Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 146, Hammond, Lake County, 11 December 1917 — Page 4

'a ire Four

THE TITalES

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS! 1

BY THE LAKE COUNTY PKINTINO PUBLISHING COMPACT,

Tucsdav. D.veniber 11. 1!M

Bn

The Time East Chicago-Indiana Harbor. daily except Sunday. at the poetofflce !n Mt Chtcnaro. November li. 1911

The Lake County Tim. Daily except Saturday and Sunday. Kntered at the posto.Tlce in Hammond, June IS. ISO 4.

The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. postofTlce In Hammond. February 4, TSa ri .. tr . i mi - .

w-., umir-uauy except Sunday. Entered tit the patffloe ;

All under the act of March t, IITl. aa oond-claii matter.

Catered

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fOMEHllw it

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People of United States Should Not Waste Nut Harvest

By Garrett P. Savin, Scientist

lf Rector

rOIiKMt ADVERTISING OFFIC.

ciluf

TKLCrHOSM. Hammond (private. exchang) ' (Call tor whatever department wanted ) Gary Office .Nassau Thompson. East Chicago '. . . . , . , . . '. F. L, Evans. East Chicago ....... 7 Ksst Chicago. The Tims? Indiana Harbor (NVvrj Dealer) J ' Indiana Harbor (Reporter and Clessifled Adv ) . Whiting: " Town Point " . iegewisih

:.3ioo, cioi. 3io: . . . .Telephone 137 . . . .Telephone 931 .Telephor S42-R , . . .Telephone -S'S Telephone SOJ . . . .Telephone 23 ..Telephone 80-51 Telephone 63 . . . .Telephone 13

just seems to us

THAT the less It looks like a hat the

i mere

A WOMAX likes il. but that may 1K a mere figment of imagination. THE Dubuque Times-Journal says: "it I S3 Elizabeth Lantry was her

bog-in to

was gon-

LAHGER PAID TJP CTRCTJIATION THAU AKY TWO OTHEE NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET EEGION.

If you tve any trouble settln Tma Times make complaint Immediately te we circulation department. Thu Tim will not be reaponalble for the return f any unsolicited manuacript artlclea or lettera and will not notice aneoymou commvuiloatlea. Ehort tetters of general tntereet printed at discretion.

I

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II 8 1

OUR COUNTRY'S VITAL NEED. Men with a quickened sense of national responsibility, who will Salvamze into immediate action those who consider this war Incidental instead cf crucial-the better that every phase of it may be v.gorously Pr0,ecuted regardless of their person! .acrifice.

?istT' oiily attendant. She

ed in pink killarney roses" OH l.i,;-zie. whoo-liool IF e read any more of those Thanksgri ving: menus for the ln aw ?ol dir laddies Wl". 5-liall rowniniend nl Till; Itet C'ros ladies

PtT a little pepsin in the next kits they send out. IOWA college girls have decided that the perfect man should not smoke HOW 'bout the perfect lady? HONESTLY wo don"t care & darn how soon tho message comes that

G EH 51 AN Y bolsheviki.

THAT

; The tune of year is fast approaching when the forests will h

iHAi tne county fuel directors had a; put- on uieir autumn robes and nowhere in iho r,rA

meeting the othor day In Gary ! rnvollv cnlri;.! i n -it . . ' ' ,ToalJj splendid as they are m the United States. But this ear now' and we suppose one of the , that the war has made us a feeder of nations on a 8f ale heretofore ! f ATTP'I fVitf -n.L nn true i ,i tr undreamt of. there

. . vt j iwr - ; - 4wa unittiiuu in tat; auLuniii voocis besides

; their beauty of foliage which ought to command universal interest and! '. draw everybody who can reach them into their fragrant aisle. It is . the call of the nut harvest. ' If you want to find nuts follow a squirrel. But the lest lesson h ! teaches is that of the food value of nuts. Every nut-bearing tree is :, , in ( fruit tree. The nut trees of this country, alune, could go far in nrti venting a food famine. : Personally. I regard the butternut as the best nut that -rows, 3ao: , ! cxceP--Pg its eTat cousin, the walnut. Besides, the butternut 'i, i

that t-.o ofen wonder how terribly j native American. But, go and see if you can find any butternuts in the I

to find

OUT what wc have done "WITH the ton of coal wc GOT last week. THE solicitous w iff is so SHOCKED when she disrovcrs company WITH any of our garments not mOPERLT buttoned up

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Gift Suggestions Give an Article of Hallmark Quality and You Have Given the Best There Is.

she would suffer

! markets!

double life.

