Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 121, Hammond, Lake County, 9 November 1922 — Page 9

V

AY DEFEAT

OLIVER FOR STATEAUDITOR ndiana Democrats Have Captured Five Seats in Congress

uANAt'LIS' Ind- Although th. Democratic party made Vl001 com-ck in Indiana d with rturna practically comPlt hav carurl flT .eats In conrS3 i addition to th vlctorjof Samuel li. Ralaton for United atatea senator, control of the ataU Korernment will remain with th4 republican pattyEd Jackson, candidate for ecretary of state, and Ora Q. Darles for treasurer of state bare been named by larse majorities On the other band. Patrick J. Lynch, for clerk of the Supreme court, had been defeated by Zacfcarla T. Duncan, Democrat, of Huntington. imACKE.V BEATS OLIVER The race between William O. Oliver, auditor of state, and Robert Bracken. Democrat, ahowa the latter leading by a small margin with tabulation incomplete. Enough holdovers in the senate assure the Republicans of the ujPr branch of the state senate in the next general assembly, but the Democrats claim that they have rained control of the house of representatives. With the result in regard to some of the state offices s J11 in doubt, it was not likely that the legislative lineup could be fore, casted accurately today. njk.CE FOR CO.VGR-ESS In the congressional raoea, William E. Wilson of Evansville, la the First district, delivered the banner Democratic plurality over Oscar R Luhrinff (Republican) with seven thousand votes to the good, while Will R Wood, In the strong Republican Tenth district, won by more than 11,00 Indiana's representatives in the next congress will be William H. Wilson, First district; Albert H. (Jreenwood, Democrat. Second district; Frank Gardner, Democrat, Third district; Harry Canflald, Dam. ocrat. Fourth district; Everett San-de-rs. Republican. Fifth distrlot; P.ichard Elliott. Republican. Sixth 'listriot; Merrill Moores, Republican, Seventh district; Albert H. Vestal. Hrpubllcani, Eighth district; Fred :--rIl rtr-ntl1can. Ninth district;

Will R. Wood, Republican. Tenth district; Samuel E. Cook, Democrat, Eleventh district; Louis W. Fairfield, Republican, Twelfth district; and A. J. Hickey, Republican, Thirteenth district. DEMOCRATS PLEASED WITH LAKE COCXTY The tremendous vote given Ralston in the industrial centers was not offset by any corresponding decrease In agricultural centers, as an analysis of the vote shows. Fort Wayne. Evansville, Indianapolis. Terre Haute, led in piling up Kalston majorities. Muncle was the only Industrial city of importance in the state which did not reflect this trend. In Marion and Richmond, regarded as Republican strongholds, RaJston's strength was surprising. Lake county, which save Beveridge a plurality of four thousand, was expected by the Dom. ocrats to give Beveridge a lead of twice that slse. Vigo county gavo Ralston a plurality of six thousand and elected Democratic officials. One fatality marked the election In Indiana. Alonzo Wlngler, proprietor of a store at Frairlflton, was shot and killed in an argument in his store Wednesday 'afternoon. Jeff Bollinger, 59, farmer, was held today on a charge of first degree murder.

CHILDREN

DELIGHTED

WITH CIRCUS

With all the anticipatory test of the cock-tall before the meal came the mutual welcome yesterday extended by 3,000 cheering, whistling, appreciative youngsters to the bespangled, resplendent, wonderful com (any of performers who opened their ten day engagement at the Orak Shrine Circus. The huge amphitheater of the temple sparkled with the brilliance of 6.000 youthful eyes as the optics of the expectant younfj on s remained fixed on the arena In the pit where 200 performers, man and beast, capered in marvelous fashion. Boy a and rtrls hung from every vantage point In the wonderful auditorium. They stood on one an-j other's feet and didn't even notlivs It. They jammed the oorridors, stood on the seats, crowded the doorways. The steel girdera of the building fairly shook with their screams of delight when Bessie, twin sister of the famous Maud of cartoon fame, alaahed, bucked and kloked about the arena, refusing like a real mule that she was to allow anyone to approach her. Many of the acts so over-awed the children with their daring and

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CONSTANTINOPLE HONORS NATIONALIST GENERAL

MSJaMSBSBBWSWSJMWBJisjKiJ!

