Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 180, Hammond, Lake County, 22 January 1918 — Page 4
i'n-crc "Four
THE TIMES. :irm,irv 22. lfJl
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
Willi i" bio.-. n
i :'nni; from ; 1 i. nan to .1 if'llmr; ni'li.j ;. 1 1 o .!- . a rolling r.itil v. here ii is needed, t
THIS MAX FOKCKS 1DJ. EX ESS OX 3ULIJOXS OF THESE JI'J.'A'.m; w SPTIEJ) SfPPLIES TO THESE SOLDI EPS
BY THE I.AKF.
COO.'iTY PRINTING COMPANY.
. PUBLISHING
Knle
o s 1 r. T ' -1 at
Time Pally except Saturday and the roslo'floe ,ii JlammonJ, Junw
i-'a st i 'h i a', th
pos'oftbe 'ti i:.ist
il.t .
ntva r .
:i e
P 1 n 1 a v .
The T mv a ; . 1- v. r o 'nil.-t 1. JMl
The Lak I'vimly 'i'imei- Saturdav and Weekly Ed.f.on. Entered at the postof rice in llanmio'nd. February 4. 1U. The Gary F.venintf f me -Daiiv exc-pt Sunday. Entared p.t tho potoffl.- in Gary. April i S, 1911. A'.i tinder the of Jlmoh 3, 147'', as wnd.f'l. fmttt-r.
r."'or Bul'id!-ig . .
AD I'.KTIMMi orKlCK,
"hira
ir.IKPHO.M.S. Hammond fprivate (x-inngo 'Call for v.hativer department Oary Office Nassau & Thompson Kait. Chicago F. I,. F.vans. Fast Chicago. ?ast Chio, Tho Time..; inH'Ml Hasbor iNns Tja!r
nuan Htrnyr cP'Vp: end riati.
3101. stoj n t f d . i .Telephone 137
Tf lui'h'ine 'Jil Telcphunn 54L-P. Telephone 2; Telephone i'2 Adv. . .Tel-phone 2 1 Te.op'"'"" S(,-M leh..n 4 J
THE INDIAN'S GUEST FOR THE BIBLE. i An ancient quest for a Holy Book, which they heard fh white man possessed, and whfr h nae n.'.n great ; power ami coin fori, hu es il.o Minneapolis Journal to' believe than ra;n;,' of the moving romances of this eon- J tinc-nt await a Malory lo put them in the form of thet Arthurian Legends. If believe? there are stories as wonderful as the search for the Holy Grail in the heroic ! days of England's hUtory. t A notable example of such a request is recorded by t a v. -titer in the World Outlook, w ho tells of a band of I Indians in 1 he far northwest more than a century ago. i Visited by Lewis and ("lark the red men were told by ! ono of tiio explorers of the Hook the white man pos-
Larsjer Pld-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papers in the Ca'umit Region.
to find th Greot Spirit. Such en impression d Indians dehati-d for t'tr'
four of their numbers across the drear
If y-ou have any trouble- getting The- Times lK" cmtiplaint lmncdiariiv to the circulation department. Th Titles v- H n ' h iririh.V fir th rti:r of
Tv unsolicited articles or letlr- and w ill not m.tic anony. ; ,lnvrn
ir.o'is eommunirati'in. 5-.rt gne-i ie..-.-i s in no a mert pr mod at cl;s'-ret:ou.
sessed, which gave them comfort as well as guided them'
i i this story make (hat the j Be eer? and finally sent!
wilderness of i
the vest to cot. at St Lou's the Took thev had heard !
of. Two survived th'" rixors of th? journey, and they wo;-o received hospitably by the frontierpmen, loaded
with sifts, but none of the inhabitants seamed
understand wha the Indians wanted. Finally one
tarn "
V1:-- T!c?x ??s.
tttA t- t.- vri-t
, of Hie oyagers addressed the white man 1n these'' words: I came to you over the trail of many moons from the srifnic .sun. You were friends of my fathers, who have gone the Ions way. I came. i:h an ej partj'v o: en for my yople who sit in
witli both eyes closed. J
THRIFT STAMPS. THK TIMES is pleased to accede to the wish of the executive officers of the u,ir Savin?s Committee In announcing that Lake county's quota of the $2,000,000,000 "War Pavings and Thrift Campaiijn is !2,91T,S2 This quota is computed on a basis of $20 for every n.sn, woman and child in Lake county.
