Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 100, Hammond, Lake County, 16 October 1917 — Page 4

Pare Four

THE TIMES Tuesday, October 16, 1917.

BY TIIE LAKE COUNTY PEIKTINO & PUEUSHnTQf COMPAXIY.

The Times Est Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally ,exoept Sunday. Entered! t th- rtoslr.rYtoe In p'a.t rm.0 r- x- m i fit !

Tiie Lake County Ttmaa Daily except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond. June SS, 1006. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the postuTice In Hammond. February 4, 1811. The Gary Evening Tim Dally excopt Sunday. Entered at the posteffloe In Gary Apr!! 13. 1512. All under the act of March S. 1171. aa seoond-olass matter.

FOREIGS ADVERTISING OFFICE. 912 Rector Building

...Chicago

TELEPHONES. Hammond (private exchange) S10O. 3101. S1C2 (Call for whatever department wanted.) Gary Office Telephone. 137 Nassau Thompson. East Cilcago Telephone 9 SI I- Evans. East Chicago Telephone 542-R fiif-i Cliuiugo, Tub Tiiies .., Telephone 28S Indiana Harbor (Xewa Dealer) Telephone S02 "hid. ana. Harbor (Reporter and Classified Adv.) Telephone 283 Whiting- Telephone S"-M Crown Point Telephone 63 Ilegewlsch Telephone IS

LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY TWO OTHER NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALU1IET REGION.

If you have any trouble getting Ths Timts make complaint Immediately to t'-.i crculatlon ilepartment. 1 Tub Time.3 will r.ot be responsible for the return, ml any unsolicited mana sorfpt articles or letters and will not notice annoymou communications. Short sjjned letters of general interest printed at discretion.

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OUR COUNTRY'S VITAL NEED.

Men with a quickened sense of national responsibility, who vill galvanize into immediate action those who consider this war IncicsiPtal instead cf crucial th tetter that every phase of it may be vigorously prosecuted regardless of their personal sacrifice.

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE? You know your country if? at war. You have seen young men leaving thir rcirnforalhle hrvraps to join your Army and Navy to protect you and your;. Perhaps temf-one has left your own household? Ton who are left behind -what are YOU doine to be!p them? What w'.l1 you do? Your country here and now asks you to lend it what money : ou can spare or f.vp in the nest few months. This money is to be used to WJN THE WAR a quickly as possible, and to unite all our families attain. I'very cent Is needed and nust b subscribed before October 27th. You can lend $50, f 100, J -"00, or more. The United Suites Government will give you its bonds T.ib'rty Bond!" which, as you probably know, ar? ensraved certificates as good as T'-;'ted States money, and which can be sold for money at any time. Your Government will also pay you four percent interest each year for the use of whatever you can spare. Rjy some of these Liberty Ixan Bonds today for the sake of the soldiers fit.! sailor?, and thus have an invertrnent in your own country. Ycu can start i-h ore dollar and pay weekly.

OUK MARKETS AFTER THE WAR Th? Official Bulletin (edited by George Creel and published at the expense of the Federal Treasury) ascends the trtpod and utters prophecy in in.pse 'otds: "After the war we must maintain our foreism markets if our vorkic? people are to be employed.' Our freisn markets, be It remembered, are now callinsr upon us for war material almost exclusively a demand which cannot possibly be maintained vhfn the war i& over, and which can be replaced only in part by the demand for rconst ruction material for the rebuilding of shot-shattered Europe, beciuso it will be the aim of Kuropean peoples to provide their own reconst rueUrn as far as possible. Our nK!is;il""le trade in other commodities can be expanded, after peace comes, only through the fier'est of competition with a lrud--seeking world. "If our working people are to t employed" after the war Is over, it will be chiefly through securing to them th benefits of our own market at horo. That market is the richest in the world; and it ia now, deppitp the war, being overrun by foreign competitors who hav? ben jzivei free ac'pss to it by the reduction in tariff duties brought about by benioTa' ic legislation. Last year a wor'd In which the most, productive rations nr engaged in war was able, nevertheless. o sen! into the American nisrket the largest amount of products that has ever romo upon our shores; and the custom hou- -s collected less revenue upon it. than a similar volume of Imports ever prod ic.-i!. That market, the Koroe market, is the market which "we must niairthin" if our worKine people "are to be employed." But firtt of all, we Khali have to regain this splendid home market rshlch has been given away through Democratic legislation. That can be done by a restoration of Repub l'can dat ion.

