Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 112, Hammond, Lake County, 28 October 1920 — Page 17
Thursday. October 28. 1920.
THE TIMES
LONDON
SETTLES HER
OA
L sihke
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Br eap.lu c. reeves STAFF COFESPONOFNT I. N SERVICE! UO.vnOV. Oct. 2. The roal strike lifts feen definitely settled, it nas officialiy mounted thv afternoon. The offtcil iinnounimenl ms made subsequent to ihe. metliiiit of th cabinet and a conference between, representatives c-f the ttrikins coal miners. l-'rank H HodgF, secrets ry of the .federation of Mirers, outlined the chief points of the agreement s follows: 1 Miners to receive wage increase of ' v shillings (normally 43 cents) per shift. Cs Boys to receive a. wage increase of ne shilling. S A sliding scale of adjustments to be inaugurated by production output compared i(h the September mine production. K A permanent v arc boar 1 to be fstsbhsbed in March. J; e.as staled I'rer:i;r 'Lloyd 'ir.-rg;i's official residence tint th exeutivo f:onimitUc of ihe Federation of Miners was recommending that the men iof to end the sLr)X.
COX
NOV
SAYS PANIC IS POSSIBLE
BY IIAUHV U ItOGER r STFF CORRESPONDENT I. N SERVICE LUYTON, O.. Oct. C8. Gov. James M Cox. democratic presidential candi ds:e, left for Ind'anapotis today wher,s ho plans to deliver tonight a fervid xiior;at!en in behalf of the league o" aat'ons. in hope of charging what is declared to be the dem'iciatic drift i here Into a Cox victory. Th srovernor was jubilant over his whirlwind "welcome home" here nl although rather tired tiday from his ; rduous -campaigning, he did not plan spare, himself in the lea.- In tha wind-up of the campaign. Dayton's reception to the governor Tas declared by old residents to hava ('ipscd any reception ever (?iven to any American here. The leag-ue of nations was his thema and it will be tonight and there-was thoughtful silence when lie declared, T'ayton bankers will be calling- in 'heir loans within eight months unless' the V. S. g-oes into the league." lie stressed the possibility of a financial panic if the democratic cause was defeated. "Mv friends."' said the governor, "this covenant of he league is based upon the idea that, i civilization lias had its lesson upon war, end this covenant is simply a bet on the morality of tha world. It Is not the covenant of tht tgue Internationally precisely -what ihe Monroe doctrine is on this continent? 'What Is behind the Monroe doo trine beside our moral force?"
AMERICAN WOMAN'S FORTUNE MAY BUY GREEK HUBBY HIS COUNTRY'S THRONE
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Page Seventeeii.
LIVE NEWS FROM THE TWIN CITIES
I.K.TS lill.I.KT i X.VAi
Piodoro tiuMincy, Mficnn. who lives at the Itepiihl'e Iron and Steel company camp, is Rolnr to do a little prlvat. Hleulhinic us :voii as hi ets out of the hospital, lie is now nt St. Marsaret'B at Hammond with, a "jull-t tri h; l'.-g. Iist v-uinx as he stood faihin?. p-ar the camp wi'h his brother and another Mexican s"m cn opcnfii th door of the building' and -hot point blank at him. None of those present wre nblo to g"t a stood view of tha can man.
' hichi s to ba started Nov. 11. AH thoyc who hava paid ti for membership are eligible to attend the meetirs and vote fop tha new officers. The membership campalg-n. which will be part of the national campaign will not be for funds, but for members.
voTir; MHl: tkii.i .";ne hundred and sixty. three tri.votes hive. bon cutt on the votin? machine in the engineer's office at th. 5ia--t Chicago city hall. Iast night the last chance for Instructional oting on the machines since all machines in the county were te b" locked t.-day and mad-- reidy for next Tuesday's balloting.
Prince Christopher, hfs wife, formerly Blrs. William B. Leeds, at left, and the prince's mother. Dowager Queen Olga, photographed recently.
has been completed ar.d opened tw traffic the concrete gang having startd the east side at the Wabash track With the new concrete mixer which will double the daily output, contractors of the Illinois Ballast and Construction company hope to rush th work to completion before the sc. vcre weather sets in.