ENGLISH AS SHE IS WROTE. Y get some rather weird laagiiage in the publicity output of some of our food conservation amateurs these . days. For Instance, the scribe in the Department of Commerce, "ho is the author of "Why You Should Kat Oyster,' a poster to bo pasted conspicuously throughout tte country, declares "It Is a duty to utilize he vast re- : source (oysters) as far as possible and save other foods of which there is a dearth. It is nor one of the cheap foods when measured by the cost of its useful constituents, but it is valuable as'an appetizing variant of the diet." As the function of fin appetizer is "to make hunc,ry:" "to whet the appetite."' (see Webster) it would seem that the author uses lansruaae calculated to defeat the "very purpose of b's poster. TIas no one thought of
datkness. 1 go 1;
made my way to you with strons arms through many enemies ?nd strar.se lr.ds ihat I might c-rry much baric to them. I po brck with both amis broken and e.;m '. T- i 'at'ier" camwith us. '.tey v.ero bivi s t ,nar;. snos at.d storms. We leave them asleep here by yowr treat wat:r and lonees They v cro t'r.1 jo many moons. Their moccasins wore out. My people sent nte hrre to pot the white man's book of heaven. You took me to where you allow your woniT, to dance, as we do not ours: and the Rook was not. thrrf" You took me to v'.irie thev wurshii) the Great Spirit with Candles, and tho Book was not thfre: You showed me images of the Great. Spirit and pictures of the Good Land r.eyond, but the Hook was no: p.mor.fr them to tell me the way. I am going back the long trail to my people in a dark land. You make my feet heavy with gifts, and my moccasins will grow old carrying thm, anil yet the Hook was not among them' When I tell you my roor blind people, after one more snow, in the big- council, that I did not brine the Book, no word will be spoken by our old men, or by our young braves. One by one they will rise up and go out. jn silence. My people will die in the darkness and they will go on a Ion? path to other hunting grounds. No white man will go with them, and no white man's Book to make the way plain. I have no more words. Tew nobler trihu-es to the Holy Writ have ever
,- A',tM 4 i V . V . "v M ,,- '" t'i ?n t - - - i V 5c --'--' 'w rw-"i-v' - r--v 3mcs -jr. --v : I
Lake County's Roll of Honor
i
t !
ii&aa.ia. t-.- iJ vv-r-
A' ... Ti-c
V' A 'rJ Ci; '
I,ak Cotrnty'a daaS la tba war with Qerman a&d Auatrla-Hun-garj! ROBERT 3JAP.KLET. Himr.'iond; drowned eff :cl5. cf New Jersey. May 19. DF.XN1S HANNON, In'l'arta 'larlior; ptcrratne poison, at Fort Op!-throrf , f'hattanoosa, Tonn., June 11. FRANK M AN'I.E T, Indiana Harbor; killed !n France at Battip of Xjil . A'ljr. 15. ARTHUR P AfELEFt. Hammond; died at Lion Springs. Tex., of sp:nnl meninciU. August IS. JOHN" SAMBROOKS, F;at Cht-cag-o: killed in France. Sept. 16. ARTHUR ROBERTS OX, Gary; kl',d in Frsncp, Oct. 31. EIKVT. JAMES VAN ATTA, Gary; killed at Vimy Ridge. JAMES MA'"KTX7.IE. Gary; killed at Vimy Rldgr. DOLFif I5Ii:r-ZTKT. East Chicago; killed in Fringe, Nov. 27. F R K Y OFTIIBLRT LONG. Indiana Harbor; kilbd in aeoS": t at Ft. Bliss. Tcxa, Dec. !". EPWARD r. KOSTCAUE, IIcba,.; V.'ied by explosion in France, r '. !-
!
Vs.
