Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 142, Hammond, Lake County, 25 November 1918 — Page 4
Pa?re Four.
Tim TIMES Moti'Iiv, November 25, 1078
THE TIMES ,03FA?3S .i 1 1 i BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHINd COMPANY.
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St. 108
The Time
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FOHEIGi ADVElt ( 1M Mi OH-'lt-'K.
TEI EPHOMiS. ,, , Hammond tprfvate eicinuie) 3101 ' Call for whatever department wsntfM.i Gary Office T- . , I Nassau Thompson, East Chicago -7'vt'l"la
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Indiana Harbjr (News Dealer)
inaiana Harbor Whltinr
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vi te &i t? i j , (iisfrortor aud Class. AdT.). ''' ' T v!,,p)iii:i? s- ....... . 1 e ; 10 c.
Larger Pald-Up Circuletion Than Any Two Other Papei In th Calumt Region.
If you hare anv troublf stt1nj Ths T'mJ make com plaint Immediately to rue circulation d -parrment. Tilt Times will nut be responsible lor tike return ot any unsolicited rt..i o: Kuei ud win not ue;:ce -. tnous communications. Short signed letters or aenera. tatereat printed at discretion. NOTICE TO iUBSCrVIBBRS. It tom fall to receive your copy of Ta Tiv.rs a promptly as you have In the past, please do net think it has been Jost t was not sent on time. Remember that the railroads are enraged with the urgent movement t troops and their supplies! that there Is unus-iai pressure In various parts ol the country for food and fuel; that the railroads have more business than they con handle promptly, for that reason manj trains are lato. Ths Tlaii has Increased Us mailing qulpment and Is oa ntratinr in everr way with the postoffic department
to expedite delivery. Even so. delays are Inevitable be- j
aauss ef the enormous demands spon the railroads ane the withdrawal of men from many lines of work.
baths and then fed and given fresh clothing. There are said to be several thousand ailed prisoners released from camps in Belgium now on their way into our iines at tvarlous points. Kindly inhabitants are feeding them on their journey and do.ng what they can ;o alle iate their sufT rings."
LYNDCRA NECD3 HCLP. On" of thi' greatest p.xbioi.is of the war roconsl rue on period that conf onts th- city of Iia.-m nd is the r at sit k in nt wh ch is baiM r.g up w th no.ii' n 1 lp d ty in ihe south :i. ; n pnrt of th city. What .A ' h id,"- if to Gar, .'-jrih Harh.,; to Ind'anr. liarbor, : ' yndora hive is to th" city of lla'i lond. Out thre is srrowh, proi;re;s. il'vclp-nctit, eniT"; hat needs to ho looked after by the city of Hammond 'Mher partsj of the city may be stami na still, but Ka Hammond is like a rapidly rrowing child, that needs new clothes ami parental care. If whe city is to let l...-ndora 4ust Krow up iijie Tops.v in IViCle Tom's Cabin she may rue it for years to come. It is a c;ty within a city and "owinj; by leap ami boun is. If needs a new school new stores and the cry for more houses is na'nful evidently unheard. The city adm'n'scration could c-own 'tsc'f with plory by look'nir well ti ft procress of EaHammond and see that it pets the th ncrs it wr- ,rid "Mist have. There is no w iv for Hammond to pro- bur a-ds the south aral it is hlch time to wake tin to that fact. Th" Chamber of Commit rce. if it is a';vp To the nfls "f Harrmord ran never be of nior-- service to tb bu! nes mer of the c;ty th?n by be'n"- a'ive to the nerin of T yndora, or as it used to be called. East Hammond.
LORD SALISBURY'S BLUNDER. It was in. 1S90, when the relations between the British and German empires were of the most cordial description, that one of the greatest indiscretions ever committed by an English premier took place the turning of Helgoland over to the kaiser in return for the protectorate of Zanzibar, says the New York Herald. Lord Salisbury was then directing the foreign affairs of the empire, in addition to being head of the government. He was approache'd cautiously by William II's ambassador at London. With true Prussian craft the latter pointed out that the gray rock in the North Sea was useless to Great Britain and that his master desired it only for sentimental reasons. After all as his excellency suggested what wasn't more than a small German summer resort under a foreign flag? The prime minister saw light through Prussian eyes, announced his decision to parliament, and there was no discussion on the subject. Great Britain woke up a few days after the bargain had been made. Every German ship available was dressed with flags and took part in the procession that went ont to take possession. And hardly had the standard of the new owners been raised than work was begun on the fortifications which were to make the island a thirn in the side of the allies from August, 1914, until a short time ago.