Refet Faaha. designated by arrow. Turk leader, and his staff of Kemalist of&cers in Constaatlnopie.

Constantinople literally went xrfld when Gen. Refet Pasha, leader of the Kemalist forces, entered Constantinople after the

Specials for Friday and Saturday EINZ BAKED BEANS No. 2 can 1 3 C

20c

13c , 8c

B

Z ARLY JUNE PEAS MONARCH No. 2 cans

for

VORY SOAP 2 small bar.

for ....... .

lAVY BEANS NEW STOCK Per

pound

2p(J ZU GINGER SNAPS or UNEEDA BISCUITS C n Per package

mROMEDARY DATES 10 oz. package

21c

RATING AP?HI FANCY JONATHANS jjg QQ

MONARCH COFFEE 3 rmri

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UVES. LA SEV1LLANA BRAND'c "17 bottle for C OONDLES, MACARONI or SPAGHETa RED X O Per nackafffl ' O

- a V at. a tSOAP CLASSIC-10 bar. O Ck -

for

7c

IQiEUEU CORTv No. 2 can for

J PRICOTS, NONE BETTER Per pound , "OOTH PICKS 10 cent package for

"JTOILET PAPER Regular 10c roll for

INDIA or CEYLON TEA Per " pound

iVAL PEARL WHITE FLOATING SOAP,

bars for ,

1 EW STOCK BRAZIL NUTS Per

pound

Demonstration On H. J. Heinz Co. 57 Varieties Pure Food Products

OYSTERS Per quart SPRING CHICKENS DRESS OUR OWN Per pound AMERICAN CHEESE Per pound , SIRLOIN STEAK Per pound LIVER SAUSAGE OUR OWN MAKE Per oound RIB CORN BEEF Per pound WILSON CERTIFIED SKINNED HAMS Whole or half.

20c 32c 8c 68 c 9c 32 c

susyeiiae that even after their completion there was no applause, only wide-eyed wonder, little Sights of relief, and open mouthed amazement. Miss Irene Van Slyke and Karl Griffin, torether with a group of teachers, directed the strusffllns'. excited mob to the seats and later saw them safely on their way home. It was a big Job to handle the children and save for a few lost hats and maybe a lolypop or two dropped in the rush there were no untoward incidents. One humorous thing occurred when a mother anxiously sought the sea of faces for a vision of her own little one. a first grader. lie wasn't to be seen. She stopped outside the door and meeting- a school boy wlkom she thought she recognized asked if he had seen "Willie." "Sure I did. He's In there," said the lad. 'Xh. please get him for me. Tell "Willie mother wants him." she said. The lad re-entered the auditorium and In a few minutes later came out with eight toys. They were all "Willie" but the mothers wasn't amorg them. Of the three thousand children that attended the show l&ss than 800 paid admissions. No child was refused entrance. It was a grand and glorious premiere!

MM SHAFT AT MAIL ORDER SWINDLERS

1

By II. K. REY XOLDS STAFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE WASHING .1 O.N, .Nov. 9. Attorney General Daugherty has completed plans and issued orders for the speedy proa-cution In the federal courts of hundreds of alleged swin. dlers who are charged with "plundering the homes of the poor" of nearly $150,000,000 through fraudulent use of the United States mails, it was learned officially at the Department of Justice today. Approximately five hundred cases wore said to be in the hands of

1 United Slates attorneys throughout

the country for consideration for "Institution of criminal procedure" and for action. Nearly nine hundred persons hare been arrested or indicted In connection with the cases now before the courta. These casea represent a total loss to the public through postal swindles of JH9.0U.231. According to goremment records, 3,582 ca?es are distribu t!d among fifteen divisions of the Departmetn of Justice, as follows: Atlanta. 18i; Austin, Tex., 446; TViston. 124; Chattanooga. 133: Chl-

per pounc

60c 29c 24c 25c 15c 8c 27c

PinnerStories

A woman who had been visiting In the West and who had seen mnv interesting Indians uought sooh Indian dolls for her little New York friends.