Tn "
MEMORIAM
Aboe Typical crowd of industrial army (left) and Coal Administrator Garfield. Below Soldiers now in France to whom Garfield figures his ahntdown order will allow supplies to be aent speedily. Coal Administrator Garfield's defense of hU industrial shutdown and heatless Mondays' order is that it was the only way to coal the hundreds of ships which must leave Atlantic porta with supplies and munitions for the soldiers in frj-ance. He answers critics who are alarmed over stopped production by pointing out that production for war uses was useless if theproduct were not moved oversea.
RURAL DISTRICTS NOT HOSTILE TO CITY.
iried apples and water as a diet which would conserve j been penned, and this one calls attention that, the san-i
foods? J guinary history of tho red man must also be merged with . ibis frequent acceptance of Christianity and so many
; examples of a savasro to f.nd the course of Peace, the ; precepts of God.
A prominent Xer York City paper raring made the j Compare this Indian, untutored and trying to do statement that congressmen from rural districts opposed j right, with the "kul'.ured" Hun, who makes a mockery continuance of the pneumatic tube system m New York, I of God. Representative Steenerson, of Minnesota, a member of j . . the committee on postoffice and post roads and also of ! MEAT EATING, the special committee to investigate the tuba service, has written to that paper that be has observed no dis- Ever" Uuw anJ then tliP medIcal Profusion revises position on the rart of members from rural districts man' of 1ts ret tenets, reversing some of them corafo act unfairly in the matter. The tubes are designed ! P'tely. This has been done since ancient times, and tr carry letter mail through the congested districts of j startling changes are shown when we consider the way the larger cities without the delays incident to street ; insanity, pneumonia and tuberculosis used to be treated.
- ........... j
left for the trenches I THAT ciacklns: sound was tie bade- i
bona j OF Winter or the theatre owners j TRYING to keep up with the- fuel j
S Ij old ' I
IF he wished to keap h'.a feet ground.
on the
traffic. The letters ar placed in "cartridges" which fit into a rube through which the cartridges are drawn by suction. In this way a letter can be sent on its way 1m-
Now comes Woods Hutchinson, former head of aD eminent American medical society and a health writer of great distinction, who discusses tuberculosis in war
mediately after b!nK mailed instead of being held until t time.
- sack can be filled and then a wagon load of sacks ?eeurnulated.
FALL IN LOVE WITH YOUR WORK The- richest rewards come on!y when one can literally fall in love with one's work. If you are keenly Interested in your daily efforts, your work is being done
more satisfactorily.
Every day is an enjoyable ex
perience. Lovo your work. Retain your youthful enthusiasm. All this means that you must take every possible care of your health. That you must maintain your physical
energies at high water mark. Remember always that
Hutchinson says that when trench warfare took lions of troops underground, sanitary experts were prepared to expect a great outbreak of tuberculosis. "But for the first two year3 of the war tbey were most agreeably disappointed. Instead of thr troops In the field showing more tuberculosis than in previous open or abore ground war3, or in fivil life, they actually showed far less. This result seems to have depended in great measure on two things: good food and proper protection from infections. Tuberclo bacillus is always present, but the
I two things that give him a good opening are starvation
ana infectious diseases like measles, typhoid and common
i colds.
BEFORE we
yesterday ME implored the wife to KEEP the Home Fires Burning
And she politely rfired
Dr. GARFIELD. THEV are shifting blame for shortage and AVILL undoubtedly continue TO do so
his at
ty
THEY hiv, a nice brisk way cf put-
1 t '.ng thlnirs !n
all
MONTANA;
j A German told a woman he wished j
; the kaiser would j
! GF.T her son and all the other fools ! In France.
FAMOUS Docks Cook and Garfield. THE war will be over when America HAS spilled as much blood as IT has ink. GEN. da! V Olio Is or.e of Italy'a farr.etis SOLDIERS.
DONT know much ab
AS a soldier, BUT his name ought to make a darn GOOD salad dressing;. THE new rippie Ijack MAKES the woman feel around BEHIND more than usual TO be absolutely sura that all Is rish'.
