Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 109, Hammond, Lake County, 24 October 1919 — Page 8
Pazo Eight.
THE TIM I Fridav, Oetobr 24. 1910. i.g'LW.''g'MT!;"g.jj.?yt.twg.itw BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute -r I ! National Legislation of the Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are the result of Ir. Edwards' determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. For 17 years he used these tablets Ca vegetable compound mixed with olive oil) in his private practice with great siicces3. They do all the good that calomel does but have no bad after effects. No pains, no griping, no injury to tho gums or danger from acid foods yet they stimulate the liver and bowels. Take Dr. Edwards Olive Tabled when you feel "logy" and "heavy." ISote how they clear clouded brain and perk up the spirits. 10c and 25c a box. eat Packing Industry muni"" 'rfp
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1. Will not increase the amount of meat you can buy for a dollar. 2. Will not raise more animals. 3. Will not produce more meat. 4. Will not stop fluctuations in live-stock receipts or prices. 5. Will not increase the output of the packing houses. 6. Will not prevent strikes. 7. Will not reduce transportation charges. 8. Will not reduce the retailer's cost of doing business. 9. Will not increase the demand for the cheaper cuts of meat 10. Will not lessen the consumers' demand for ex pensive delivery and credit service. 11. Can not at the same time raise prices paid farmers for live stock, and lower prices paid by consumers for meat. " But the slowing up of efficiency due to cumbersome governmental routine will have the effect of increasing the manufacturing charges between the cost of live stock and the cost of meats, thus forcing lower live-stock prices or higher meat prices. The packing industry as now conducted!, is characterized by keen competition, 'highest efficiency, and unusually low profits.
Let us send you a Swift "Dollar." It will interest you. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, I1L
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
-ifTS BUB" j-tmnmiii,siL.a
Viy est 41
THIS SHOWS
WHAT BECOMES OF
THE AVERAGE DOLLAO
RECEIVED BY
'SWIFT & COMPANY
FROM TME $LE Of WlAT ANB BY WXJDOCTS CCNTS IS PAID SOW TM( LIVE AWIMAL !. Cf NTS FOB LABOft f I'tHSIl AHO FSf I
10 CCNTS HCMAmS
WITH
SWifT 4 COMPANY
AS .AOUT
Whiting Advertisem en ts Are Winners
COAL
ORDER NOW.
SHORTAGE SURE.
No Msuranes ot supply If you delay. We have a stock of all grades of Hard and Soft Coal, also Coke.
BEST PRICES.
HONEST WEIGHT.
MID-WEST COAL COMPANY HARRY . HILBRICH, Manager. 264-268 Michigan Ave. Phone 16X Hammond, Ind.
That Old Rug
Better Make It Last We will help you do it. What's the need of paying an exorbitant price for a new rug? Orientals carry a startling price tag and domestics are away high, too. You will appreciate the Important Announcement Our rapidly inoreaaiag business h&s shown us the need for a department to repair rugs and thus prolong their life for an Indefinite length of time. Rug Repairing In Hammond has heretofore been unknown and now that Hammond ha such, a place It will he received gladly by rug owners ot thla region. Our equipment provide for first class Rebinding of Rugs. Befringing of Rugs. Cutting Rugs to Smaller Size3. Resurfacing Worn Places. And other repair work that will save you from buying a new rug. Telephone 216 and our representative will call for your rug. Don't wait, delay may prove costly. F. C. HOPMAN CO.
GENERAL CLEANERS 375 Sibley St.
1
WHITING and its PEOPLE
nil are accented by Tk ULilloi .tna
-., ua. jmit at., raoa iss-w. SENSATION OF
THE YEAR
1. She's called the American Beauty.
2. She is one of tho if
not the most beautiful wom
en on the screen.
3. She has her own com
pany.
4. Her leading man is
Thomas Meighan.
ii er nrst picture is
"The Thunderbolt," releas
ed through the First Nation
al. ". She is Mary Mar; Laren's sister. 7. Her name is Katherine MacDonald. 8. Watch her! In a year from now she will be as famous as Mary Piekford. 9. See her! Monday and Tuesday at the Princess theatre. Motherhood, God's symbol of 'Woman's purity, was the one priceless privilege Bruce Corbin df-nied his wife. "Ths Thunderbolt with Katherine McDonald and Thomas Meighan ella this wonderful story of a struggle between two giant souls. PHI.VCKSS THEATRE, MONDAY AND TUESDAY. 10-24-1 While taklne; some 0f tho ,rorrs for the picture Sahara. Louisa Giauni and her company were forced to an abominable hotel. They stood for all kinds of indigestible food, till one day a near-pte -was served and Mlas Glaum decided the limit had been reached. She said to the waiter: "The undercrust to that pie Is outrageous, I never saw such tough crust." Imagine her consternation when the waiter replied: "There wasn't any undercrust to that pie Mi'm. It was on a paper plate and you have eaten It." Se Sahara at
the PRINCESS THEATRE. 10-24-1 PRIXCESS THEATRE. TONIGHT:
Ethel Barrymore in "THE DIVORCEE" I also a travelogue. Coming Tomorrow i Louise Olaum in SAHARA. 10-24-1
Is Washday a Habit with You ?
