Hammond Times, Volume 11, Number 273, Hammond, Lake County, 1 May 1917 — Page 4

THE TIMES Tuesdav, Mav 1, 1917 THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BT THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY. I Everyone 3 r p Needing I Glasses The Tltne Eat Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally eopt Sunday. Entered at the postoffics In East Chicago. November 1. 1?13. The Lake County Timre Daily except Saturday and Banday. Kntered at, the post-office In Hammond. June 18, 1906. i Th Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Kntered at the poatofTk-e In Hammond. February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Dally eacept Sunday. Entered at the poatofflce In Gary. April IS. 1S12. All under the act cf March 3. 137. aa eecond-claaa raattr. Jf will a)prcciato the ad- U vnuVAixo f the dependef'!ee in ur otFOaSIGS ADVERTISING OPTICS. II Rector Euliain Cnlraga I p metnst.

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Btmmona (prlTate exenaaye) (Call for whatever department wanted.) Gary Office , Nassau & Thompson. East Chliaso F. L. Evans. Eaet Chlcaaro East Chicago. Tub Time , Indiana Harbor (News p.lrl

Indiana Harbor (Ueporter and Classified Adv..

Whiting Crown Point

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S101.

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, ; Telephone 1ST t T . 1 1 CJft T '

a.....iirpilUIIV tJ , Telephone 737-J :o snj ... Telephone 4 I 2M or 7S5W Telephone 8-M

Telephone Telephone It

LAEGEE PAID UP CIECULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHER NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.

If you have any trouble ettingTHa Times msie complaint Immediately to the circulation department Thb Times will not be responsible for the return- of anj unsolicited manuscript articles or letter and will not notlcet enonoymous communication Short signed letters of general interest printed at dlacretion

- - 15 All - iv W;i'-v .-V-t v'i- ,'-A : f flit ? ' A U iLA . "'-'Xi f " r ''a it-i'r,

He will examine vour

(Special to Tun Timks.)

I.VDIA.N'APOU, 1N!.. Apr . The .

industrial board of J nri mn.i. h:is st its ('V'('S flee (f ('liar"' if cast's for tHi" am' ,h,i fj!:,nvln? is a:fl -lasses are reqniil he list of the cass wiii'-h w!!l cr.-fnt:, th: N ' .,, ,. . . ,

1V . t 3ii in yon witii TLie i s'oi'C- o?ses at a verv

MttCJition of tho full. l.-i-tr'I O! Kay 2. 1317.

A cidont No. 5."('-f - -!'r s..tiK3!in. Ai indont No. For invi't ;'uti"n. .H. N. 421 f :'" n. so. lit-ts-.i .k .-t. Northern Indiana ; A- K!f. Co.

iar;i, Wiliiains vp.

i reasonable; eharjre.

Ame. Stoc! l-'dry.

.r.

No. 93 H'l'.OO b. m. n. t. c. r;. a. No. f45 11 :"0 a. in 'o. vf. I'ot r F;i

No. 33" 1:"0 n. m. SomJyo s

M eiais JtPitnins o.

No. HSO 3 : p. id. Mof-:f vs. Great ; f:J ij&'Ai-s Dredge & i." k Co. i t

v.-. ! m

u. s.

irarry

Jswefsr-Oplomstrist

Mac AVargo

Irdi:i. T a Conipfr.y. The fHS" on rev a w on v. "n

1) It. is i .

Left to rijfht, above: Ids M. Tariull. Anna Howard Shaw and Mrs.' Josiah E. Cowles. Center: Mrs. Antoinette Funk and Mrs. Flvilip N. Moore. Below: Maude Wet-

more. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt and Mrs. Stanley McCormick. Woman's part in the war will be determined by nine women recently named by the council of national de-

California, president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs: Miss

! Mande Wetmore, of Rhode Island, chairman of the National League for Woman's Service; Mrs. Carrie Chap- ! man Catt, of New York, president of the National American Woman Sufj frajre organization; Mrs. Antoinette

1-unk, of Illinois; Mrs. btanley Mc

Cormick. of Boston: Mrs. Joseph R.

anil the ntl'fr nnmhirq arp Mrs Lamar, of Atlanta, president of the

fense, to be known as the committee Philip N. Moore, of St. Louis, presi-1 National Society of Colonial Dames, on women's defense work. Dr. Anna i dent of the National Council of i and Miss Ida M. Tarbell, of New Howard Shaw is named as chairman, ' Women; Mrs. Josiah E. Cowles, cf i York, publicist and writer.

necessary to !iae only one m -rubor of the board pit. are ;ip follows: May 3, 1317, Tharsday. No. 1126 fl:'"' . m. rtrson v?. JIcClintlc Marshall Co. No. 1119 1 0 : 0 a. in. 3IcKirn,ic vs. Koppcr C'o. No. 111411:00 a. m. Jackson vs. McClay et al. No. 1113 2:(0 p. m. Griffin vs. Standard Forcings Co. No. 976 3:00 p. m. James Lewis vs. National Car Coupler Co.

