Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 237, Hammond, Lake County, 31 March 1922 — Page 10
CHOOSE MB SHOES
1 6 V6I B
efore
Have such beautiful creations been brot forth in one season at popular prices. v $QQ
others at $6, $8, $9, $10
MB Boot Shop On Hohman St.
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F1CT1 a"M.aT JlJtMff JIJUJtS3ralPIISBglEMg37101 IgMZMMcfl
Economy Grocery & Market Co.
Manufacturers of Fancy Home-Made Sausages 81 State Street, Hammond, Ind. Telephone Hammond 49
FRESH SIDE PORK, per pound ...... Veal Breast. per lb.
Veal Chops, " per lb.
Veal Shoulder, per lb Pork Hearts, per lb
5c 15c 12c 5c
.................... 1Sc izr.....: 24c Pot Roast, any cut, 1 C per lb . 1JC Home-made Pork or 1 C . Liver Sausage, lb. . . Home-made Bologna, J,Sc per lb
NORTHERN TISSUE, the 25c Toilet Paper, now A( 3 for UC
Dromedary Tapioca, J O C per pkg
Minced Meat, special, JEJq pkg Swans Down Cake Flour, large pkr . . . Fresh Cottage Cheese, 7JL
M iu 2 v. B per lb
FREE DELIVERY TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY
EGGS. Strictly Fresh, 25 C per doz.
Sun Beam Coffee, spe- OQp cial. I lb. can, only , . O. Mayer's Mustard, 1 Alarge jar, only Old Country Soap, 6 25 C
iUl . . . .
Hammond, Whiting and East Chicago Railway Company FREQUENT STREET CAR SERVICE TO AND FROM CHICAGO fUMMOND, WHITING & EAST CHICAGO RAILWAY CO.
EmuM"9mi.mA.Jm "wmihhwhu -tammy jiMiiMwwjui iiiiai "aUdllM ' "i -- -
Pot Roast, best
cuts, lb. ... . .
Sirloin Steak, per 22i lb. ..... v:; ... .
c
HAMMOND
icet & uairv rrooiic
184 State St Phone Hammond 4068
Fresh Country But- A C ter, lb TbOC Fresh Country O1? Eggsxjozi (Select in cartons, 30c) Fresh Cottage 1 C Cheese, pt . . . . . Home-made Pota- OA to Salad, pt ViC Potato Chips, per CI package ........ Dill Pickles, per OA a dozen C Home-made Pies, 9 C . each ...... ... OOC Our Home-made . Cream Fried Cakes, per Oflo
Leg of Veal, lb.
20 c
A-
Breast of Veal per , y lb. ..... '. V. . Veal Chops, per g lb. ............
3c
Neck Bones, per lb. ...........
Home-made Pork 2,5 c Sausage, lb. ...... Home-made Liver J C Sausage, lb. .....
dozen
ORMER SENATOR IS CENTRAL FICVRE IN BULGARIAN DIVORCE
fits, Vi
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V
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4. '
Ms,
FRESH CHURNED BUTTER-MILK, ALL YOU 'Cr Quart
CAN DRINK FOR.. vv
10c
Mrs. Grace Fisher Hollis disputes raliriity of new marriajre of her husband, Henry French EloUis, former United States senator. "An exile for love." That is hots friends characterize former Senator Henry French Hullis. of New Hampshire, wh .se mamajrt to Miss Ann White Hobbs has Just been announced in Rome. Rumor has it that he was cranted a divorce from his first wife id Sofia, Bulgaria, after American and French courts had refused him a decree. His first wife. Mrs. Grace hishsr Mollis is living at Princeton, N. J. Hex
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attorneys declare that Hollis States una that -vill be liable to divorce is not valid in the United prosecution if be returns.
