Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 24, Hammond, Lake County, 16 July 1917 — Page 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
BT THE LAKE COU2TCT FKIHTENQ A TTTEUSmSQ COM?ABT.
" THE TTMT!S , - . " .
nnr nv .In t- IK 1017
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JBntorM
fna Timet But Chicago-Indian Harber,. sally Saada
Tha Laka County !ma Dally except Saturday ana Swada?. trW al laa poatofflea in Mammotv. June J I, 10. ,Thf. Lk Co Tlmeaatrdar and waekly a'aitta. Entaead at Mm aoatofrfoe la Hammond. February 4. lli. Tha Oary Bvanlna; Tlma Dally except Sunday. Satorad at tae pMttfflM Gary, April It. iill. AH nde the act of March i, 117, a aeeond-ctaaa matter.
forkig.y AOTimitiflo orvicm. Is Rec'.or Building Caloaga
. telemiowib. tU-remtJirt (prlrwre aacaanra).......... SlOfl. 1101. tifll Cll or wbitiTtr department wanted.) Oary OJIc w.....Teteaa II? Naauu Themr-nen. Eat Chlc&g- T1phee -! r. L Evan. Baat Chloaffo Telephaaa TitEaat Chicago, Taa Tium .tf Indiana Harbor (New. Drdcr) .... . . . .SOJ Indiana Harbor (Reporter and Classified AJv Telephone 41 2M or 7 S 5 W Whu,I: ' Telephoaa 9-M Crown Point Te2eane Hegcwlaca TaJepnaaa U
LAEGEB PAID TIP CQCtiXATION THAI? ANY TWO OTEEE KIST3PAPERS DI THE CAltTMET SEGIOU.
U you hare any, triable getting Tita TlauM mjOce complaint teianedlataly t the circulation department.
Th Tijies will net be responsible for the return of any unsolicited manu
script artlolee or letter and will eot notice aaotioymone comaitinicattona-
aaort -tnH letters of general Interest printed at discretion
LADY DOCTOR HEADS WOMEN'S HOSPITALS
BETTER call It thrf fool bill KOT th food bill. "LIQUOR question ia a moral one.' writes a friend OLD time atuff
HOW can
legislation?
you make men moral by
? .
Efl tear
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Bill '
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M'ADOO NOTinXG.
Of all the ranlt piffle antmeasly bunk that was ever written is the statement fmitlA f n nnmhor nf fomnnroti nonarn alnoA tt a f IKnrtw T Aa
. w s v. v i i- 4 v. i . a, fc a a-tw ri i. uuau
m taicen up, aeriarmg tnat to son-in-law McAdoo belonged the creditAnd yet thew same Democratic papers are roasting Will H- Hayea because
ce is cnairman or tne state Defence Council.
What did McAdoo do to get the credit for the Liberty Loan? The
Democrats ar eridently trying to pave the way for McAdoo as th Democratic presidential candidate when President Wilson's term of office expires.
Credit McAdoo for the Liberty Loan? Why, ten days before the "books
closed only 65 per cent of the loan was taken, and it was only after the magnificent efforts made by the banks of the country, ably seconded by the newspapers, that success was achieved. The credit for the Liberty Loan 13 Just as much due to every hard-working man or woman who gave up 50 hard-earned dollars for patriotic love of cdmitry as it ia to son-in-law McAdoo, and if that is lese ma.este make the most of it-
HONOR IX INDUSTRIAL SERVICE. Industrial Managemrnt for July calls attention to the need Of reeogni
tion for industrial services to the nation In time of war. It cites the app'ear-
ence' of a poster in England showing a child asking "Daddy, what Did You Do in the Great War?" Tn the background Is a khaki-clad figure. This poster was used for recruiting purposes. "The appeal of that poster is sentimental and biased. To be true to the needs of the hour it should show in addition to the maI in uniform another in the clothing of industry. We have always honored the man who has served his country in the war; today we must begin to honor the man who serves his country In industrial pursuits. For in these days of national emergency industry is equally as honorable as warfare,"- continues the magazine editorial. , Timely, the editorial points out that the man in Industry, 'whose service to the nation is more necessary in. the army at home sustaining the army at the front, may for & time have to endure the jibes of uncomprehending persons wh6- will ake reference to slackers. But it beJieres the day Is not distant when Industrial service will be on -the same plane with military "work and those who have the moral courage to stand taunts and stay where they can help to save their country deserve great credit. This raSA it nnitA a r.rilir.ihlc hpri Thla fa an Industrial vmrinn cS-wm
a - - i' i - - - - - - - -- -j - .......... i .... , . v 1 v i. icu over to the production of Iron, steel andother munitions such as benzol.
snrapnei casing, guncotion ana military cnemicais. Tnat we are not slackers here is sliown that this region leads all America In the percentage of men it has given to the regular army. Yet to withdraw very many more from war industries, already short-handed, will be to imperil the army at the front and to take away the lives of the boys in the trenche sbecause of the failure to keep up the stream of supplies. What Amefica should dp Is to follow the Erglish example and accord a distinctive honor badge to the soldier of industry, whether he Is In steel mill or on the railroad.
