Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 74, Hammond, Lake County, 14 September 1917 — Page 4
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THE TIMES
Friday. September 14. 101
THE TIMES NEWSPAPER: BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY.
The Time Eaet Chicapo-Indiana Hrbor. dally except SunJy. Entered at the postorrlee in East Chicago. November 18. 1913. Th Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at
the postofTlce In Hammond, June 8, 1606 i Th Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the ; postofY.ce In Hammond, February 4, 1911. j The Gary Evening Time Pally except Sunday. Entered at the postoCflce j In Gary. April 13. 1912. ' j All undethe act of Mirrh !. 1S75, as econd-clans matter.
I.te and niako bettor use of my time. Tho washing machine is the best Investment we ever made and beats the New England variety of thrift, under which my mother labored, all to pieces." Thrift in time Bocislirnes !a confused -with the waste of time which Is the worft of extravagance. (Copyrighted.)
DESPITE whatever Mr. Edison may Invent, It's dollars that will finally 3ubdue the U-boats.
INDIANA Daily Times wants exemption denied the end seat hog. Too gentle. The firing squad should handle his case.
FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICE. Hi Rector Building Chicago' ! " i TELEPHONES. Httmonl (private exchange) . .. SlO. 3101. 3103 j (Call for whatever department wanted. Giry OSice Telephone 13" Nassau & Thompson. East Chicago , Telephone 540-J F. L. Evans. East Chicago .' Telephone 737-J j Ea.-t Chicago, The Times 203 l.-i'iiana Harbor (News Dealer) S03 tndiana Harbor (Rjp.Tter and Classift d Aav Teiet.ii. me 412M ..r 7S5W Whiting : Telephone 80-M J Crown Point Telephone SJ, Keg-ewiBch Telephone Uj
CHAP down at Columbus in jail for having three wives. They may do that thing further down hi Indianny, but up here where the cost of living figures in one wife is a luxury.
A GOOD name to call the chief promoters of the People's Peace Councils in assistant Germans.
CONSIDERING the way the Gary Tribune i defending Mr. Gleaton's Like front .Mailer in the way of a swamp park scheme there ought to be s few iron crosses from the s'eel trust in the shape of another choice building site.
LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHER NEWSPAPERS IN THE CAIUMET REGION.
If you have any trouble getting Thb Times make complaint Immediately to the circulation department. The Times will not be responsible for the return of any unsolicited manuscript articles or letters and wli; not notice anor.oymous communication SVrt signed letters of general interest printed at discretion.
AT last tjie American auto makers are going to show some common Fense. They are going to cut out the cut-outs.
IF the Turkish soldiers keep on associating much longer with German officers they will become almost as cruel as all the resit of the "kukur" and "Oott Mitt Uns" execrcsence.
''"il...!-!!!.'!!!!
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HORSES IX THE WAR. From some peoples point of view this isn't very much to write an editorial about. But it is nevertheless. In the Boer war the British army lost during the first year over 35 per cent of the horses sent (from the United States) to South Africa. Conditions have Improved. In Egypt, Salonika, and Mesopotamia less than 1C per cent have been lost during the first yar, ar.d on the French front lees than 5 per cent. This is because they are more humane with horses and sanitary condition? are better. Any one who has seen the allies" remount stations in this region, at Hammond and Clark Station in Gary, where thousands of noble equines have pone to help mankind battle and who have wondered how many of the poor beasts survive it all, will be glad to know this good newe shout horses.
GARY lawyer ir alien.tt j ,i suits sues det'-w1nn".'s attorney. Nothing like making case-; ln:f! c.-t inc. Next thing you knv.v opposing counsel w'll want to hand a ft w legal swatr. to the judge himself.
DAME
SAYS
MAYOR Johnson announces candidacy for mayoralty of Gary rlnu!tanetusly with firing of Wall street politicians. Looks like Wall street is going to get hard hit not only at Gary this fall but by the anti-war profiting senate p.t Washington as well. This is a bad year for junkers whether they are in Berlin, England or Wall street.
