Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 113, Hammond, Lake County, 1 November 1921 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

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SERBIANS DENY

SARIC STATEMENT

Indiana Harbor, Nov. 1, 1921. Th Serbian Political Club. 4021 Kim Street, wUhe to deny the statements In the Reppa Daily of October 31. 1921. In this statement It is disclosed that the majority of the club are opposed to Callahan for Mayor. This is false and is the product of the fertile imagination of one Li. W .Saric. Imagination is the chief stock In trade of L. "W". Saric as he well knows this club after fully considering- this matter on Sept. 25th endorsed Mr. Callahan for Mayor. Just five members of this Club oppose Mr. Callahan, they are: L. TV. Saric. Nick Fopovtch. Nick Mayor. Proko Dotlich. Janko Mirmlch. No one acquainted with the above men. who is interested in the success of the Independent Ticket ever solicited their support. Mr. Saric Is requested to attend the next meeting of this Club and apologize for this misrepresentation or he wU be. expelled. UTKO ZIVICTT. NICK M. KANICH. BAM VCJNOVICH. FETE MALKTICII. Advert tse-ment.

WHITING and its . PEOPLE

Mrs. Amelia Klose, Mrs. John Canner, Mrs. Alfred Johnson and Mae Dauer attended the meeting of the Dorcas Rebekah lodge at Hammond. Elsie Wallfer entertained a number of her friends at a Hallowe'en party ' at the home of her parents Mr. and - Mrs. Harry Walker on Cleveland ave. : Mrs. Norman Trout of Pennsylvania I avenue has returned from a visit with ; friends at Riverside, III. Megdames Klose, Carvner and Douer, visited with Mrs. F. Moore at Roby. r Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Byerly of Central avenue, are- now located In their new hom In the Forsyth Water Gardens. Tha M. E. Ladles Aid Society will hold an exchange on Thursday evening at the parlors of the M. E. church There will be a sale of useful and fancy articles suitable for Christmas gifts together with a baked goods sale. An Interesting program and refreshments will be In order. Tou are, all invited. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Mathews

-of Oliver street, motored to Indianap- ,. oMs over the week-end where they vi.s- ; ited their son Orren Mathews who is attending school there. The regular meeting of the Daughters of Isabella will be held tomorrow

NEW PENNSYLVANIA

SENATOR STARTED LIFE AS TEACHER

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William E. Crow. William E. Crow f Uniontown, Fa., the newly appointed U. S. senator to succeed the late Philander Chase Knox, was torn on a Pennsylvania farm. He :tarted life as a school teacher and has been a successful newspaper man, lawyer and legislator. He "ill serve byappointment until the election in .November, 1922.

ni?ht at which the final arrangements

will be made for thoir Christmas mar

ket. Mrs. Lillian Caswell entertained

party of ladies from Whiting at her

home in Myrtle avenue, the afternoon

being spent in sewins, following which

a luncheon was served.

A daughter was born to Mr. and

Mrs. RuIe N. Jameson of 339 Sheridan avenue- at the Michael Reese hospital

In Chicago.

Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Collins who have

been visiting the Iatter's sister, Mrs.

H. E. lieaubten have returned to their

home In Indianapolis. The regular meeting of the W. 73. A of the Maccabees will be held In Flsch

rupp's hall on 119th street, where ths

lodsff. moved on Monday. Bunco will

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HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better Looking Take Olive Tablets. If your skin Is yellaw complexion pallid tongue coated appetite poor--r-ou have a bad tasts In your month .a laxy, no-good feeling you should tika Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards OHre Tablets a substitute for calomel were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are a ' purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. Tou will know them by their ollva color. - To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards Oliva Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel yet have no dangerous ater effect. ; They start the bile and overcome constipation. "Take one or two nlght"ly and note the pleasing results. Millions of boxes are sold annually at 15c and 30c Adv.