"WHEN wa read of wat!-rfd
German woman clearing her throat and
a rawing- deep from the bottom of thelunrs x
SPITTING in the
Canadian prisoner on his way to a prison camp In Germany w feel
THAT there are worse fhino. v.o
could happen to this world than having
it -it or a comet
AJD broken to pieces. LtTKE MeLuke says that he dJuin-f
blame some of the girls for sticking" to Ion skirts
AS some family skeletons should be left absolutely under cover. OF course Hollweg can "hold out" HE'S fair and fat WHAT about th poor Germans over there who are nearly starving? -LOWING the clamor of the food propogandlsts t WE desire to enter a new slogan "DO yoar bit Without a bite" IX other words, why eat at all?
ALSO, why appeal the coal barons
to . the hearts of
WHEN kind
they hava nothing of that
IN their make-up?
soma
LOOKING at pictures of
those ancient Roman togu WE fall to comprehend how a man could get along In publlo without carrying A PAPER of safety pins with him. WITH our usual aptitude in handing
out gratitious advice to friends
WE informed one of them that a rolling stone gathers no moss and waa ho there with the come-back?
WELL, he said, business."
"I'm not in the moss
THE days when a fellow will have to sneak back of the door In some 'dump j AND lap up a little hair oil IS fast approaching.
ON Eethman ,says he is not
peace wltftout annexatidto STILL trying to gather in England, eh? THE story that they are not going to put starch in shirts any more vividly RECALLS those goou old days when we pulled a boiled shirt over our head. WE note with interest in one newspaper that "Rompers are one-third off" EITHER the mothers are very careless or else the tots are getting stylish.
f
s i : t .x .a:
r
of '!'7 -J
lit v; f f
for XIi.S , ' ?' " "
ojxe must be developed. If the business has -been transferred, organized to do without its proprietor, trusteed or something like that, much labor must be undertaken to organize matters on the old basis. All this for the purpose of making things convenient for some one in government service! ft is -ridiculous. It is unjust. In making selection for the first army from ten million possible candidates, there are bound to be many rejections. Let those rejections be made by the local boards to th. tu. v.
the least necessary disturbance of industry ,h law
. w. in lc; ivi tfiji; vi;n eni-I
"u-,u";ui' ine numDer or instances of grievance against Uncle Sam.
ine loieao uiaae declares that the war denartmpnt ha
lot of foolish acts since war begun, being govered by a man notably pony
auove uie ears. ux it seems now on the point of eclipsing Itself.
Dr. Rosalie Slaughter Morton.
Dr. Rosalie Slaughter Morton, of New York, is chairman of the American Women's Hospitals, an organization created by the war service committee of the Medics-.l Women's Notional Association. The organization's headquarters rre in New York.
Special Summer Sale of Jced Tea or Lemonade Sets. Cut Glass Jug: and six tall tumblers SS value S3.4S American made real Cut Glass Iced Tea or Lemonade Sets, full hand cut on clear crystal glass blanks; new floral design; set consists of jug and six tall iced tea tumblers. Regular price $5.00 the set, yepon sale at . liJafD John E. McGarry
THE HALLMARK STORE.
599 HOHMAN ST.
THE TWO GERM AX YS.
OVER IX IIOYXE LAND.
