Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 97, Hammond, Lake County, 12 October 1922 — Page 10
Paec Ten.
Tj'IE TIMES Thursday. Oct. 12. 1022.
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MERCK TAG . DAY SUCCESS
There has been tag days galore in 3ary, but none like the Mercy hosMtal tag day drive of yesterday. Captain II. S. Xorton of the Gary -and company and president of the Sary Commercial cli'b who sponwred the drive and who Is deserving: f heaps of credit for Its success 'i9 still busy this morning figuring ip late returns and seemed confident :hat the drlvo would net the Mercy leveral thousand dollars for the ullding of a new addition for the listers and nurses to relieve the resent conjestion. fThere was a spirit in the air yesverday that has not been evidenced n a tag drive In Gary In many fears. Everybody seemed conreni il and happy and gladly opened up ihelr purse "strings to give a dime, t quarter, a half or a dollar or more ind there were many contributions f more than s, dollar. Taggers did not have to beg. Men vomen and children stopped them n the street and even asked to give Jonations. Business men in autonomies, stopped their cars on street rorr.ers and even in the middle of ;he block to give their contributions ind many gave more than once. The flock of taggers made up of iromen and girls cf the city were n tha street bright and early and lid not go home until late at night. They worked hard, but it seemed a pleasure for them to render assisance to the Mercy hospital authorties. The dance at the old home of the House of Muscat at 541 Broadway. aas also a success last night, the fr.rd being swelled several hundred Jollars more by generous givers. The I
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taggers danced for 10 cents a dance and It seemed as though everybody danced. Gary will not forget the Mercy hospital tag day.
HOLES
EXECUTIVE COM. Anderson Selected as the Site of 1923 Board Of Charities Meeting. SOUTH BEND. Ind , Oct. 12. Anderson was selected as the convention city in 1923 for the annual meeting of the Indiana Conference of Charities and Correction at the final session here. Xo date waa set for the next meeting. The follow ing officers were elected: President, Miss Vida Xewsom, Columbus; vice presidents. Miss Ethel Clark. Richmond; Mrs. Edna Hatfield Edmonson, Bloomtngton; Judge O. B. KatclifTe, Covington; Dr. C. A. L,lppIncott, S-'outh Bend; secretary, John A. Brown. Indianapolis; assistant secretaries, Mrs. Ella B. Kehrer. Anderson; Miss Rhoda Welding, Muncio; Leet B. Myers, Evansville; executive committee, Rabbi Morris M. Feuerllcht. Indianapolis; Amos W. Butler, Indianapolis; Mrs. A. F. Bacon, EvansvllJe; Dr. S. E. Smith, Richmond; Fvans Woollen. Indianapolis; Timothy Nicholson, niehmond; Miss Ada E. Bush, Kentland; U. G. Wratherly, Bloomtngton; Gtorge A. II. Shi ieler, Jeffersonvllle; Mrs. L. G. F.llingham, Ft. Wayne; T. F. Fitzgerald. Muncie; Moses Epstfin, Frankfort; M-a. Richard Edwards, Peru; Dr. Kenosha Sessions. Ir.dianapo'.ls ; Mrs. E. A. Gould, Peri; Mrs'. Joser-li B Kea.ing, Indianapolis: C. O. Holmes. Gary; W. D.Hiil. n Done the vMl I 1 I I r ,' e,' mc rVi-r- -r-V,A 1 ' v s DiftMONOS WflTCHtS :JP-UELRY
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Agents in Hammond for the
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FAMOUS FANS
HLOQOH.K1T ZH& Vinctnnes; the Rev. F. H. Qavisk, Indianarolis; Mrs. E. C. Rnmpler, Indianapolis. OVER 500 ATTEND BAPTISTSGONVENTION State Day Observed in Meeting at Evansville; Women Elect Officers. EVANSVILLE. Ind.. Oct. 12. More than five hundred delegates and visitors attended the state convention of tae Indiana Baptists here. The meeting' opened Tuesday and will close Friday. The program was in observance of State day. The Rev. H. X. Spear of Bluffton, president of the state asosclatlon, made an address and he was followed by a talk on "Religious Education" by ti e Rev. T. S. Young of Philadelphia. The 3cv. William C. Everson of ecia Weekly