Kay 1917, Tilfiay. No. 1141 3 : n i ' n. m. Ducheck v.Standard titeel Car Co. No. 63 10:00 . m. Chandler f. Cudahy Packing' Co. No. CSO-ll:H) a. m. Heimke vs. N. V. C. I;y. Co. No. RF.8 1:00 p. m. Tony Syda v. Standard fi-el Co. Co. No. 33 3:00 p. m. Mike EvanoK vr lllinois Steel Co. No. 11344:00 p. m. Delia Luitner vr

Illinois Steel Co.

AT DeLUXE THEATRE, MAY 7 AND 8

DEWEY Day:

HOW is George Svlvester Vierck kecpinK his mouth shut? GOVERNMENT may commandeer all auto?.- We're not worried.

chief of the mi-ion, Mr. Balfour, is a Tory in politics at home. Yet be is serving ia the ca'.irvt tmdfr a Liberal prime minister who holds office by J virtue of a radical majority in the house of commons'. It 5 many years since! Mr. Hal four has held o:'fio by virtue of th political supremttcy of his own J r-arty; and he now ha.s the portfolio of foreign affairs because, in the face of; war. Great Britain has mohili.d lo the carrvinp on of the conflict not oniv h:r, fleet, her mt. her money nad livr maierial resources, hr political power . as well, irs", under Asqnith, and later under Lloyd George, the best, mind.-? of j British conservatism were called into council by the Liberal government. Aj unified Knglar.1 is carrying on the war. ) Yet at Washington. Mr. Balfour found none hu democrats on cuard. He: "a invited to dine at various tables, whfie he Sat among democrats oniv or

i chiefly. Whether his conference were political, financial, military, or social,.

it was always the same. H came in contact oniv with democrais. Yet Mr.

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to i

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I'alfour is a scholar in pojitics as mui ii as Mr. Wilson. Jfe cannot fail

know there sre an ennal number of reimhliC3ns and rlemncrats in our house !

GERMANY has her Junkers, Mexico her bandits, and we have our food j nf representative- .R,i in ,hP senate, as he know, from nrevious personal ac-i

speculators. , 4. u., u,- ; ,k !

v,ud the equal if not. iho superior in intellect and patriotism to its democratic, associate. Yrt Mr. Balfour was not brought to meet any of these men) through official introductions. Had' he been an intellectual strancer to Wash-t inpton he would have been jas'ified Id thinking that 'he nation possessed j none Inn. democratic statesmen, legislators aad administrators, and tha" lie j 'as in a stranpeh one-sided co-.mtry. . - i

ILLINOIS court says golf i3 not an amusement, it is a crime.

The way some play

POSSIBLY a Zeppelin flying over New York is the only thing that will wake some people up. ,

RALEIGH, N. C, has sent one" naval recruit, to Josephus in Raleigh.

Guess they arc all wise

'BIG Bull" Thompson is another reason why we always sisrl; wi when the traiu pulls out. of a Chicago depot.

h relief

NO. we haven"t sot. the last dollar paid off on the winter's coal bill, but the baby has just cut his last tooth, which is some consolation.

ARE Martin opines tint "a feller has f work harder t' make his wages j.o round these days than he does t' make th' wages."

ALWAYS thought Chicago was the second American city of the world, but its mayor says it's the sixth German city of the world.

AS the purchasing power of the dollar gradually dwindles there is at leaFt this satisfaction: The dollar is worth two dollars Mex. money.

exploitation of Mr. Balfour beenn iV republican stood up in the house of re pre-1 ?entative's to carry on tb- democratic president's fitta to pass a:t army b'H' vhich the members of bis ov rt t arty -the Clarks, the fen!5, the Kitcbin.-", -t i al had ref'i:-ed to support. I I-r-re a-ain was found a curiously one-sided coun-!

fr wiih the republican lem

ranged en masse on the side of patriotic

efficiency. The lesson could hardly have been lost, upon the discerning Eog-

lisbman and in the course of bis visit, which he has said is to be or.' of!

service, he can render no befur service 10 Mr. WiWon than by tactfull

pointing out that in En

energy of the nation

var to that party w hich for moment 'chances to possess a parliamentary m:i joiiiy. '

BABIES

The baby is a small, active article of excitement. Its business in the world is to keep its father and mother hopping sideways. It can do this better than almost anything else extant, with the possible exception of the doctor bill. The largest thing about the baby is its appetite. Which it exercises several dozen times a clay. You'd think they'd wear it out. But they don't. No. But they wear out everything else around the place, including mother's disposition. The baby is not an absolute necessity. But it is customary. The great trouble with babies though, is that they won't stay babies. They grow rapidly in all directions. They, accumulate, shed, and reaccumulate and shed flocks of hair and sets of clothes and teeth promiscuously. Withal, babies are a great institution.

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Mi 'M" ARfcRAFT PICTURED U

ier no De;i r service to .vir. vu-on man iy tactiuiiy ; y England and in France tlere is no attempt to narrow tliejp p. by confining the planning and the carrying on of the j r

imsmmm and puz.rm

Yi:S, Till-: WKST IS WAKING IT.