i
Many things that might be improved have been with us so long that It sometimes never occurs to us that we could do better without them. We are slaves of custom of habit. The buttons on our coat cuffs date back to the Seventeenth Century, when coats were of such rich and costly fabrics that it was necessary to protect the wide sleeves by rolling and buttoning them up. We have abandoned brocades and cloth of gold, but we still cling to cuffs. In many parts of France, Italy and Austria, women harness themselves up with the oxen and drag the plows. It has never oc cured to them that women have a higher mission. Are you thus bound by habit and custom to washday? Perhaps you simply haven't thought much about the mat
ter heretofore but there is a more modern method than that of the scrubboard. It is our family laundry service. It is a better washway we wash your personal and household goods in the same careful manner you would do them yourself. No flapping in the wind to collect soot or tear the textiles but a sure, pure drying. Then ironing by our steam-heated method that never scorches. Delivery at a definite time on definite days these are what we give you. Washday is a heritage of the past that as a modern woman it is unnecessary for you to cling to longer. Call us up and let us give you freedom from the trying labor of washday. We will be glad to have our driver call for your family bundle.
CALUMET LAUNDRY CO. 1073-5-7-9 137th St. Phone 103 Indiana Harbor TOLL CALLS REFUNDED
Send if
?&&?2cjl aunaru
Chi m C
Km
Items of interest to this column may t left at 433 Slierldaa t., or phoned to Waiting 80BL Your newa Is aollclted. Mrs. Alex Vincent of 408 Ohio avenue has gone on an extended Eastern trip. She Is at present at Hartford. Conn., as the guest of ,her daughter, Mrs. Philip Lee. where she will also see her two grandsons. George and William Berlin, who have Juat returned from Franc. She will also visit her daughter. Mrs. Kelney In Pittsburgh and friends in Franklin, Fa. The Luther Guild will give a bunco rarty at the St. John's Evangelical cburch. 117th street and Cleveland avenue, tonight. The Trl Kappa Sorority members will he guests of the Indiana Chapter at a Hallowe'en Chapter tomorrow ever.ing . A. Franklin, the electrician, has purrha 'sci tlis Herman Illicit fiflit on llPthj ,.-trrft. Mr. nnd Mr. Herman Lucke A NERVOUS
REAKDOWN
Miss Kelly Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health.
We are not living only to snatch th Joys of th moment. How about thff future? Regular installment in t:-
I h ti.iK Savings ail Loh.i Assoi-istl.in
ars the simple miins of obtamitiK a happy and Independent future. Current dividend rate six per cent. IO-L'4-I FOR RENT: 4-room furnished Flat. for light housekeeping, $20.00 per month. Apply John Fischrupp. 4'12 119th street. 10-24-1
J. Van Till has. left for Montana. He intends making his home there. Miss Marion Dunnigan gave her regular music and art lesson at the public school h ere on Thursday. Jake Kooy has returned from DeMott after spending several weeks there. Misses Anne Grogan and Josephin Anderson of Whiting spent Tuesday evening with friends here.
CE222SSS
HOBART
i
Hajnmond.
Advertise in Tiie Times
Newark. N. J. "For about three years I suffered from nervous break-
I' ll ilOT weak I could hardly
1 1 &S3 stand, and had head- '
I J fj . ,-&g ches every day. I i-Tt. tried everything I
'y could think of and L- was under a chv-
sician's care for two years. A girl friend had used Lydia E.
