Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 13, Hammond, Lake County, 2 July 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
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Ttms East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, daily at the postofflce In East Chicago. November 1, 181J The Lake County Times I uly accept Saturday t2a postontiee In Hammond. Juno ti. lHOt. The Lake County Time Saturday and weekly postofflce In Hamruond. February i, 1911. The Gary Evening; Tlmaa Dally axcept Sunday. In Gary. Apr 18. 1811. All unri the act ot Marck a. m. aa aeeond-clau
xeept Bund.ay. Kntarad and Saaday. Ea tared al edition. Entered at the Entered at the paitaffloa matter. '
FOaXIG ADVERTISING OSVICB. X Rec-.or Building .Cfclcago
Hajomond private txcKonn)
TELEPHONKt.
1 0 CI. 1101. tlOJ
(Call tor whatertr department wasted.) Gary Offlca Telephone 137 Nassau Thompson. East CT.Uago Teltprma 640-J P. U Evan. Eaat Chicago Tel-phone 737-J East Chicago, Tarn Timxs , 2( 3 Indian Harbor (News Dealer) Si r in i.ana Harbor tLeporter and Classified Ad v. ... .. V.tVu-phone ViYm" or" VsVw" Whitln , Telephone J-M Crown Point Telephone SI
nogewiicn I.
"WHAT," asks Abe Martin, "la more ricd
attractive thin an underwear ml hnw.
Ins a whole well-rounded family sitting! TS a alsn nh' Spttln old.
around the table in their union suits?"; PEOPLE who live within a stone's !
throw of each other SHOULDN'T live in glass houses. DR. HURTT, our state health enmloner, aya
WELL, we'll nibble, what is more attractive?
OUR new gosFls not having arrived yet from the optimetrists we were un-
............ .Telephone
&&GER PAD) UP CIBCLXATI3N THAN ANY TWO 0TEE2 KEWS-
PAPEES IN TIES CALUMET REGION,
If you have any troubla getting Tma Times msika complaint Immediately iv the circulation department. Thb Times will nt be responsible for the return, of any unsolicited manucrlpt artlclea or letter and will not notice anonoymoua communication Short ind letters of general interest printed at discretion
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THE SANCTI.MOXIOUS IIOYNE. Macl'ay Hoyne, Cook county's alleged state's attorney, came out to Gary the other night to shoot off his mouth. He did that very thing. Firtaps we ought to stop right there, for that is really about all there is to bay about what Mr. Hoyne said, but When the people of this district recall that Maclay Hoyne has been Chicago's chiefest mouth-shooter for a number of years, and when they recall that his bailiwick reeks with festering vice spots they have no confidence in his tarantarade and taradiddle about vice in Lake county. It's none of Maclay Hoyne's business anyway. There is vice in Lake county. None disputes that- There always has been and there always will be- We hold no brief for any city or county officer in the country and there are things that should not be and must not be tolerated, but when a fellow of Maclay Hoyne's type presumes upon au invitation given him by women to speak on suffrage to come out to Indiana and announce his candidacy to succeed the sweet-scented Bill Thompson of Chicago, by insulting the city and county officials of this part of the state, we tab and ticket him as a blatherskite-. Hoyne speaks of wire tapping in East Chicago and Gary. This wire tapping really took place in Hoyne's terrain and was hatched in Chicago, yet he has the Unmitigated gall to blame Lake county for iL We have our opinion of a city that will permit Maclay Hoyne to pull the wool over its eyes.
TO go out to the Lake Front beach yepterclny and t:lve the NEW one-plf-re pu ts the o. o. WE really believe the street cleaning department ought to be called upon to r (something about the mesa Tit AT "Uig nill" Thompson and the city council have left Chicago in. SOME of our best families have gone to the country to board for awhile until thf- pet TIRED of resting. IX our quiet but vigilant manner we find tl at it is simply woiidexful what ATTRACTIVE graduating dresses some of the girls made themselves WHEN their mother i lan them, cut them out ant! do sill th? sewing. W1IV jail the slackers? SEND them to the place that they raise when they refused the draft. WHEN a woman begins to tell people how young she was when she g,t mar-
"WIIAT a chump, civilized man is" YOU nald a mouthful doc, he won't belie.ve half
"The Man
YOU docs say will he? NEW play Is entitled. Pays"
WELL if h" doesn't the poor 'groceryman would never get hi3 kale. "MAKE this a big canning year." says an exchange YOU'RE on. we have a lot of things we can spare. WE note that a neighboring judge HU LED that it was not blanderous to call a wain-r a grafter CERTAINLY not, it's a mark of respect to call him nothing worse than that
BERLIN Lokal-Auzeiger eays the
German navy warns to fight
THE B. L. A. talks like one of the
blatherskite, fight managers who used to come out from Chicago TO rut on a scrap here.
