Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 230, Hammond, Lake County, 12 March 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE 'IMES Mondnv, Maivh 12, 1917
'HE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
BT TEE LAKE COUNTY PHENTING & PTTBLLSETSa COMPANY.
The Times Sut Chicago-Indian Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered at the poetofftoe In East Chicago. November 18. 1913. The Lake County Tiujte Dally except Saturday and Sanday. Entered at the postcttice In Hammond. June IS, 1?C6. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Kntered at the postofTtce In Hammond. February 4. I'll. The Gary Evening; Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the pontofflce In Gary. April 13, 1S12. All under the act of Marctl 3. 1S73. as aecond-class matter.
irtJRXlttX ADVERT1SINQ OPTKK. IU Rector Building Chicago
TELErHOlVKS. Hammond (prtvsta excluuire) t.. (Call for whatever department wanted.) G.iry OiTlce Nassau Thompson. East C"h;.a.ro F. 1 Evans. Eaat CMeasro East Chicago, Thb Time Indiana Harbor (NVws T"ealer Indiana Hirbar (Reporter and Classified AJs)...., Whltlnr; , Crown Point , Ltegewlsca
,.8100. J10U J10J ....Telephone 137 . .Telephone 640-J ..Telephone 737-J S02 sns . . . .Telephooa 48 ..Telephone 80-M Telephone ....Telephone 13
LAKGES PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHER NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET HEGION.
If you have anv trouble getting- Thsi Timij r::.ke complaint Immediately to the circulation department. Thb Times will net be responsible for the return- of any unsolicited manuscript articles or letter and will not notice ionoymoua communication. Short aigned letter of jreneral interest printer! at discretion.
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4
THE THRILL OF THE NEWSPAPER. When you pick tip your newspaper these days you feel the thrill of the times. It is the day of bis events. You expect to have the headlines tell you that the inevitable has come to America -war. If it comes you are not surprised, for its foreshadows have been on us for a long time; but you will be pobered. There is every reason to believe ihat. we will soon print the paper that has the war headlines. It may be today, maybe tomorrow; perhaps it will be a week or a month before the grumbling machinery of the pressroom gives birth to the paper that pcreams of the conflict. No one wishes it to come, but no one can forestall the inevitable and the newspaper is its messenger.
RELIGIOUS TOLERATION. It may seem rather out of fashion to persons in pome communities where a difference in religion is almost tantamount to a cleavage of humanity to read in THE TIMES of a singular meeting held in Gary the other evening. Under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus David Goldstein, a lecturer, addressed an audience to which non-Catholics as well as Catholic? had been invited. Gotten up by Catholics the meeting had as Its chairman, a Pro'estant, a man prominent in the ranks of his church and hich in the Masonic order. The Mason did not hesitate to praise the Catholic order, nor did the evening end without fair references to other fait! To see a Protestant and Mason as chairman, by invitation of a Catholic priest and membrs of the Knights of Columbus, must have been a disconcerting spectacle to those citizens of Gary, who earlier in the week, had circulated anonymous circulars concerning certain candidate.-: for office, because of their religious affiliations. The country is happily getting away from the old lines of religious narrowness and other day tenets. Not long peo when persistent charges were made in the west that, the Knights of Columbus order exacted unpatriotic allegiance from its members, the stale council of California submitted i's entire secret ritual to the scrutiny of the highest Masonic body in i Tie ?ta and it received a reply that silenced the d.-tractors. America is a land of relicious freedom, all can set along in harmony and if there were more of a spirit of co-operation between those of different religions and a friendlier regard for the good pom's of fraternal orders to which the ether man belongs, the country would profit immensely.
FARM TROUBLES. A good many men. not only hero in Barton county, but all over th sta'c, says the Lamar Democrat, are leaving the farms this spring. They intended all along to stay on the farm, but as spring approaches and they face the necessity of buying corn at a dollar a bushf l and other feed in proportion in order to mnke 8 crop they fro they have neither the money nor the credit. So 'hey are having sale-:, cashing their personal property, usually- in an effort to pqtiare up with the world, and try something else. Farmers found it easier to stay on the farm twenty years aeo when their products sold almost for nothing than they do iu some regions today when -vcr thitu-the-,-produce sells at prices simply staagerine. Paris (Mo. i M'-rcurv
COPPERHEADS AGAIN.
The Chicago Tribune is furious. There was a great, meeiini: in that ci; in the interest of peace, which took the form of a referendum to discover whether het people wanted peace or war. There was a zreat crowd, and The Tribune attacks it editorially under the head of "Twelve Thousand Copperheads.' That is the Brick Pomeroy style in secession times, when there were "copperheads," but now there are no copperheads, and won't be any unless such style of journalism makes them. It is shameful to American citizenship to call a man a horrid name because he favors an I. and R.
