Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 55, Hammond, Lake County, 11 January 1919 — Page 4

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Page Four. THE TIMES .laimarv 11. 1:,'10.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

AN ISSUE THAT NEEDS A FRIEND. j One of the most, important issues to be considered i

tlY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING; r.t the ; eace conference at Versailles is free trade, audi CCV1PANY. I not one American tariff protectionist is to lie t here. More J

hae been primed on that issue in Ku:opo the j

last week than about sorting out justice to bill. It ha j

h'liliy lie went t.. Omip Ti s lirnmut.vJ at that j.lac

The Lake County TIttim Dally eaaept Saturday n j words uaday. Enured at tha aoatjfflaa In iiammond. June ,

Tha Timea East Chlcaao-Indtana Harbor, dally exep unday. Sntsreo at tha paitofftce In Eaft Chicago. Novumi" n. tia. Tha Lai County Times Maturdav and TV.ekly F.Jif.on. S-ntir4 at th pMt4tfln la Hammond. February . Tie Gary ina flroes Dally opt Suaiay. Knsr4 at tha poatoftlc In Gary, April 11. 111. All under tha act cf March S. 18T. a second-class mat! or.

111 R;m Building

,.Ch!ct

Jtamand fpr'vate uaiuit) StCO. S101

(Call for whatever department wanted , ., Gary Offlee TiphoB 1J Kintau Thompson. East Chicego Telephone SJ U Brans. East Chicago Telephone last Chtcaa-o. The Tlr.tr Telephone ISJ wdiai.a Harbor (Xaws Dealr) Telephone Indiana Harhnr I Rr,.trf r .,a d... ll ) TalaO: .one IJ

heen reported that the election in ftivat Britain depends upon tho disposition of the people on the matter of shooting the past kaiser, tut the fact i that the election turns on the is. tie o" free trade. In aU nations there is louding up about the fiiet theory of free yeas

and free trade among the countries.

If

will be founded on free trade. The United S'ates will

'J'Ue IipIIioOih loy. nb were former employes, ieH-aod from the oernmcnt sei-the. recently visited the ! hit rstat plant, during; the week: Jnt Moloney, Camp Oordon. Uu.: Joe Mo- j Oillui k. A. K. V.. I'. K. Miller. Camp ) Truest, (la., ami George Lai".' ton, Uieat Lakes. 111. !

in tn'ioss Kca-

ervu c.

Jrtif Peterson li another (ronn u ' ' ":1 '- Ki 'in 1 d. n imy who is a corporal. IL; i.v vi itli ' .Michigan. a,o l,!x LV.inpniiy 1, lith Machine Gun r.allal- Kredual- ..f tlm Mi. I,

lion tio with the Army of Occupation mid mw .-.(.me hot tishtins.

ylor ami i. to the

Ll.i- armistice

ii Mltc'ietl, lompici-ii lii-i .ouri"i and to"k advanced train, at the si'l.O'tl if Are at I '.. i t U:, .'Kirs.

I' turn I'ii.i lip''. Me in a .'in l.i iv - liuo!

rank of lienti-nant.

Italpb I'aplrh, former minrr nilh tho iMti: Mil;. Mi;-.!'!! ...r Ml., s, .'.Tilt i

l.ieul. Ilumtlton, Henry Miteiy anil tied i'ertella were among the recent H-.ldler eallera at lh JnlAr.d Steel Co.

I hnrlr Schmidt of Iyer. hn return, j -sta

Vniericans do not watch out the league of nations plant.

Lieutenant Ilaaoir of (he Alatiin

919 Jos its Ifes if not i:s head, ltd billion dollar 5-hips Will ; Corps received his discharge papi.

! 1'red HennlnR, of t rann t'olnt. bna j ftrnved home fiom I'imp Iifvuis Mass. ; with an honorable discharge from til-' ! I", r. arinj.

n ttn- m

fa loi.rm in i l.-i i y, l.us I'arnii .lai'k.i'.-ri. .- ' . h

ifi'.fd hi:, uiiiitai y ;.' : lankcil as a '.r$f..ant and l.ias in th" a'-t of r. t : uin Vork for niliu r ka t ion to K .i the a. i n,!?li.-.. ua.- s i .- -i . .J .