BIG RECEPTION
mi:i rums mrmr; Th East Chicago chapter of the Red Cross will meet tonight n th
T, i - .w.-.v...n in lining am rooms on ryth avenu, fn- iii.i. i.j. -. . . . . .
, , , - inuiuus nroor n.ea suaaeniv yewter. snnua. section of ofjctr, and for di.i- day Just after he had returned horns
' " "n'i'a'-' i torn work. lie had taken off his
SMYOH IU ntfK Mavor Ieo McCrmicli of Kast Chickto. who for the r.at three weilts as b-en at the Burleson sanitariurr. at rand Ilapidw. Mich., w.i return to Kast Chicago either tomorrow or Saturday. It Is possible that h- will have to return to the anitarium' for another week, but he will at least remain in tha city longr enough to vote, l.ecent reports are to the effect that be is recovering rapidly from his operation.
M liHrlOYES MKKT BanU emploes of Hammond. Whiting. Fast Chicago and Indiana Har bor will meet tontcht at the Firs' Calumet Trust and Savings bank in Kaat Chicago for the purpose of organizing a cliepter of the Amrtcar InstUufa of Banking. -A numhor of fliot.- interested met lact Monday night at the city hall in East Chicago, but nothing defln'te was decided upon, since there was not a iVpresintntive of the Institute present. A representative from theChlcago chapter will be the speaker tonight and final plans fer offering the banking courses will he made.
shoes after returning from work and had Just set down In an easy chair when he died. It Is thought heart failure was the cause. Mr. Hang leaves a wife in Indiana Harbor, two sons. Will and Fred In Whftlng, ont son. "Walter, ajid a daughter, Mrs. Flossie Adams, in East Chicago. The funeral will be held Friday afternoon.
EX.KCTIOX HKTtRX Officials, of the Indiana Harbor Civic club have mad arrangement to receive election returns at the elu: rooms next Tuesday evening and during the evening furnish entertainment to those who wish to gt the returnj at the club. A special wire has been provided for and an operator will be In the rooms to take the returns as they come in. In addition to the entertainment the dining room will be opn and the
rr.embers may get refreshments whlhi Ihey wait. The po t and billiard tables, as usual, will b available foVl use. : 1 , ... ' i GOOD WORM FOB WATTS " The East Chicago Chamber of Coranitrce yesterday passed a resolution endorsing the work done in East CVcago by A. H. "Watts and wishing hi; (,-ood luek in his work at L.ans!nx. Mich., where he will start the first or next month. The resolution wss !..- tre.ducesd after a report from Mr. Watts, in which he stated that th financial campaign, had been very (-.)c-cossful and In which ha predicted success for the movement during the fi;suing year. The Chamber also discussed the' Scuth Shore crossing at Forsyth and" Chicago avenue, automobiles on the streets st night without light and; sveral other civic questions.
DEATH OK MTU HA 4G Frd Ilaag. ag" 73. who for the pat 30 years has resided in Whiting and
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Second-Hand Stoves and Furniture BOUGHT AND SOLD Stoves, Gas Ranges and Furnaces repaired. All work guaranteed. H. GADEKE With Hammond Fttrniture Co. 112 Plummer Ave. Phone Hammond 543
FOR HARDING
AT CLEVELAND
MAC SWNEY
BURIED TODAY Widow Collapses and is Tillable to Participate in Obsequies BTJXHTITT IIHTERNATIONAU NEWS SERVICE j LONDON, Oct. 28 Mrs. Muriel WacSwtaey. widow of the late lord mayor of Cork, collapsed today tinder the Ion? strain of bar husband's corJlnsmsat ia Brixton Jail and his hunger strike la prison. She was enable to participate la the public fuaraX, Relatives said it was doubtful If Mrs. VacSwlney would he able to accompany the body to Ireland.