AND by the way who is to
UNTIL summer con".?? famine !s ra.
and tba ica
WE cant make out whether
THEN a nd told h
rrs
d on him
TO hasten out of town
to keep up sanitation.
ttolnntloc. n-o -. - . . J
you cepena upon jour roan, maenme ior trie attainment ; an4 as for food lt contained a great element of meat. At
or your orrjeci in me. uaKe care or cat rnacnme, says j Fhysical Culture. j Is if rot worth more than automobile, than an air- ; i - .... .... . i
plane, t tine horse or clog: Is is not in reality beyond
financial valuation? Recognize its value to the full.
Remember that each day you are what your food makes you. The muscles, the strcnght and contour of your bodv. are influenced by the exercise you take. The blood that makes up the tissues, that nourishes and gives energy and enthusiasm to your brain, depends upon your diet and exercise and the general care you give your body. ,
every meal meat was served and Dr. Hutchinson taking into consideration the cases of C5,0000,00 alien and friendly fighters, who get all the meat they can eat. brands as superstition that we would be healthier without meat, that it i3 a luxury and that all manners of maladies follow Us use. Supposed to produce gout, rheumatism, liver trouble, paralysis, arteriosclerosis and what not these diseases are conspicuously absent among the fighting meat eaters.
War Restoring Kitchen to Its Pioneer Place as Center of the Home
By H. E. BARNARD
! DECIDE on the non-essential iud'JSi tr'.ps? Think it over. : ON seeing a girl in a pair cf yellow , rpats j AN editor raid that it wss ! STRANGE how on really unirr.port- ; ant detail i WILL dominate a whole costume I AND that the spats left the imrresI ston upon him I ' THAT the girl hadn't anything else
TOO confounded cold for even a German ploiter to do any plotting.
AND A NEW HOUSE FOR CARDINAL MERCIER, TOO.
THIS is great weather for the movie companies to turn out Alaska dramas.
1:
rliould
ha ve more
i
union, says
Th.9 American minister to Belgium, reports that
King Albert has created a department of economics, to j superintend the restoration of the country and to create J "WE have made another discovery. There art' men economic relations with America. Minister Whitlork i in this town who observe entirely too many waterless usts; j days." Houston Post. Bice the Germans have carried off every- ! :
thine In Belgium, from the machines and belting in factories to the kitchen utensils and brass knockers on the doors of private houses, the ountry at the f-nrl of the -war will be stripped ';ei'a!ly bare .of everv iooi and article needful in 'he rnchan'-al. industrial, and ib-ni-stir; arts, and to j'l'.'ply this need will bo something more 'han a commercial transaction of magnitude; it will be an act of friendship. Let's gel up a national shower for little Belgium. We've enoueh in this country to fit the gallant little
POETKY and
Atlantic Monthly. Our idea would be to send some of the SHOW poets tip fi.il life.
The war has restored the kitchen to its pioneer importance as the Titer of the home. A woman is rich or poor nowadays according to her itchen economies; a patriot or a slacker according to her kitchen actinic?. For years kitchen work ha3 been losing its importance in home rna'knrr. Housewives have lost interest in cooking and have found work in
he home. How many housewives will confess, "I love to make salads, j nit T loathe dishwashing?" Xow comes war's necessities and all kitchen j
vork, even conscientious dishwashing, becomes a patriotic service. Food Vdministrator Hoover has told us over and over again how the little eavngs in the kitchen multiplied by the 20,000,000 kitchens in this country will conserve enough food to feed our suffering allies. Many women ho for years have been content to leave their kitchen in charge of a servant rediscovered that it is an interesting place curing ihe long hours they put in canning and conserving food for winter's nse. They see the drudgery of kitchen work through the clearer glasses and realize as they have never done before that it is not the work but the way the work is done that makes it a servile task. After all, the kitchen is
on. WHAT Las become cf the OLD-fashicned man who was always t be seen AROUND with egg on his chin? Our passionately beloved CUSTOMER COAL man DID a dar:; deed the other night; HE brought us a ton of COAL NEED of conservation of childish orders and suggestions.
mless the !i;o:i!ii;s of tb foodstuff of the world the teachfs dedlati themselves anew to th mighty task ct rebuilding the national Institutions an fs-pression of the highest ideal? ct
I humanity.