I'-'IU t in -1 ';i.e i'a;.,' ii oir.ina nd lor N"w ;'. when

ftnl canu turou-h Without a , u , lie wu.i en.- o th,Stith Div:i"!i vi j "o w qui:k service after rea-'htr. so: Krau'-e, not hnv'ng sai!.i f o I the t". S. until October 5th. Thr- dlv i rsion 'lid not yee -r i-e ;is a ivi.f.U 1. 3Sth ar(d M;h division? w-re to the Argi.nin' Kor-et wher- the t. j w'ere iinfd us feplaet-ment units, ta;;' j In the k;,;.s ir. th" various ir n'r-r i ... . . . . .

" iitc xzi" men had been wojud- d . killed, '.nail it i s said th-. d:i-i..:

e?. i :r inns or the:r f .-'h. e. The c?t"r dated le-em I'roni L.-c ''ha yp 1 Sr-d, l':an-. '.l ist reached ihi town and drn'

Wjaltlhi

Crown

'oint.

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In fine junk. Insu-ad of hoin able lo feed the world, it will be the receiving committer of charity to feed i'fl l..-o':;e. Labor will he paid on tho Chinese basis. Tlv-

indle-tying and the bungling will be done at VnrnaiUcc

N'oi one ,t d Jlbir

and is now hack in the partirifint fo the Inland P

audit ine it-el.

de-

TCephon S0-if,i;ow- nl;,ny bufins Anierieans ill be there'.'

I orporal .lark Aelrh. f Hegenlaeh

Id homo from Camp t'unfton on a ten-da-furlough.

Herbert ICbrtum, of llyer, who wa home on a fifteen-day furlough returned to tiainlng prhool at I'arnecic

v. lio ha.s ever made

tarfltr Hld-Uy Ctraulatlon Than Ay T.o Other Paper; un.i(M In tha Calumet Raa'Q"- i tr -, w ..,.,hu -..Hi c Thi T'o-e make com-i

lmi

of

a.a'.nt lmmaittatalv to tha c'rculi'ion dsnartment.

Tha limes will not Ba reioonaible for the return

y uaanlictted arttvles or vttt and wlli r. u noricw anony. tUi comniunli!'.lftr.a. Short aigned lattera of generaJ Utirnl ariBteil at dlaeretlon. STICTB TO lrIClUBERI. If you to racalVa your copy of TM Times a aramptly a you Taava !a tie past, plsasa do not thlna tt haa bean lost' r wu not nt on Uffla. Kemember that the railroads are augaged with the urgent movement af treops and their tupplles' that thara la unusual pressure In rarlcue parts cl the country for food and fual: thit tha railroads baa more business than they can handle promptly. For that reason many trains are lite. Tun Tiites hex Increased Its mailing aqulpn-ent and la eo peratlng In every way with tha postofflce departmeat to axpedUe delivery. Kvan o, delays are Inevitable b tausa of tha anorasoua demands vpon the railroads ama tha W.thdrawaJ of men frosn many lines of work.

a tarilT protective law, or

any other kin l of law. THE GERMS OF ABSOLUTISM.

IriMltut.-, l'a., Aeio Sjn.