KEEPING HARMONY AT HOME. The people of this country are willing to support any proper war legislation. But they are likely to become vexed and irritated if all sorts of reforms are foisted upon them under the guise of being war measures. Chicago Tribune. Persons with no sincere motives will, in time of war, endeavor to har- . uess reforms on the country in the guise of legislation. Such moves tend to create unrest and they should be promptly stamped out. President Wilson in coming out against bone dry legislation shows that he recognizes this. This is either a free country or an autocracy; if it is the former it should be kept that way- Just now one of the most insidious menaces is the hired prohibitionist lobbyist, hundreds of them, many of the number " being clergymen, are at work in Washington- They are paid from funds collected by persons who give no accounting and only the Lord knows how honestly the money is handled. It is just as vital that legislation is not dominated by narrow-minded fanatics, who place prohibition above patriotism and preservation of national harmony as it is that liquor bossism is promptly stricken down- America ' cannot afford to be menaced by either, but at this time the most effective aid we can extend to the kaiser is to inflict summary ar.d complete prcLibition upon the United States.
ONE WAY OP GETTING RESULTS. Gary is a ?ity with a large foreign population and one of the problems it has is to get co-operation between Citizens and the municipal government in the matter of garbage cans, refuse and clean alleys. Many arrests have been made of offenders, but this has not brought results. Mayor Johnson has adopted a new plan. He has named a sanitary inspector, C- L. Btownell, noted author and war correspondent, who is in Gary studying the schools. During the summer vacation Mr- Brownell will give his time to the process of sanitary education, and as he is known to every child in the foreign qirartr through his helpful lectures at the Gary schools, h - should make a success. But it is not alone in the foreign quarter where sanitary education is needed. Not only those persons who have not attained it disregard health ordinances, but in the uptown districts, where residents should know better, they violate local laws with a clear disregard of their neighbor's welfare. They, too, can be subjected to further enlightenment. Many methods have been tried to get clean towns, and tbi. one will be watched with interest. A new place, possessing sewers, paved sidewalks, concrete alleys, steel garbrge cans and free, systematic garbage collection, there is no eaon why Gary streets, alleys and yards should not be the cleanest in the state.
long. He and his own fellows can go together in the same unit. It is a comfort when the going is rough and the hardships come, to know the ellow at your right elbow lives just around the corner at home, and the fellow at your left Is your pal- You .can talk "hack home" and get the same pleasure that old cronies find in talking of di.ys when they were boys togetherAnd there is no denying you feel a stronger interest in your officer when you know that he is responsible for your , well-being, not only as a matter of dny, but because of the moral responsibility to the folks in his . townA lot of the chaps do not know that they can join the nat-onal guard for the period of the war. They can- Furthermore, the old excuse that they do not want to act as policemen or put down strikes is antiquatedIhe guard is going to war and when that is over, the soldier can step out of the ranks and retire for good. Young man, join the national guard! Choose your own bunkie. and have yrmr pal with you when you join. The conscript army will be a noble army of the f.ower of the land; the national guard of Indiana the soldier boy identified with the state of which you are proud should have the first call.
A MATTER OF DEFENSE POLICY. Relative to an expression of policy by the executive committee of the special committee on national defense of the American Railway association, in a conference with the commiUee on Inland water transportation of the Council of National Defense, in the matter of co-operating with water transportation companies to facilitate the movement of traffic and enlarge the field of co-ordination of transportation facilities', we quote, as fellows: "The position of the railroads regarding transportation on navigable waters of the United States is that they will welcome any practicable water transportation, and are prepared to co-operate cordially with responsible persons or corporations who may provide such water transportation by the evchange of traffic, the issuance of joint through bills of lading, and, if necessary, where conditions justify it, by joining the w?ter carriers in the building of tracks to connect the railroads with the wharves and landings of water carriers." '
NOW t rat the sweet things are going to wear red, white and blue bathing suits, we see where every chap will have to stand at attention and salute every time a "mermaid passes.
