Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 12 January 1917 — Page 4
I 'AO E FOUR
THE TIMES Fridav, Jan. 12, If) 17
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY. Th Time K.it ChicdRO-Tn liana Harbor, Jolly except Sunday. Entered t th postoTlee in Kst f'hlcnsro. Novfinbr If, !!l", TU Lake County Thee Pally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at tin- j.-ist.-(Yi- in Hammond. June 2S, J:06.
DOES RHEUMATISM BOTHER YOU? atidorn Things and Flings
t f "" I 3 TZH "f & V A fan you read this
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The I.alte Cour.lv Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at th I ;. .sto-.Y r e. in Uat:v.:i.id. Kbrury 4. 1911. Tii" Uary Kvrnlnv Tirces Daily except Sunday. Er.rd at the postoffle !:. C.iiy, April IS. 1!'12. .
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THE Iondon Telegraph says the wild n-t dpp:rt exist any n-ore. My,! l.vir in: H .isn't any one told the good; man sthout the auto reports at HurnA MiniilWHAXOi: In Va!' street is 'nai.'tiilr ; 'hat allows the Hon. Tom ! W. Ijivsnn to break into print. Olve' '.! the religious p.tgel Tom never appears thee. '
IF.t.r.I'MOVK'. ; lii:iu.u (private exchange) 3100. S 101. 310, ('."!'! for n hitever department wanted,! "' '"''- .Telephone 131 N.:t .iu T'ln;, K.i.r "::'l.':i:o Telephone- 540-.?! I' !. Kv.r.s. V. sr rhi,'.s.) Telephone T3T-J ! 1 1 : -1 ("l i nt . -: T;r. 2i 2 I ! tin l:l :.: (".w J i.-.. Jt- .' , . o" I . '.. H '. : (H'T-rtcr and Classified A i ....'."......."..... Telephone 46 j v': ' - Telephone S0-M.I ' : i. I; I'-lrU , Telephone GS li.-:,- '.s '.i Telephone 11' !
THK railroads seemed to have misunderstood. Tlie demand -Is that they put Ice in and keep colder their refrigerator cars, not tlieir nasfenarer coaehes.
LAEGEU PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHER NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.
KANSAS wants a whirmlnc not for
wife-beaters. It seems that it is only j in 'dry" states that men beat their : v i v e .. I
BliKSIPKXT WIBS'ON has appointed rrvliui.i laukea to be secretary of the territory of Hawaii. What's become of the old-fashioned man with the good old name of Jone?. Smith, O'H.HTigan or lalla'-rher who n?ed to get an appointment from the white house'.'
Many Doctors Use Musterole So many iufTYrcrs have found relief Miisterolc that vou omrht to buy a
small jar and try it. Ji3t spread it on with the finpers. Rub it in. First you fret a fcrntle glow, then a delicious, cooling comfort. Mutero!e routs the? twinges, loosens up stiffened joints r.nd muscles. Miisterole is a clean, white ointment, made vvi:h il (,f mustard. It penetrates t.- tiie seat of pain and drives it away, but doe.i not Mister the tendered skin. It takes the place of the mtsjsy, old J
lasitioned mustard plaster. Mtisterole is recommended fcr Lron-
chitis. crottp, asthma, pleurisy, 1'imbago, j neuralgia, sprains, bruises, stiff neck,! headache and colds of the chest (it often i
prevents pneumonia)
If you cannot, then you need Kryptok Glasses the invisible bifocals which combine near and far vision in one crystal-clear lonse.
THEI1K miht be something to the reform movement in fJary if the peo-
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Ijjj nN the? Chicago Tribune f December :0, 1910, 1 .vol may Iiave noliced an article setting forth Hi: 1
If you have any t ;.:. gettine The Times make complaint tmmediateiy t the circulation departm. i;t Tub Times will mt lie respoitHle for the return of any unsolicited manucript articles or lettei and will not :otl.e snonoytiiout com.'KUiilcatlon thort signed letters of gT.eral Interest prtnted at discretion.
"COAI. men hold banquet." South Bend News-Times. You don't hear of any coa! buyers being: nble to attend banquets.
THE NEED OF NEW IMPEACHMENT LAWS. From the governor's message: ' Our process of impeachment and of removing from public office officials who are faithless to thp trust imposed upon them are too tedious and intricate to be effective remedies in the hands of the people. "I recommend the simplification of our impeachment law so as to make it possible to obtain the speedy removal from official places of those who fail to discharge their duly, or are guilty of such misconduct as to justify their removal." Never have the inadequate facilities for removing unfaithful ;ubiie officials been brought so much to light as ii has in this political division of Indana. If there were an easier machinery for returning bad occupants of public office to private citizenship it is not at all improbable that there would be so many instances of county and municipal disobedience, not counting justices and constables, who occasionally go on a rampage. Within the past five years there have been at least a score of instances here where gentlemen of officialdom might have been accorded needed dismiss;!! papers were ;r not for archaic impeachment laws.
INDIANA legislature would save time by agreeing to meet every year instead of biennially every other year's" session to be given over to passing hills creating new courts in Lake count y.
behind it diil not consist of some
j of the candidates for mayor, those tryins to brinir pressure to land biif conj tracts, and others (treasinsf the way to help their candidate! win tit the city ! election. Otherwise the reform efforts ! are all rirht.