How I Am Doing My Bit to Help America Win the War. By ( A III. J. WATT.. (Agent 8oubern Jarlflc Lines.)

(Written for the Inltetl Press.)

A FATHER not a thousand mliet from here SAYS he believes in heredity AND then goes on to crack up bis boy WHOM he says is the brightest you ever saw OH. very well NOT with any Joyful fanfare of trumpet nor CLASH of cmyba! Ii) we announce THAT there will undoubtedly he a lot cf HKATLESP days this winter as well. WE may ! m ich out cf til way. hut we

FKJl'rtE it out that thre ar sjondi

people in Germany who would P.ATHER have a peck of potatoes just now THAN" the most wonderful dream of nipire. AS we slowly Fletcheriie WHAT has heen served up for our first COPKlSHB.VI.L-Lt.3S breakfast AVK opino it is cry DOfTHFt'l. IK any nian with a 13ts r.etk is very

safe IN marrying a woman with LONG fingers. LATEST advice from the nuttery EAT salt on your cereals. IT m.i.y got some lime THAT the hen that lays an egg will be entitled to have HK Ft Picture e. o. d in the paper for two week. GOVERNMENT edict may cut the price of coal dc the ion GLORY for small mercies THINK of saving 5"c on a hundred dollars worth of coal. THE ordinary citizen around here IS looking forward to a campaign THAT win make a PolrheviVi uprising LOOK like fi meeting of the Young FeoYdcs Christian Endeavor Societv. ONE weakness of the AVERAGE mnn is to believe thut whrn a Birl has orange-colored hair SHE has a heart as big as a grapefruit. CONGRESS admi's that the profit taxing law holds tlie record for obscurity lU'T it 'is perfectly clear that vou get less for five cenis worth of beer THAN we ever saw before.

j MAC DONA. TEXAS. Oct. 131 tegietered myself and forty-eight othi err for selectice draft. June 5. without lone cent cost to the government. Mvself, wife and -hi!d hove become I n;ni'oer of the American Red Cross. I I have secured in this place and j surrounding country, 12 members for the San Antonio chapter of the

American Red Cross and collected "nearly 10. I have purchased a Liberty Fond and induced several others to buy bonds 7 have impressed upon shippers the

j nets! ( y of loading cars to full upace ,end weight capacity, and seen to it j t ho t they did it. j I have urged shippers and consignees to load and unload cars with all the speed possible. : I am using small and licht rais for J light loading. I I nm forwarding loads and empties I en the first available trains. I I have Instructed ail my men to re- ! p'.t t dis'.-ynity and treasonable a?t. I nrr. reruerr boring at all times that i 1 nm an American, with true sr'. un ! divided loyalty to hilt oil" flufr, "Old i'GlTy." i

Ask Yourseif How You Can cause wide as the world and high as Heaven.

CHILD'S TONGUE

BECOMES

lFJOflSTIPfiTEO When cross, feverish and sick, give "California Syrup of Fig3." Children love this "fruit laxative." and nothing el?e cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not slop playing to empty the bowels, and the result is, they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach pours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don't it. aWp or act naturally, breath is bad system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, .Mother: Pee if tongue is coated, then stive a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Kips." and in a few hours ail the constipated waste.' sour bile and undigested food passes out of the system, and you have a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers give "California Syrup of Flft" because it Is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it never fdil.s to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Fiss," which lias full directions for babies, children of all aes and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Heware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig Syrup Companv." Refuse, any other kind with contempt. Adv.