GERMANY NEVER LET UP. That the Germans never for one moment let up on their Inhumaa treatment of allied prisoners, not even when they saw that the end was near, is evidenced by a dispatch from British headquarters in France telling of the arrival of the first batch of released British prisoners. Men who had been in the prime of life when they were taken prisoner only last March, were scarcely able to stagger across .the allied lines and numbers cf them dropped dead on the journey from sheer exhaustion. The story of their harrowing condition has just been described by an eye witness. "Along the roads that lead to the allied lines from territory that is still in German hands there pass today pitiful processions of broken starving men prisoners newly released from prison camps in Belgium. The sight of them makes one's heart ache. They are mere shadows of men in rage and tatters, stumbling along rough stone roads their sunken eyes strained for the first glimpse of the allie dkhakl. The Germans opened the doors of their cages on Thursday morning and told them they could go. They walked into free air like men in a dream, and were set upon highways that would take them to outposts of the halted allied armies. Empty handed, without great coats to protect them from bitter air, some of them indeed wih nothing but a fragment of old tunic pinned across their wasted bodies, they have walked the weary road towards home scarcely able to keep upright. Some of them died upon the way. and their bodies lie in rough graves where they fell. Others barely kept body and soul together, until they came at last into the hands of their comrades within the lines. The men who composed it bore little resemblance to British soldiers. They wore German caps and the horrible prison uniforms which made them look like German soldiers, and at first troops who received them coi'ld not believe they were their own peorle. They came from prison camp at Halle w?t of Bru-sels where they had been employed In Ioad" ammunition, cb'eflv bot for aeroplanes which attacked tons be;nd h n1" lines. All of them were taken prisoners diT-'n0- th" Ing around G'venchy. Festubert. and the T.v ip M--r-h and April. These prisoners bad only two ba"'- 'n etn-v months. They were herded b'ke cattle and fed far less. One boy of twenty mirht have been a lad of ten so shrunken was his body from svsterriat'c starv'ne. Manv Of them were disgued by imtrimmed beard and r fed hair, and their faceg and bodies wpn covere,t -nr-'h sores. It is impossible to give an ad-n'iate pictu-" of their shocking condition. The little column was tp.keri first to a divisional rest camp and when the men had been medically examined they were sent to tv norp-
ON LETTERS FOR SOLDIERS. Keep on writing to the soldier hoys overseas. Don't ihink tluit they will be back b Christmas, because they won't. See that nice fat letters from ail the folks at home get to them, and DO IT NOW. Write thorn cheerful letters. George Ado has a sample letter whose lines you might follow. Read it and follow suit: 'Dear Elmer: The leaves on the trees have turned golden yellow or blood-red and now they lies as a mat under the trees, and there is a ha2e, like pipe smoke hanging over the landscape a half mile nway. and the country boys who gets seven cents a bushel for shucking corn are ordering fuzzy overcoats with belts around them, the same as the Yale students wear. A good many Ford3 are buzzing up and down Main street and nearly every one has a stout lady in the back seat. People who haven't received any mail for eight years, except the Sears-Roebuck catalogues, are still going to the postoffice twice a day. "The soda fountain at the drug store has become a special department for the sale of witch hazel and cough syrup. Well, the 'flu has about flown and those who didn't have it regard their escape as an evidence of moral superiority. In the grocery stores you can hear them asking, 'Is that all the sugar we get?" Everybody is wondering when peace will come, especially the lads who are well under ,43. The hot stove board or strategy meets each evening at the pool room and if they could get word to General Foch it would all be over except the shouting in about ten days. The school children have borne up with great fortitude while kept