Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 89, Hammond, Lake County, 3 October 1922 — Page 10

J-'nfffi Ton.

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ROBERJSDALE

1 DALE J

FAMOUS FANS

By Hopp

PRINCESS THEATRE TONIGHT 'HIMAX HEARTS," Tilth Ilonfte Ptere and an all star raat. Ounlnjs Wcdnrndly, "BLOOD AND MM)," Rodolpb Valentino. 10-2-3 HOnLBACH-SEEHAl SEN. A very pretty wedding took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Horlbach of Indianapolis boulevard on Saturday evening a 8 o'clock when their daughter, Marie Horlbach was united in marriage to Mr. Paul Seehausen of West Hammond by the Rev. Bopi of the Lutheran church. The bride wore a beautiful gown of blue ;

orepe de chine with trimni ng rf silver lace and carried a t"hower bouquet of bridal roses. Miss Martha Steine of Hegewisch, and the bride's brother Keneth Horlbach attend.t the couple After

was performed an course diner wa'

guests. A number from out-of-town. Seehausen left on

their honeymoon for different points in Minnesota and after their return will reside with the bride's parents on Indianapolis boulevard for the present time.

f?USa? ' SOLOaOOO

-is

DOLL

WEft. TODfW

ALL-J-VLB ceo.

Those. hovvy

birds

"THE. SM-tSTtYErV VMC

SPILES UsIIHTE HOTEL

JUST P CjQGPLftTlH

how skles ken -

TVAE-V Y&VL THE. "FWt

fvo-tem ctvrrsToac:

ERi ftvAD TVE OTHQ

CLOTHES

the ceremony

tlaborate six served to fifty of them were Mr. and Mrs.

Si

fa

the the! ev- J the

CM B MEETING The first general meeting of Fortnightly Club, was held in social rooms of the library, last ening with Mrs. U. G. Swartz,

new president, presiding. After the

business meeting a very fine

srram was enjoyed by the large audirnce of members and guests. The guests of honor were Mrs. Luchens a state officer of Indiana Harbor and Mr. Canine, president of the Woman's Club of East Chicago. The rooms were 'beautifully decorated with autumn leaves and festoons of crepe pa.per In colors of burnt orange and black. During the social

inur which followed a 'two

A special meeting Is called by the

pro-' ...s.

ternoon at one o ciock at ia oi P. Hall. The department President. Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, of Indianapolis, will be present. All members are urged to be- present. Cliff Green of Central avenue 1 driving a fine new Sport model Oakland touring car. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Dobbin and family of East Side were guest at

course

tYim Thissnn home for dinner on

mnuneon was served, cafeteria style ! Sunday by the committee, that was in I

charge .

Mrs. Charles Stross of Rockport. Texas, returned home on Sunday

Mrs. Charles Johnson of LaKe

avenue, visited Mrs. Dudicker, who is confined at the Mercy hospital in Chicago, and found her getting

nfte.r a month's vls:.t with her daughalorK nicely

ter. Mrs. Carl Buehler and family, of

borsyth. Harry Stross and wife of ntral avenue, Charles Stross and family of Myrtle avenue, Arthur Strofs and wife of Lake avenue and J ::lius Stross and family of East Me'e. Don't forget the Old Settlers club this evening at the Community ("enter. The regular monthly meeting of the Lutheran Ladies' Aid will be he'd In the church "basement Thurs'ry afternoon at two o'clock. Aft--r the meeting Mrs. H. F. Eggers remittee will entertain at Bunco. '-'Srnents will be served.

"arc l'cwJshmhh - ft

rou

.ixculd Use:

.s different from

thers because

fc more care is taken in

L .he making and the materials

used are of Higher grace. Black Silk

Stove Polish

ilaies a brTCIant, stllty polish that does no t rub off or dust oil. and the sbinelasts

c:tr times as lone as ordinary atove '.cilsb. Used on sample atovea aod sold

.; naraware ana srocrry cealers. wuktftnal. U e It on your cook toe.