THERE'S one advantage about not having poor eyesight and of living in these towns swept by lake wind.?. You don't have to read the trad-1 journals to get an idea on what the latest fashions are in fancy hosiery, i P. S. -We are kept posted by the trade journal.).
TIMES FASHION DEPARTMENT
CHILDREN'S YOKE DRESS. By Anabel Worthington.
By KAEOAKKT MASON (Written for the United Press.) ' A devotee of tea i.s Tens She drink an awful lot I guess Hys, Oolong, Orango P,koi i-vie o'ote urmii . in iiil j ou know Th" nr; some teas j ou must confers And come te.ise is pretty Tesi. NEW YoliK. Kept. 14. In those far off halycon days before the Avar a High tea wnx h formal function that one dressed for. Nowadays all tees ere high and v. don't Jrea for 'em wo Just pay for 'em. With commendable ratriotimi w have, economized and Hooverlzed and shave 1 and pared down our menus to a bone until they haven't a ! it of lamb to stand n;i. For wh'te bread we have n .Hntig but black looks and we are rintitiK the changes on corn meal mush, r.-l-d irush. corn br.Bii an. I co-n oii.i-s every dt y In the week. Hut when u cornea to interrupting our flow of ten th it's a (liferent matter. CouKUining tea at present Is our ror.sumlng passion. What matter If the price be steep you have to Pteep the, tea an;way. l.r' them put the .rice up vil nl een by-putting the tea down 'o Tolly put the ktttle on we'll all hive ten." A tea rart for the summer porch or th winter hearth in an indispensable adjunct of the modern home. A hostess whoso white hands flutter effectively above the silver ten. service and the frnjf'.U- eKg-Phell tea cups and v-hote
I m.oibjln t 1 o;ee coos sweet 83 th-i cubes I of m:g,-:r, "How many lumps?' "Lemon
cr cream?" nnd "Do jou take rum?" neds no more effective phrasta in her (wivrrsitiimal bag of tricks to hi a scintillating success. The legion r.f luclous sandwich's, fantastl - fairy ct.kea and toaated mufJins. sconas end crumpets continue to be popular tea table trimmings but cjutte the smartest thing to serve with your afternoop tea t tho present raome.i ii "h war cake in all Its egglefs, miik:ess, butterless deliclousness. Sandwiches of the assorted bran, brown and oatmeal war breads are also the well bred thin to rerve. In New York "When In doubt go to
tea" is the popular slogan. The tea j shops are as numerous s they are nt- ! tractive. Though the big hotels of
course all have their more or lts swagger and distinctive rooms given over to the Imbibers of the aromatic amber leverage the quaint and tiny ta
shops with their heme made goodies, have a feminine following all their own. I Thceo who wish to see, be, seen, gossip, j danco. flirt a lot and drink tea a little flock to the smart hotel tea rooms, j Those who wish to chat, flirt a little i ar.d drink a lot, hie to "The Fernery ," i "The Tally ho," which is madfl out of an old stabla with the tea served in '. stalls. "The Colonial," "Vanity Fair."; "The Piccadilly," "The Plerrott." "The Sign of the Green Tea Pot." "Mary Elizabeth's," "The Xtose Tea Shop.": "The P.oof Tree"; "The Tea Cosy," "The1 Chimney Corner," 'The Sign of the Green Parrott," or any other one of the sixty teven varieties of tea shops that infest Manhattan ways and by-waya. ( L'own in some of the South American countries they have a tea all their own to the high cost of shipping tea from China and Ceylon for the. nome means nothing in their f;ve o'clock Tea Hour. This 'south American tea which is made from the dried leaves of a tree which grows in the. forest fastnesses of Uraguay is called Yerbe and is made by pouring boiling water on a teafpoonful
of the pulverized leaves and sugar. It is prepared in a small dried gourd and drunk through a silver tub"! which has perforations in the bottom that act as a strainer. The gourd and tube are called a "mate" and th tea with the service is "mate' yerbe" just as we say a "cup of tia". Many of the gourds are most eloborately banded and ornamented In silver and the tubes also are usually of the pure silver elegantly chased. The older generations of the natives and the "rancheros" cowboys have a delightfully unsanitary custom of refilling the S'ime gourd with hot water and passing it arounl in turn t- all parties present for a suck through the same tube. This yerbe tea possesses most "beneficial and strengthening properties, and none of the evil tannin of our own tea. It has been Introduced in the English and French armies with great success
and although an acquired taste is easily
so. Who knows if the rrlce of tea continues to soar w may get soar and take to yerbe yet. But at least we'll insist on an individual gourd and tube at each tea r.rty.