no danger of shortage. in gasoline;
Ample Supply in Sight for All Cars This Year, Government Says. INTERNATIONAL NFWS SERVICE1 - WASHINGTON. March There Is no danerr of a, gasoline shortage. Fears expressed in somo quarters that the United States mip-ht bh threatened with a gasoline famine
today were declared by officials ot-
the Federal Bureau of Mines to b;groundless. - "There is an ample supply of 'gas' to meet all the requirements of the 10,50,660 : automobiles and trucks that are paid to be in usein thj3 country, together with the predicted 20 per cent in crease in their number this year," declared one of the government's oil experts. With the use of automobiles and trucks growing- by leaps and bounds the Bureau of Mines ia giving- closi study to the gasoline situation. Surveys of .production of crude petroleum, operations of the refiner-es anfl stocks in storage are, beinT made at regular intervals y the bureau, and by this means the government's experts are enabled to keep in elope touch with production and consumption of the commod'ty fhat keeps the automobiles running. 3KJ REFINKRIES OPERATE. Officials pointed out that at the nd of last year there were 586,087,32 g-airons of gasoline held in torag-e, while there were- 303 rc;ln tries., in operation having- .t tola! 1aily capacity -of l,7S6.7i3 barrels
-vt crude oil.
"A "lare number of these rejnries are only running: about ir c cent of capacity, end theio arc n ..addition,, about 150 reftneriei thai iav shut down." said one of tlv ?overnmeat.Oi.i experts. "There ar. t-'ii pie stocks of cr.ide oil in siphf o timid automobile -. owners nee' ave no fear that a gasoline i'ainirx s inimlnent." Last year 5.1S3.549.31S qrillon o "isollne were produced in tb 'nited States, being- an a-verar 4,119.313 gallons daHy. This vr in increase over of 271,002. '' -..lions. Domestic consumption r risoline in 1321 exceeded that SI 9 '.by 1.0S1. 000.000 gallon:?.
April 23-29 Designated Library Week in State
Governor McCray has Issued ; proclamation designatinK April 2 to 23 as library week in Indian; -nd urging- its observance, in ;i ,)arts of the state. "I especia i recommend that the trustees i public libraries, librarians, teache; ind clergymen do their utmost t -each all in each community with .lie message and influence of grood books," the Governor said. The proclamation, in part, follows: "To spread the influence of pood books is not simply a missionary -ork for. human betterment, but a oatriotic work In disseminating- the principles in" which democracy finds 'upport and strength. "Today as never before the wellbeing: of our state'and tbe progress f our communities' 'depends upon :hc vlg-or and effectiveness of our educational Institutions, our publij 'brar:es as well as our schools. The public library in Indiana and 'Isewhere has proved itself one of he most valuable social, spiritual nd practical forces in the life of the community, by fos-tering reflection, ideals and progress, and by itimulating the reading and assimlation of the best in books, the treasure rhesls of 'human aspira?ion and knowledge." The Governor said he -was desfg--natins! a library week in order that the citizens of Indiana might come to recognize more fully the value of hooks, reading and libraries, and "hat they misht become more familiar with the advantages and needs of the public libraries in their own communities."
North Dakota Has Unique Tax Distinction of U. S.
No Citizen There Found with Income Above $70,000. Puzzling Experts. BY GEORGE It. HOLMES, STAFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE1 WASHINGTON. March The sov
ereign state of North Dakota, birth-,
place of the Xon-Partisan Lragne and the great testing: pit for political experiments along economic Hues, lias- a unique distinction anions the forty-eight states of the Union. It is the only one of the fortyeinht which in 1913 and 1919. the last two xears for which records are .viaUab'e, did not have a citizen who paid surtaxes on an income in ercesa of JIO.OOO. Nobody in the stata had an income this lars;e, even with wheat selling- at war-tirne prices. It appears that Xort.h rakota is populated by real "dirt farmers." Government economists have been puzzling- their heads over it,' but as yet they have reached no conclusions as to the why and wherefore of this state of affairs unless it be that the state controlled banks and the state-controlled elevators and state-controlled other things have kept down large profits and enforced a more standardized distribution all the way round. I,RGE INCOMES FEW IV 1VEST Absence of great Incomes is'conspicious in all western states that are devoted almost entirely to agrivulture, as is North Dakota, .but all atound. in sister States, where experience with state control is lackinff or not so far advanced, there have been at least a few taxable incomes of more 'than $70,000. In Suuth Dakota, for instance, there were two men who in botn years paid taxes on incomes in excess of $70,000. In Idaho there were
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two in 191S and three in 1913. Nevada almost equalled the record of North Dakota, as there was only one man so caug-ht in 1919 and none at all in 191 S.' New Mexico had four in 191S and only one in 1919. It is in the gveat manufacturing and industrial States am the East that are found the large taxable incomes. To what extent this is true !s readily seen by the official fact that 6T.9 of all income surtaxes are paid by persons living east cf the Allejrhany Mountains. The boundless West may be enormously rich In resources, bat not in enormous incomes of the seventy thousand and above variety. STATES OF" $70,000 TVCOMES Fifteen States in 1919 reported they , had more than one hundred citizens within their .borders who paid surtaxes on incomes above $70,000. They are the richest States in the Union from a urtax stanlpoint. ' .