Jan. 3. lie hr-lont" to

Major Thoniu 1"

in llamn.iiml, form I'n.ted St.'ites aim;ilia na . ha .-. b en a

Itn. well UnoTrn

.' .ti- -., ..). r-r. i

ie. i ::'t;:.s in I n:c(! !-.' the

v. . i 1 Nt ii. 1 iil.O'St Oil 1,',. hasn't

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r re-

A. 1.. Aadervon of fbe hilling department o! the Ryan Car Works at

i Hegewisoh, has leeelved his discharg

Oyer aol.ller 1mj In f'rnnee, who 1 have written home recently are: .Nick Kagen. Hay Kelituan. Frank Lteiriger,

I v i .-. i a ii d 1 n - Indiana Naof Adjutant n s:ted tin.-:

from eoldlerins it Jeffar.on Uarrack, j " HUiman. Walter Helmer and liar-

tit. Louits, and is back on Ike Job again.

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THE POINT OF VIEW IS EVERYTHING.

I'nder the complex of cardinal national interests, agricultural, mineral, industrial, commercial, financial, inI extricably and vitally dependent upon sound, efficient j railroad management and development, i an interest J greater than all of then., for all raut be endangered when it fail." that of responsible, representative self-govern i ruu. If the stover nnunt. is to continue to control the rail 1 roads, and with them the express, telephone and tele- : graph companies, a mighty federal political machine will ! be the inevitable result. Two millions of federal em ! ployes will b sure of an assured support, an indulgent ; supervision. Ion? wazes and short hours. The taxpayers I will be bled for the benefit of this army of office holders.

whose duty it will be 10 keep In power the administration that is cootl to them, and to their faults more than a HmI blind. The Ins can be overturned only by the larger promises of the Outs. We shall hair a gigantic centralized government at

ry uemtx. l how iijlters are r.iore in-t-rettlng now a? they tan tell where

a re

Marry Station, material euecWar of they are located and what th.

doing.

tha steel car department at the Kyan

Car Works, has resumed hie duties at the plant again after a neslon with the w Vincent Veukey. former reporter northern bombing group at Belgium' for tha Circuit court at Crown Point, and France. I arrived home fiom Pari Island, oft" the - ..oast of .South Carolina Monday aft.-i-

Julloa l.atsko. analatant master me- j noon and was pleased to (jreet all his J -;.j chanic of the SUmpi at Hammond, old friend whom he hud not seen me j f.J!

depaitinent as m.litaiy ; atructor lnyp t..r ...f th tn-na! Guard :n fli- :Ti .'eneral Smith II- oft.

locality when t ri-ant barge of Hammond.- i

Jame Sewurt. 'Ahillnc. a member of the 38th ril.;e.n. ir..i,. infant:;-, stationed "at Camp .h'-lhy ii-r e.ver a tear, has wi itten his n,o.he. Mr.-. A. I'. Stew art, thai he sa .v active -..-.; e

anj a:, son kti lumi."

ii'r-'h from t

i' it the dirty hand ,. th- way that most o 'I'll to pie.-.-.; an-';: : at is left t'l V-t a pei w as n . e a town is t ) . .

W,-;. :, had the "; l;u;n:' office.

Kxpiii.sion drug sale at Summers I'hatmacy. .Inn. r;th to 1 S'h. Afii .

The time is getting very short to buy W. S. S. The Lake Co. quota is $20 per caoita.

i r "

ana tor some time serving ine oni." last bummer, wnen he enlisted, l ne i-

snd Stripes at New Haven. Conn, ha land on which he has been quaitered returned and is back to his old job i fmce his enlistment is about ten miles again. J lon and varies considerable in width. Twenty thousand soldiers were accorr.-

.eraia names, vrao oas oeen n e-.- ffi(,,j(d at one Umfl ,n(J th(!r numtr

her of the IT. S. navv. has been dts- 1 . , , i5

, f now na i,en ra jffu nan. -vi r. xou- it. charged and is back as a member of . k.., hM m.d- annlieatlon for Hischaru-e i it

QHU 'J ft - Utt' tV 11'MilT V I (.a I II L.i- i , rtf.. e fit is' u-lrai ) l I A l a - ,1 r. r- c . r 1 to ' tt.

the brake beam departn.ent In the American Steel foundries at Ham

mond.

t

j aoir.e foreign land.