I.K.-'I'ITK iiis efforts in behalf of th.; prohibition cause, Kx-Secy. liryan continues to be America's most extinguished citizen.
IN POLITICS
ONIl of these days some one at Washington is going to make a great bit by working out an apropriate excise for keeping I'ershing in Mexico.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
LEGISLATIVE USURPATION. Kven the most honest advocates of prohibition cannt help !;r. view with concern the action of the senate in voting for the Shepperd bill to make the national capital "dry." The bill, which unfortunately enlisted the services of our Indiana senators. Kern and Taggart. now goes to the house. It presumptions on the part of congress to interfere with the personal liberty of the people of Washington. If Washington wants prohibition it should be a matter for them to decide by referendum, a suggestion which the upper house refused to consider. While residents of the district are not with power to vote there the prohibition question is one that should have been submitted to their decision. As jt is senators who supported the move to inflict prohibition in such summary manner simply hurt the cause. It is hardly possible that the people of the district view with a friendly eye the efforts of outsiders to enforce prohibition on them, and if the law is passed it is hard to imagine that it will be observed. If th" advocates of prohibition want to get anywhere in this country they will have to get out of unmoral grooves. Their tyrannically-gaineB success it Washins-on should be a matter of mourning for well-meaning prohibitionists rather than an occasion of jollification. America will hardly tolerate
10 the Voters of Gary: At the urgent solicitation of a large number of Gary citizens who heileve that CJary's greatest need for the future is a clean, honest and energetic business administration. 1 hereby announce that I will te a candidate for the republican nomination for mayor of Gary, at the primaries to be held In March, 1917, or at a later date as may be designated by the legislature. 1-3-tf JOHN A. BRKNNA.V.
I CONGKESS is to pass a bill enabling i the American army to acquire a fleet of zeppelins. However, it will r.ot be ne 'essary to add that American soldiers i will not drop bombs on women and
j children and orphan asylums and ho.1- : pitals. i I
i EDITOR of Current Opinion offers,
the "key to Billy Sunday." Jn view of the coal bills that are pressing upon us we would rather have the key to Billy's cash box. !
FOR MAYOR I desire to announce to the voters of Gary that I am a candidate for the republican nomination for mayor of the city, at the coming city Primary, and ask the support of all republican voters who believe that the people of Gary are entitled to an administration of, for and by the people of Gary. 1-6-tf FRANK W. SMITH.
THEY only charge four cents apiece
,for eggs now. It would seem that the
sellers would be a little more accommodating: and ask for a nickel, tints relieving us of tlie annoyance of waiting for a mrry penny in change.
NOW that the real Buffalo Bill is dead all those other trenuine and only Buffalo Bills, who have been traveling around the country with different circuses, will have to take up a new oc-
. cupation.
N the? Chicago Tnhmie f December '.-(), 1910,
you may have noticed an article setting forth
great prosperity and an enormous ma un
til
S CHTuO SSEJVS
ill
ROVE
Jlus.-iar
m ; hods.
THEY DON'T WANT IT SPOTTED. Sot to-voce remarks in Kansas newspapers sometimes reveal things about Kansas prohibition that her society of prohibition boosters does not tell away from homo. In the Salina (Kan.) I'nion of December lf, 19K, appears this paragraph: "The state is waiting to hear something about the enforcement of the prohibitory law in those sections of Kansas where beer and whisky are still regarded as necessities of life. Governor Capper has used the prohibitory law as a political argument and asset for a good many years. It is time for him to realize that the people of Kansas are in favor of a dry state, not in sections but all aver the s:h'o." . These remarks will come as a shock to those coniribntors to the An;i Saloon League "wfr chest" who have accepted without qualification Wonderful stories about prohibition in Kansas.
BUTTER
r
WHY PICK ON AMERICA?
interest
London newspapers sneerinsry criticise the I'nited States' eh
in the war as a mercenary one. That sort of thing comes with poor grace from a people whose stay-at-home members; have been piling up such huge fortunes out. of their own country's necessities t hat the number of people in Krgland subject to income tax has doubled through the war. England's own ally, Russia, is shown to have demanded and received a promise of Constantinople and the Dardanelles, P'TSttaiably as her price of slicking loyally to the war. Is there nothing mercenary in ihaT? The Krupps were reported as having declared an enormous ii idend ft le v days ago from the profits on war nic'erials furnished the central powers. If these people, while battling for exiTter.ce, do not hesitate lo make money out of their 'ow n national necessities, how can they expect the rest of the world to devote itself to pure, utunereenary philanthropy ? Tloston Bus:.
Good butter is essential to a good meal. Secure it by asking for the Oak Grove brand.
One pound of Oak Grovt Bulicr it equal to 10 pounds of Fresh Fish in food value.
