Hammond Times, Volume 10, Number 18, Hammond, Lake County, 14 May 1921 — Page 6
Mar 14. 1921.
THE TIMES PAGE
At The County Seat
Itarry Nlchoiaon, who has had rooms C'J fan fined for dipbtht-ria. one at tlie
o-.r the Boston store, has been cornfiled to move on account of the Doen tore going; to enlarge their ytore and use the eecond story of th buildir.g. He has now ta'n quarters ovor yie Baker Jewelry store. ; Mrs. Gretchen Finr.ell and son of 'eve'ajid, CK1I0. are spending s'evera! w'.th her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ;. O. Wheeler. : Jack Kwscj.ch of Whiting wj fJiid guilty in fh criminal court on Fridsy morning and. gi.en a $1.00 :)ne ai'd six months suspended sentence Tn liquor law v o!at"rs take up t;t ''ijor part of the time In the criminal 'vart these days, hardly a day pa snsr but several of these afnuaitsr ar, ;;d. Many of t'ne. are appeals from i n various city courts. '. Martin McGregor, a conductor on the Indian Harbor Belt K. R.. was acn ultted of usinjf undue negligence in sstrutlngr a '"alumet aenue crossinj In Hammond, on Thursday In the Titnlnal cquri. Milo M. Bruce, a brother of Otto J. Bru.:e of this city v aa the complaining: wiine?s I The J. 8. Harper home has ben
children being very ill with the dlic a s . The services of the first Holy communion will be lifld at St. Mary's Catholic church on Sunda3 May 15. at which time the lat;e.t riif.', .om posed of. twenty children, will, rooeiv c this holy ob'iarati'n of the church. TIuho
who wl'l ma!i- their tlrt cxinmunioni
beine . Joseph M iller. It-nry 't. niiinr
Herh-t Giisen. Lawrence
Ionard Hort. lrd. Wlrtz, - Porotn
Smelter, .loseahine Wit t. Marsaref
llalfman. Clara Hetf.. Notti
'Stack. Mother and babe doin? well.
I". J. Tiriser is spending this week n St. IjOui.. Mo., i -11 business. Two carioa'Is of fine Jersey and Hol-
.-tcin cattle were fed and milked In the !l5rifrUh yards Thursday morning. I Oliver Kraay of PMottP, Ind.. was J.'in town fur business Friday. i
John Pallock. one of the teamsters jit the Standard O'.l plant, was severely ' njured at noon Friday. The horses "i)fcame frighteiT-tl and F'allock was
IhrrMi n in Mia prnun'i! nntt frnmnlofl '
Slay- j '
fill them out and return them to the Adjutant General- office. The following -instruction is enclosed which is considered Important: "Please give all your service, as Indicated on teh form; name in full (.Christian name not initial): rank or grade; army serial number as . hown on discharge; data of entering esrvice; organisation (reaimont and company) to which firyt asMi;nd; whether volunteer or draft; any and all ch.-inafes of Krade, if any.
i and all changes of organization during-
fervice and location whtro served; if
I overseas service, jrivo dates of Rolng Kcheerinsa arjanrl returning; uhcthrr wound--fl or
n baby Kir; j parsed: when and where d ischargrrl ; j home uddrens where mail will reach
The "May day program- ien by, you. lin public school Friday evening wa. The Adjutant General's office has on
Mr. and Mrs. r.aiph
y 'flin- proi!,i ,iarrais of . fl r.ohl'.ni? ;.j)0) n Wednesday .nis'it
ton. Catlier no Uaher. Genevieve llr-h-tihach. Ma hel Uonsn.ane. ran!, nr. I , ... a I lit Bieg-el. Christ ir. :rt7.. :'reme hie-
1.
Hu."emin. Mary Kroner un.l
xcejlenl from bejiinnlna: to t-nd. Tli-"
nee was uin of the larRest ever
eicd at Griffith.
Mrs. Illtii VlhTter of Crown Point
s:tintr relatives in town.