KLAN STAGES
A MONSTER
Nllllf
f INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE LOS ANGELES. Cab. March 30. Between 700 and 800 "Aliens" of Los Angeles are members today of 'The Invisible Empire" the Ku Klux Klan, following- what is said to have been the greatest and most spectacular initiation of the organization held in the west, last night in canyon near Santa Monica. Spot where the weird ceremony (fas held is one of the most secluded in the vicinity , of Los Anseles. Approximately S00 Klansinen were present in full robe attire, with almost 200 others in civilian clothes. Sentinels stood guard at the canvon entrance and on the surroundinghills. ' ' For the final dedication ceremony, the candidates' were massed on a 'lope which was surmounted by a large white cross. . Many of the candidate admitted last night were said to have been in their twenties.
T
ACROSS SEA
AIR UGH
S BEGUN
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE) LISBON, March 30. A 4.000 Trauis.-AUantlc air flight was begun here today bywo Portug-ese aviators when they departed in a powerful hydroplane for Brazil. "With cheers and shouted wishes of s-uccess ringing- in their ears, the airmen. Captain Scadura and Captain Coutinho hopped off shortly aXter ten o'clock they planned to make their first stop at the Canary Islands. The flight is being- conducted under the auspices of the Portugese government. Three Portugese war-
Be Rid of That Nagging Backache
ships are stationed along the route to pick up the aviators if they fail into the water.
The new chancellor of Syracuse University. Rev. Charles W. Flint, is the son. the grandson and the great-grandson of Methodist local preachers.
The pipe which Sir Walter Raleigh smoked on the scaffold Jn ISIS is now in the private museum belonging to a London firm of tobacconists.
it
CURED BY A NATIVE HERB On boar a vessel bound for India recently a man was bitten by a poisonous reptile; blth the ahlp doctOT and a famous surgeon failed to control the poison fast spreading through his system. In a day the vessel reached port. An Indian medicine man was sent for, who produced a native herb which quickly allayed the poison and the man's life was saved. Roots and herbs are nature's assistants in combating disease. That well-known medicine for ailmeuta peculiar to women, Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, is prepared from roots and herbs, possessing medicinal properties of great value in the treatment of such ailment. This Is proved by the letters of recommendation we are continuallv
publishing i. this pap.-r for it. Adv. j
W FOR TENDER
SORE. TIRED FEET
The minute you put your feet in a "TIZ" bath you feel pain beinff drawn out and comfort just so.kin. How good your
tired, swollen, burning feet feel. "TIZ" instantly draws out the poisonous ea' udations that puff ujt. your feet and cauM.sore infttmed, awe: ty feet. "TIZ," and enlj "TIZ" takes the pain and soreness out of corns, callouses . and bunions. Get a box of "TIZ" at any drug
or department store for a few cents. Tour feet are "C'nsrto bother yow i? -more. A whole year's foot comfort guaranteed. Adv.
IS
Wife?-
An Honest Doctor
I have always prescribed for my patients what I felt my duty. Seeing so many cures from the use of Dr. Burkhart's Vegetable Compound, I could not rerain from recommending it for Liver, Stomach Trouble and Constipation. Dr. Burkhart's honest method of letting the patient try the medicine before paying for same shows what faith he has in its curative qualities. Dr. A. Van Meter, Oeorgetown, Ky. Write today Xor a trial treatment. Pay when cured. Address 621 Main St., Cincinnati, O. 30 days' treatment. 25c; 70 days, 50c. All druggists. Adv.