away from their studies by the closing order. Political orators were the real sufferers. They found it was impossible to save the country while wearing an influenza mask. Red Cross women are as busy as ants, although some of the officers are privately criticized as being too 'bossy.' The well known tiehtwad. Mr. , who owns 240 acres of land and has a bureau drawer full of chattel mortgages, was finally hounded into buying a $50 Liberty bond and contributing $3 to the War Work campaign. Now he goes around looking as if some one had robbed him of a lung. The woman who has a Fon fighting in France is so proud she won't speak to an old bachelor. Doug Fairbanks is still popular in the movies. The girls continue to wear their clothes as few and as brief as possible. If they were Belgian refugees we would pity them. Wages are high. t "The intermittent son' of toil who is worth $1.75 a day demands six and gets five. Raking up leaves now conies under the head of skilled labor. Every Sunday some of them boys in blue or khaki come home and eat whatever has been accumulated around the house for a week. They look better than they did in civilian clothes. At a little conference held on the depot platform yesterday and presided over by a traveling salesman from Chicago, it was decided to show no mercy to the kaiser. The Saturday night trade is greatly worried over the "t-rbable increase in the price of oyster stews. War is hell! "P. S. AH' the lumbago and asthma victims above the age of 45 are still wishing they were young enough and husky enough to get into the blamed thing."
FINNISH PEOPLE REJOICING. Many Finnish people joined in the jubilations which attended the announcement that the war was over. The spirit with which they received the news Is reflected in the editorials printed in the Finnish-American press. At the first intimation that hostilities was finshed, the Paivalehti, a Finnish non-socialist daily of Duluth, Minn., came out with the following editorial: "It seems that the United States has accomplished the first part of its great task," said th Paivalehti. "The disturber of world peace has been overthrown, and the only thing remaining is that the second part of the work shall be accomplished in an equally brilliant manner; viz., the recognition of the independence of the small nations, and their emancipation from oppression and bondage. Let us hope that this wil come to pass, and that every nationality that has been suffering under a foreign yoke shall be liberated from its chains; that it shall stand forth as a free people among the larger nations, and that among these fhail be included our old home. Finland Let us be condent that those th'n-s for which the United States cnllrd out the boys to f.ght: the freedom of the world and the rights of the small nations, will be realized!" Similar sentiments were voiced ty the New York ''utiset, a Finnish liberal tri-weekly. It said: "Great ;s the present time, althoush preceded by sorrow and pain. Happy seems the moment when the deadly work -f the battle field shall cease and the nations may return in peace to continue the'r orderly development."
t
-r
The War's Loss and its Remedy
BY D. J. MORAN.
Mi:.'S ioh 0f sj.ert Is funny wh -n yen m,iaid( r a uoi.ian'M j 11. K' is to tal.r a day off and go liun; A Ni;V j:;, r,.,! IH.50 in her rurse to py for It. Till-: TIim;.TS of liivoire Hi our own little; i
l!A I LI 1( 'K wore renewed AGAIN last right
YVIIKN we d.ire.l to sis,;ifst that woni'ti ouirht to retire the old l'as-hion-ed leil-;mnel I'KTTIOOAT, and cut out the SII.K KNl('Kl:US. TKS by all means make Nov. 11a n:itiotuil holiday WK ha vi'ii't enough holidays now and t lie I. a id -worked bunkers tKSEUVE a few more. NOTHING excites our compassion more than Till sierht of a one-armed man OOl'KTlNG a nice plump Krass widowWITH about a 4" bust. CKKMANY has gon- k.'U'U. BUT will she stay put. Till: Columbus Itpublleean advertises AS follows: "WANTED a colored irl for BKLLllOY at the St. Denis Hotel." IF the number of persons mentioned for seats AT the. peace table continues TO grow THEY'D better bold it at the fir grounds in CROWN rOINT and make a regular PICNIC party out of it. Tlinni; must be some funny things in Indianapolis now AS for Instance our old friend Sim Ralston in a flu mask.