S05IETIMES we would b8

feel that wives

l

has jolly well stung the

noise you hear soundinar like

THE hired man eating radishes AND celory IS Trotzky and Lcnlne discussing the AHMISTICE with the Huns. "WE note wiih considerable TREPIDATION"

XeTzJl'tT 'r?ere CaPab,P Pr'Va,M Hnd ommla-loned officers win be trained to bo officers to fill vacancies as they occur

Literally shaking, shoulder straps are within the reach of ev

iu u.m i . pauie or wearing them.

FRIEXDLY ALIENS

AMIAT THE GERMANS HAVE HERE.

to a free

who left th- fatherland in

Wbv tt,n r , .

w-tee ieu tneir own country and whv tliev tame lnd is admirably, told by Abe Martin, who adds-

uur country is filled with CermHns

..vurui,uut,u mimaTy clique. Here they have been lowed th' use o th sidewalks an- u . .

" in urueni oi our I

'uul'Lf' lD- Know when they climb up on a resturint tU.'TI n i ....

...... u -..oweti i retna.n there till they've swallowed fh-r i.t bite. They have thrived here at.' become Sood. thrifty eitizn an'' I believe that fer th' most part they are true an' loval- If th' Rohen rollerns win this war, an' o' cot.rse they won't, th' rrindin' Prussian

l'c luruugnout in world. Mv friends many is a carrot. iovhT country an' that fact alone is enough The common people in Germany love their country, Abe opines they never lived in a regular countrv.

al-

ree msti-

stool that

Ger-because

IT WAS SPLENDID WORK. The report of the work of the Boy Scouts of America in the second Liberty Loan drive has been made public. It -hows that theBov Scouts were directly responsible for the sale of $101,133,800 in bonds. This means that they procured about 5 per cent of the total subcripuona to the loan, and the number of bonds they sold show that thev secured one subscription out of every eighteen. This is a splendid record for the boys of America and a hopeful ,i?n for the future of the country when the boys of the land are willing and abi to l-erform such valuable public service. It is to leave them such a national heritage as our forefather of the Revolution bequeathed to their descendants thai the proceeds or the" Liberty Loan are to be used.

"rninent will not forget, and citlnS ,m r ,,,

' ' V ." when war is declared o Hunstarv. v;Ii not hn oTiTviia. n, u . i

- , U uuuciHians are not enemies; nor

.1. oT-ii..-. nor ltoiij. nor Slovenes

provinces, m.r

The co

- '.. iiui IVJ Mill! I : Z I V. n . . ' . . i .

L'fi, mil

A uttria-

r

nor Italians of th I'nr.da.m.H

lovaks. nor most Dalmatia

only friends of America, and so to be treated, but pro-A.lv in'the warNw i ork World. Don't imagine for a moment that the man who Pits next to you in th street car, whose nio macbe points savagely upward in a foreign wav. jnecessarily an Austrian and an enemy alien. He may be. and probably is, a staunch admirer of the United States and the most outspoken friend of i'lu allies. He may have subscribed to the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A. and bought a couple of Liberty Bonds. The chances are that he is O. K. with a 60-point O and a K.

f l.T.l . . ...

"'- u.e larmers about their butternut trev. and be-r ;

IF .-he found out we were leading a! them tell vmt tW ihr. cr,,l v.- r-.i-.v -, . , i

j-- - " cmrr in iaiut;is lime. nut. nnw i

they've been "cut off" or "let die out." I venture to say that no butternut j tree was ever cut down, while still in the bearing age, without loss, no! matter what waa nut in ifo r,L. I

FAR happier if they only felt j ;" ina- j that men kick about what there is! . , U ,she fne Wllh the hickory-another native of America. One! to cat j of tae saddest bits of news I have heard in manv z dav is that the hick-i . " . il i i . i . . v

only to let their better hives know ! vri Hre threatened witli extermination by a new insect enemy. But that there is really nothing j r(,gardless of new enemies, the hickory has been shnmefuHy negle'cted. the matter with them. ! Some of those irces supplied successive generations with nourishvht doesn-t Uncle Sam draft tt. I m?nt a dessert worth a thousand concoctions of the kitchen, and that