The recruiting returns indicate that the west, is as earnestly for the war, now that ii lias been entered into, as it was opposed or indifferent to it before it was begun. And that lis a pretty good test of

GENERAL George Washington never dreamed that some day a British) patriotism New York World.

.mission would jourr.ev to Mount Vernon to lav a wreath from the king on From figures at hand this paper believes that Lake county has sent more

his' tomb. i men to the colors in the gix months passed than all the rest of the counties j in the state put together. NKW York World hopes now that the coal operators have increased the I .lust as THE TIMKS reeently stated the near west, the middle west and

miners' pay that they will not. give themselves a special reward by levying i the far west haven't, done so much Plattsburging and preparedness parading i $1

or made so many speeches on patriotism, but now that war has begun a!l:

From the same issue of the World, April 27, from which the preceding:

paragraph was taken, there is a Washington dispatch showing total enlist-

i.ts ia the army for the first 21-days in April. We learn that New York;

has .given lt-'J per rent of her quota as compared with 4 3. r, in this s'.ate. Hi tie-! blooded and colonial ancestored Vermont, looms up with 2.3 per cent, Mary-j land with tl.s per cent, Connecticut with 13.7, and Massachusetts with 11.9)

tax to the government. We see where a lot of editors and paragraphers are ! per cent. Compare these figures with Indiana s showing or with Nevada's: j-oing to Ret. into the limelight. I M.4 per cent, Liah's 13. V per cent, or even pacific Nebraska's 21. !t per cent, j

. I This recruiting district led tr:e count ry and Gary, besides giving an overSOME of our manufacturers are so whole hearted in their patriotism ! seas, expedition of 23 Serbians, yielded i he army more men than the f nlis.t-. cow that America has gone to war that, they will not boost the price of ma; rrenta in Maryland. Delaware and Vermont combined. Gary did b. t'er than terial to our allies, but will continue to be satisfied with the present method I cither the District of Columbia. Rhode Island. Wyom;ng-and other states, and

a double tax' on the ultimate consumer. CAN'T see why the president is sending Elihu Root to Russia when he might have chosen either .Messrs. Hughes, Fairbanks or J. Ham Lewis, any one of whom have the proper amount of whiskers. INDIANA Daily Times demands that congress pass law- providing for publicity that will show amount paid by each person who yields an income

o! charging them five or six times actual value.

her sister city of Hammond, with ev n more enlistments, outranked rnanj

-tate.-',

A'ONK-SIDEI) COUNTRY

j One would think that states on the Atlantic coast, where people have been; 1 preaching preparedness and which are so open to a' tack, would not, let Httloi

The first few days which the British high commissioners spent in Wash-j towns in inland Indiana, towns whose population are more than titty per cent j ington produced no little confusion in the distinguished visitors' minds. The J foreign born, outrank them in giving men to the colors at this tini". , j

Kjjijs ;hk1 Poultry are two of the most important and lwessary items in

daily food supply of the world. Giving a an exec-use, the high prices of feed mail people who formerly raised chickens hav? uivon them up and disposed of their I'lorks. We are informed that the same condition exists all over the country. If

l o, it means an l-'AJlLNh within tii:- next six monxns. i racneaux au e.ugs t prodm-etl in the fall and winter months must come from pullets, , hatched in the

spring during' April and May. All .the mmire henstop laying as soon as the moulting season hegifis, about August' 1st, and do not lay again in any great iniouiit until the following season beginning in late January or February.; Unless something is done and done AT ONCE, there will develop a scarcity of -ggs timing the fall and winter months that will force fresh eggs to prohibitive prices bevond the reach of those who ne?d them most. Here is an opportunity to

prove our patriotism ahd at the same tim? demonstrate the value of fresh eggs ns a staple food. A strong concerted movement at this time to increase egg produc-

lion is just as necessary as the ''home girden" movement." Wo appeal to all poultry raisers, farmers and commercial producers, fanciers and back yard breeders, to keep up hatching at this time anil raise all the chicks possible, thereby helping the situation, locally at least. Would that we could spread this warning all over the 'country, and prevent uch a lisaier as a nation-wide egg and 'ultry meat famine. A. dozen liens will keep an ordinary family in eggs the year around and can be raised arid kept on a u;vv Hxll feet. (show you !' patriotism by becoming a producer instead of a consumer, jmd at the same time insure your own egg supply. MAGINOT BROS.

174 FAYETTE STREET.

HAMMOND, IND.

PETEY DINK.

-'The Perils of Petev." The Potato Bug, No. I,

MJ?S DlviK A7MO 03ANETS MAS VtCD

WARO JORUf IMtS 'S'POUSE

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oc Something Do 3UST AVECV."

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mil- i.Xr "W j& .i T. " -

By C. A. VOIGHT

W.SPR,vEwToTAK,WJ - 'p'j -Af BlT.-PTEH0WS '0J his v-tFc a potato ntk.. 1 fvNeAKMess-brccts hr-j9 CHA?Aa 3v 1 I HAH 'if ivMlSMTo flf . To COPTHE. VmTVf IM A t IT CLE 6 AME. fZ T?N M-