Xext week is commencement week the, Crown Po'rt hiEh school, the ti event being the baccalaureate sern-
by Kev. Hale. SjnJ.iv eveivnsr. May 15 Senior class day exercises T.ies l.iy ever.'ns. MV .IT. eighth s:ail exercise." Thursday. " p- m- Senior-Junior banil :ef. Presbyterian church. Thursday evening. May 19, H. s. commencement Friday eveniag. May 13. Alumni banquet. May
GIVES HIS STORY OF TI BONDS
Father Thomas Gorek. Polish Catholic priest at New Chicago, Ind., between Gary and Hobart who was arresterday Tuesday night by United States secret service a:?ent Pete Hrautzburg and now detained in Chiigo In connection with ths Jl.OOit.'ji'O mail pouch robbery at Toledo, O.. last ,'anuary related today how- ho tame in possession of $83,000 in bonds -which was dug up by secret service rneu in ;'. back yard at New Chicago. Fifteen years ago a young Kradua.e at a seminary in Poland arrived in Toledo, O. He called himself Father nthony Gorke. As pastor in a little Toledo church he rr.ad th acquaintCce of a youns girl. Wanda Urban. 1 The friendship ripened. Then Gorke left Toledo. For eight years ha hs been pastor of the Holy Sacrament rhurch at New Chicago. For elsm years he did not see AVanda UrbatiB. Then, one day it was several inonths ago and Father Gorke vras pacing the Englewood station of th Pennsylvania railroad Wanda reappeared. Fata was unkind. GIVES HIM A PACKAGE. 'Father, dear father," he pleauc Tou remember Wanda? Wand Toledo? She thrust a package, he says. Into his arms. Then she was gone. Relating his story in a low monoTone, tears coursing- down his cheeks. Father Gorke today explained to Capt. Thoma-s I. Porter and Peter I. Dratz1 arg- of the eecret service, how he got livs $85,000 worth of bonds part or the $1,000,000 loot taken at Toledo which they found buried in his backyard. "I did not intend to use the money," re gaid. "When I discovered what the package contained, I was afraid. 1 buried it deep in the yard. ; "Night after night I lay awake thinking of the fonuna that was mine for the taking. The re3t you know the rest." DECLINES AID THKf SEEKS IT. Then his hands clenched. "I won'i talk any more. Not to any one. N one can help me. I don't want help.' In another hour be had hired Attorney W. W. O'Brien to defend him and sjed his friend to obtain $10,000.00 bonds for his release. Drautzburg was notified yesterday that Wanda had been arrested in Toledo. Gorke'a arrest followed the attempt pf two of his friends. John Paulek and J. Stanley Bartinowski, to caah coupons from the bonds at the Illinois Trust and Savings bank. Th Times has been In possession of the facts relating to Father Gorke'a arrest since Tuesday night, but at tlie request of the secret service men, did not use the story as they were preparing to make other arrests. The Times is able to state that othr arrests are to follow, if they have not
been made already. It was Intimated that a dozen or more are implicated, several of ijo arrest to he made in the vicinity of Gary.
SEK RECORD OF SERVICE
MEN
NOV
fUr; records of service of veterans ot the Civil and ?(iatrish-American wars ami theso are refrrred to many times daily from all parts of the country, in connection with pension matter.", entrance to soldiers homes, burials and assistance for soldiers and their families? Certificates from these records are issued under the seal of the state where they are needed. All ex-servire men who receive th??e blanks arc urged to return them properly filled out and to sea that the matter is brought to the attention of other soldiers.
are exceeding those of last year by one. third. The -voilurue of sales Ss 103 1-3 per cent of any previous year. So great is the demand for the Ilaynei that today in our big factories at Kokonio we are employing 16 per cent mo.e men than ever before, even t the bis rush day of last year and the previous one." "Thu motor car has become an indispensable instrument In our political, social and Industrial life," President Harding.