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Muncle preached the convention sermon. New pastors in the association were introduced to th convention In the afternoon and tht Rev. C. M. Dinsmore of Indianapolis general secretary of the Indi.m.i Baptist convention, reported on thu work of the state board of promotion. The Rev. Dinsmore was formerly pastor of the First Baptist church In this city. A talk on Old Testament study was made by Dr. J. R. Sarnpey of Louisville. a ttTk & S B W BS ( Hit AGO PHOUH13 BUTTER No market. EGGS No market. ltv OLmitY Turkeys 30c; chickens 172c; springs 20c; ers 14c; geese 21c; ducks 24c. POTATOES Receipts 7 Wis. white S1.05S1.15 cwt.; roostcars. Minn. Red Rivers Jl.05tffl.15 cwt.; Idaho rurais $1.25 1.35. Chicago uve stock HOCS Receipts 30.000 Market weak. 10:320c lower: Bulk $8.15 9.60. Top $9.63. Heavyweight is 65 S9.60; medium weight $3.35 J? 9 63 ; light weight $9.15.60; pigs $8,504; I 8.90. CATTLE Receipts ll.ooo. Market, I good grades beef steers steady to strong, others slow. Beef steers, choice and prime $ilT3.io. medium and good $7.25311; good and choice $8.75812.25; commo nand medium $5.50Jf8.75; butcher cattle, heifers $4.659, cows $3.6538.15, bulls $3.S5 6.65. SHEEP Receipts 16.000. Market active, strong to 23c higher. Lambs, 84 lbs. down, $12.25 14; lambs, culls and common, $8,50512; yearling w ethers $3.30012; ewes $3.50 S 6.7.7. EAST BtFTWLO LIVE STOCK CATTLE Receipts 3(K. Market slow. Prime steers $9.50 !& 10.73 ; shipping steers $9.50 10.50; butcher grades $7.25 3 8.75; heifer's $6 8.25; cows $2.2530; bulls $2.755; feeders $4.756; milk cows and stringers $1.4d1.20. CALVES Receipts 200. Markets active. Cull to choice $4 50313. SHEEP AND LAMES Receipts 1,200. Market slow. Choice lambs $13.75(314.75; cul Ho fair $8 13.50; yearlings J 7 3? 1 1 . 2 3 ; sheep. $3S9. HOGS Receipts 1,280. Markc-t active. Yorkers $3.50i3'10; pigs 9-40 9.50; mixed $9.40 9.30; heavy $10 010.15; roughs $77.75; stags $56. BOVTII OMAHA LIVE STOCK HOG3 Receipts 5,500. Market 15 25c lower. Bulk silxed and packing grades $7.1C7.75; bulk medium and light $S.239.15; bulk of sales $7.159.15; top $9.25. CATTLE Receipts 4,500. Market. j all classes very slow. Trime heavy beeves $12. SHEEP Receipts 11,000. Market, lambs strong to 25c higher; top westerns $13.75; fe dclipped $12.50; yearlings $10.50; sheep and feeders steady; ewe top $3.63; feeding lambs $13.75. EAST ST. LOTIS LIVE STOCK CATTLE Receipts 5,500. Ma-ket steady to strong. Native beef steers $7.75912; yearling steers adn heifers $9.5012; cowg $36.75; stockers and feeders $47.25; calves $4 3 10.50: canners and cutters $2.50 2.50. J HOGS Receipts 9,000. Market steady to 25c higher. Mixed and butchers $9.259.50; good heavies $9.409.50; roughs $7.50(3)8; lights $9.239.40; pigs $8.2338.75. Bulk I3.309.50. SHEEP Receipts 730. Market strong, active. Mutton owes $466; lambs $12(31 13.25; canners and chop pers $13. SIOCX CITY LIVE STOCK HOGS Receipts 5.000. Market 10 23c lower. Range $7 9.40. Bulk $7.15(39.23. CATTLE Receipts 1.300. Market slow. Feeder steers and yearlings $10Qil2.25; short feds $7(39.50; grass butchers $3.50(?6; grass steers $5 7.75; feeders $6(3 7.23; stockers and yearlings $47; feeding cows and heifers $35. SHEEP Receipts 500. Market strong to 25c higher. This is the largest amount raised by any Kosciusko county farmer this year. Dress Shoes $5.00 Value Dress Shoes a.'11"1:... $3.85 $5.50 Take, All Leather Dress heeor!rRubber. $4.45
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By Happ
r-urvi -TWE COOLER SO OFTEN INDIANA ITEMS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE HARTFORD CITl. Oct. Yi. The Hartford City common council will make a Junketinff trip In tho nejtt few days to a number of Indiana cities to study water works conditions. One or more new wells are to be put down at te municipal plant here.