-vr rarior so or your ra rnira. If too I

-it nd it th Sot tv noUah yxxa ever

w. joor o"..r is ct r tern -o to rerpna jiau i

Ud la liquid or paste m quality. DIack Silk Stove Polish Work Sterling. Clinois 1e Claefc Ttnt Alr-Orytn tnm tmrnmrnt on -t. r-tr.irr. roe-pToe rYovanu rcstir.cr, UMk ft'lh Mtal F-'lt forsiivsr. skkel

Ac Dk ao eiuu zor nBf i iii aaUKSooki:.

Mrs. August Schmittle of Superior avenue, attended the funeral of her nephew Edward Gale In Chicago yesterday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A. Schafer and family of Cleveland avenue, spent Sunday with Mrs. Schafer's parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. Bahn of East Side. Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Eggers of Lake avenue, received word from their son Harry that he enjoys his work at the Illinois university where he entered as a student this year. On Wednesday evening the Marquette club will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. Buell of Indianapolis boulevard. Mrs. Jane Franklin of 120th street, and Mrs. H. T. Eggers of Lake avenue, were the Invited guests at a luncheon at the home of the latter's sister-in-law, Mrs. W. Seliger of East Side yesterday afternoon.

IND1AXATOLIS, 6ept. Three thousand ooventy-four fires In the atate of Indiana, from January 1, 1922. to June SO. 1823, caused a total loss of $:,9J5,6, according to reft report W Newman T. dllller, state fire .marshal. Lightning leases In the six months period amounted to a total of 77.005. Of the S3 buildings damaged by lightning, 22 were roded and 10 were not. The Are loss by months, as recorded by the flre marshal was as follows. January, $844,311 February-. $819.-

731; March. $303,109: April, $434.90:! May 12SS SSS: .Itin s?o.7 K7 I

Barns and manufactories head the list of fires, with barns having a lead over the later.

The average duration of life In England is now fifty-seven years.

FILM SMILES -2nd so forth By Hi Speed

PRINCETON", Sept. Princeton housewives are learning It la dangerous to leave vinegar Jugs unprotected since the advent of prohibi

tion. Almost every wek police are l

notified of the theft of jugs (from back porches, the thieve-s evidently searching for something with a kick.

I I I J

X. -B' ivitfi'iirw

(FILMS

rSMMDMTTrtf

TttaH rr looks

Soundings tken in all parts of the navigable globe have established the fact that the average depth of the sea is about two and a half

miles.

FILM producers have shown lack of respect for age in going to play and novels for inspiration and now they have turned to old songs for photoplay topics. No need now for mother to wail :

"Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" Shell find him at the movies. Other film-song-titles may be "Father, Dear Father, Come Home With Me Now," while yeggmen are making raids "On the Banks of the Wabash."

I

mm

INDIANA ITEMS SOUTH BEND. Sept.-One of the leading topics for discussion at the state conference of charities and correction, to be held fcere October 7 to 10 will be child welfare. Several speakers who are members of child welfare o-ganlzations have been assigned places on the program of the conference. Members of various child welfare groups will meet Monday atfternoon when problems of particular interest to each group will be discussed.

These organizations are: Indiana i

Association of Probation Officers and Policewomen; Indiana Child Welfare Association; Indiana Children's Homes Association; State Association of Attendance Officers and the memebrs cf children's guardians. All the meetings will foe open to the pirblic.

Later Departure

Faster Time

Lv. Chicago Central Station . 11:30 p.m. Lv. 43rd St. Station , 11:38 p.tru Lv. 53rd St.-Hyde Park . . . 11:42 p.nu Lv. 63rd St. Woodlawn . . 11:46 p.m. At. St. Louis Union Station . 7:23 a.m. Sleeping cars to St. Louis, Springfield, Decatur; Buffet Club car and Chair car. Tewer stopsM tunnel On-time arrivals This famous train enters and departs from St. Louis over Merchants' Bridge, avoiding the tunnel. All-steel equipment, smooth track, automatic safety signals, on-time arrivals, dependable motive power, 8-track Chicago Terminal. Distinctive in equipment in cuisine in courteous employes. Next time take the Diamond Special, leaving Central Station in the boulevard-hotel-theatre liisrxict, and enjoy true comfort.