Reference to the daily columns of the Chicago newspapers gives light on lawless conditions in certain parts of Cook county: Saloons are run so. especially on Sunday, that many of their drunken customers endanger lives with the way they drive autos. No less a person than the county board president admits the presence of "blind pigs," and in one district the police magistrate runs a notorious resort. On top of this Is the "easy village" of Ecrnham, an undesirable neighbor. v. And all of this is going on in Cook county where that saintly prosecutor, Maclay Hoyne, is state's attorney. And Hoyne is the man who Came over to Gary and hit at conditions in this county when a mere stroke of his pen would start the clean-up of his own county. v
A REASONABLE OBJECTION. According to a dispatch from Washington, which we hope is wrong, there will be two examinations for the recruits gathered In on Registration day. One will be by local boards, "necessarily superficial." the other "minute and rigid" by army surgeons at the concentration camps. , Now this is one of the easiest ways we've heard of for the accumulaticn of grudges against Uncle Sam. Suppose a young man is named to Join the colors and is passed by the physicians on the spot. He proceeds to place his house in order, quitting his job, arranging his business so it can run without him, as the case might be. For the period of the war, he has committed himself to entirely new duties. Then suppose the young man Is rejected at the concentratipn camp. Returned home, he finds a new man in his job, and must hunt another. If he has sold out his business, a new
Of the addresses before the National Educational ra
tion at Portland. Ore., on July 12, few were as interestlnj? as -ae delivered by Charlotte A. Koch, assistant professor German, Stanford university We will follow Miss Koch through a few paragraphs of her" topic, "How to Spend
irr in Germany vrim from ana rieasure," and it will be good to men
ially transport oneseir to the Fatherland and be in the German .,.i
..- "
line to ne: j.
Th ct of this paper is to plan for a year of aysrfmati study and pleasure In Germany. Starting m June sail on a one-class steamer for the continent. Travel by rail to Cologne.' thence in slow stages by steamer up the Rhine as far as Mainz, again by rail to Frankfort After a few days "In Frankfort go to Marburg to attend the Juhr e'. sion of the School for Modern Language Teachers Spend Agu- ia JVelmar and Ilmenati at Gothe and Schiller chrlnes Then go to Munich for art. and visit the Bavarian Highlands. Including: Oberammergau for scenic beauty. Then spend a week in Nuremberg and " Rothenburg. both interesting for their mediaeval setting Dresden's ' attractions are art and porcelain. , By the middle of October you -should be in Berlin to register at the University for the Winter semester. Make thea-tef, opera and concerts, as weil as regular visits to the galleries and museums a part of your weekly program. Much fine music and excelled art lec!1ny ."I.81 nm,nal PrlC6' Study the shPs ake part In 1I the celebrations. In the Spring tramp in the Harz Mountains and then go to Hinfver, to Hamlin mm to. Hildeshelm to study old German architecturethence to the port of sailing, allowing a few davs for Bremen and it Anr.in-f rtl-:t-co,onr- Worpswede. or Hamburg and its suburbs Altona and Btankenese. But instead of the picture of the romantic fiprmsnv - v
hideous Germany., v. The beautiful Germany that we knew of, the land of the Rhine, the Hari peaks, almost sacred Oberammergau; ' the-land of Goethe. Sfchiller-: the land of arts and sciences has been swept away It is now the land of Essen.,of U-boats killing women and children, of Zeppelins as bad. of Uerlin the capitol of anti-Christ. Tae memory of all that is charming is gone. Comes in -its place a bloody array of Hohenzollerns Hindenburgs. von Clucks and baby-slaying von Tirpitzes. The old Germany Is only a memory. The only solace there is In the contemplation of what Germany is today and the hell that it has turned Europe into is the thought of the fairyland that wal Germany.
A'FI-'LLY a5Iant of th Indiana mayors to choose Park Commissioner Kate Wood Ray as their vice president.
REAL mean of Indianapolis News to insinuate Gary has one population figure for advertising and another one for conscription purposes. . m t COLLECTION'S of clothing, kimonas preferred, will be received here for the bare-legged young lady spraddled across the top of "The Passing Show" of this page. . ' ' ' - BAD enough to be called "Sammies." but the drafted men from around New York will have to go in camp at the town of Yaphank.
NEW CASES FILED IN SUPERIOR COURT
The following new cases have been!
