Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 130, Hammond, Lake County, 7 November 1913 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE TIMES. Fridav. Nov. 7, 1J)13.
THE .TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br The Lake County Frinttng aad Pub. ItahlBK Compile.
The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflcs la Hammond, June 28, 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday nd weekly edition. Entered at ths postofflce In Hammond, February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Gary, April 13, 1913. The Times East Chicago-Jndiana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered st the postofflce In East Chicago, September 25. 3913. All under the act of March 3, 1879, as Becond-class matter.
Pf)l? FOR THE 1 EM -lDAYl
will take Beveral more notes to ad
ust the controversy to the satisfac
tion of all the countries Interested and at the same time do justice to
Mexico.
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ANOXTMOUS comnrunletions wl!t not "bs noticed, but others will t printed at diocretKen, s-nd should be addrasavd to The Editor, Times, Hammond, Ind.
FATHER.
Me was not the kind of a father that
you read aboat la books,
He wasn't loatr on lssgsaxe and lie
vtass't atroag oa loo It a,
He vnn not the sort of father that you
bear about In play.
He hi jum r human rather with n
human father's wars.
o hp never balked at workUx, but
when he waa through It once.
Right down to the grass waa father,
with the children, doing stunts,
All of ii m would pile up on him and he'd
welcome all the nark.
Ttiit I'm wondering after play time, did
we stay there on his back?
Wasn't strong on dissipation, said his
"Etmbol on the K rem"
Wan to nil the platter fanter than the
kids could lick It clean.
And the next best game he knew of
waa an equal one to neat;
It was keeping leather rovers up to the
supply of feet.
Always on the Job wan father, plugging
steady-like and strong.
ever making any noise, but avoiding
all his little world along.
nd to think! Lord I ain't it funny you
can see things years and years
Aad yet never know you've seen thm.
till your eyes are blind with
tears?
Quit bin Job one day and left us, smil
ing as he went away;
Euloarv seems all so foolish. What fan
anybody aayf
Seemed like even In his lenving he was
saving some one bother.
Par the word on the granite which lies
over him Is "Father." Edmond Vance Cooke.
435
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge. No. 569, F. and A. M., Friday November 7, S p. m., E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S. Galer, Sec, K. M. Shanklin, W. M.
Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M.
Kegular stated meeting Wednesday, November 12, Most Excellent degree.
Visiting companions welcome.
Hammond Council No. 90 it t S. Id-
Stated assembly, first Tuesday each
month. J. W Morthland, Recorder.
Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting Monday,
November 17, Red Cross work. Visit ingr Sir Knights welcome.
WHY IGNORE THE PEOPLE?
The people, the common people, may seem powerless sometimes when
institutions, cities or other political
divisions seem frozen in the icy bands
of machines; newspapers represent
ing the people, mirroring their un-
lest and striving to suggest to the
people as a whole the need of change
of growth in change, may be held
up to scorn and contumely by these political machines, but the sun. never
shone on a day when retribution
didn't finally come.
Five years ago this paper single-1 handed pioneered in the expose of political and social conditions in Gary. The campaign as carred on for John A. Brennan in Gary was a memorable one. He was defeated. Gary was not ready for a change. But the noxious system of municipal government that rode the wave cresthigh succumbed last Tuesday. In East Chicago another municipal government, which was not built upon the rocks but upon the sand has flourished for years. Its principles were wrong. They could not endure. This paper pointed them out. Those who stood for this erring system of municipal' government ridiculed, scorned and villified the newspaper, failing to take into consideration THE PEOPLE. They fought the newspaper and ignored the people. What happened is history. Why will politicians IGNORE THE PEOPLE? It is not only in municipal government that the people can reign, but in county and state and natioal government. Why ignore the basic principle of liberty of freedom in voting?
The people will no longer be bound In the shackles, and thrown in the cogs of political machines. There are a few more machines in in these parts to be disposed of.
THE worst is yet to come. Nat
Goodwin announces that he has finished his book.