A S75.00 TALKING MACHINE

for $35.0

A good size cabinet

talking machine, plays any make of disc records. Come listen to it, or better yet vce will send it to your home for a ten-day trial. $10 Cash, $.1 Monthly (Interest added.)

Joim E.

I Jeweler Optometrist.

The Hallmark Store.

SiStZ

If You Think THE TIMES I? Doing Its Bit Your Support Is Always Welcome.

sociation, competing with one he owns, seems to have gone out of its way to tell all about it. However, recent developments indicate that neither Mr. .vlorgan nor Mr. Hearst are in anyway, unpleasantly involved with Ilolo Pasha. They met him, but so did other people. , Just as the Youngstown Telegram points out, many may wonder why a subject of the sultan should become a traitor to France. But llolo Pasha if not a Turk. Born Marie Paul Bolo in France be is ft ill a Frenchman, the Ottoman title having been acquirt-J duriag his wantlerinue in Egj pt. As to Bolo's adventuies in New York the Trleeram ,sas: It speaks we'l for Bob a mi.d i revtec! fen;. is thnt 1" " shcild have sauntered into wi New York wit 'a a)! the desert unsophimcat-.on that might be expected to a.-company his Garden ef Allah mime Bnd made !!. Keen Yankee hu ne?inen app"fir rather f ! .-hi .1. V. Morgan is not us.iai'.y the kind of mnn v. ho bets on shell gem-s and ot Mr. M"-i-f,.n's Lank was eas'iy fooled. Mr. Hearst is consider ed a tatlur smart newspaperman and yet we csd how Bo" ra'.'.i labored earnestly to line him up for the kaisr. whrb o-nsi!!y laying plans ?a 1 e France from the terrible Prussian, lbi! even mre t ha n for these other conquests 3o'o appeals to the envious imagination whn It contemplates his success in talking Mr. Krnsterff out of tl.TOO.OOO in real inor.ey, th whole operation occupying but a few minutes. Tbere will be many lodges of sorrow held if this swavest of al! suave V"rench-.nen is lined up against a wall before h- reveals his prescription for plitcU'tig money out of the air. There seems to be too much of a disposition in some quarters o throM aspersions on a rasn's patriotism, and one may wonder how much of tho bitter attacks, probably libelous, made by pro-steel newspapers in Gary are due to the vigorous fight the Hearst newspapers have made -nsainst war profiteer ing. The Times does not agree with all of tho Hearst policies, but since Mr. Hearst began attacking the greatest evil of the war, blood proSteerir.?. it is notable how much attention he gets from certain vltrolic pens.

SITUATION DOESN'T IMPROVE It would be folly to undertake to conceal the fact that the coal situation it; the United States today is little, if any, more satisfactory than before the Government undertook to deal with it. So far as the aw-ige consumer is concerned, it is apparently less satisfactory, for, with the approach of winter ho is forced into the acceptance of conditions which th" Federal authority promised to correct, but thus far has not corrected. -Christian Science Monitor.

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How Women are Reitored to Health fipartanlmrg, S.C. "For nine ysars I snffersd from backathe, weakness, and irregularities so I c -Id hardly do ray work. I tried many remedies but found no permanent relief. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coicpound I felt a great chsnga for the better and am now well and strong so I have no trouble la doinz my work. bopu erery user of Lyiia E. Pinkbam's Yeg'..Ubie Compound will get as great relief ss I did from iis use." Mrs. S. D. McAbeb, 122 Dewey Are., bpartanbtirg, S. C. Cfclcago, ITJ. "For about two years I suffered from a female trouble so I was enable to walk or do any of my own work. 1 read about Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in the newspapers and determine! to try it. It brouebt almost immediate relief. iSy weakness has entirely disappeared and I nererhad better health. Iweijja 1C5 pounds and am as strong as a man. I think money is well spent which purchases Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. J-s. O'Uktam, 1754 Newport Ave., Chicago, I1L YCU CAN RELY UPON