Pool-1 cost the farmer simPJ' the cy and delightful labor of picking up the i : ti Tit Q that tVie frncto rc1ocml .1 ik. i i . , . i

i - .ia-cu cuu i m: iwi autumn wmas orougnt nown. i Tht? consequence of our neglect of the nut trees is that iheit product!

n uiwiiie a rare luxury insteaa oi an unfailing staple on our food lists. As the squirrel teaches the value of nuts, a more unpoetu-al animal, the hog, teaches that of acorns. Xothing, perhaps, will fatten a hog so well and go quickly, or give it market quality of so high a value, as a diet of acorns. But I suppose that relatively few persons are aware that acorns are an excellent and palatable food for man. "Acorns," says Doctor Hornaday, "are one of the most valuable and abundant crops of our forests, and no use whatever is bein? made of it

OUTS who rooms all

hang around the

DAY. never work and always hav GOOD clothes and mony to spend?

tery Ameri-

The acorn is going to waste in the United States while it in bread in Germany." What more need be said?

is

SPEAKING of proposed government control of the telephones, might add we have government control of the weather bureau and consider the kind of weather we get.

SOME one threw a lump of coal through a window at Seymour, which rroves the editor of the Columbus Republican to add that he wishes the same person would heave six tons of coal through his sanctum window.

STOP THE WASTE. The New York Sun has the following to say of the publicity bureau at Washington which provides a sinecure for George Creel: . - i ... . .....

i nn rt-1 news rr.iu tor a little time interested the corps of Washington correspondents. Its ar-tivilies RP1rl

were examined to learn if thev

le jrltima ti hii.in4 of i. 1 1 a.- 1 1 1 . o- .. . . . .- .

- - - - - "oMinii, nasninfion news. Foon the mill was ignored. Newspapers and news associations were much better equipped for the work: their representatives were upon better terms with officials who are sources of news. "It is certain that congress this session will have problems vavtly more important to consider than th- happy ending of this abb'ird venture. In any respect it does not matter much: the entire contraption, salaries, rents, composition, printing, white paper and cost of

iranhing, aoes not, it is probable waste more than a million of taxes a. year.

".However, the irritation the th

permanent outffi vine.

might be a useful adjunct to fh

THIS is the day of sacrifice. Missus seizes the deal table in our study so he can bathe the new baby there, curtly announcing that typewriting will have to be done elsewhere.

The number ,of persons who know all about how to run a v ,ir ::. equaled only by the number who know all about how to run a now-paper, i

"There Is Peril in the Open Mouth" explains a health authority particularly if you feel disposed to say something un-American.

A revised German estimate says the U-boats can win the war in il month?. But how many months late will that be?

It may be some consolation to the drafted men who have flat feet to know that some of the others have cold feet.

LETTERS FROM SOLDIERS

ONE advantage that will ensue if Russia splits into thirty or more republics is that all sorts of deserving democrats will be taken "care of witli ambassadorial and ministerial Jobs.

GLAD YOU LIKE IT. It. Sill, Okla., Dec. 7, 1317.

Editor Times:

Hammond, Ind. Dear Sir: Enclosed find cheek for Jt.80 and please tend your paper to the ad-

HAT'S become of the old-fashioned merchant who would be out calendars this time of the year?

giving

NEAHHY reporter, wtio was ordered to disguise himself as a farmer mj he could get inside secret meeting of milk producers, had to borrow a JCO Huit'. a diamond ring, a fat wallet and drive up to the assembly place in a Packard limousine. ' .

MAN never knows where he is going to bump into the increased cost of living. Come home to lunch and wifey breaks the news that she has just had another baby, which means doubling the milk bill.

quarter or a half

unt; causes to

standable. Members are insisting that the ("'reel fussy, amateurish, useless and expensive. affair closed."

consress is undernews mill, beinj a should now be

TIMES FASHION DEPARTMENT

dress, which you will find enclosed. I have always thought a lot of your paper, but diave never had the opportunity to send for It. I think every boy from home, that Is in n. camp, ought to have your paper, as it furnishes not only joy, but amusement in reading It. I wish you would send the paper as soon as possible. CHARLES S. GOETZINGER, Fort Sill. Okla. I37th Aero Squadron, Aviation Field.