CHAtNCEY M. Depew says the
American girl is not so pretty now
as she was fifty years ago. And Mr. Depew's beauty seems to have faded somewhat during that time also.
is not much; a hungry and healthy family will probably finish it in one meal. You can still enjoy good roast beef, and surely for less money, only buy the right cut. From past observation the writer has found that nine out of 10 customers ask for the first cut of the rib roast. Of course, they are the most expensive cuts. The fifth, sixth and shoulder ribs are hardly in demand, and the butcher has a hard job selling them. The-e end ribs or shoulder ribs of roast beef are not only considerably cheaper to buy, but are richer in nourishment
and food value. When buying one of
LAND MARKS DESTROYED. The world moves. If you don't believe it just ask
yourself what has become of that
rock-ribbed and relentless democratic
bund of mayors in this part of the
state, which reigned for years.
You remember them, Darrow of
Laporte, Miller of Michigan City, Goetz of South Bend, Spooner of Valparaiso, Warwick of Whiting, Knotts of Gary, Durgan of Lafayette and
Becker of Hammond.
The bund is busted. What mayors hadn't got out of
office in some other way were buried
beneath an avalanche of votes last Tuesday. Some of them thought they would get into office again.
The people thought differently. Think they didn't?
THE returns from the Mexican
ejection show that Candiate Felix
Diaz ran well to an American consulate.
viduality beneath the conventional
exterior which the cultured woman
wears like some skin-tight covering
Accustomed to a constant repression of every opinion upon life, bound by
a thousand invisible threads1 more securely than by chains, forced by the
tyranny of prevailing standards into
self-deception and a fear of confess
ing their own divergent emotions
they silently pursue those paths which have been prescribed for them
by a stronger will.
"Opinions with respect to what
woman 'ought' to be are the deter
mining factors of feminine education
the sole purpose of which is to sug
gest a fixed type to the growing girl
To be sure, the development of young
men is subject to a similar influence
but as women are trained merely for
cue purpose, for one vocation, there is much less play for Individuality
within the limits of female education
"In addition to this, women are generally much more disposed to
subordinate themselves to authority
the- fact that they are considered
the weaker sex is, in the main, due to their susceptibility to suggestion. The disciplinary measures by means of which human beings are converted
into 'useful' members of society react more strongly upon them than upon men. "In whatsoever way we may elect to judge them, it is nevertheless true that the majority of women conform to the dominance of certain ideals with regard to their duties, in order
to approximate as closely as possible to some model, some canon of womanhood. The closer they resemble this disciplinary ideal, the more womanly they believe themselves to be, and they fear to lose this womanly quality by any divergence from this ideal. "That ironic definition, 'Womanhood is the summary of all the peculiarities and idiosyncrasies, the advantages and the faults which make woman desirable unto man,' proves how closely this convention is associated with the abstract idea of womanhood."
PERHAPS if as enthusiastic study
were given the income tax rules as
is bestowed upon the baseball rules,
more people would understand them.
THE MOVIES AND NOVELS.
Whatever may be the effect of the
moving-picture show upon the con
temporary theatre, the most recent
developments In the "film drama
seem to favor the book market. Na
ture presumably is being exhausted
by the cinematograph man, and con
temporary history is not moving fast
enough for the "movies." The novelists are now being called upon to
supply the ravenous demand. It be
gan apparently with that red-blooded adventure story, the "Odyssey," and
already we have "Quo Vadls" and
Bulwer-Lytton and Thoma3 Hardy's
"Tess," and the promise of Jaok Lon
don. Some of the choicest things in
fiction are hardly capable of being thrown on the screen. The emphasis
will, of course, be on the melo
dramatic and the spectacular. "But
says the New York Evening Post,
great deal of excellent melodrama
may be extracted from the standard
novels; and even the second-raters
are an Improvement on the ordinary
reading of moving-picture .audiences
The point is that the cinematograph
scenario may awaken an Interest in
the book from which it is drawn. If
Nick Carter audiences are attracted
towards "The Three Musketeers' there is a distinct gain.