0X0-GAS OIL BURNERS have no wick, but. do develop a clean blue flame jjas, with no smoke or soot. Burners made in sizes to lit all heatiim and cooking stoves, also one for heating plants of ten to twelve room cajiju ily. (.'all and see burners demonstrated at 122 Siblev St.. o)losite -MoniU depot. OIL GAG HEAT & LIGHT CO. Hammond, Ind,

He was very much provoked. Thins were not going right with im and in a general denunciation of the

way some things w?re Koine in hi

he srew very bitter and pessimistic.

'"Take the Monon depot,'' he said. "It's a disgrace ; to a town to have conditions exist as exist there. When j the last train coms in at night a woman is lucky to get j

off and away with her life let alone her clothes. Sloppy, wet mud, no lights around, coffins, chickens and the good Lord only knows what jammed on the platform. Roughnecks s:crimbling and jostling, and such thin3 ought not to be." And yet there should be another way of looking at it. Coffins are not pleasant, but we have 10 hsve coffins and sometimes they have to be shipped away. Everybody likes chickens, but th-?y have tt) be brought into town. You can't grow chickens in your front ard Rough necks? Well, there's many a warm heart Seating below a rough neck and we never met one jet who wouldn't help a woman if the proper appeal is mad-5. The mud well, it will rain and we can't expect Arcadi? at a depot platform. What we would like to say is that the y.orld is large ly what we make it. If we are philosophical and make the best of the conditions that are around us we will be far happier and we will find that it takes all kinds of people to make a world and that it isn't such a bad old world after all. Pessimism is largely a state of mind, we can be optimists and it won't cost us a cent more. There are even good things to be said about a depot platform, not the least of which is that we cano.aL.set along without them.

Crnls Wtllla, nho haa been aerttng Uncle Sam at Watertown. N. J.. has i-.l. ...1 anil . nrtTL ViAflf In the

Washington, able to bring irresistible political pressure ni'4,.h.n, aho al the Sirnpl,s, am.

by means of i's mastery of communications. 1 rade, in- mond.

dustry, agriculture, labor, look to it for punishments or

.. i rewards must be nolificallv subservient or take the con-

s nonie town naturally j cetved

1 nfmiprfim Thi wore pv;! of tm old iinrerormpd rn

bating railroads were the Golden Age compared to those sure to come from the politico-economic absolutism which permanent government control of the great agencies of

j communication must bring; and if firm res'stance is not j made to the beginnings, all the other industries -will be j scooped in one by one, and a monstrous, swollen, autoi cratic federal state will have swallowed local and individual initiative and energy. ' Government is what it is. not hat it looks. Within ! the terms of the constitution there is a strong effort to I change our government into a centralized socialistic state j with multitudes of placemen. That effort must be beaten.

The executive committee of the National Associat.cn of Owners of Railroad Securities is doing a service to the whole public by its labors for the return of the railroads to private control. New York Time.

THRIFT THE WATCHWORD. Thrift being the watchword or slogan of every man, woman or child in the Tr.itod States for the term of. the war and probably long after, it may be iuieresting to a great many of us to know just why we must mean this watchword in every sc-ne. There are 1.S00.000 of our American boys now serving in the Army or Navy of tho Vnlted States, many are not coming back, many of them are. To those who are already across the seas we owe every penny that we can save through habits of Thrift. For those who will come back every penny will be needed in the work of reconstruction. Thousands of the Roys are fighting and dying

When this paper recently advocated the repeal of 1(1 ve the Ldoertics and Rights or tnose wno stay al

the present primary law and the adoption of a less costly j hor:.e and to obtain freedom against military despotism, system some politicians objected. The mass of th? peo-j The "Stay at Horn.?" army should be many times larger pie did not object, however, and to show that this paper j than the army fightirg, and the "Stay at Home" army is was with the majority 70 per cent of the 5,000 ques-j the THRIFT ARMY. ttonairres sent-out among eJl classes of Indiana business) Is there anyone wl.o' can think of the heroic sacrirnen came back advocating the repeal of the law. These I fioes of the Boys going over the top who cannot think