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Notice this delicious flavor when you smoke Lucky Strike it's sealed in by the toasting process

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be played after the business tits si on. Victor Herbert of Clark slret has rented a five acre farm at Whoeler. Ind., to where he, his incthfr. his sister, .Mrs. swint and dauKhtor Dorothy

bwmt have airrady moved. Delta

Shinn, another niece will also live wit

them. Mr. Herbert will continue to work at the Standard Oil Co. in Whiting and go back and forth each day. Johnson A. Knight of Ohio avenue, left Sunday for Mu;ko?0' Okla.. to where, he was sent by the Sinclair oil Refining Co.. being given a promotion in his position. John Komet. arrested for bin

drunk plead guilty at the police sta-

tlOTl find nftM a fin rv-f 41 rtft .ot I

The Republican Woman's Club will have a meeting at the headquarters on 119th street tomorrow evening- at which there will be speaking and ringing. All women Of the city are accorded a royal welcome. Andy rieptn,ec was arrested at 871 Schrage avenue by officers Oirard, Avaroni and Wagner for violation of the liquor law. He was released on a $1,000 bond to appear for trial November 3rd. The Young Indies Guild of the Congregational Church will' meet twith Miss- Bessie Naef on Roberts avenue, tomorrow evening. The ladies of the Congregational

Church are invited to the church parlors tomorrow afternoon to organize

a missionary societv.

An unusually largo audience greeted

William Ralney Bennett last Fridsv

evening at the Community Center when

i epoke on his favorite sibject, "The

Man Who Can." All who heard him

were well pleased and went away feel

ing they had acquired information ea-

lu(- paucanon ot tne man i

of today. Parents especially w-re i

pleased with the thoughts sriven th

for their sons and dftiiehtera

will make them stronger men and women In facing the problems of life that lie Immediately before them. Said Mr. Bennett, "Every worth-while man and woman lives with the dally ambition of making good In some definite

field and I want you to tell your young ; people,. -:peclally your daughters to I prepare for a Job In this world, and all

the rest that is .Rood will follow. And remember that there is never anything In the way except themselves. He can who thinks lie can. This is the message that young America needs to.

day and wheen we believe It and act j upon it nothing ls impossible. Thlnk i net and live not the way you feel, but the way you ought to feel, and you will forgo ahead In any field. One must climb to 'ret to the top of the ladder. The bottom wrung may be

crowded but there Is plenty of room at the top. Edward Uok once thought

himself lost In the crowd, but once he I

began to move ahead he found the whole roadway clear. Think you will, say you will and you will." On Friday evening next. November 4th. another of our foremost Americans will speak at the Center. I,ew Cniett, au-

i tlior. b cturer and poet( Is a young man who has already attained high success. Mis coniiag affords an opportunity to hear one of the leading thinkers of his field. As has been said of John : B"i roughs, the greatest of all thinkers j who have ohosen to live apart from th

masses and know the world of nature. "Lew Snrett takes his audience Into the great "out-doors" close to the heart throbs of nature where they learn to

live life at Its fullest." Mr. Karett will be followed on November I8th by Oney Frtd Sweet an don December 10th by the famous Judge of the Juvenile court at Denver, 'lien Llndsey. The people of Whiting and the Calumet district are indeed fortunate to have with In their doors such men of prominence and are availing themselves in large numbers of this unusual opportunity.

Weighing Without Scat's. The resourcefulness of the Irish 1 shown In their method of weighing without scales. "To weigh a pig," said an Irishman the other day, "all ye have to do is to lay a plank across a snwhorse, place a big stone on on end of the plank and the pig on the othpr, then shift the plank until the two things balance. Then ye guess the weight of the stone and y6 have tbe weight of the pig." Boston Tran-

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bijou Harold Lloyd in "CAPTAIN KIDD'S KIDS"t Also "Carmen of the Border" SPECIAL T0M0R0W DANTE'S "INFERNO"

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ATTENTION! Property Owners! TO HOLLAND'S GREAT MUTUAL BENEFIT OFFER A Minimum First Payment to CoveT Delivery Expense $25.00 Not a cent more until next March, and then one full year to pay in easy monthly installments. Phone Hammond 3425 and Heating Engineers will call and explain this wonderful offer. Holland Furnace Co. World's Largest Installers of Warm Air Heating Plants HAMMOND EAST CHICAGO INDIANA HARBOR Service Office : Hohman and Plummer Ave., Hammond

Psrdldo River The Perdfdo river Is a small river and bay on the western border of Florida, separating It from Alabama. The word Is Spanish and means "lost."