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A DANGEROUS PRACriCE

i

SOLID FOR McCORMACK

Th" Roumanian Republican Club of the Twin Cities through its officers ;;pd leaders cla'm that they have fourteen hundred names of men speaking t h Roumanian tongu who are lined up to vote tho straight Republican tCf.(jt rm Novemher Hlh. Thi certainly shows the strength of Leo McCor;;..;rk, the candidate for mayor. The Italians, the Lithuanians, the Xogroes and the Roumanians are practically s-o!id for Republicanism. It is undoi Hood th.-. a change has been taking place during the pas; w eek amr.ng 1ho rolish-Aniericaji voters espc cially on the south side of blast Chics ao in ti second ward, notwithstanding the fact that there are a few dis-afl-ifr' loaders there who have been prominent in Republican ranks in the !...!. la tact, one enthusiastic well informed Pole said this morning that twothirds of the se-.nd ward w ere sure to vote the Republican ticket.

Reports are coning out of the steel mills of Gary that certain bosses ant!

others are nanning worKmen earns lor tnern to sien. cards in w-nich 'n; i M

plerig theemslves to work tor and support Mayoralty Candidate HodS"s. This practice ought to be stopped at one. On the face of it an innocent thing, yet what must many workmen think will happen to their jobs if they do no' sign the cards? j There ousht not to bo tolerated any s'gns of industvial dictatorship like I thes". As it is Gary is already burdened with enough political oppression. j

.TIMES FASHION DEPARTMENT

LADY'S SKIRT. By Anahel Worthington.

Y. I?. HEARST AND ROLO PASHA A great deal has been said about Bolo Pa.sha. the French editor now in a I't ri:i ceil because of his alleged connection with a German espionage plot. Bi.lo 1'aoha's visit to America caused his name to be linked with that of J. P. Morcan and W. R. Hearst. As for Mr. Hearst it is notable that a rival as-

Tha Aomsti who !s inclined to sKuitnes ill appreciate the writs of this plan two jrred skirt. The ad wining of the fin r, inviiihlr pockets N r.ppaienf, for they are a great oonvenionce. but they do not add hu'k to th figure. The front gore is cut in a do':'i curve from the waist 1 lie to thf side Kenu raa'win- jui attrac'iv i:nie, iv !.!-' breaks the widih across tli" fr.-nt. Ti;e ruck j.re Is jafhrcrl at he v nist hue ju.i! n r arrow belt goi-s from :taic to seam. Serse, gahortline. wool poplin or shepherd check will be suitable for this skirt. The skirt pattern. No. S-1U3, is cm in ;ios 24 to ."J inv-Ijes vi cist measure. Widh fit lower edjra of skirt 2-i yards. The "4 in-h ..? rer.::res .1 sards lit! Inch rantciiiil. io ohtain this patlern send 10 cents to the of::,-.. ' :.,Jh.';cH'.ioj..

IV ,1 I' -1 , tt ' - A If t ' ' 4 -'- - ' J i -' i i s 2

New Guaranteed Tires

Tire . Cle-

MR. AUTOMOBILE TIRE BUYER: You can save more money buying a fewtires for your car than putting it in the bank. Drive right down and bring your money. Tires for you at less than dealer's prices. All sizes, Non-Skid, Plain, Straight Side, Q. D. and Clincher Casings. Don't fail to attend this sale as it is of the greatest importance to vou to tire.

unnell's Auto

Sal

S04-6-8 I tollman St. Hammond, Indiana

cs Gck 1

Phone 650

232S1

PETKV DINK Yes, She's Hurled Hash Before.

By C. A.V0IGHT

f I Hove IXat r-rr T MopeN T- - n IsewEeujHE ) SHEr AtXN ( Know "Tme J Smej IX XITHS VrE VT5t6HT AUUTlC SfvltTV ' i AlTRtSSS foP- I jPr( V ju- y ?

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517 Oar

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