CHICAGO HAS A MONTE CARLO CHICAGO. Slay 14. A Chicago
'Monte Carlo" where huge sums were
Hammond Auto Sheet Metal Works
690 Hohman Street Phone 3032
Manufacturers and Repairers of Radiators and Fenders : THERE IS NO ADVENTURE attached to placing a job with us. You j-ou can rest assured from the beginning that the results will be satisfactory and certain. Expert workers plus superior materials insure the satisfaction of our customers. We have devoted our greatest energy to the business of accomplishing sheet metal repairs and restorations. Utilize our experience at low charge. Oar Prices Are Right We Guarantee All of Our Work
GRIFFITH
liid ia napol
mmm0 1 'made to
Jl
All of the eighth grade pupils of the public school passed the fnal examination. Their names are Ira Weyhe Marguerite Bennett T'oris Vra; Cyri; Hutchins. Howard S-ikrs. .lame? Hoehnier, Ear! Paul. Wayne I.ishtfo-'t, Viola Ira W'eyhe receive dtiie highest grade. On "Wednesday a fine 10-pound baby bov was .torn to Mr. and Mrs. Kvnest
Many Lake county men wii.i sa-.v i rvw-...- in the war with Germany have
n r. iv.-il requests fur aid from the ' -I flee of Adjutant Cemral II. H. Sm'th
; v n'ni v. 1 1 ' m , i i rt a complete record t
all cx-sevvi.-o men. Theso records are imfrlant 'and variable both to the state and to the men- themselves. 'I hey will show Ju-t h-.w many ef the state's ..ns were civen to the service and will fne o a ;iprni;u -nt record, the value f which w ill favm-a.se as tlie years (so on. In the. event that bonus legislation Is r-a-sed eit.net- by congress or by t'l' state. -erti!loates tnad from these record"? will be available at rnc "i ni.ikintr distribution, llhu'ns are hemi;
hoys with instruct ion to
; Haynes Co. Experij encing Greatest Year
''I'ir.s is the greatest year the Jlaiies has ever known.-' states Alton C Seiberlins, vice president and Kneral manager of the Haynes Auto-mo-uiie company. Kokomo, Ind. "It i;; lar exce.-rttr'jv it year and the ear bf-tore, when production alone measured the volume of sales. Thai was a tellers' market, ad little if any work was r.-oes.ar.v to sell a car. "To,i;.y th'ims are different. People are scrutinizing their purchases. They i;i Insisting th.it every dollar yha.ll b;y its fall value. "And today the sale of Haynes cars
lit t.' tlie
Decide by Test buy the Best
MALT EXTRACT HOPS ISINGLASS
For liberal measure Buckeye. For goodness' sake Buckeye.
It's what you get for what you pay that counts. And when you buy Buckeye, you get the most for the least every time. THE BURGER BROS. COMPANY (Now 47 Years Young) 335 MAIN STREET CINCINNATI, OHIO
r
WW
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03
Never Had A Bank Account? We wish all persons who have never had savings accounts to read this, for it is an invitation to those people - -L : . - ; Ve wish them to understand that there is no red tape connected with opening an account at this bank. -f , $ ;.: : t t Just come to the bank and tell the first person you see that you wish a savings book. We have a souvenier for every new account opened. One dollar or more will open an account and we are glad to have among our depositors' what ever the size of your balance. We have set aside a book for you. Call for it today. CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK Capital and Supplu3 $150,000 United States Depositary Hammond, Indiana
k J. C. Paxton, President C. E. Bauer, Vice Pres. P. H. Fedder. Cashier
3S
lost and won across th tablei or at rouletts h been uncovered by States Attorney Robert E. Crows, It wat learned today. According: to talementi made to representatives of the ttates attorneys office, one Chicago -broker lot $700,000 in trro hours of play and later -n on back 500,0f0. A Chicago oil operator 's a!d to have lost $14,000; a Kankakee banker, ?2,300 and another man 91.400. Chorus girls. It Is alleged, -were used as "lures'1 to entice victims to the gambling- house. Th'-y were paid 10 per cent commission, according to reports. Indictment of the ajees of the
Cat and aeveraJ of his agents U to be aoug-ht, according to State's Attorney Crowe.
Decline of th Parlor. One ot the large manafartarlrisf companies of the United States 1 engaged In the construction of a great number of houses for Its employee and -while there are many novel features in the way of making convenIfiices, the most Striking thing about tn' homes Is the total absence of the U!ual parlor. The space is thrown Into the other moms, it looks as If the parlor was out of fashion.
1 eiphon Rates
Extension Telephone and Private Branch Exchange Stations are Reduced Effective May 1 st, 1 92 1, by order of the Public Service Commission of Indiana, rates for the following classes of service will be as follows :
HAMMOND
Business Extension Telephones Residence Extension Telephones Private Branch Exchange Stations
Old Rates . $2.00
1.25 2.00
New Rates $1.50 1.00 1.50
Individual one-way line telephone service is abolished.
llinois Bell Telephone Co.
A-Y
IT3
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It is not the dollar you earn, but tKe dollar you save, that is the measure of your progress. We urge every man, woman and child to save regularly in order that they may not be caught in an emergency without funds. Make it your business to put aside a certain amount on each pay day and you will be surprised at the accumulation.
SAVI
CTKT TRUST Rr
NGS BANK
Formerly Known As Lake County Savings & Trust Company Cor. State and Hohman Sts., Hammond, Indiana
PETER W. MEYN, President DAVID T. EMERY, Secretary-Treasurer
JOS. W. WDS. Vice President CHAS. H. W0LTERS, Asst. Sec.-Treas.
Base
May
BATTERIES: Scatenas, Creasbaum, Hess and Bakalar
SCATENAS VS. INDIANA HARBOR Morris Park Game Called 3 o'Clock Indiana Harbor. Galick and Krupa