filed In the Hammond Lake Superior
Court: - 162J3 Rrri. 1 Forecl. Chat. Mtg. and Rec; Rrdndeis Auto Sales Company (R. A Murray) vs. Emilie Grimm. 1274 ilm. 2 Divorce; Marion Clark (G. H. A- Smith) vs. Milton Clark. 16275 Rm. 1 Divorce; Cfitherlne Johnson c(R. Green) vs. John Johnson. 1627 Rm. 2 Aect. (Appeal by Deft); Marcus Hershcovita (M. Hershcovitz) vs'. N. T. Cfintral R. R. Co. 16277 Rm. 1 Divorce: Florence McFadden (E. O. Sproat) vs. Charles V. McFadden & Hammond, Whiting A East Cbgo. R. R, Co. 1627S Rm. 2 Divorce; Helen Jams
(H. E. Granger) vs. Jacob Jarus. 16279 3nt. 1 Replevin; Chas. A. Lour (E. G. Sproat) vs. Paul Nuschelwlcz, et al. 162SD Rm. 1 Pet. to Sell R. E. : Chas H. Friedrich. Admr. of the Est. of Robert B. McAlee.r. dec. (McAleer & Dorsey) vs. Margaret: McAleer, et al. 16281 Rm. 2 Damage to P'rs. Prop.: Katie GInther, et al. (J. M. Stinson) vs. James Johnson and John R. Farovid. 16282 Rm. 1 Replevin: Oiarfes H. Louer (E. G. Sproat) vs. Alfred W.- Ehlers. 162S3 Rm. 2 Divorce: Unice James (C H. & Smith) vs. Dal Jamei. U284 Rm. 1 Forecl. Ml.; State Bldg."& Loan Assn. of Ind. Harbor (R. H. D. & R.) vs. Moa Eenedlk. et al. 16285 Rm. 2 To Compel -Salrt of R. E. : Kattie Peikarz, Gdn. (,Tho9. B. Cerajewski) vs. Kattie Felkarz. 16286 Rm. 1 Ins. Policy; Sylvia Gadsby (F. Barnett) vs. The North American Union and The Fraternal Aid Union. Battles In Room 1.. 13775 Chamberlain Metal Stilp Co. vs. Lund."et al.; dls as to Chgo. Bond & Surety Co. Judg. 15079 Wagoner vs. Wagoner: And for cross complaint divorce Judg. 1569 Kulborsch v. Gorrlty; find for pltf $20ft; Judg satisfied In open court. - . 15744 Myers vs. City Taxi, etc.; Porter Sup. Ct. 15800 Cit. Tr. A Sav. Bank vs. Wyzykowski. et al.; find for pltf vs. Wyzykowskl, Wegrzyn and Malik as principals and Havron and Borowskl as sureties $210.66 plus $21 without relief Judg. 15SS6 Green vs. Consumers Co.; removed to Federal Court. 16fl 11 Shannon vs. Shannon; find for pltf divorce Judg. 16122 Soelker vs. Hack, et al.: find for
pltf quiet title Jodg. 161S1 Cit. German Natl. P-ank V3. Pohlplatz, et al.; pltf d!s costs pd. 16229 Amer. Tr. & Sav. Bank vs. Ham- ; mond Asphalt Prod. Co., et al.; j find for pltf $25,586.10 plus $739.65 attys fees without relief Judg. 1G231 Mutual Sav. & Loan Assn. vs. j Mavlty. et al.; find for pltf $617.3 I plus $78.80 attys fees without relief Judg over vs. Jesse Mavlty Judg.
1 u - 'jJiiion oi jv.isuer ana "Kistler; find for pet. adoption granted under name of Marie C. Hepp and Ursula C. Hepp Judg. 16270 In re adoption of Maggie McQuiston; adoption granted. 16241 Miller vs. Hoover; contract cancelled; find for pltf possession Judg.
W. U. GIVES TO RED CROSS FUND WASHINGTON. D. C July 16. The Red Cross "War Council today announced & gift of $250,000 to the American Red Cross ffbm the Western Union Telegraph, company, through Its president, Newcomb Carlton. Mr. Carlton is a member ef the executive committee of the New York County Chapter of the American Red Cross and has taken a very active part in the work of the society, especially, in connection with the recent campaign for $100,000,000.
hi Want Prfalry one to-Dau, Yourself evmsee
THERE'S this to be thankful for: The dishonesty of most of the coal operators might be twice as bad as it is.
WHAT with the rebellion in China, Sinn Fein elections in Ireland r. TV. W. rows in the West, kicking in the German Reichstag, and high times in Russia, it is only natural that Gary has already her,, t...t.A ...u
city election quarrels.
SOME of the steeL coal and food concerns seem tr, i.a
the president. . He asked that they back America, not back her to the wall.
THE pro-German Laporte Herald is ungodly mad at the supreme court for knocking out the constitutional convention. The L. H. is evidently for anything that will divert Indiana from a successful prosecution of the war
- LA' ''(feSSlaUL If 1 ; Jr
Do Not Let the Telephone Cord Get Wet
A wet telephone cord will cause a short circuit and interrupt --your service. This is the ,' cause o a reat many cases of telephone trouble. Frequently a wet umbrella is carelessly laid against the cord,
or a &lass of water is spilled over it, or the cord is accidentally dropped into an ink-well, thus putting the telephone out of service. By protecting your telephone cord fromlmoisture you keep your telephone in &ood working order.
CHICAGO TELEPHONE COMPANY
' l1"' in.i a II aa - aasaaaaaaaaaaai !
PETEY DINKWhat-s A Few Feet One Way or the Other? , : : 7 By C. A V0IGH1 . -. ' ' ' '