PERHAPS General Felix Diaz
would not take such a handsome picture as he does if he consented to have an interview with General
Huerta.
PROFESSOR Munsterberg says women do not change their minds. Evidently the professor never saw the exchange desk of a dry goods store.
OF course Huerta Is deeply grieved to think that he will have to keep on being president.
IN these days the most lordly senior would not disdain being the foot of the class that can kick a goal ffom the field.
AN enquirer wants to know what girls who wear watches on their wrists do when it is time to wash the dishes. They don't do anything.
WOMAN. An interesting book dealing with
analyses of woman is just bff the press and the views expressed are
deserving of thought as the book is
written by a woman. She say3:
"We shall be able to know what women are only when we no longer dictate to them what they should be.
It is, indeed, difficult to ascertain the
true contours of a woman's indi-
BELIEVE WILSON SINCERE. It is apparent to anyone who has
followed the attitude assumed by European nations toward the United
States since the Mexican crisis began,
that England, France and Germany are determined to take a personal
hand in the controversy, if necessary
Of course the attitude of President
Wilson and his cabinet of necessity
is considered, but there have been official utterances made during the
past fortnight that very thinly veil
the doubt that the United States will be able to handle the Mexican matter
to the satisfaction of all concerned
Be it said in justice to the European
powers and to President Wilson, as
well, that there is not the - slightest doubt felt regarding his sincerity. It
is, perhaps, this confidence in the American Chief Executive that ha3 made England, France and Germany patient in the matter. It is no breach
jjt confidence to say, however, that it
the three or four ribs of beef, say, for instance, weighing five pounds, you will find that you hardly have sufficient meat left after it is carefully trimmed and the bone taken out. The difference in price between the first cut on the rib and the two last cuts is at least six cents per pound; and when you ask for a shoulder rib roast, ask the butcher to insert a piece of suet in the center of the roast, or. If he has time, to lard it with thin pieces of fat. Another good piece of meat for roast beef Is the top sirloin, which is not so cheap, but is recommended because it has
no waste. "The next important item on the meat bill is chops, either lamb, pork or veal chops. Lamb chops, however, are the kind mostly demanded, and ot course the demand is for loin and rib chops, the most expensive. There Is the same solution as with steaksbuy shoulder chops, they cost less and are sweeter. This same principle again applies to pork chops. The shoulder chops are very sweet and tender, and the butcher will sell them for less; but very few people know about them." Woman's Home Companion.
NOVEMBI'.H 7 IV HISTORT. 1804 Cape of Good Hope fortirying against possible invasion. 1808 The French attacked, carried and plundered the town of Hastalrick, but were forced to retire, leaving their plunder. 1874 Japan withdrew her troops from China. 1904 Bitter fighting between the Russians and Japanese at Fort Mountain, north of Port Arthur. 1906 George McClellan elected mayor of New York; William Randolph Hearst declares the election fradulent and notifies the mayor-elect of his intention to make a contest. 1918 President-elect Wilson announces plans for a trip to Bermuda for a short rest after campaign activities.
WHAT ARE WE COMING TO ? Seven Indiana cities on Tuesday
elected doctors as their mayors. And
now one knows how many doctors have broken Into berths as town trustees, aldermen, and what not.
What are we coming to? We have entrusted the docs with
our health. Now they demand to
rule our political fortunes. With Dr. Wrilson handling things at the top and a whole raft of doctors ruling
fat portions of Indiana the aspiring young man who has been taught that the law is the path to statesmanship had beter alter his course and register at a medical college instead.
PROBABLY, even if the news that
Sulzer has joined the Progressive
party reaches him in South America,
It won't prevent the colonel from
having a bully time.
WHAT BUTCHERS EAT.
A retail butcher writes an article
entitled "Reducing the Meat Bill,"
In which he shows how the people
who buy the high priced cuts don't
get the best meat. He says that some
of the cheapest meats are the best.