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Folks who have been attending the sale know what this means. To those who have not been here we wish to say that it is to your interest-to attend the Auction Sale on Talking Machine night. WM& SMLES BMSIW 2:3 ami 7:3 P. Beautiful Souvenirs free to the Ladies attending the afternoon sales. SX3 txa t:r73 "j E3
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INDLVAPOLIS. Ind .. E. rfhrup, state v
, Juno 30. Dr. eterinarian. has
undersjin a movement for increasing
the rfuetion of pork by farmers of Indian Under former conditions, pigs and 1; hogs were sent to the public stock ris in large numbers and from there Ire Koine- to the rifirVlnw
, As p-t-of the movement for mors
food, fvas recognized that these light hogs fcuM not be Blanch t
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wirjr we-nea z'ju pounds or more. Dr X ' . .
-luimrup nas established a complete
ciearng hous system for getting these pigs back to the farms to bo fed out. During tho past 60 day8, more than 25.000 head of pigs have been bourht
et public stock yards by Indiana farmers as feeders. Before leaving the yards all of these animals are examined careful for health, disinfected and are vaccinated against hog cholera. These pigs have averaged less than 100 pounds In weight. They will not come bPCk to market until they weigh 200 lKunds or more. Tf the averaga gain is 100 rounds, 2.600,000 pounds more pork has thus been added to the worlds food supply through this movement in sixty days. At the present price of hogs more than 1375,000 has been added to the 1917 income of Indiana farmers at the same time. And this movement!
has gone still further. Co-operating
with the various county and district veterinary societies in the state. Dr Northrup has established branch clearing houses over the state whereby the man who wants to sell light hog's an -the man who has corn to feed the-e can be brought together. In one o1 these branches thirty-four deals of "ft;kind, representing more than ona thou sand pigs, were made In thirty da so that altogether It Is probably thnot less than 65,000 head of light hjr have been saved from slaughter una they can be made to produce the msc mum amount of foodstuff. Dr. Xorthrup has divided the sts, into sixteen districts, and -vct.-.r.. -.
arian resident In each district, has 1. appointed deputy state veterinrior- -.
that territory. These aopointm
have been made regardless of pojp.-.
lhese men. draw no salary, but
paid only for the time the.v c,-u .---
spend in the service of the state.
WORLD'S FIRST AERIAL FIRE FIGHTING COMPANY PUTS OUT SAN DIEGO FLAMES
YOUR LAST CHANCE, YOUNG MAN. Though Lake county has fallen down in furnishing its quota to the national guard in this week's 70,000-rr.en call, there is still time to make up for it. The recruit joining tho guard has a privilege which will not be open
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One of San Diego's aerial trucks and firemen who man it. The first aerial fire fighting- company has been established at San Diego, California, which city has purchased two one hundred horsepower hydroairplar.es on which powerful chemical extinguishers and apparatus are carried. These two machines are at the disposal of Fire Chief Louis Alheim, who pilots one of them. Thev can be used in fitrhting water front Llazea.
PETEY DINK They Can Work on Petey Anytime
RIALS!
EALS and SB
GOOD Housekeeping realizes that the women of this country want food factspractical facts that they can use in these days of wax shortage and soaring prices. It gives you these facts in the July Good Housekeeping more concretely, more comprehensively, more helpfully than you can get them from any other source. But it goes rurther. It also gives you fiction like the serials of Mary Roberts Rinehart and William J. Locke. It gives you good short stones like those of Meredith Nicholson, Bertha Runkle and Wallace Irwin. It gives you the vital, informing articles of E. S. Martin and Peter Clark Macfarlane-and ten paees of Fashions! K 6 Nine up-building food articles in this one issue-yes that's true. But more-a wealth of entertainment in this same July number. Practical, authoritative, helpful yes But delightful, worth-while reading, too 1 On sale today everywhere 15 cents
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