Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 39, Hammond, Lake County, 2 August 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE TIMES Thursday, August, 2, 1917.
TEE TIMES NEWSPAPER! BY TEE LAKE COUNTY PIU2ITCJQ & rUBUSHnia C0MPA3JY.
Th Tlmen EMt Chlca jo-Indlan Harbor, dally azoopt Bundajr. !Btr4 t the poto.Mc In Ea-at Chicago. November 18, 11S. . Tta Laka County Time Dally xcpt Saturday and 8nJay. Xntorad at tt. poatofrica tn Kiramonl, Juna Js. ISO. Ths Laka County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the poatoffice in Hammond,, February , 1911. The Ovry Evening T.mea Dally except Sunday. Entered at the poetffloe to 0ry, April i, 1912. ASl under the act of March a, XITs, aa aeeond-claaa matter.
roasicm advertisiko officbl It Reeior BuUdln ...,....Clco TELEPHONE. Haxvmao4 (prlrate exchaaj-e) net, I10U tigs (Call for whateTar department wanted.! Oary OfTlc Telephone lit K&aaaa A Thompecn. East Chlcajr. Telephone 640-J P. L. Evan a, Eaat Chicago .Telephone 737-J Eaat CUotfo, Tb Tius , 20 Indiana Harbor (Newa Daler SOJ Inaiana Jiarbor (Reporter and Classified Adv Telephone 41 2M or TS5W Whiting TeJephoM -M Crown Point , Telephone 1 Hes-ewlacfc Telephone 1
LAEGES PAID UP CIECtXiTION THAU AST TWO OTHEB. IHEWSPAPEElS m TEE CALUMET BEGION.
If you have any trouble retting; Taa Tims rr.sJce complaint Immediately 10 the circulation department. Ths Tiuss will net be responsible for the return-of any unsolicited manuscript articles or lettsr and will not notice anonoymoua communication.. Short a.'fned letters of general Interest printed at discretion
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THE "GLORY" OF HIS DEEDS. The kaiser In his latest "Me und Gott" effusion to his hordes boasts or the "Glory of German deeds." The Glory of them, eh? You doubtless refer to the little babes and the scores of women you sank on the Lusitania; the drowning of .suffering men in torpedoed hospital ships; the outraged women of Belgium and France by your bloody Huns; the murder of Edith Cavell; tthe horrible deaths of school children by poisoned acid bombs from aeroplanes; the bombing of unfortified towns by Zeppelins: the maltreatment of prisoners of war in your hellish internment camps; the deeds of violence In our own land by your infamous spies, and a hundred other horrors. Yes, we get you. Bill "The glory of your German deeds." You'll pay for them, Bill.
JAMES O'DOXXELL BENNETT. When the new German chancellor made his opening address to the reichstag he was, of course, conscious that he was addressing the world- The opportunity lay before him to suggest Germany's conditions of peace at least as clearlv as Mr. Lloyd George and Mr- Balfour have done- He did not elect to do so, and the central powers cannot complain if the allied governments and peoples refuse to accept seriously unofficial assurances or friendly seeming generalities such a3 Mr. Jame3 O'Donnell Bennett conveys in his dispatch to the Tribune or the Austro-Hungarian premier offers us in his Interview replying to Lloyd George Chicago Tribune. James O'Donnell Bennett's Germ.tnistic articles have got to t!:e state to where even the Tribune has become- skeptical about them. But why continue to insult readers with any more Hohenzollern spittle from Bennett?
GOES JUST ONE WAY. About the cheapest loaf of bread sold now i3 the ten cent loaf, isn't it? Iit's about the same size as the loaf that was once five cents and later jumped to six cents. The hundred per cent increase followed a leap of 100 per cent or so in the price of SourFlour has dropped in price. Th.j bakers have profited also by the ''a return" order that cuts out much of their waste. At heme and in the re?taurans we are getting a mixture of stale bread along with fresh bread and nobody is kickfng except a few chronic grouches for these are war timesYet bread isn't being reduced in price to five, or even six cents a loaf. Why is this? Are the bakers holding their lines firm now in the face of lower prices so that they may boost the price again if flour takes another upward turn? Perhaps when the food bill is passed the consumers will be allowed t. share In food economies- Everybody hopes so anyway Youngstown Telegram.
