Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 235, Hammond, Lake County, 20 June 1922 — Page 5

Tuesday, June 20, 1922.

THE TIDIES Page Five

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PEOPLE SHOULD USE CITY PARKS

Tbft thin with the most uniera.l p(pAl to the vrae perqu U nature, and for that reason, varyone -who La able, spends some time during: the year In enjoying frejfe air and sunshine. The reason jro4tly is that out of door life In the natural life for mankind, and city life is unnatural. There are those, however, who are unable to obtain the beneficial effects of green grass and shimmering water in the usual manner. The cost of travel to a summer resort Is premrbitiire to the rank and file. Many loss ttie opportunity as a consequence. It is too bad that more people do not realize the beauty and utility form the standpoint of pleasure that the parks in Hammond offer, especially during the summer months. The olty maintains these garden wpots at & gTeat expense, and for the benefit of the citizenry. Beautiful Jatroons. gracefully curbed ihills, and wonderfully planned flower beds await examination and enjoyment of the heat oppressed victim of ttie city. Harrison park is a large expanse of tea-at!ful lawn, the monotony ibroken hers and there, with well arranged flower 'beds and ponds teeming with OsK Shade Is furnished by a galaxy of beautiful trees. Hammond people hare no excuse to swelter -under the hot sr-m. cooped Tjp In stuffy houses and of-fi-ce ttnildlnga Many enjoyable and comfortable fcours may be spent In tie parks of the city. They have been furnished for you. Use them.

half dozen times by soldiers of Gen. Chen who hnd surrounded the palace in the belief that Dr. Sun vras tUl within the walls. Returning tu the telegraph office, Mlaa Booker found that the teleirraph operator had been shot dead and that all measagc had been conflscated. Torn by the fear that her dispatches had not been sent, she hastened to the nearest telegraph office on Shanieen Island where the foreign settlement Is locutcd. And there re-flled her story, fortunately the operator had sent her story before he died.

GARY NEWS i

HOW I. N. S. WOMAN WRITER SCORE BEAT

v hen Edna ! Booker one of the I nc-mrlHMl Kew a Serrlce stair representatives jj Chin, scored a 4 hoar Veat far International clients Friday by rm Uag the military eoap thronarh which Gen Chen Chtiutc Mls cayrnred Cants and Prt Dr. laa Tet Sea In tUcht. she did so at a-aeat personal dancer. Wlem tli addrn attack came aha was n her wary to th palace of Dr. Staa te arrang for an Interview with t uthera Chi na president. Sha raahd to the telesrraph office filed her dispatches and then deaiptto th din of rlfia fire In the Chinese qosrter, made an effort te reach the yahaea to learn the fate of Dr. Inn. 8ha waa turned back a

CONTRACT IS DISPOSED OF Gary's garbage disposal which has confronted the new administration since the first of the year has finally been disposed of. At the regular meeting of the board of works yesterday the contract for the collSction and disposal was let to "V. A. Fuller and Company, of Gary, for a period oZ five years. The company will receive $11.S00 a year.

BAND TOSO. BEND The Gary Municipal band has Just been employed to accompany the Gary baseball club to South Bend'on July 2nd. This band will play for the Crown Point Fourth of July celebration. The band is playing weekly concerts in Crown Point and played a splendid concert at the East Side park in Gary last night. Several other cities have made overtures looking toward the engagement of the band. The membership of the Gary Municipal band i3 composed entirely of members of the Hammond Federation of Musicians, and Includes the best artists in Gary, Hammond. East Chicago, Whiting and Indiana Harbor.

"OPEN HOUSE" THIS EVENING

Thompson were the men whp were fined.

LADY DIES OF TUBERCULOSIS Tuberculosis caused the death of Dora Knapp, 1184 Wilson aivenue, Sunday afternoon at one o'clock. Six children and her husband survive the deceased. In the Slavish Holy Trinity church services will (be held and burial will take place at Oak Hill cemetery The deceased was 33 years of age.

Complete arrangements have been completed by secretary-manager K. A. Warner, of the Gary Chamber of Commerce for "Open House Night" at the new Chamber of Commerce quarters at 19 E. 6th avenue this evening to which the public is extended a cordial invitation. A reception will 'be held from 6:30 until 11 p. m. and Mr. Warner e-cpreeses the deside for eveTy member of the organization to inspect the new quarters.