"The schools are the laboratory of good citizenship. The children are little ci'lsetts and must be glided in surb pient experiences s will liiake f i tain their future dictation to the wl fare of the republic. The Junior meirbership of the Red Cross, through tb school auixiLary, offers an uns u passable med:'j-ri through which t'ie patriotic activities of the children cjri rrake themselves felt. Beginning- wit'9 Lincoln's birthday, and lasting ur'.il Washington's birthday a r.alon-wid effort is to be made in behalf of increasing the junior membership. This call to the colors is for your servioa in this campaizn. "The National Education Association effers every teacher In the lard th high privilege to participate in this treat campaign. The school organization of every state needs yo:r help In this form of character education. The Fresident of the United States, the great teacher of the world, has given a new content to the term 'Red Cross Therefore you may consider that lie tails you to the colors in this actlva service for the children of the world. ' You are hereby called to the colors by all the great Ideals through which today ts acting on tomorrow to tl e end that tomorrow may aes the tanlis of a orld life dedicated to straight thinking, hard work, mightr loving. "You are called to the colors by the spirit of America, by the reeds of childhood, by the soul of civi'.liation. Tours is the privilege cf sacrificing', serving and loving. "I ealute you uron yccsr freat orportvnity. I thank you for the way in which veu are certain to rise to its furthest heights. Soldiers of the common good! Reb'jtlders of ciz'lization! Moulders of the destiny cf the world! Your great task is ready. Assume It"'
IUYou Think THE TIMES It Doing Its Bit Your Support Is Always Welcoms.
A CALL TO TII3 COLONS
I ,11 II l I t I u '
111 I'll i ' It 111' IMS A
Hyiiiimiiiii.iHii
Horaoe Ellis, state surenr.tendertt of public instruction, has received "A Call to the Colors" for the teachers of the United States from Mary C. C. Drad- . i p tVna VnHen.il Educa-
.. , i- v jt. i 1 ic-ru. pi"""" -
:nty a practical working iaooraiory in wnitn me cooh. mtves compic i ton n5SOC,ation. it follows: hemical compounds, such as meat and flour, and turns them into other , to the Public School Teachers cf the compounds which are transformed in the wonderful laboratory of the', .f h'eby caUe to the colors bodv into heat and Cliorgv. jof the American republic. The teach- " To be able to prepare food in such a way that it is wholly satisfac- VT.i Tll S torv for the body's needs is more than an art; it is a real science. Our ' ,vr,t!d cr,:,is thst u at land. The was
! war for democracy is mulling down into everv home. Jt is rescuing us
I
1
"WHKltM is ihe old fa.-hioned man who used to j as a people from the depths of selfish res
have a cold? Today he is down with laryngitis, pharyn- had fallen
gitis, rhinitis, tonsiiiiis. influenza and coryza." Min- j ptac iierc labor becomes service and t he simplest duty a definite con
aiii'ous jouiiiai. iiihis uai rsuos irom rue anvice j
handed by newspaper henltb. columns.
i b
and carelessness into which we ; r
human freedo.ui i.annot be won ':nth army of soldiers of the cemi pood th public sihool army
Tt c rcac hiTiir into rverv kitchen and transform! oe it into a aiv.?!, the fullest wmsuh f,f "'-'''flc
and service.
and fairer
itribution to the immense effort necessary to bring us victory.
n " 'v
! more important, a civilization w.ll not
take the plae ef th one thnt ha brokirn d'iwn under the stress of conflict
i o.rr t i
ixeaeves atirr iiecK
VUhen you wake up with a stiff neck or sore muscles, strains or sprains, use Sloan's Liniment. No need to rub; it quickly penetrates to the seat of pain and removes it. Cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments. It does not stain the skin or clog the pores. Always ha ve a bot tie handy for rheumatic aches, neuralgia soreness, bruises and lame back. In fact, sJl externol pain. Generous sired bottles at your druggist.
1m mi.' iirfjt-"LiJP-rJs,3s-tii-" tA-;.iikl
PETFA DTXK Yes, Ilenrioita Isn't Built Kight
By C. A. VOIGHT
ilfl PM fi Sl 'p m -5 11 f m&r. iiTAWr J3&d XwA mm&, mmim
-