I
WE have our gloomy moments ! AS we wfnd our way to the busy! nr. rts of tritde . ' WHEN we feel that about the only difleituce between civilization j AND savagery ' IS that the former w ears more clothes ! Hi.d in Kit.ME enf 's a uood deal shorter and j
SCAXTIEl: at that. ' j
IN that air plane production seandai WE wonder how much wua spent i l-'UH caster oil? I HAVE von hunted up your old friend tile t-nowshovel . j AND given it the merry "good even-j j
WOMEN like to braic about their husbands
F.CT they are always exceedingly'
cnreful to do It
WHEN their hubbies can't overhear them. i I IT is fin easy transition from the horrors of war to the j HOKEOIL.s ef fe'ding a family. j WE 'an only Fee one treed thing In j the trip of Wilson to France and that ia )
Til AT he might take George Creel out und LOSE him over there. SOMETIMES It just seems to a mafried mar. as If in her spare times a woman THOUGHT about nothing else than new lace curtains. MYSTERY attached to the fearfully noiy meeting of the neighbors' CATS from Webb and Ruth Ft reels last night WAS solved this a. m. with the , ANNOUNCEMENT that they were electing Uekgntes TO go with the Wilson party at the VERSAILLES peace table.
The Great War Is aTjou over, aoi change from present conditions must toa expected. 2C0 billions of dollars of the wo -la s wealth has been destroyed. Cut this Is not all. Proba"bly 12 millions of able bodied men have been killed and permanently disabled. Each of these produced enough to feed, clothe and shelter, two or 'hrea dependents. The wealth piodifcing- labor of the civilized nations of the earth has been sadly diminished. It is estimated that each able bodied man In the United States, is woith at least S3.0CO to the country, during his life time. And if we assume tiiat $3,000 is a fair average in the civilized world, this means a loss of at least 30 billion dollars more. Thus, the civilized world has sits alned a less equal to the entire wealth of Korth America, from the Isthmus of Panama to the Arctic Ocean. Except for the man power on the North American continent, the world stands as If wealth of this continent was sunk ia the bottom of the sea, ard It had become again just what it was whan discovered. It Is useless to hope that this loss will not bo felt the world over, even here in our United States. There is but one remedy for this loss, increased production, and absolute prevention cf waste. Every workman murt produce more, that is, worS harder and more efficiently. Ke must also see that every pound of coal, every pint of oil, every tool and every machine, Is properly used and con
served, and treated as his own personal property. Every management must thir.k and pian to make its easiness protrace as never before. Oraamen al officers, superintendent and Vorses, must bo made useful and productive. The weal h of the people in the banii and financial institutions, must be Isout only to productive industry. Money should not be loaned to speculate In stocks or bonds, or in ns?f commcdi ies. Promotion of specuiatl. enterp'-ises rau't be abandoned. Wealth is food, clothing, shelter e.n the means that produce them, machir ery and labor. O! the two, labor is b far the most important. Ig-norant lab' destroys bo'h the machine and Its pr ductlveness. Such labor destroys itsel because it lowers its own standard b. living' by non-production. Six months instruction and Intensive training1 made our young' men wonderful soldiers. The lesson to Industry is sis months' instruction and Intensive training which will make them wonderful workmen. Every Important Industry must" educate and train its men. The knowing head and the skillful hand Is the most essential and costly mean'i of production, but go'a the least care and attention. Kany an indujtry has a hundred men to keep its machinery clean, pollshe dan, efficient. Hov; many industries in the Calumet region has even one man to keep its man power clean, polished and efficient? THIS IDEA MAY EE WOHTH WHILE, LET TJS THI5TQ- IT OVER.
tins been pro-
IT MAKES HIM WANT TO FIGHT Do they like The Times? Here a missive from 1'r. Al. A. Skurntz. Cattery A, 17th F. A.. A: E. F.: "I write you with great pleasure and certainly do thank you for The Times. It is the best I have rcid in France for the news in in it from the home towns makes me feel good and I want to go out and lick a couple of Huns. I have been in seven different battles and came out O. K. in each one. I faw Irv Chayken, the old Times sportwriter in the 12th F. A., and all the Hammond boys ore getting on fine. I remain as ever, a good Hammond sport."