The dolls were dresso-' in Indian fashion shawl, colored han." rchief about head, moccasins, patchwork skirt and hand-made stockings. When she trot home she looked to see what kind of underwear the Indians had made for the Indian dolls, and every one of them wore a eorgetta chemise! New York Sun.

Garfield Cash Grocery & Market LEIMBACH & SCHROEDER, Props. CONKEY & GARFIELD STS. Phone 2668 WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF FRESH MEATS AND VEGETABLESWE DELIVER TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY

"See that woman ow there ?" "Yes. what about her?" ! "Well, if it hadn't been for three words shs said ten years ago. I would be as wealthy as Croesus now!" "Delightful situation. Go ahead with the tale!" "Well, her father own-d all th safety pin plants in the country ..nd the family was just - Ung 'n wealth. And with all her riches she was mean enough to deprive me of my chances of making ten million dollars at a blow! Imagine!" "What's the rest of the dope? What are the famous three words?" "7hy, I was going to marry ?r and then all her millions woild have been mine but " "Eut what?" "But when I asked her to be mine she said: 'No. You foo.!'" Amherst Lord Jeff.

Mudania conference, hailed aa a great bloodless victor for the Moslems. The entire city turned out to welcome their hex., who cago. 382; Cincinnati, 392; Denver, 76; Kansas City. 223. New York. 725; Philadelphia. 218; St. Ixuis, 144; St. Taul. 80; San Francisco, 1.971; Spokane, 61, and Washington, 201.

was borne through the streets by his admirers. At th Fa- v' Mosque prayers were offered irf thanksgiving for victory. -

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NEW YORK STOCKS CLOSE INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Allla ctialiuers 44 American SLeel Foundry 44 American Tel. and Tel 124 Anaconda 51 14 Baldwin Locomotive 132 Bethlehem Steel B ... 71 M Chesapeake and Ohio 75 Colorado Fuel 30 14 General Motors 14 Lackawanna Steel 83 Lehigh Valley 69 V4 Mexican Petroleum 226 Mid vale Steel 31H Norfolk and Western 1191 Northern Pacific 84 Pure Oil 29i Reading 82i Republic Iron and Steel 51 Texas Co 4S4 V. 8. Steel ,.108i Westlnghouse 60 Willys Overland 5 Sinclair Oil S3 CHICAGO CASH GTLAIlt WHEAT-No. 2 red 11.25; No. J hard J1.17 i 0 1.18. CORN No. 2 mixed 700 71c; No. 3 yellow 70071'ie; No. 3 mixed 704 4c; No. 3 white 68tf70c; No. 3 yellow 6814 & 70 c ; No. 4 mixed 70c;

No 4 white 69HOc; No 4 yellow 66H70,c. OATS No. 2 white 44 c No. 3 whluj 42H3,43Vic; No. 4 white 42 42Hc

Mteady to I0o hlgUar; bulk parkins grade I7.HO0T.65; butchers $8 8.0; top $1.20. CATTLE Recaplts 8.000. Market KtPArtv 11 1 r. T - . 1 . 1 .