MOTOGRAPH MESSAGES. A few weeks -ago the Merchants' Heat and Light company of Indianapolis asked a number of Indiana newspaper editors to contribute a sentiment expressed in not more than forty-five words for display in the big electric sign at the top of their building, corner Meridian and Washington streets. The invitation asked for a brief expression of an important sentiment voicing the immediate r.eed of the country and serious and patriotic thought of the hour- Each message was displayed three consecutive evenings, to be read by the throngs of people who rightly pass the corner. These were all received by the company in advance of the display of the first one on the raotograph, so that no editor knew what any of hia brother editors was saying. The Tribune has been favored by the management with the text of these brief appeals to the thought of the people of the capital city and to give them a widr circulation submits them as follows. John Henry Zuver, editor of the South Bend News-Tribune said: "Need of country now: Elimination of personal selfishness, a larger socialized service Unless the individual can come to see that he is living and doirv? for everybody else more and himself incidentally only, it's a long, long way to Berlin." F. A- Miller, editor of the South Fend Tribune, said: "Pure, unselfish, incessant patriotism and unity of thoucht and action in big affairs are the vital needs today. To accomplish these we should, as long as nece3sary, eliminate all that may interfere- America must win liberty for all the world " Claude G- Bowers, editor of the Fort Wayne Journ il-Gazerte said:
GOSHAMIGHTY. folks a NEIGHBOR now want us to start a flrht against the apple worms SOMETIMES while seated in solitude in our roomy bath tub we
FEEL, as i'f less
people wanted a harm-
NEWSPAPER man to be on good TERMS with nobody nor NOTHING; prithee "WOTINELL. have the poor apple worms ever done to us? TVE trid to explain to an enthusiastic ABE KAEIBBLE who was passionately endeavoring
TO sell us a pair of galluses that we .
new fanrled
KEPT our? up by hooking them OVER our hip bones.
up
WE read with much Interest that a woman who was attacked by a huga snake F-.OMPTLY went after it. and slew It THE girls will never forget the nasty trick a snake played them.
CHARACTERISTIC. AN Impossibility Is something that a woman cennot do with a hair pin. ADDED to the horrors of life is the man who EATS onions for breakfast and THEN blows his breath in your fare while he Is talking to you and your poor sensitive stomach. A FRIEND who is as . observing as he can b- says there are lots of girls wearing; tlannel petticoats BUT, they are under two years of age AND in cradles IN our quieter and more subdued moments WE ha"e finally been forced to admit THAT a man never sets over BEING bossed by a WOMAN WHEN he gets so old that his mot her q Jits SOME Kirl begins.
Whiting And Its People
Buy a $50. OO Xdberty Zona. But ol Whiting-, open 9 a. a. to 8 i. m. 5-21 Mrs. Saunders and son of Atchison Hvenue, hme returned from a visit of several wtteks in New Tork and Virginia. Mrs. Lino's. Sherwin of Fischrupp avf-r.u-, hns returned home from the South Shor'i rospital in Chi -a go where
nnuTwenr an operation for ap
pendicitis. Roy Slichty of New York a venue, is
entertaining his sister from Illinois. j David Spencer of liruh. str.et, has!
members cf the Tri Kappa sorority at her home in Atchison avenue. Tuesday e v ning. OKicor Swan Is now back on duty and Officer Ro.se is now on a two weeks' vacation. Princess theatre today. National Film Corporation presents Mary Miles Miles Minter. the dainty juvenile ptir, in Youth's Endearing Charms. A charming photo play in Ave prts: also a good comedy. 8-2-1
Earning a Living. It can never be said of the farmer who earns a good living that he doesn't get it. nor of the farmer who gets a good living that he doesn't earn it. Both do both.
a visit with his son in
THE only vegetables Berlin grocers display ARE lemons' and onions
sreen
SEVERAL FRIEND? the cat.
-Yes.
we miss
AND several fond female friends of his are holding nightly wakes
he Webb st. toms please
WILL hurry?
"Vital need is unification of every race, creed and class In the solemn conservation of every man and every dollar to the successful prosecution of tthe war, and the crushing of the copperhead with the iron heel of the republic." Mrs- Mildred Crampton Wnson, editor of the Carroll County CitizenTimes, said: '"Merge all political parties into pure Americanism. Conscript every man, woman and child of proper age. Some for transportation. Some for the shop- Some for the Red Cross. Some for the farm and some to bear arms- America first." Percy Arthur Parry, editor of THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS, said: "The vital need is men with a quickened sense of national responsibility, who will galvanize into Immediate action those who consider this war incidental instead of -crucial the the better that every phase of it may be vigorously prosecuted regardless of their personal sacrifice." Edward C- Tor'jr, edUor of the Anderson Herald, said: "Our oldier boys bravely throw forward the outposts of liberty and democracy- While they thus extend the frontiers of democratic liberty, it is for us at home to sustain their cause by broadening "and deepening the institutions of liberty." George A. Elliott, editor of the Newcastle Courier, said: "The most vital need of the country is more business- We must buy bonds, pay taxes and donate to war auxiliaries, and the business world will respond as never before. Ahead strictly to business, and a lot of it. ' George B. Lock wood, editor of the Muncie iTess, said: "We must win .the war or see our territory invaded, our flag abolished, our liberties destroyed and our country dragged at the chariot -vheels of a cruel conqueror. We need to realize our personal and national peril " The last message from the state editors, appearing the latter half of this week, is from J. A- Kautz, of the Tribune, at follows: "While the social fabric is trembling throughout the world and po itical institutions in Europe are tottering to their fall, it is more than ever .he supreme duty of Americans to give glad allegiance to constituted authority and willing obedience to ordained law." - ' This intervening symposium will be concluded next week when the editors of the Indianapolis newspapers "w ill be quotedon the motograph- The Indianapolis papers have reported the motograph messages regularly and they say these brie appeals have been the subject of much comment from tthe thrones of people on Washington street Kakomo Tribune.