NOTICE. Frleiidn of the Times, who have sent In soldier letters must ereUe patience-. They vrlll nil be printed but must be puhllabed In the 0Ar of their recrlpt. Hy government order, our space- is limited because i4 newsprint short:nre and we are only allowed to ue a vertnln amount of printed metier didly. Ion"t fear that the letters will not appear In their turn. All soldiers returning from the rump snd nintonments are kindly asked to register thrlr names for (his column. The Times Is going to nearly a thousand soldiers from this county who are In Frunee. Many of them won't be bark for a year or more. They want to know where their friends are. This column Mill tell them, o soldiers and their friends will plensP let us know nhrn they retarn and from whence they return.
Mm I'nllnrk, the old "Mae" of (To. 'L." writes a letter to The Tiiips which wil be of great interest to his friends in Gary and Ea-t Chicago: He says: "It has been six months since I left the States and eiehteen months since I left Indiana Harbor. I was with Capt. A. I. Twyrnan's Co. "L." When I arrived at Enaland I wrote you a lu rried letter stating that we arived safe and sound. 1 want to take this opportunity of thanking you very much for publishing that letter. I hive received considerable mail and almost rvi'iy letter had it mentioned that The Times published 'my letter. At the present time I am feeling good It sure has been an exciting six months for me I and a few boys of Gary are altogether. There's John Maloney, who was with the United States Steel Company. He asked me to mention bis name, and say hello to all bis friends through your paper Many letters that we have written have gone astray, so that by reading o'- parer ur -nxious friends will
, know that w e are still alive an-3 kickj ing. This sure is a great life,. Th I best pastime we have had is chasing the ICm and . promenad ing with tho ! Madamoisell". the latter being pre-
irrri'U. -Mis jss Miepara and .Miss Sybil Clapper sure are doing their bit. They have been writing letters to some of their boy friends, and it sure does make a fellow feel good. Miss Ciapper.who is from East Chicago, keeps me posted as to the happenings in E Chicago. She always tells me the men are leaving the town and it is getting lonesome. If she wil wait a fewmonths I'll be back in the dear old States and cheer her up. Miss Shepaid sends me The Times, and every time mail is given out and a part of a newspaper that looks like a home paper Is In the bunch the man giving out the mail is out of luck. A young war is started. This country sure is very beautiful. Pretty rivers and many hills. The people are a little old-fashioned, but that adds to the beautifulness. An American soldier is treated like a king. The American boys have done their part over here, and from the looks of the communiques from the States the people back home are sure going over the top in subscribing fcr the Liberty Loans. For every person that bus a Bond a message Is flashed across the water and for every message flashed a German Roche is pushed back a hundred miles. When the loan was oversubscribed in New York a bulb-tin was passed out to the boys and passed along. The bulletin slated ail about Jl.e Loan, and the first thing the boys wanted to do was to go over the top again. It's in the American blood; fight for right, and America, risiht or wrong, is always richt. I'aris Is one wonderful place. Real modern and up-to-date. They have regular subwuys and long ones at that. They travel a mile a minute. Well, II cut this short and would appreciate it very much if you would publish what parts you think best, and would like very much to receive your paper. Here's wishing you all the luck in the world. I am respectfully. Max Foliar li better known as "Mac"; Hcailq. Det.. 1st Dep. Div., Stat. Sec, Am. Exp. Force."
Ensign Will HnstlnKs of the nnvsl aviation blanch of Great Lake, has returned a:ter a tdiort fuiloiigh with relatives
Louis Mtitt, son of Mr. nnd Mrs. F. R. Mott, is another Hammond bey who has written home soul-stir! ing accounts of the tremendous Yank offensive In the Meuse sector. In which he was a participant at the time his letter was sent.
at Caiup Devens, Mass.
moted to sergeant. . Floyd Grlilith. Ted llorlbeck, Geo. Mortenson., of Whiting, wh were attending the motor transport school at Int.erlaken, have been transferred to the cau.p t Valparaiso. Martin Mc-NaniHi-a, who Is en instructor at that school, lias also been transferred to Valparaiso.