- 'cr, uui's ana Teais j unchanged; stockers and feedexs 1 "low to lfce lower. J SHKE?- Hecelpta 12,600. Maket, 1 lambs steady, top $14.10; clipped 25 i 436o lower, bulk 112.50 012.85;!

yearling strong, top $12.25; sheep and feeders steady; ewe top $7; feeding lambs $13.20. BIOVX CITY LIVE STOCK I1003 Receipts 3,000. Market steady, strong; range $7t?g.5; bulk $7.2508. CATTLE Receipts 1,500. Market slow, steady. Prime cattle $11 12.50) short feds good $8.50010.60; grass steers $507.25; fed butchers $508; graas butchers $3.7506; can. ners and cutters $2.2503.50; bulls

$33.T5; veals $609.50; feeders $5 i

07 stockers and yearling, good. $5.1507.15; plain $405.50; feeding cowg and heifers $2.7505.25. SHEEP Receipts 1.500. Market steady: EAST ST. X.OT7IS CATTLE Receipts. 4,500; market

steady) native beef steers. 1100 0 1325i yearling steers and heifers, 90001325; cows, 3000675; etockers

and feeders, 700 0725; calves, SaO0 600; canners and cutters, 3000 3E0. HOGS Receltps. 12.500; market steady! mixed and butchers, 840 866) good heavies. 8550860; roughs, 7150725: lights, 8400850; pigs, 840 0900; bulk, 8400855. SHEEP Receipts, 1,600; market Is steady; mutton ewes, 12003't4!5; lambs, 300 0 600; canners and choppers, 1000300.

bly this week. He triad a little

stunt. He inserted an ad. In the classified columns of The Times stating that a rug would be grren free to every person 'bringing the ad to the store. Now here's the odd part. He didn't attach the store's name to the ad. He Just inserted a cut that he has ued for years In his advertising. It Is the familiar one with the vord "Furniture" on a black background and with the clock in the center. Folks were so accustomed to his trade mark that they evidently were not bothered a bit by the absence of the Ktoro name. This morning he di.-played forty of those classified ads torn from the back page of The Times. He was amazed at the demonstration of the pulling power of classified ada. Furthermore, he's convinced that there are a lot of people In Hammond who are confirm ed want ad readers for they had to be In order to be so well acquainted with his trade mark.

WAN

T JURY TO

PITT WILL STOP W. AND J., SAYS

LAFAYETTE MAN

EASTOX. PA., Nov. 7 The powerful Washington and Jefferson fotoball team, which Saturday stopped the Lafayette college eleven after It had won seventeen consecutive victories, will not go through the remainder of the season undefeated, according to Dr. Jock Sutherland, Lafayette coach. "The sweeping end runs and aerial attack of W. and J. can be stopped, and I predict the Pittsburgh team will do so when they meet In Pittsburgh a week from Saturday."

CHICAGO rRODlCK BUTTER Receipts 7.044 tubs. Creamery extra 48c; extra firsts 44 0 46V4c; firsts 37 40c; packingstock 29 0 30c. EGGS Receipts 4.465 casea Miscellaneous 4045c; ordinary firsts 32038c; firsts 40048c. LIVE POULTRY Turkeys 36c; chickens 173 21c; springs 20c; roosters 14c; geese 22c; ducks 22c. POTATOES Receipta 9 3 ca-s. Wis. round white 75 0 85c; Minn, round white 70085c; N. Dakota Red Rivers 7585c. VEAL 5 do 60 lbs. 9010c; 70 to 80 lba 11012c; 90 to 110 lb. 12 13c; fancy thick 14015c; overweight 130 to 175 lba 508c

ADVERTISING'S THE THING You never can tell what an advertisement e-ven a. little want ad will do. J. Arkin of the Hammond Furniture Co., had it brought homo forcl-

DECIDE IN UNCTION

INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE CHICAGO, Xvov. 9. A request that the question of making the famous "Chicago" rail Injunction permanent be given to a Jury to decide was made today by Attorney Donald R. Rlchberg, representing the former striking shopmen named In the temporary injunction, before Federal Judge James II. Wllkerson. Judge Wilitorson granted Attorney Rlchberg eight days in which to prepare In brief in support of Jils request and the samt amount of time was granted counsel represent, mg the government in which to file an opposing brief.

RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER

Seep Seated TTrfo A old Deposits Are XMssolved, and th. BJxeumatlo Poison Starts to Iv tfc. System WltMa Twenty-tour Sours. Every Druggist in this county is authorized to say to every rheumatic sufferer that if a full pint bottle of Allenrhu, the sure conquerer of rheumatism, does not show the way to Btop the agony, reduce ewcllen Joints and do away with even the slightest twinge of rheumatic pain, he will gladly return your money without comment. Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous results have been accomplished In the most severe cases where the suffering and agony was Intense and piteous and where the patient was helpless. Mr. James H. Allen, of Rochester, K. Y., the discoverer of Allenrhu, who for many years suffered the torments of acute rheumatism, desires all sufferers to know that he does not want a cent of anyone's money unless Allenrhu deoisSlvely conquers this worst of all diseases, and he has instructed druggists to guarantee it as above in every instance. Summers' Pharmacy can Biinplv you adv.

cnicAGO 1.1 vn stock HOG3 Receipts 34.000. Market steady. Bulk $8.1008.60. Top 8.65. Heavy weight $8.5008.65; medium weight $8.3508.60; light weight $8.4008.56; pigs $8.2508.65. CATTLE Receipts 14.000. Market steady. Beef steers, choice and prime $12.60 013.50, light weight $12.60013.30, common and medium $7011.60; butcher cattle, heifers $5 09.50, cows $408. bulla $3.6007; canners and cutters, cows and heifers $3.6004.50. SHEEP Receipts 17,000. Market strong. Fat lambs $13.75 014.75; lambs, culls and common. $9 013.50; yearlings $11013; wethers $7,500 9.50. norm OMAHA LIVE STOCK HOGS Receipts 6.800. Market

I Miller's Shoes j

Make it a point to look in our Shoe Windows. You will see the new styles there first. They offer quality and value that you will not find elsewhere, particularly at

$1

Mill

er s oootery

Successor to Hellerman 595 Hohman Street Hammond

BS53233SBS

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OLONIAL

147 State St., Hammond

Offer

TO HOME OWNERS AND PERMANENT RESIDENTS OF LAKE COUNTY SPECIAL BIG PHONOGRAPH SALE THREE DAYS ONLY THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE POSITIVELY CLOSES AT 11:00 P. M. SATURDAY NIGHT NEWS OF VITAL INTEREST TO EVERY FAMILY IN LAKE COUNTY. Read Every Word of This Sensational Sale Great factory surplus stock of the world's famous KIMBALL PHONOGRAHS recognized by over 50,000 musicians as the finest high grade phonograph made.

Must

Be

d

Out at

Part of the Nation-wide Campaign

Close Once

JVinal Prices Practically Cut in Half

4

WE WERE FORTUNATE IN SECURING 100 OF THESE SUPERB MACHINES FOR HAMMOND ONLY 100 They will be on sale Thursday morning. This is the most beautiful stock, the largest assortment of high grade machines ever shown under one roof. Your machine is here.

Come in and hear it.

This is not a sale of cheap machines but a GENUINE STOCK UNLOADING SALE of the world's finest product. Nearly every one direct from the great KIMBALL FACTORIES

Backed by the strongest responsibility and MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

Your parents and grandparents dealt with KIMBALL Ask your neighbor. More than a million homes in America have had an instrument from KIMBALL during the past 65 years.

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Don't Miss This Great Dollar Saving Opportunity Tlieii Come Tomorrow Bring $ 1 0, $20 or $50 and S se It Double in Value at This Wonderful Sale If you haven't the ch-inge handy, come anyhow bring no money select your machine. We will arrange confidential terms TO SUIT YOU.

Store Open Friday and Saturday Evenings

ne iOionia.

J. H. Millett, Prop. 147 State St. Hammond

Store Open Friday aod Satur-Jay Evening

REMEMBER THIS SALE IS AT THE HAMMOND STORE ONLY

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