HOW HETTY MADE HER MONEY. The career of Hetty Green affords an instructive lesson in the art of making money. "The richest woman in the world" started with $4,0o0,no and died worth perhaps $1GO,000,OOC. And she built up that immense iortune not by taking chances, but hy a slow, steady, unspectacular process of money-lending and investment. Although she made a good deal of money over a long period by putting cut funds in the form of "call loamV she appears to have acquired the bulk of her wealth by loans on real estate. The millions she left are invested mostly in realty mortgages, with some bank bonds, public service bonds and bank stocks. The wholly non-specu-Utive nature of her holdings is shown by the fact that her death had no effect whatever on the stock market. We can't all be Hetty Greens and few of us want to. But it's worth noting that the methods she followed can be used successfully by anybody of ordinary business intelligence who has money to invest and will take the sr. me pains that she took in Inverting it.
THE MONEY VALUE OF AN EDUCATION. The average educated man earns 1,20 a year. H works forty years, making a total of $48,000 in a lifetime. The average day-laborer gets $1.50 a day. three hundred days in the year, or $450 a year, making $18,000 !n forty years. The difference, or $30, C00, equals the money value of an education. To acquire this earning capacity requires at least 12 years in public school and one year in a special school; or 13 years of 200 schools days each, total 2,600, the number of days required in getting it, and we find each school day worth over $11.50 to the student over three times the value of each working day. But the money value is trifling. The thing that makes m?n happy is personal power.
r J V r it J
Children's clothes can be mvie so much more individual looking when the rcaterial, trimming and pattern are. selected by the maker to suit the particular type of th little wearer. No. s5"'5 is a charming little frock, which eight be made ur in either rha!Hi or diraity. It has a plain bodice in bolero effect, and it buttons at the centre back. A tiny round cellar, which is In two sections. gfTes the dress a quaint air. Th waisthne is Ftraight across the back, but just for variety it is cut out in a semi circle. The sleeves dibt be long or thort. A onepiece skirt i gathered to the yoke. Th children's yoke rlreas rattern No. S.r0 is cut in three sizes 1, 3 and 5 yesrs. The three-year size require 2 yard of 6 Inch msteriBl, with yard of 27 inch contrasting material. To obtain tbis pattern send 10 cent t the office of this publication.
If You Think THE TIMES Is Doing Its Bit Your Support Is Always Welcome.
Enlist In The Woman's Army Ey Conservint' Foods.
THE WAYS OF THRIFT. A New Yorker was showing the sights of his city to a visiting Japanese. He rushed his guest down into the subway only in time to see the gates of a subway express train clang and the cars pulling out, "There," exclaimed the impatient New Yorker, "we've lost two minutes." "What were you going to do with those two minutes?" inquired the mystified Jap, who was in the habit of conserving his time as w-ell as his money for a definite purpose. Mrs. Harding is a typical good w-ife and mother "a real thrifty, hard working woman" the neighbors say. She lives in a New England town and follows with all the religious fervor of a good Chinaman the example and habits of her parents and grandparents. It was Monday and she had little time to let the joy of the sunshine enter her thought. She saw it only as whitening her clothes on the line. In well-worn gingham and sleeves to the elbow- she struggled with a "heavy wash." Suds and steam and "tired feelings" pervaded the pretty home, and the children kept well in the background. "No, I haven't any faith in those new fangled washing machines," she said with a finality which checked the invitation on her husband's lins to go and see them demonstrated at the central grocery. "My clothes are white and nice, and I think too much of thern for any such half-way methods." Mrs. Davi3 married a young Ohio farmer and settled in a progressive western town. Her parents were thrift people and like the Wise Men of old, came from the east. It was Monday forenoon and the Hothe3 line was out, and the washing was "doing" in the laundry. Sho Wl the piano where she had been happily trying some new music to answer the knock of an early caller a member of her Woman's club. "You see I am washing this morning," she explained as she ran to change the water in the washing machine. "We have en electric washing machine and it does all the hard w-ork. We used water power when we were on the farm and had no electricity. The fact is, I don't believe' in being a martyr to the cause," she laughed. "The clothes look as w-ell with less wear and tear, and 1 have leisure to enjoy
New Lines of Fall Suitings are Here
The season's latest patterns, made to order. Suits and Orercotts, perfect fit, newest styles, perfect quality, combined with thf best workmanship Is our motto. Satisfaction guaranteed. 18.00 Up Suits and Overcoats $18.00 Up J. GUSS, The Tailor 236 East State St., Hammond, Ind. Phone 771. WE DO CLEANING AND REPAIRING. GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED.