He takes an iemlzed weekly meat bill of $4.63 and shows, item by item, how that bill can be reduced to $3.21 just by using cheaper cuts, which he says are better cuts. After dealing with the various kinds of steaks, in
which, by the way, he tells about, the
steak that the butcher eats himself, he goes on, as follows, about roasts and chops: "A roast of beef costing a dollar or dollar and a half 'at the present time
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Qh Goody!
We all of us welcome this "just right" kind of dessert -with plenty of sustainingand hunger-satisfying- qualities but without any heaviness or "I've eaten too much" after effects. And Snow-Mellow is that kind just to perfection. Imagine snow-flakes, crystallized from richest cream, and flavored with marshmallow made by the Fairies. That is Snow-Mellow. Imagine such a gift from nature, served on lady fingers or with sliced bananas! Or just think of a heaping dish of this wonderful dessert, richly covered with cherries or raspberries or chopped nut-meats or sliced fruits or apple sauce. There hasn't yet been found any way to tell you how good Snow-Mellow is. Snow-Mellow has about the consistency of very rich, thick, whipped cream but it is somewhat firmer and much more tender and delicate. The taste of Snow-Mellow is an exclusive taste all its own. We can't any more describe, in words, the delicious taste of Snow-Mellow than we could describe the taste of a ripe, juicy, peach, fresh from the tree. But you may be sure that you all will "just love" Srtow-
Mellow all of you, from baby to 'grandmother. Probably your folks like cocoa or chocolate sometimes hot, sometimes cold. For either way, make it with just water and serve a little Snow-Mellow on top of each cup. It may be your custom to have a big Sunday dinner, including- a good homemade pie. Oh, Snow-Mellow on pie! Snow-Mellow makes a tender, thick meringue, that browns in the oven to a rich golden brown, stands up firmly and cuts as smooth and easily as butter. The next time you make pie, Le sure it's a Snow-Mellow pie. Have This Pie for Sunday Cover outside of individual pie tins with a rich pie paste, invert, prick with a fork, and bake in hot ?ven. When done remove crusts from fins, cool, and fill with the following: To Snow-Mellow filling (made by the plain, simple directions which come in each package) add 1 cup giated cocoanut and 2 teaspoons lemon juice. Spread evenly in crusts and servo at once, or if desired, brown slightly in the oven before serving.
Snow-Mellow Costs So Little One tablespoonful of Snow-Mellow, which costs you only four cents, makes the topping for two of your pies! One tablespoonful of Snow-Mellow, costing only 4 cents, goes as far as four or five eggs, which would cost you from 15c to 20c. And Snow-Mellow is better oh, ever so much better than any egg meringue could ever be. - Many Delightful Desserts Full and complete directions for making the many different Snow-Mellow desserts come in every package. Meringue for Pies, Puddings, Custards, Floating Island. Fillings for Cakes, Cream Puffs, Eclairs. Sauces for Puddings and to use instead of cream for fresh fruits, berries and cereals. Plain and Boiled Icings without eggs. Candies Divinity Fudge, Marshmallows and Kisses. And other daint?, special desserts to delight your family. Just get your package of Snow-Mellow read the plain, simple directions and all these new and good desserts are yours. Snow-Mellow desserts are "Oh, Goody desserts.
At
Goo
(Grirocceirs
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The big-quantity package of Snow Mellow, guaranteed under the Pure Food Law, contains enough to make seven liberal, family size desserts and costs only 25 cents less than four cents for each delicious dessert. Go to your grocer today and get SnowMellow. t Or telephone him for SnowMellow right now. Just be sure to get it for Snow-Mellow is too good o be without another day. There is no other treat you can give your family that will please them , like Snow-Mellow. Every day we get letters from ladies telling us that they wouldn't for anything be with-
s. Jaow-Mellow. So good! So inexpensive! Seven big, rich, delightful desserts and each one may be served a different way for only 2;c less than four cents each! All grocers and delicatessen stores can supply you with Snow-Mellow. Get your package of Snow-Mellow today at your grocery or delicatessen store and have a Snow-Mellow dessert a SnowMellow cake or a Snow-Mellow pie for your family dinner this Sunday I Frank & Houren, Inc. National Distributors CHICAGO
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