J. F. Sawyer, of the Great Lakes, was the guest of Hammond friends yesterday. He enlisted lest summer and has no de.'inite information as to when he will be mustered out.
The nearest relatle of any member of the. American Expeditionary forces in Europe n t receiving a Christmas parcel label by November 21, 191S, or in ase such label is lost, may obtain a Christmas parcel label for sending su. h a parcel by applying to the local lied Crofs receiving station. Parcels t which such labels pre affixed will be accepted by postmasters up to and including November 30, 1918.
The nrrlvnl of Private Mick Vnnder Ai. in South Holland, on eleven days fuilough from Camp Travis. Texas, was quite a surprise to Is is friends and relatives here last Wednesday morning, lie feels and looks fine, but says Texas climate is pleasanter than that ot Illinois.
.Max Yerex of near the I'orter-Lake line, who has been stationed tt the Fort Ethan Allen, Vt., Aviation Camp, returned home last evening, having been Riven his discharge from military fcervice. He sas that at bis camp there was atbtal of 2000 men and that all of them have been discharged and sent home.
Mrs. Willtam Fox, Indiana Harbor, received Utters from h-r son. Hayden
Fox the other d ! y. Hnvc-n is now in
France and has been complaining that he never heard from his home folks. In one of his recent letters he Informed his mother that shortly before writing he l ad been given thirty letters from home at one time. He had been driving all over France, and the result was that his mail was held up and delivered to him all at once.
Mrs. Elizabeth Mrlln, of 3510 Fir St., Indiana Harbor, has received official word through tiie American Red Cross that her youngest Lrother, Ferd Blums who is well knewn in these parts, enlisting from M.iivale, Fa., was severely wounded in the right leg above the knee. He was attached to the C. '. 317th Inf.. A. E. F. He is one of the five f.f the relatives of Mrs. Sirlin in active service..
KdHartl Heil, Indiana Harbor, is home from the Proving Ground, A I. deem, Mai ;, land and at the home ! parents. Mr. and Mrs. John M. R- ;; North Forsythe avenue, recup'-ia from a recent attack of pneumonia.
The W. It. Weldons of Ivy street. Indiana Harbor, ere looking forward f..r their son, Frak, to come home from ('amp Kendriek, Lakehurst, N. Z.. to spend the he-lday season.
Times re.-nlers nt various ramps are now addre sel as follows:
H. J. Hargis. Co. C, Sherman. Pa'fl L. Rar.thum. ('amp J.ii kson. Tiiomis D. Harh.
Trans.. A. E, 1'.. N.
A. J. Foes. , N.
. lampton Roads, Va H. B. Fund, 3rd Lr tr . Co.
Corczal. P. C. Jno. Frank, 2'.th Eng.. Co. E, Am. Exp. Force, via New York. Wm. Ford. 2 Ord. Rep. S. D.. A. E. F. via New Yorfc
3TSth Inf.. Camp Rat. C. Reg. IS.
pany F, "5
Base,
F.. Fort
Co
Y. Operating"
FROCK SHOWS THE VOGUE OF THE SASH, AND MONKEY FUR, NOT FRINGE, TRIMS IT
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Elmer Hurr. Enst t hienfro. Is home from Camp Shelby. Miss., visitir.gr his parents In East Chicago and his wife in Davidson place, who resides with ijer parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ilorlheck.
i.i. Z;4s6i. - . n" jCtA ' ',1 ' - is ';"''-".;&'" 'A Jib rL7 "'. f X t - - t :.t -C' A v v ' - - - . , . ?r
Melvin Ahrnham, YtliUin. who Is
Hcav i i ,cpe cloth is used to fashion this oddly charming restr;ufant frock. One would know at a glance that Lady Duff Gordon was the c-esiguer of it. Who else, indeed, would have thought of using monkey fur to simulate fringe? Bands of black silk bra.d fasten the fur to the loose side panels. The loose sleeves and shawl collar are trimmed in like, manner. A large and graceful sash and bow of black moire ribbon at la
vaistline add a unique hnishms touch.
They Might Hawe Introduced Petey to the Dos:.
By C, A. VCIGHT
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