-.Pinkham's Veee-
pyj table Compound and !7 sti told me about -'"lit. From the first
day I took it I began to feel better ani
now I am we'.l and able to do most any
kind of work. I have been recommendingthe Com
pound ever since and (five you my permission to publish this letter " Miss Flo Kelly, 476 So. 14th St, Newark, N.J. The reason this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, was so successful in Miss Kelly's case was because it went to the root of her trouble, restored her to a normal healthy condition and as a result ' l. 1 B 1
are erecting a new home on the rbt adJoining their present location, the construction of which has already been begun . A basket supper will he held at the M. E. church tonight at 6:30 o'clock to which all memoers and friends of the church are invited. A social time will be held following the supper this to be suggestive of Hallowe'en. Russell F. Smith, the insurance man has been appointed chairman for the coming Red Cross drive, November 3 to 11. in which Whiting's quota is $l,f,30. Memberships sre also to be renewed. Mr. Fred J. Smith who has been the chairman of every lied Cross and Liberty Loan drive, declined to accept the appointment this time, so his son Russell, was appointed. It is the opinion of all that with him at the helm he will meet with the same success his father has In former drives. Mrs. Thomas Byrne of the Fast Sine wus th. guest of Mrs. M. A. Hickey of Pennsylvania avenue. Mrs. 1. H. Boyd and daughter Donna, of Hobart spnt the day with Mrs. W. E. Gillette of Central avenue. Mrs. James Robertson entertained a party of friends in the West Park Addition yesterday afternoon. Mrs. James West of Central avenu. remains at the Lakeview hospital !n Chicago where her condition Is slightly improved . Betty, the daughter of Mr. and Mm. L. C. Grubh. entertained the children c.l the kindergarten At a ;arty today in hi nor of her fojr'h birthday annivers;. ry . Katherine Powers nas btn 111 with t- ns litis. The American Rd Cr- 58 have called a meetinf for next Wednesday to elect an executive committee or board of directors. A meeting could not be held last Wednesday night, owing to a quorum not heiig present. E. A. Mizo of U9.r street, had their Ford tourinpr ear s!oln on 63rd street Chicago, on Tu'--l-,y -wning. They were rhopping a-i; -vher. they came out the car was gone. Mrs. Frank Chileris cf 113h street lias been entertaining her mother from Wilmington, 111.
Mr. and Mrs. Emll Scharbach, Mrs. tJ. Bussce, Mrs. K. Norris and Mr. Wm. Bursa attended the funeral of J. H. Gardner held in Chicago Tuesday. Mr. H. Coons !s at Cincinnati this meek attending a meeting of the American Casket Mfg. Association. Mr. George Stoker who has been, studying for the past number of years has opened a studio in the Community building . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Maybaum have, moved into the Meyer hou?e on Georgic ana street. Mrs. Lwight Mackey and Mrs. H. Taxton, president and secretary of the Reading Club, left Tuesday fcr Kokomo to attend the SOth annuol convention of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, Mrs. F. Ructti was a Chicago visitor yeeterday. A daughter was born October 21 to Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Thomas.
Electro Medical Doctor SPECIALIST Treats Chronic Diseases of Men. Consultation and advice free. 95 E. State Street, Hammond. Ind. Above Schloer's shoo store. Office hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sunday 9 to 12 ra. only.
, .., . tfMn 'i nf -...v.i.'m.i.ihim- rii. r ill ii ' i -j ?t j. : J ! CHAMPION i i Q 17 l I IT ! I e3 Ha 11. V I iLa I
MUNSTER
Miss Bernice Thornton of Hammond spent Tuesday right with Helen and
NEGLECTING THAT GOLD OB COUGH?
Why, when Dr. King' New Discovery so promptly checks it
r'S n6tnrfil yon don't vunt to be careless and let that old cold or cough drag on or that new attack develop seriously. Not when you enn pet such a proved successful remedy as Dr. King's .New Discovery. Cold, cough, Rrtppe, croup does not resist this standard reliever very long. Irs quality is bh high today as It always has been and It's been growing steadily in popularity fur mor than fifty yenrs. GOc. and $1.20 a bottle at all druggists. Cilve It a trial.
Tardy Bowela, Inert Liver They Just won't let you put "pep" Into your work or play, bick heartache comes from retaining waste matter and Impurities in the body. Feel right for anythlna make the liver lively, the bowels runctton regularlv, with Dr. King's New Life rills. Smoothly yet positively they produce results that cleanse the svstem and make the liver and bow-els respond to the demands of a strong, healthy body. Still 2dc. et ail druggists. Try them tonight.
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What does it mean? The Finest Winter Tops The Classiest Painting Highest Grade Tops and Seat Covers Strongest Built Bodies and Cabs Dependable Motor Repairing Simonizing TEMME SPRINGS for all cars in stock Broken Springs Repaired while you wait Johnson's Shock Absorbers and Gabriel Snubbers "FIRESTONE" TIRES
POTATO MACHINERY CO.
PHONE HAMMOND 3200 ' Chicago and Sheffield Aves., Hammond
iier nervousness aisappeareo.
Louise Kske.