THE HALLMARK BRACELET WATCH A really dependable l'-raclet Watch ;:t a reasonable price. The movement comes in two erad?. lGjeweled and 17-jew-cled and both grades are fully guaranteed. There are thousands of Hallmark Bracelet Watches in us-e and giving exceptional satisfaction. Prices Range Upwards From $15.00 FOR YOUR SOLDIER BOY A FOUNTAIN PEN. Experts claim that the Hallmark Fountain,ren is unexcelled. It is made of hand-rolled pure rubber in a manner that insures durable wear. The pen points are 14-karat gold, warranted to write smoothly without scratching. There is a ren point for every style of writing. Priced at From $1.50 Up to $10.00 John E, McGarry The HALLMARK Store

Enlist In The Woman's Army By Conserving Foods.

PATENTS &HD FOK MV F& BOOK. -HOTf TO GET THEM. It's fell of Information yon s&otll Remember that ail work entrusted ie my care ts dona in toy owa officea. rl(bl Here in Cblcaso. where ym ucia call for consultation T buelneaa day in tle rear or any Monday evening until o'clock. Service beat to k ha at any pr'.cn. and It costs lean. Fhore Central 6S JOSHUA R. H. POTTS, 6 S. Dearborn St., CMcago ATTOR-NTET nnd COUNSELOR AT LAW. IC1TB illl HARTFORD BUILDING.

And that mildly expresses it. THE TIMES has been receiving a copv j of the Creel publication since it began to be published a?d has never yet found anything in it that is worth the linotype composition. Tn other words,' k is perfectly useless to newspapers, who find thai tbeir press associations' and other news agencies give them much better service. !

OPPORTUNITIES IN THE ARMY. AH of the officers haven't been made in the army. There arc thousands yet to come, and due to the liberal policy of the war department thesa men will be taken from the ranks in the regulars, national guard and selected army cantonments- Even fcome who will be officers a year hence are today m civil life. At each divisional headquarters the war detriment has set up an officers' training school, where regulars, guardsmen and drafted men may try for commissions. Hundreds are being selected now- for th? first school. It ir, the same "over there." General Pershin has s'.-irted a large training

4

Stb.

PETEY DINK At Least He'll Never Forget the Doctor.

LADY'S WAIST. By Anabel Worthinton.

The important points about thu aljiri j wa't are those on the food looking larje collar and tha deep cuffs. It ia iut the sort of plain blouse that is slwaya ao convenient for bnsiness, sboppini o ; travelling. The hemstitched coilar ia m j long at the front that it jives tbe effect of revert.. The sleeves are set in without fulness and gathered into straight band at tbe wrists. Tbe pointed, turned bak sections are attractive, but they may be omitted if preferred. Washable satin, cr?pe de Chine, handkerchief linen or madras maj be tised for this shirt weisL The waist, pattern, No. 84tj2, is cut in 6iiea S6 to 42 inches bust measure. The 36 inch aiae require 2M, yards cf 36 inch material with yard 36 inch contrasting goods. To cbtai.i luis pattern send 10 cents t the efface of tiiis pablicatior ,

.j

jerwoi

must leam im

neaieci men

How Women are Restored to Health Spartanburg. B.C. "For nine yeara I suffered froan backache, weakneaa, and irregularities so I c AA hardly do my work. I tried DinnT remedies bat found no permanent relief. After taking Lydia . Finkham's Vegetable Compound I felt a great . change for tha better and am sow well ami strong so I have no trouble in doing my work. 1 hope every user of Lydia E. f'mkham Vegetable Compound will getaa great relief fis I did from its use." Mrs. S. I. McAbee, 122 Dewey Are., Spartanburg, S. C. Chicago, III. "For about two years I suffered from a femalo trouble so I was unable to walk or do any of my own work. I read about Lydi E. 1'inkham'a Vegetable Compound in the newspapers and determined o try it. It brought almost immediate relief. My weakness baa entirely disappeared and I never bad better health. I weigh 1(55 pounds and am as strong as a man. I think money ia well spent which purchases Lydia E. Pinkbora's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Jos. O Brtaj;, 1753 Newport Ave., Chicago, 111. YOU CAN RELY UPON

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