Salesman Ready To "Cash In"

My weight dropped from 160 to 130 and my face had so little color of life in it that my friends often taid I was as white aa a bheet. My blood was thin and watery and I was so wetk at times I could hardly hold mv body straight. My nerves were bo bad that I was cross and irritable to customers at the store where I am employed as a salesman. I had so little vim ' that my daily sales dropped "way below normal, and I was afraid I would lose my job. Well. I got hold of ZiTTTZX.XS VTT AM-IRO S and took five bottles and now I as as spry as a fox and full of tremendous pep. Have got back my usual weight, my nerves are O. K. again and I can work Befficiently that my sales at the store are increasing every day and my job is now secure. Thanks to VITAM-1RON, I feel hundred per cent fit again. It's a grand medicine." 90 Vitam-Zron Tablets Cost $1. Money Baefe Guarantee In rf constipation use Xiuell's Uttle Ziaxlos In connection with the Vitaa-Xron treatment. Twen ty Xueirs Little X.axles, cost r;oz,z ST ait, x.xjiirN-o dhttc. -TTr rrr K4I3KOTO, WHTPrvn. rNDIAJT. SAKBOS, EAST CHICAGO, ETC. Xn.stribn.ted by Xnell's VitamCxon Co.. (not Inc.), 2S40 Berr.rAve., Cnlcero. Bend for T'R'ET TrjAM-rsow gmi3 aktd LITEE&TTniX,

Tier Only Way" led Norma Talxnadge into moving pictures.

Elaine Hammerstein pays $100 to have her hair "permanently waved" while her colored maid gives twice that sum to have her own curly locks made straight.

How Time Flie Films, only a short time ago in their infancy, have arrived, according to a new title, at "The Foolish Age."

"What Do Men Want "At the Stage Door" especially when the electric signs apply to a movie theatre?

Film titles are frequently appropriate. Mrs. W. S. Hart (Winifred westover) is the object of Conway Tearle's affection in a Selznick picN ture titled "Love's Masquerade." Niles Welch does not believe in

signs of the -movie variety. On the I day his work with Elaine Hammer- I stein was issued under the title of ; "Why Announce Your Marriage?" j Welch presented his wife with a j frame house commemorating their i wooden wedding anniversary. j i You Are Hereby Informed i That Eugene O'Brien began life as a baby. i That Buster Keaton has finished shooting "Cops." That Conway Tearle is off the atage and into pictures. That 'The Soul Saver" is not the pictured life of a cobbler. That Owen Moore's new comedy declares "Love Is An Awful Thing." That Evelyn Laye will be made a screen queen with an English reputation, i

MENT3S

O VJ LTQ N

Q3

I went out to the fragTant fields,

Mid nowers and thj bees. I breathed the scent of new-irown hay And then began to meeze.

NO TVS THE TIME.

SOLITUDE.

I reached the silent wcoJland csll. Aweary from my tram;; But found there not a pl.-.c to rest. The ground vas soft anJ damj..

Then to the beach I hied myaelf. The ocean breeze was grand. I dozed and, when I woke, torn kids Had buried me in sand.

"vie

Write, fhene or 'all upon C. E. DRESSLER, Passenger and Ticket Agent South Chicago City Ticket Othce, 7.946 E. 92nd Street Fhor :south. Chic?o 6720 Addrtu all matt inquhriet to J. V. LAKIGAK, Cn. Pass. .Igt.. Room 302 Central Station, Chicago, Illinois

I At home at last! I locked the door

And wrecked the telephone.

The only place where man can be

Contented and alone. Le.ter Lamb.