AN AUTO IF YOU GUESS HER NAME
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andom
THEY al.o remember that
iime ia lik a lamb in the
March cyclone
Things and Flings
ship. The Turk are getting- almost as frightful an the Christian sailors in th.; U-boats.
THIS Muncie arlass factories must be. working overtime. Mrs. Anthony is Inwii In NV-w York with fiiamonfls on her heels, fingers and fare. ;
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ISN'T it about tlm for th
to be printing that It wtis nil
ps pera a fale
Co:nt Von
HF-.RINC; some of th men in report, that news abo
V. S. senate you can't blamn 111 Zeppelin beintr dead?
i for deciding to remain in Cal- ' A DOIiLATl saved Is a. d:iar earned j i,ut, bv the way, what does a dollar
beind passed ntnount to these days?
IMIi iSPEHITY is
aroii!.'1.. T!ie corporations are making t-ii tiioos at much ns tliey did orid the wrki:,:;:ii-iri is tettinx one-tenth jr.nre ttiati iif i.s.-.l to.
KYKRYTIIINO probabty bnppenfi for, the best except thi baby's colic. I
n i-;a u i '. y
on 'JleU." nttendl by don o T i'V ' priicarles.
man delivers scrThiK fiioui'l have th" gentlemen who thf steel roller in
VHF:N you bad the evening: out.
arranged to spend
Hi". tf. ! t hat ! - d. ! i
I: chap has gotten up a dOM -e to tin- i f f . ts of modcrnt." drlnk.'o jici'd of it. Kvery one Icnnws . drink brings good feeling, two to talk, three to ping, four to
Tt'IiKi-'tr s'ibmnrlne sinks hospital
AT.I. Is we'll! Farm and Fireside figures tbet even If Germany did start a oubmarine blockade it vnuld tako a thousand years to starve us.
ITi ere i re 10,000 I.ske Coanty people who are lt-rlng all -rer the V. 8. A aaharrlptlon to THE TIMKS will save you the trouble I writing n letter ta my one of them.
I Appreciate I
to tho fullest my respon
sibility in safeguarding
the eyesight of the hun- I
dreds of people "who have favored me by their patronage. In ray estimation, every detail of the work is worth' of elosest attention and keenest discernment.
j ealling for a deep spe
cial knowledge and long years of training in conjunction with a high degree of skill.
This girl is the most popular touhk lady In the world. She is truly the "darting or the screen,' and this photo shows her as she -will r.pptar In her next Altera ft pv-ture. "A Poor Little Ui' L. Girl.". To all who can ptiess the last name of this well known screen star we will give an ai!t'tudi;eproviding every guess is accompanied by a certified (heck for $500.
on war. We don't favor it. but wo in-jline to respect the man who docs more than we do th paper thru calls him a copperhead. Let u pet rid of siu h low and unsuccessful ways of crca! iusc opinion. Chicago Herald.
THRIFT IN LITTLE THINGS. "Don't take the top sheet," is the order issued by a larse insurance company to its employes when taking stationery from the stock room. The reason is, the top sheet is soiled and dtity and must, la thrown away, only to leavo another top .sheet to become soiled and wasted. Over the electric button in a larpe hotel is the request: "YV'e would appreciate the favor if you will turn out, the Jiuht when leaving tao room." Some hotels furnish a large cake of soap for each room daily, whether the guest changes or not, the bulk of which is wasted, while ot her hotels furnish a small cake just largo enough for a clay's u.-o. p-.mr- hofol.-i have the heavy and costly counterpanes laundered every day, while others have the zuaida turn tho covers back each r.i.sht to avoid soiling.The reason for these small economies is not r.i.ceardliness, but good management. Of what use Is a lareo cake of soap when a small onti answers the. same purpose? Why burn the liuhf. wh. n you ate out of a room? Why soil expensive linen when a little care would prevent. If every employe In a large office wastes but one sheet, of paper a day, and every guest burns hours of needless light, the yearly cost, is enormous. If a hotel can pave but a cent a room on f-oap. it mean a yearly saving of $1,500 in a hotel with 500 rooms. If every bundle that goes nut. of a department ftore has half a cent's worth of needless paper and twine, the loss is a large Iters in the firm's annual profit and loss account.