returned from Montana.
Miss Ameha Stiplitz of 113th street, is visiting at the home of her aunt and uncir in Detroit. Eorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore, nee Beatrice lirown, a daughter. William, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Roe. ia in with blood poison in his foot. LyJe Mauhork of iasper, Wyo., is hf.r) visiting fr:.--nds. He hns enlisted in the coast artillery and is waiting to be ailed into service. His father.
vi.r,!!- .wauuecfc. aiso nere on i
a. nusinesq trip. Mr. and Mrs. N Mrgatz of is;? South Broadway, Gary, will be at home Sunday. Aug. 5. in honor of the engagement of their daughter. Helen F.. to M. D. Redfteld. a Gary attorney: also the confirmation of their son William: S-5 and 7-10. 'o cards. Henry Graben of 415 Hohman street. Hammond, a clgarmaker who has b.-en empl-jjvrl by Jame H'-nderson. was arrested on complaint of the latter on the charge of 'orsms checks. Graben wi3 rtlfusrd on bonds. Peter Nierajnski, arrested hy Special Officer Walker on the chargo of riding a bicye'e in te park, was fined Si ami costs, in . default of which he s locked up in jail. Mrs. R;iv tWhitn,er entertained the
Crystal Glucose for Fine Candy Prompt Delivery Telephone South Chicago 920. AMERICAN I.IAIZE PH0DUCTS CO.
Every Bay
s
CM M Fees'
Li
m over
c carry's
-s
trom now until school n opens. Thoughtful par- ft
ents are bringing their children in to have their
examined before li
1he fall sehool term, p
e do not under any consideration advise the use of glasses unless positively, needed. Eyes Examined Free.
JOHN Eo
Mc GARRY
I Jeweler Optometrist.
599 Hohman St.
i n a n a m m o rv
DISTILLING CO.
DAILY CAPACITY 215,000 GALLONS
Advertise in TIte
Times
NOW that Mr- Wilson and Mr. Hoover hav? arranged one-man control T 'cod, let's hope that we will get one-price-
SOCIETY of writers now demands tax fron every cabaret and movie
where the members' songs are sung- If taxed soigs aren't sung maybe we'll;
not hear any more of such monstrosities as "Don t Bite the Hand That Feeds You."
THIS warning business against using court ilaster may be all right, but what about the girl who uses black plaster strips to give herself beauty spots.
TIMES FASHION DEPARTMENT
GIRLS' DRESS. By Anabel Worthington...
Your young daughter will be at her best in a frock like No. S.3G2, which was designed to suit the needs of the growing girl. The waist is quite plain nnd closes at the front under the bib section. This bib may be tuade of a contrasting material to match the other trimmings. It is out in an unusually graceful shape with tSe front disappearing under the inrge sailor collar and the sidfs curving to form straplike end to which the sash ends are fastened. Long and Atort sleeves are given, so that you may use the pattern for winter as well as summer dresses. The short ones are straight and finished with deep cuffs; the long ones are guth-er-d into a narrow band cuff. The straight, one piece skirt is gathered to the waist. ' The girls' dress pattern. No. 8,362, is cut in sUes 0 to 12 years. The 3 year size requires 2 yard of SO inch material, with s yard of "6 inch contrasting goods. To obtain this pattern send 10 cents to the office of this publication.
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All association members close at 6 o'clock except Friday, Saturday and Paydays.
What Did Last Ev
Did you enjoy yourself--sure you did. And so did our sales people. They told us today. Even if they had not said, a word we could have told they like the new closing arrangement by the way they worked today. You benefit by the 6 o'clock closing Mrs. Shopper; and you too, Mr. Man, for part work and part play makes everyone feel happier and more cheerful. You arc served better, more quickly, whenever or wherever vou shop. Whiting Merchants'' Association
PETEY DINK Henrietta Is Always Up to Something
By C. A.V0IGH3
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