BY FLOYD MCGTtllF STFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE! CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 2 S. Senator Warren O. Harding republican presidential candidate who has begun telling Ohio audiences that, very Hke'y he will be their next president, motored to a country club- this morning for n round of gjolf before leaving for Akron. 8enator Harding was greatly pleased with the magnitude of his Cleveland reception. After witnessing the greatest torchlight and red fire parade of republican men an dwomen of the present campaign, the senator. who felt that his prepared address for Cleveland did not quite do Justice to the occasion, forenslcally and arg-u-mentatively spread himself over a wide field, giving Cleveland his con
ception of what America should be In
politics, government, foreign policy j and much else. The audience was especially Interested In his titatement that he had brought Senator Hiram Johnson and ex-President Taft closer together than they had ever been on tho league Issues that he had believed rendered a service to Amrtcan if not tli world in making the two league factions in the republican party more open to reason. But ho made it clear he did not ask any senator to accept, the idas of a president on siieh an issue that he believed In ir.d"pondT.t Judgment by S'-nators on such matters. Never before has Senator Harding had tc many questions put to him from the audience. He took great pains to answer each questioner fully and in spite of efforts of Mayor Fitzgerald and a couple e.f police at one stage to chuck out a Socialist questioner, the senator kept the situation in his own hands and would not permit objection. In his Cleveland speeches Senator Ilardlnsr emphasized hi policies of party government as (prosed to personal government, American nationalism as asrainst internationalism, ample protection of the American citizens on "lawful business abroad," although he dec'ared he was not going abroad himself and a league of nations program upon which all America can unite and help make effective.
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Better call up The Ttcncs an3 have it sent to your house every night. Then you'll be sure it wiU be there.
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BT WILLIAM L. MALLABAH London, Oct. 28 Amldbt heart-rend-Ttr.g scenes of emotion the funeral f;rvieei were conducted today at St. ileorge's Roman Catholic Cathedral, Southward, for the late Terence MacSwiney. lord mayor of Cork, who Jied in the 74th day of hia hunger strike at Priton Jail. The plain and simple coffin, draped with the Sinn Fein flag and banked with f'-jwers. rested in state on a catafalque
before the high a'.tsr at the head of the
church. It had been placed there by tender hands after the removal of the body from F.rixton Jail late yesterday, following the lnjut A death watch kept guard over the body all night lung-, the warders being relieved, at intervals of three hours. More than ten thousand persons filed past the toiTin before the doors of the Cathedral closed at 1( o'clock, ilany w.en night workers visited the church after midnight and being unable to enter knelt in silent homage outside. Inside the cathedral members of the MaeSwiney family sat through the
rught. occupying mourners benches fac- j tr.g the catafalque. The ecene was one ;
of tragic sombrMiesis. Candles in brass hf 'ders as hljrh as a man's head burned dimlv brsldei the coffin.
New 1920 Prunes, Peaches and Apricots Just Arrived, See Our Prices.
In an' Around GARY j
RAIN HALTS BROADWAY PAVING Ha;n and weather conditions have called a halt on the south Broadwar
paving project in Gary for svera' days, the first time since the big ta was started several weeks ago. The strip on the west side from th Wabash to the Pennsylvania tracks
The SOUTH SHORE LINE Winter Train Schedule Operating on Central Standard Time Goes Into Effect at 2:00 a. m. SUNDAY October 31st, 1920!
P.
PRUNES California Santa Clara. Sweet and meaty, large size. 22 lbs.55c 5 lbs. $1.05 25 lb. box, $5.10
CANNED PEACHES California pack, large cans. 3 cans 75c Case of 24. $5.90 CANNED APRICOTS California pack, large can. 3 cans 75c Case of 24, $5.90
SOAP 10 Bars 69c American Family
PURE T0URA1NE COCOA 1 DRIED APRICOTS
7 it I Sweet California. 2z lbs.