!clips8 Dump Sox Compan
Manufacturers of the
A certain restaurant found that it cost $
'i a
.-ear t.- fun--.;-.- bread
and butter gratis, and by charging hut ten cents for this service turned a loss of $30,000 into a profit of $."0,000. That is good management, however much we may' grumble at the ten-cent tax. , Success In business, success in life, a matter of applying thrift prin
ciples to little things. We too of en forget that dimes make dollars. And as j waste counts up fast, so savings grow apace. If you .were allowed to go j
over the books-of any savings bank you would find hundreds of accounts that show steady, systematic saving. It may be but a dollar or two a week,
but in the long run it mounts up. A certain young lawyer in w York j who was once a pack peddler made it. a steady habit when a boy to save j
FAMOUS COMBINATION DUMP AND SERVICE BOX 226 Fayette St. Telephone 1436 Hammond, Indiana Expert Automobile and Engine Overhauling and Repairing Auto Accessories. Agents for Firestone Truck Tires. under the supervision of Arthur Howard, expert machinist. Manufacturers of Truck Bodies and Form-A, H-D extension for Ford trucks. All kinds of grocery delivery bodies. Also all kinds of Forge and Iron Work a specialty.
John E, McGarry
Jeweler - Optometrist
Killer's Autlceptlo Oil Known at
ake
t Will Positively ReUeve Pain la Tkre Minute. ' Try it liffht now fur Rheumatism, 1 Neuralgia. Lumbago, sore, at iff and j Bwoiir-n joints, pains in the head, back
application pain disappears as j by magic. A nev?r-f ailinir remedy ufd inrnally and externally for Coughs, Cold, (.'roup. Sore Throat, Diphtheria ancl Tonnilitts. This oil is ron"pdd to be the most pc-netratinir remedy known. Its prompt and Immediate effect in relieinp pain is due to thi fact that it penertates to the afferted parts at once. As an illustration, pour Ten Props on the thickest piece of sole leather, and it will penetrate this pubstance through and through in three minutes. Accept no substitute. This etreat Oil Is polden red color only. Every bottle guaranteed: 25o and &0c a bottle, or money refunded. Ksuffman & Wolf, H am m o n d . -t-A d v .
Hammond Furniture
Hospital 823 IT. HOHMAW ST. For up-to-dat Upholstering. Furnltura repairing, Uattreasea made to order. All work called fo? and -Jellvered. Vacua 24S3.
1
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fifty cents weekly, and he was a" regular as the clock. It was the beginning i of a sticce??fnl career. Another younsr man. about, to be married, paved j
five dollars a work for two years out of a ?alary of fifteen dollars and never missed a wck. Th re?'il:s of Ftich pyptenia'ic work will ftirpr !.-; even yourself. You know that fifty times two make a hundred, but if you apply the principle to a bank account, you are bound to believe it. Little leaks c;?n sink a ship as well as a great hole in the bow, and do it with ie-s confusion. Li'tle savings can make you rich ns well ns a great strike. The reason so many people are poor is simply because they cannot stop the little leaks. They spend little sums all the time, and in the multitude of little spendin.es reach a total that proves disastrous. Thrift in little things will make you thrifty in big ones; but you never can have the b'g things unless you jive lieed to the littlo ones. Watch yourself for a few days and see how your money gets away from you. You will surprise even yours-df.
GIRL'S DRESS.
By Anabel
4l 9 mM 8147 "j M
Tokos and plaited effects in a dp f a growins; gir! always draw prawe. at in the frock pictured these feature a;
Worthinton. expressed in a way to suit any girlish fancy an 1 to please any girl's mother. The waist fronts and upper od;;es 'f the hack are gathered ai'd joined to front and Lark yokes. At norma t wnist line a belt of material conceals the juininc of a one piece skirt with sereu backward turnins plaits in each hr.lf and the front iu panel form, as fashion directs for adut dresses. 11. neck is collared with Keif materia! or contrnstitic goods, as preferred, in fnKtir sty'i . The sleeve U easily full. f':;:s!iod witii n wristband cuff "hen full length in .1 with a roll onff when the short length is desired. Thin iress shows the Li sit favor in which braid is held for trimming. Serge, gabardine, wool chocked goods, Talni lleach cloth, lir. on. tussab silk and Hring cottons ar- suitable for d"veloping. It will add to your pocketbeidc and to the appearance of TO;r dnughtr to copy th'S sun pie little dress fr-. u the pattern. The dress No. s,147 cuts in sizes to 12 jears. To make in si..' S requires '2 yards .'V. inch materia!, '",'s yard 30 inch ,r contracting g'.ods and 'i yanks bmid. , i To obtain the pat'ern send .10 cents to the office of this publication.
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The Local Chicago Telephone Directory Goes to Press Soon
Subscribers are requested to notify us at once of any change or proposed change vvhich may affect their present listings in the telephone directory
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New subscribers who want their names in the next book should sign contracts at once Chicago Telephone Company O. A. Krinbill, District Manager Telephone 9903
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