irket Co
U 181 East State Street. Hammond. Ind.
Specials for Saturday, September 15th
PRIME ENGLISH LEG OF MUTTON, lb PRIME NATIVE BEEF POT ROAST,, lb BEST CUTS OF NATIVE ROUND STEAK, lb
SMALL LEAN CALIFORNIA HAMS, lb
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16c 23c 22ic
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Prevent BotTrouHes
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Buster Brown SSioes is a line of shoes for your children which you don't have to worry if you are getting your money's worth when you are buying a pair; and now is the time you have to be most careful in selecting shoes for your children. We carry the B. B. Shoes in foot-shape and on the latest English lasts. A. Hellerman
Fresh Tender- Boiling Beef, lb 12 Prime Native Short Ribs of Beef.... 12 Vn Fresh Cut Young Mutton Chops, lb .22 Milk Fed Native Veal Leg or Loin, lb 22 Milk Fed Native Veal Breast, lb 17 Fresh Cut Beef or Lamb Stew, lb .15 Fresh Cut Veal Chops, lb 22 Prime Native Rib Roast of Beef, lb 18
M. Ham, Berlin or Veal Sausage, lb 22 Fresh Frankfurter or Polish Sausage, lb. 18 Swift's Shortening, better than lard, lb.. .21 Sugar Cured Boiling Bacon, lb 28 Butternut Brand Brisket Bacon, lb 36 Libby's Superior Chow Chow, per qt 30 Libby's Sweet Mixed Pickles, per qt 35 New Home Made Sauer Kraut, per qt 10
535 HOHMAN STREET.
HAMMOND, IND.
OUR MOTTO: QUALITY FIRST.
Inde
pendent Conip&ny
181 East State Street.
Hammond, Ind.
SISSSS?''
McGarry Eye Glasses are correct in every detail; nothing is left to guesswork , or chance. Mr. D. (). Elliott, O. I)., an eye specialist of considerable experience, examines the eyes of every one of our patrons and prescribes the proper glasses. Come in tdav and have vour eves
e x a m i n e d charce.
free
or
JOE
c GARRY
Jeweler Optometrist. 599 Hohman St.
Special SsfHFctoy Only BRAZIL NUT CLUSTERS 45 A POUND 25 A BOX Delicious candies made from the purest and choicest products. Our ice cream and sodas are the best.
Candy Co. 166 State Street, Hammond, Indiana.
DON'T PATCH THEM
Get more mileage by having them Vulcanized. We repair and vulcanize Blow-outs, Sand Blisters. Rim Cute, Side Walls and splice inner tubes. All Work Guaranteed A full line of slightly used casings at all prices, Leimback Vulcanizing Co. 262 Hohman St. Hammond, .Ind.
XT .r 4- m.
How You
N T. r i- b it T f
OUR COAL is The Coal you should use It will merit your approval and will "make cood" In quality and heat diStrthution. THE BIEKER BROS. CO. 144 Sibley ftt. S87 ST. Holvman St. Talsplione 53. Telephone 3.
If You Think THE TIMES Is Doing Its Bit Your Support Is Always Welcome.
PETEY DINK Every Little Bit Helps.
(-
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