Are you dragging- around day after day with a dull, never-ceasing backache? , Do you suffer, headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stabbing pains, feel tired, irritable without life or anrvbition?. Ll.kely then your trouble is due to kidney weakness not' hard to' correct if treated promptly, but dangerous if neglected. For quick relief use Doan'a Kidney PUla., Don' have helped thousands. They should help you. Ask your neighbor! A Hammond Case A. F. Robinson, 443 E. State St, says: "Gravel and (bladder trouble carne on me, causing terrible pains. The kidney secretions were scanty and burned in passage. Headaches were frequent and -I bad diazy spells. Doan's Kidney Pills were brought to my attention and I began using them. I passed a good sized gravel stone. I am now enjoying excellent health." Adv.
60 at ail Drurf Stores r&tn Milbjjrn Co. iVttUmX'tdUio.KSC
Loop Service Concerning Jitney Routes and Regulations Effective Saturday, April 1 All jitneys will operate in one of two classes. One half the total number of jitneys will bear Number 7 on the radiator. The other half will bear Number 8. . ROUTE OF NO. 7 JITNEYS These will travel south on Hohman St. They will go via Kenwood avenue to East Hammond and will return north on Columbia to Drackert; west to Calumet; north to Sibley; west to Oakley; north to State; west to State and Hohman Sts., where the route will be continued without interruption to Hoffman street over Hohman; Hoffman to Sheffield; north to. Huehn; east to Calumet; south to Hoffman; east to Oak st, and thence returning over same route to State and Hohman sts., which point will be the terminus of the whole route. ROUTE OF NO. 8 JITNEYS State and Hohman sts., east on State to Oakley; west to Sibley; east to Calumet; and proceeding on to Colmnbia, if passengers so desire; otherwise, south on Calumet to Drackert, east to" Columbia; south to Morton, and returning over Morton to Calumet; south to Kenwood; west to Hohman ; north to State and Hohman sts., thence east on State st. and traversing same routes, making loop service real, effective and permanent. This organized service will continue throughout the day. But after 8 P. M drivers may operate cars at will regardless of routes. Except, that the driver must take a passenger to any point on any of these routes at the regular fare if so requested by passenger. Yours for Better Transportation Hammond Motor Transportation AssnJ
its
You Can Visit
ns....,L." . . a -
the Country's Largest Furniture Exhibit
Through our cooperation vtlth tha Peek A Hills Furniture Company, Chicago, you can new choose from their wholesale exhibit the world' largest display of furniture and floor covering. Simply present a card of Introduction elgned by ua.
The selection of styles is unlimited. The choice ranges from the fine it class of furniture to the lower priced, inexpensive grade. There are immense displays of furniture and all character of floor coverings for you to inspect at no obligation to yourself. V7e can aave you money and we are sure you will be pleaaed. Now is the time to select your furniture. ro not bealtata. It la wortb your while to investigate this wonderful offer. Come and see us. Let us explain. G. O. HAGEN FURNITURE STOVES RUGS DISPLAY ROOMS 165 E. STATE ST., (Upstairs) Where Rent is Low and Prices Lower
UQZ3SB81K
orton Spring Water
Crystal, clear, fresh and sparkling, is eagerly sought. It is nature's builder-up of health. People drink it not only because of its purity but because of its medicinal properties. Drink six glasses per day. for a month and you will be a new person. A call by telephone, Hammond 3115 will bring a supply to your door. G. F. Brumm & Son Distributor Thornton Spring Products Thornton Mineral Water White Cross Beverages Cherry Blossoms 16 V. Mason St., Hammond Phone Hammond 3115
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O-n- A TTJT TT1 TTVi Opposite Mee Hotel H AY ,X M WC Phone 358 Hammond 11 11-1 1TE. iJUl .ILL O - 645 Hohman St. Forequarters : : 7c pS flTl Hindquarters : 14c V A&(yi jl Kidney Roast : 15c Breast . : : : : : 6c .p Ckck Roasts ..... 7c j) JL Round Bone Roasts . UV2C I Pure Ground Beef ... 8c JJJ vLJi Round Steak . . . . 20c Sirloin Steak . . . .20c Link Sausage . . . 10c Bualk. Sausage . . 8c - - Regular Bacoo 0 20c