45c
75c
5 lbs. $1.45
NUTRO MILK Tall cans. 3 for 25c Babr size, 6 for 25c
3 $1.00 VALUE BROOM
5-string. 65c
New Pack, Sniders Catsup 16 oz. Bottle 25c
CI
o n s-ti hi ers
Wholesale Grocers "GUARANTEED PRODUCTS" 540 Hohman Cor. Plummer, Tel. Ham. 531
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Everybods Talking JJ ADHTTT P
PREVO'S BARGAINS Y
Festival Groceries, Meats and Footwear And for Excellent Reasons as Prices Quot-
i Ufa
3 f aaresk
ft
ATURDAY
is Postively the End of the Sale Final Cut Prices Now
FRIDAY AND
KLENZERS Spotless, Kitchen Klenzer, Sun Bright. Per can
Great Shoe Bargains
5c
TOILET PAPER High grade Toilet Paper. 4 rolls for
25c
PRUNES Fine Santa Clara Prunes. Highest grade. 2 lbs. for
29c
CATSUP Heinz, Mallard, Monsoon. Per Lottie
HOUSE SLIPPERS 1 25 pairs of women's all kid onestrap House Slippers, with flexible soles. $3.00 values, & 1 Qt at only J J WOMEN'S FINE SHOES big stock of women's $9.00 and $ 1 0.00 boots ; black, brown and grey, French and military heels, new Fall model, $6.95 Jut they go at w MEN'S DRESS SHOES 260 pairs of men's black and brown lace shoes. English style. Goodyear welted soles, all sizes. C Q EC $8.50 values. Now. .P-7-MEN'S SERVICE SHOES 160 pairs of men's all solid Work Shoes, black and brown, blucher style; $5.00 values. jjO ACt Now '
WOMEN'S SHOES 1 75 pairs of women's lace shoes, in !lack and brown, high and low heels, Fall styles; values to $7.00. Vhie they last, $0 AC per pair . . . tpoi7i? GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES A big stock of Girls Shoes, in black and brown and white tops; lace and button. Sizes 8'i to QCi 2. On sale. $3.45 and70 BOYS' SHOES High grade boys' English style lace shoes, all solid throughout. Black and brown. Sizes 1 to 52. $3.95; sizes 10 to 13'2, 45
BUTTER Highest Grade Creamery Butter. Per lb. 59c
OLEOMARGARINE Certified or Good Luck Oleomargarine. ' Per lb. .
35 c
MACARONI High Grade Macaroni, Spaghetti. Vermicelli Eo-j Noodles. Perpkg. ?
7c
Canned Goods Specials
13c
FLOUR Ceresota. Pillsbury or Gold Medal. 25 lb. bag $1.59 SUGAR Beet Cane Granulated Sugar. Per lb. ( 51b. limit) 10c
60c ORANGES This sale, per doz. . . PRUNES No. 2 cans. Per can APRICOTS 2Yi lb. can. at MONSOON APRICOTS. Per can SWEET CORN . Per can EARLY JUNE PEAS Per can LIMA BEANS Extra fancy, per can WAX OR GREEN BEANS Fancy, can.
PEACHES 2Vz lb. can. OQ Per can , . . Fruits and Vegetables at Special Prices
39c 15c 23 c 17c 15c 15c 14c14c
Finest Meat Specials LARD Oscar Mayer's O EL r Open Kettle Rendered NATIVE VEAL STEW 1 7p Per lb X
NATIVE VEAL
WASHING POWDER
7c package. Now . 4c
SHOULDER Per lb
PRIME POT ROASTPer lb 15c and SHORT RIB BOILING
BEEF Per lb
HAMBURGER Per lb SWIFT'S PREMIUM HAM Per lb....
Other Items Priced Low Accordingly
23 c 18c 14c 19c 43 c
BAKING POWDER Dr. Price's, Federal. 1 lb. can
23c
BROOMS 150 regular $1.00 Brooms. Now 59c (1 to a customer)
ALL ITEMS ADVERTISED FOR CASH ONLY Sale Conducted by Goldsmith Sales System Phone 1p) f Everywhere 492 Jfeo Jo 11 InUCj J Deliveries 799-801 Calumet Avenue 2 blocks South of Sibley St.