FIGHT PROMOTERS LOSE MONEY!

Promoters wh ostaged the Tate-

Boston Bearcat fight card at the old Porter race track Saturday afternoon are said to have diopped a nice "roll" on the boxing exhibitions. The gate receipts very very small, ont large enough in fact to pay off the fighters besides other expenses incurred in staging the affair. The Boston Bearcat who was knocked out by Tate in the opening round, was in Gary yesterday trying to collect some of the money which he said he had coming.

I

ATTEND KIWANIS

CONVENTION

I Two Gary mn, James Cassidy and Charles H.'Maloney, selected by the 1 Gary Kiwanians as delegates are i attending the National contention, being held at Toronto, Canada, this ; week. They left on a special train over the Michigan Central from Chi- ! cago carrying some tnree hundred , other Kiwanians.

STEEL WORKERS QUIT THE MILLS Official of the Gary Mills are having a difficult time with their laborers and other steel workers, according to a well known mill man today. s the men are qultlng their Jobs by th hundreds, according to information received today. Small salaries drawn by the men is given as the reasonOne colored workman who was quitting- , his Job was asked why and he Is said to have given this reason. "Why I ork four hours for my breakfast, four hours for my dinner and four hours for my supper and at the end o fthe day I still owe for my bed."

MANY GARYITES TO TAKE IN FIGHT A large number of Gary fight fans have already secured their

' duckets for the Leonard-Kansas en- ! gagement which will be held nt Mich I igan City on the afternoon of 4th of July. It is expected that more i than a hundred Gary fight fans will i see the battle in Floyd Fitzsimmon's ; new $250, 000 arena.

FINED $50.00 AND 90 DAYS Alfred Evans was yesterday fined $50 and given a Jail sentence of 90 days when he was tried before Judge Dunn cn a charge of assault and battery on his wife. Mrs, Evans testified In court against the defendant. They live at 1413 Adams ?t

BOY DIES OF HEART TROUBLE Heart trouble causod the death of Mike Sucknl, 17 years old, 1609 Tyler St., Gary, Saturday. Yesterday the funeral services were held at the Holy Trinity church, and Oak Hill was the place of burial. Susie Suckel and Steae Suekel, mother and father of the boy, three brothers and one sister survive him.

ENGINE TO PULL STRINGOF CARS "Mystery" Engine Astounds Railroad Circles with Feats.

LIQUOR LAW VIOLATORS PAY FINES

ANOTHER KIND LETTER FROM A TIMES READER William H. Howe, Instructor In printing; at the Hammond High School, writes as follows i Editor Time. My Dear Slri Amid the many critk-lsms that most all jrood newspapers receive are some of the cutting and ungrateful sort, hut I wish to take time today to express my sdnocre pleasure lately In reading Ol'R Lake County Times. Your fight for n better Lake Co. Is sure winning friends for you among the substantial class of our citizens. May the good work go on. W. H. HOWE.

of two cylinders conrvert the trailer wheels into drive wheels. The booster together with added tractive powers from the main cylinders gives the locomotive a traction power of 74.000 or 15,000 more than the ordinary Mikado type, engine.

Ten liquor law violators arrested over tne week end on charges of drunkenness were each fined $11.00 in the city court yesterday. Joe Babich, Ed. Lancastorm. Louis Radie, Frank Fermanekl, Clarence Foster, Mike Marlch. A. Tiloi. Laddie Hames. Tom McGowan and J.

Hammond people will be gKen a .sight of the new Michigan Central "mystery" locomotive, "8000," in a few days. The engine will Ipass jthrough Ivere enroute from Detroit to Chicago, pulling a string of coal cars, loaded with coal, a mile in length. This feat has

never been accomplished In the'

history of railroading. The engine has been pulling strings of loaded cars in and around Detroit for a week and will now be sent out on all the main lines of the New Tork Central. The engine is said to be the easiest operated engine in the world and the ca of the" monster is claimed to be best fitted of any make. . Everything is placed for the comfort of the engine crew. With the assistance of a locomotive (booster, an auxiliary engine