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EARTV JjOME PROBLEMS an .j gLg'VS LuaeeTH J. Thompson ..
Dear Mrs. Tho:npson: I am a girl of fifteen. Every time I go to my grandmother s it. another j town she tells my mother a lot of j lies about me when she sees mam ma, sne says i run an over town v. anrl flir4. inmt y-;,,,,,,, T I . W 1 UWJU ... 114. .f J go with a bunch of older girls oi seventeen and eighteen. iy The last time I was at grand mother's all of the girls wa'.k-'d home from church with boys and B0 did j. Do you think I did anything wrong? Grandmother told that I stayed out until eleven and ; twelve o'clock, but I came home at ; nine thirty. j Grandma was only sixteen when ; she married and she thinks it is awful if I even speak to a boy. I ; am of medium size and am in the tenth grade at school. All of the other girls go with boys in my t classes. My mother says if I ever fail it will be on account of boy craze. I have never failed and 1 don t care anything about boys except as friends. Is there anything wrong about that? Mamma says when I am eighteen I will be old enough to go with boys. In that case I will be out of school as I will finish when I am seventeen. Do you think I an. old enough to correspond with boys in another town? - Do you think my grandmother should have anything to say about at sixteen? JACKIE, what I do when she did worse than I am doing when she was married Your grandmother probably feels that her girlhood was cut short by her early marriage, and to save you from such a catastrophe she tries to prevent your going with toys at so early an age. I think you are old enough to go to school and neighborhood parties with boys if they do -ot last late at night. Also I can see nj harm in letting a boy waNt home.
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MONTICKL.LO, Oct. 12. Vandals destroyed a young apple orchard here belonging to LaKue Hoover. Twenty-sevisn thriving trees were cut to the ground. The npxt night after the trees were destroyed, a return visit was made and tho wire fence about ttie orchard was cut and thrown into the road.
DECATUR. Oct. 12. Triangular debates will be held during the com-" ing winter by the Portland. Bluffton and Decatur hiyh schools. A meeting of the principals of the three schools was to be. held here this week to make final arrangements for the debates. ; Athletic rivalry is keen among the three schools and it is thought great Interest will be manifested In tho debates. ETNA GREEX, Oct. 12. P. E. Messner of Etna Green today ate from a table rrade by himself, containing 250,000 pieces of wood, for which he has refusod $10,000. J Practically all the hardwoods of the wo " v.-ere used In the making of the. taole. . Messner's after-dinner cigar was lefted from a smoking stand made by him out of 3.300 pieces of wood. WARSAW. Oct. 12. Wheat acreage will be light in many northern Indiana counties nxt year. In in;iny counties, according to T. A. Parker. Kosciusko county agent, the farmers will put out r.ot more than on-third of the usual crop. The dry weather has prevented them from preparing the soil and It Is too late to do plowing 'or wheat now. The long continue! drought ha? dried up pastures completely and farmers now are feeding their livestock with hay put away for winter consumption. INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 12. An appeal to business men and employers of Indiana who have vacancies in their offices or businesses to employ former United States army officers who nave received discharges ' from church with you, if you go directly and do not stay outside and talk. Many girl3 of your age see too much of boys, and I think your mother is right in insisting that you tend to your studies and jait until you are a little older before you have boy friends. Correspondence is a good thing if conducted in the right way. If you do write to boys in another town you ought to read the lett s you receive to your mother and also let her read your letters in reply, A great deal that is unwise can be said through correspondence and in order to save yourself from future heartache 'I would advise you to accept your mother as your confident. Bo more charitable In your regard for your grandmother. She is old and cannot see things from your youthful point of view. Love her and appreciate the fact that she has your interests at heart. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a f-irl in my teens. I have a boy riend who has moved away. He said he would write. As this is the first time I hawe had occasion to write, will you kindly tell mi what to write? Please tell :jj how to begin the headirnr '-d how to close the letter. THANK YOU. Begin as follows: 1694 Main Street, Bedford, V Y., May 4, 1923. Dear George: End as follows: Very truly yours, Gertrude. The body of the letter should be original. Tell your friend what you have been doing and chat with him as if you and he wera together. It never pays to be sentimental in letters unless you are engaged, and so refuse to talk of love even if the boy seems so inclined, and and
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from the service due to the curtailment of the regular army by act of congress, has been sounded by the commandant at Fort Benjamin Harrison. Among the men who have been
relieved of their army duties are Included many professional men, In- ! eluding lawyers, surseons, chaplains, engineers, dentists and veterinarians. To aid these men, who no doubt have lost local connections which would have assisted them in obtaining positions, the War department has established an agency that will act as a clearing house to help them In making business connections or in securing employment. Recommendations and other data concerning the men may be obtained from post headquarters. Fort Benjamin Harrison. Indiana, Office of the Tost Commander. MONTICELLO. Oct. 12. Unless a severe frost arrives too early, L. M. I Smith of this city will have two crops of red raspberries this year. He has picked some fully developed berries from his bushes already and they still contain many green and half-ripened berries. HARTFORD C1TT. cause the pay of a Oct. 12. BeGreek soldier
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Extra Special Sale -FORFriday and Saturday A TREMENDOUS SAVING Boys' All Wool 2-Pants
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All Wool Sweater! Pull-over style, for men. Heavy double collar in combination or solid colors, for Friday and C (( Saturday Men's Fall Hats Very latest shades new Fall styles an excellent selection to choose from $2.75 $3.45 and $3.95 Men's All Wool Trousers Finest workmanship same quality also for young men. Regular $3.50 to $6.00 values. Special Friday and Saturday $2.45 $2.95 $3.45 and $3.95 Children and Infants' Sweaters and Sweater Sets All wool a
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We are headquarters for P. N. Practical Front Corsets as nationally advertised in Vogue, Ladies' Home Journal, Women's Home Companion and Pictorial Review. gg QQ fa $12.00 A variety of fabrics from. v a m.vsvs Other Makes as Low as 75c Ladies' Pull-Over Sweaters All wool the latest shades. Extraordinary values. Special for Friday and Saturday $2 95 Juvenile Sweater Coats Sizes 22 to 2(3 maroon color two pockets well made. Regular $1 .50 value. With This CQ
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amounts to only about 10 cents a day In American money, Tom Tappas, proprietor of a confectionery store here, !s sending money to his brother Steve, who is serving In the Greek army In Thrace. The local man U watching the news of the fighting lr Greece with more than passing interest.
" ETNA GREEN William Hazen. a farmer residing near Etna Green will supply the principal ingredient for 94,370 pancakes . for northern Indianans this winter. SWABADA George Swatada, aged 53 years, died yesterday aitarnoon at his home 427 Plum me r venue, following a prolonged Illness with heart trouble. ue is survived toy Ills widow two daughters. The funeral will b he-Id Saturday morning at eight o'clock from the St. Joseph' church. Interment will be made t St. Joejli' cemtery. greater warmth and durability. real $10.03 value. Ci7 AVZ $3.50 to $12.50 Collar Sweiteri Combination Saturday only 0 QEC selection in many QJc Up s s
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