MADE FROM RICH PASTEURIZED CREAM
POUND CARTONS SOLD BY GROCERS
Put OAK GROVE butter on your bread and know the 7'pp of being Tvell-fcd
jacTunucr output of the ( 'aliimet District. This statement was sufiiciont to make the residents of this district feel proud of its achievements. There has hrien recently organized a companv which is destined to piny no small part in the future progress of this District the Wright Manufacturing C. This company, incorporated under the laws of the State of Indiana, with its he? dow: inters in East Chicago, Ind., the heart of tho manufacturing district, has secured the rights for the manufacturing and sale of the TRANSMOTOT?. a device which in connection with an automobile has unlimited uses and possibilities. With this device it is possible for anvone who has an automobile to use the power generated by the .automobile without in any way changing the auto, as all that is necessary is to back the auto on the TKANSMOTOH, v.hen'it is instantly ready for any work that can be done by a gasoline or other engine of six or eight horsepoAver. Tn addition it can be used for many other purposes, such as lifting building material, raising hay into the barn, putting up ice, in fact any kind of lifting; and can also b used for drilling wells, etc.; in fact there is ho limit to its use. The TRANSMOTOR is as easy on the. automobile as the smoothest road. We are now manufacturing the TRAXSMOTOR, but owing to the fact of the demand we have decided to sell sufficient stock of this company to equip a factorv whieh will enable us to keep up with the sales. We are offering now the stock of this company at par, $20.00 a share. Every dollar of the money goes into equipment. There is no question about the future of this company. When this issue is sold, there will be no more at this price. You are no doubt aware it has been, only a short time since the stock in the Ford automobile,
the Overland automobile and many, other.. cjqna!lyJ
good enterprises could have been purchasod-at var. which are selling today at many times thai price. Four or five shares of tlie original stock in these companies and in many other similar companies are earning dividends that arc making the holders of the stock independently wealthy. We stand readv to prove everv assertion made here both as to the company and "the TRAXSMOTOR. Don't let this opportunity pass unheeded. Call us up by phone or write us at once. Give us the opportunity to show you what we have. You will never regret it. As an opportunity like this seldom presents itself. The officers of this company are men of standing and exceptional business ability and are well known in this locality. Mr. Chas. D. Wright, in charge of the office, 100 Citizens National Dank Dldg., Hammond, Ind., President. Phone Hammond, 510. Mr. Win, J. Funekey, Jr., Cashier, First National Bank, East Chicago, Ind., main office, Secretary and Treasurer. Phone E. Chgo., 1. Mr. Chas. P. Packer, Jr., Cashier, Citizens Trust & Savings Bank, Indiana Harbor, Ind., Yice President. Phone Ind. Harbor, 155. Mr. Andrew W. Morcll, 0233 Commercial Ave., South Chicago, Illinois. Phone So. Chgo. 75 or 45. Representative.
i 1 fit
Op tome-
to examine eyes and let try Kryptok
John E. McGarry JEWELER OPTOMETRIST.
it
I Snake 1
Oil
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Will Umber Ton Tip A. siw Creation, Pala KUlr and Aatiacptlo 00101311163. Kor .Rheumatism. Neura.I-:a. Bur -batco. Jt iff and swollen Joints. ' Corns Bunions or whatever the pain may ', it is said to be without en equal. For Cuts. Burns. Bruises. Soi-e Throat Croup. Diphtheria and Tonsilitis it has been found most effective. Accept no substitute. This preat oil is golden rl color only. There is nothing like i; Kvery bottle ruaranteod by leading ftroggjctg Kaufman A- Wolf, Hammond
J. T. STAfflAl Chiropodist 412 Hammond Bldg- Evenings Only
"Z3
Our Middle Name is
a.
1 COAL
Our business is to sell coal good coal. Our pride is to give you full value for every dollar you pay us. Your order will be quickly fdled. THE BIEKER BROS. Cii, 144 Sibley Sfe SS7 V. Hetuau 91. Telephone 53. . . TeHphoae HAiTKoin), nrs.
Take a bottle of Old Guardiai Bya
j For f!
fry
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$1.00 for a full
N quart b o t t 1 e.
CALIFORNIA
WINE HOUSE
Wholesale and Retail Liquors. S. LEVIN, Prop.
145 State St., Hammond'
Phone 438.
CORN AND OATS HERX. I. .ilte count y, the leadinc industrial division in the state, is also an agricultural c'T.ler of importance, ran'nir.s amons the h idlest in Indiana's list. Field Apent Bryant of the Bureau of Crop Kstimates of the department of agriculture, indicates that in 101 we produced 2.1 70, find bushels of corn. fO.nito bushels of wheat, K..n"o hushels of rye and !.21o,n0d bushels of oats. Our farm product ; count, too.
-MADE BY-
SCHLOSSER BROTHERS
9138-40 BALTIMORE AVE.
CHICAGO, ILLS.
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THE HAMMOND D ISTI L. LING CO, DAILY CAPACITY 2fi,000 GALLONS
A FRIEND IN NEED IS A FRIEND INDEED Good coal is a friend in need. We have it. Place a small order and be convinced. West Hammond Coal Co. PHONES 1674 OR 2955. J. J. Brehm, Prop.
Tub Times gives the w oria news.
PETEY DINK v"s n' Was With tho Pnrt.v A11 the Tiim
By C. A. Voirhc
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