A frood many Rhode Island schools cannot open on account of the roal shortage. Among those wh j are not worrying about the coal strike. : are the kids who go to those schools. Gunmen took $750 from a couple of bootleggers the other night. Sort of violating the ethics of the profesh, as it were. ! JUDGE MARCEL SAYS: There is going- to be a bitter battle over Lord NorthclifTe's two t wills. It is claimed that he was not of sound mind when he made Lady ; Ntrthcliffe his solo executrix. 1 It is our opinion that a man who makes h;s wife sole executrix of i his will sh ows that he is of sound mind. Executors are often expensive luxuries. A wife can always get advice from reputable lawyers and banks. Ask yourself this question. Why does a man want to be the extor of a large estate? A physical director says people are becoming round-shouldered. Probably from carrying their salaries around. The money the other fellow has is capital. Getting it away from him is labor. We have to thank Funk & Wagnalls for rememberirg us with a opy of the new "Etiquette," a very ambitious work on all the phases of -oJite social entanglements by Emily Post, with an introduction on norals and manners by Richard Duffy. Although while teaching- us etil.ette is i;ke carrying coals to Newcastle, we appreciate the remembrance. Although we have been the Lord Chesterfield of Park Row for nany years, we are glad to learn what others think of it. The introiuction on morals and manners by Richard Duffy is of no use to us i vhatever, as our morals are exemplary and our manners quite beyond ; riticism. One gets that way after twenty years in the newspaper busipsf. One is never rich enough to be immoral snd is seldom th.own in "Ith a class of socv-ty where hie manners sh, up minus. However, ' s somebody has said, it is a great game and we wouldn't be doing any-.i-g eise if we cculd, and we can't. We know this, for we have tried. J It is about time 'or the Tired Business Man to begin rehearsing the lismal story he wiil tell his wife on her return from the summer resort. j From a purely impartial standpoint, it looks as if the age-old plea Has at last been granted and that Erin has gone bragh.

Announcement!

THE STRAUBE PIANO AND MUSIC STORE PLANS TO SHOW ITS GRATITUDE

Since 1 904 the Straube Piano and Music store Has sold pianos in Hammond and Lake County. Throughout these eighteen years the people of this community have supported the business given it their patronage. This loyal and regular patronage has had much to do with' making possible the established policy of the store: One price to all, and to all a fair price. The support of the community has made it possible for tKe store to handle high class goods; and the integrity and honesty of tKe store's customers have made it safe to sell on reasonable terms with minimum down payments. r Th e proprietors of tKe StrauKe Piano an'd Music store realize the debt of gratitude they owe to the community and for a long time tKey Kave wanted to give the people of Hammond and Lake county some material manifestation of this gratitude. Just how to Jo this has been a problem; but the arrival of the eighteenth anniversary has served as an inspiration. In short, it has Keen decided to hold a big anniversary celebration to Kave 'an "Open House" month for the people of the community. But before telling more of the coming celebration, the proprietors of the store desire to state, that one of the primary objects of the undertaking is to bring good music into more homes of the community. They wish it were possible to place a piano in every home in Lake county that the children of every family in the community might have access to a piano as one of the privileges of childhood. Any attempt to realize this ambition, of course, could not but result in failure, but the Straube store is willing to make a supreme effort to assist those who feel the need of a piano in the home. And in doing this, the proprietors hope to show their gratitude to the community. In an effort to accomplish this purpose, pianos are 'to be offered at prices which will come as a revelation; and the terms will be so reasonable that none need pass the opportunity by. Every instrument offered will be backed by the usual Straube guarantee and the people of the community know what that means. The personnel of the store is now busy figuring the price of the instruments to be offered down to the lowest possible mark. This work will be completed within a few days, when definite announcement will be made to the public through this newspaper. In making this preliminary announcement the management of the store would impress upon its friends and patrons, that it is not havmg a sale in the general sense of the term. Business is good at Straube's it is not necessary to sacrifice stock in order to dispose of it. Neither is a sale necessary to raise money under pressure: The store is simply about to undertake the celebration of an anniversary by showing gratitude to the community for past favors. The celebration will begin Friday morning. October 6, and will continue throughout the month. The store will be kept open evenings during that period in order that all may have an opportunity to benefit from the event. Definite announcement of the instruments to be offered will be made Thursday preceding the opening date. Prices will then be quoted in order that all may understand that the Straube store intends to have a regular celebration for the benefit of its friends.

s

traube Piano and Music Co

631 Hohman Street Hammond

A

81 N

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