ATTK VIIOX I,. O. O. M. Hammond Lodvce No. 57" will 'initiate class of candidates tonight. Kast Chicagro lodtre will exemplify the ritualistic work. Luncheon will be perv- : All members urtced to be present. 11-1-1 J. C. I'.KCKKK. Pe" .

ijou Theatre Hammond, Indiana WEDNESDAY, NOVLMBER 2 Big Special Matinee and Night

ante's Inferno"

THE GREAT ITALIAN POET'S CONCEPTION OF HELL The Only Picture cf Its Kind Ever Produced. Don't Miss It. Continuous Performance.

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TODAY "THE PALACE OF DARKENED WINDOWS" Pathe News and Comedy WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Gladys Walton in "THE ROWDY"

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D. W. Griffith, the master magician of the age, has arranged to present at the De Luxe Theatre for the first time in Lake County, and at reduced prices for the first time in America, what has been called by artists, poets, editors and the clergy, D. W. Griffith's Greatest iwasterpiece

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UR loaf is a distinct success. It is the different bread. It has a distinctive flavor that pleases the palate and it stays fresh a long while. It is your bread and you should remember to order it.

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System of Bakeries

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Br-r-r! Cold Weather

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The Best There Is "Vassar"

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Excellently Made Cut Full Heavy and Medium

Other Union Suits $2, $2,50, up to $10

J TWO STORES

564 Hohman, Near State, Hammond Michigan and Fir Sts., Indiana Harhor

j" ' il' iriHrfii- ' ''.''S&.ll.U.&lSV-U. :.- - "'.1-.:.L Jit--L.-..V:i?.f.t.t-. -. ..-I.'- ---' H 1 ONLY FOUR MORE DAYS S

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The People Have Said: Let's Go, to the

Starting Sat. Nov. 5

THE BEAUTY PICTURE DE LUXE

A real-life story pulsing with thrills and clad in a thousand beauties. Acted by the greatest cast of noted players ever brought together on the screen. A screen masterpiece filled with keen satire, sense drama and great appeal. It's gripping qualities make it the greatest picture ever shown.

PLAYED BY STARS ENOUGH FOR TEN PICTURES

INCLUDING

Wallace Reid Elliott Dexter Monte Blue Theodore Roberts Theodore Kosloff Raymond Hatton

Gloria Swanson Bebe Daniels Warida Hawley Agnes Ayres Polly Moran Julia Faye

SPECIALTIES, SOLOS and ORCHESTRA

Also "AL." MELDGARD at the Grande Organ, Playing Leo Fiesta "PEGGY Q'NEIL" Big Success Also ALBERT & MORTON A Song and Dance Flirtation Mo Advance in Prices for This Sueer-Production!

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JOE HANEY ON THE JOB Joseph E. Haney, who with his wife and two children resides at 1200 Monroe Street, is a graduate of Purdue University, a Regist"red Pharmacist, and compounds prescriptions in the Drug Store of Carl E. Nelson. Haney compounds about forty prescriptions every day or more than 12,000 a year, and in his four years at Nelson's estimates that he has relieved the sufferings of 50,000 persons. , Although the duties of pharmacist in a busy drug store are many and the hours are long, Haney finds time to campaign for his candidacy fcr Alderman from the Ninth Ward and state his position on the many issues that are of interest to us all. He is a stalwart for law and ord?r and believes that the strict enforcement of an unpopular law or ordinance is much the better way to secure its repeal or amendment than the tolerance of its flagrant violation. Believing that our public school system is the keystone to the arch of our government he is an ardent advocate of it, and now has two children attending the Wallace School. Aside from his regular vocation he is a student of taxation, having devoted much of his time to this class of study and work. He believes that improper appraisement, resulting in an unequal pro rata payment of taxes, and the failure many times of officials securing full value in return for public funds expended are important factors and constitute just reasons for dissatisfaction among taxpayers and that both evils should and can be corrected. Mr. Haney is a taxpayer, owning two residence properties in the Ninth Ward, and has deep seated convictions with reference to the proper discharge of the obligations one assumes upon being elevated to the omce of Alderman; his supporters all feel that a training such as his would be of value in the deliberations of our Common Council.

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