TRUTH IS STRANGER THAN IS FICTION

INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE NEW YORK, June 20. Truth wrote another chapter that rivaled the extravagancies of fiction. With eviction because of inability to pay his rent staring him In t'he face; with starvation and the prospect of losing some of the canvasses which he had so laboriously painted, causing him loss of sleep, Alfred Fogel was notified that his painting "Music" had been awarded the Prix de Rome, one of the greatest prizes hoped for by artists. Besides the fame, the prize carries with it a $1,000 Income for three years, free residence 4n the academy, and opportunity to travel in Europe and study the works of old masters.

why It is the people have so suddenly decided, that the tax system is all wrong. In commenting on the tax subject one prominent democrat pointed out that the only thing that is' wrong is that taxes are too hUh and they are high because of the expenditures for local schools and roads. And the tax plank is the principal item in the democratic platform. In fact if some of the private correspondence between democratic lead era about the tax situation could ha made public it would be a mil

sensation. The . platform makers' were warned to "stick to the truth." Those who believe that the wet and dry question Is not an issue may have an awakening. The wets are now putting out a newspaper in Indianapolis devoted exclusively to attacks on the eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act. A majority of the eleven democratic nominees for state representative in Marion county are avowed wets elected on that platform in the primary. The candidate for congress on the democratic ticket in Marlon

county Is running on a wet plank. The same is true of the candidates for congress In several other districts. The Immediate object of the wets running for the state assembly is to amend the Indiana bone dry law so that it will not be more stringent than the Volstead act in other words that whiskey can be sold on prescription for medical purposes. The sale of whiskey is not permitted in Indiana under any circumstances.

The Association of the Army of the United States, which comprises the regualr army, the national guard when in service of the United States and the organized rserves, has been formed as a national organization which embraces the entire country and Its territorial possessions. The national headquarters are In San Francisco.

PARTY IS DIVIDED BY FACTIONS

(Continued from nage one.)

It is remembered the tax amend-! mente were decisively defeated. In view of this many are wondering ,

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For Men a.ndl Vourag IV! em

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Made to order Suits, left on our hands, Now selling at retail 40c on the Dollar, wholesale cost.

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Now being sold at retail 40c on the Dollar wholesale cost by the BANNER TAILORING COMPANY, Chicago's largest wholesale tailors in the large Building at 9116 COMMERCIAL AVE., SO. CHICAGO.

3,000 Pairs of Customs Tailored Pants left on oor hands. Made op for $8.00, $10.00 & $12.00, now selling at $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 as long as they last.

The Banner Tailoring Company never before sold at retail, never before have yon seen a wholesale stock of Custom Made Suits sold at retail at 40c on the dollar wholesale cost. Hundreds of men and yonng men have take.n advantage of this great suit sals and bought two and three suits each, taking advantage of an opportunity they know comes but once in a life time, This is positively the most sensational suit rale ever held in this locality, All goods plainly) marked in price and size DON'T DELAY COME NOW.. vYou nrjy neve have another chance to bay a custom, made suit at 40c on the Dollar.

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j9C Men's and Young Men's dj A Qg (JCoMen's and Young Men's d; 1J QC $03SUITS, NOW . . . .tp EOD SUITS, NOW ipIO.OO $yjnMen's and Young Men's II Cfi A Men's and Young Men's -fl A DC SUITS, NOW .... .leOO PUSUITS, NOW Lv00

$75-00 Men and Young leu's Suits,

Among these 5,000 Custom Marie Suits that were left oa our hands through cancellations from or 10,000 agents throughout the United States, you will find every conceivable pattern, color and style and every suit hand tailored in our own custom tailor shop, at prices that hardly covers .e cost of the tailoring. They corns in Grey, Blue, Black and Brown, made from the finest fabrics turned out by the world's best looms. EVERY SUIT MUST BE SOLD NO MATTER OUR LOSS.

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OPEN WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY SRYURBAV EVENBIUGS

Start right in after the honey

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in town Certified Bread

If you're married already begin" all ;Overfagain Get

the big double loaf

Your husband wilFenjoy the economy of it And you'll both enjoy the full richtaste and flavor that xomesfrom!

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more fine richshortening, sugar and milkfintCertified Bread more wholesome nourishment and real I satisfaction But Certified Bread doesnt)

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