain of your daily life.
Says His Prescription I
Has Powerful infiuerrce Over Rheumatism
Discoverer Tells Druggists Not to Tai a Cent of Anyone's Money Unless Allenrha Completely Banishes All Rheumatic Fains and Twinges. Mr. James H. Albn suffered for years with rheumatism. Many times this terrible disease left him helpless and unable to work. He finally derided, after years of ceaseless study, that no one can be frte fr.nn rheun.atini until the: nr. umulated impurities, commonly called uric aid deposits, were dissolved in the joints and nui'ejes .'ind expelled fioni the body. With this idea in mind he consulted physicians, made experiments and finally compounded a prescription that rjuickiy and completely banished every sign and symptom of rheumatism from his system. He freely gave his discovery to others, who took it with what might be called marvelous success. After years of urging he decided to let sufferers everywhere know about his discoery through
the newspapers. Your druggist can sup- I rly you. --Adv.
You can protect yourself from thess useless shoclcs. You can cushion your feet against these daily jolts and jars. O'Sullivan's Keels absorb the shocks that tire you cut. They relieve the jolts and jars that make a burden of walking. It is not just the rubber that gives O'Sullivan's Heels their springiness and wearing qualities. Rubber, cs you know, can be made hard and brittle as in fountain pens, or soft and crumbly as in pencil erasers. To secure the resiliency and durability of O'Sullivan's Heels, the highest grades of rubber are "compounded" with the best toughening agents known. The "compound" is then
"cured" or baked under high pressure. By this special process the greatest resiliency is combined with the utmost durability. It is this special process that has, since the making of the first rubber heel, established O'Sullivan's Heels as the standard of rubber heel quality. O'Sullivan's Heels are guaranteed to wear twice as long as ordinary rubber heels; and will outlast rhree pairs of leather heels. Go to your shoe repairer today andhave O'Sullivan's Heels put on your shoes. O'Sullivan's Heels are furnished in blaclc, white or tan; for men, women and children. Specify O'Sullivan's Heels, and be sure that you get O'Sullivan's avoid the disappointment of substitutes.
Poulltvan s Meets
Absorb the shocks that tire you cut
Copyrighted. 1919byO'S. R. Co. sgiJeMaijMWML'jjLia!fcAieaga
r Wmml MMm .
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