WANT IT REPEALED.

j to save every pern:' possible to help tbera in their' saca leadinz Indiana ; rifice. They give their lives if need be. The Thrift Army

men wanted delegate conventions. John B. Stoll. for half a cntury

Journalist, calls attention to the opposition to the direct j m-jft furnish thm the a.mmun4Uon to save their lives if primary in New York where it has failed to accomplish j possible. It is for that reason that the unit of saving the results predicted by its advocates. The republican j for the Thrift Army has been put as low as twenty-five nd democratic state committees in Missouri have ap-r(nts There is no. a person in the state of Indiana who pointed representatives to consider measures for return j Cbr.not spare one tveenty-five cent piece to buy Thrift to the delegate convention system. It is futile to cn-i giBin tnd that opposition to the direct primary comes only! from selflsh sources and that it is confined to Indiana, j Th- law ought to be wiped out. Why repeal it fox LEAVE IT TO LODGE, municipal and county affairs and keep it for congr. j Senator Lorl?e.s proposal that those dea, in G. sional? Dispense with it altogether. man goods pha mak pubc declaratSon of that fact j selves the problem of trade reprisal against Germany GOOD FOR THE A. P. L. I muc1' more efficaciously than the boycott suggested by

the I. S. Chamber of Conmif-rce, and oher organizations would dec The Iode -proposal puts the question directly to the purchaser, who can act as hi? conscience dictates. Alreadj- a great many have signifbd their determination never to purchase anything raaiie in Germany, and this is a personal action which is denied to no man. But for the government to adopt a policy of boycott against

Robert Flloe, Highland, re

ft n honorable discharge from

the United Stats army at Camp Sheridan, Chtllicothe. Ohio, January 4th, and Is now with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Ulut- in Highland.

Private W'nlter l-he, HiKblani, Battery E. 3rd Field Artillery. Camp Jackson. South Carolina, received an honorable ducharge from the service and returned to his home in Highland, January 4th.

I lent. Robert H. Richardson, n for

ir.er Gary attorney, ha? returned to the j cty with a bride. The. young married couple will make their future home in j the tteel city. The returning officer ; was formerly associated with the. law! firm of Greenlee and Call and will again become identified w ith that law

firm. Lieutenant Rlchardjon enlisted with company K, Gary, three days after the Vnlted States entered the war and went with that contingent to H.ittiesburg. Miss., from where he rose to

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Friends of Henry ear! of K. Chicago, who w as reported jn the casualty lists say they received a letter from him as late as December li and they believe he is O. K. Major K. M. Wall, former Warren physician, but for many years an army ofT.cer, has been placed on th retired Hit and he and Mr.. Wall expect to make their home near Los Angeles, California.

Hubert Goaa. aon of Mr. and Mrs. C. Gosj. of Columbia. City, has not been heard from since the first of September and his parents have grown anxious about his welfare. Ha n in France for over a year and was driving a sueply wagon when last heard from.

After nearly three ntotfc af anglous waiting, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Noo. nan, of G&irett. received a letter from their son. Charles, who Is In th Slth Engineers. Company A. A letter written by him December 5, states that November 11 he was on the battlefront in the reserves. He was in the battle of the Argonne forest and on the Hindenburg line. At the time he wrote he was In e.n old town In Franca where his outfit was being renewed.

Greater food value increased palatabilhy

I In making chocolate Ja

rs.V-a.1 UJW BAKER'S CHOCOLATE

wifh barley and

Walter hutimnul of Crown Palat, one of half a doren of that came, in the t". S. service from Lake county. Is now in Wlttlish. Gtrmany, with the Army of Occupation. He writes that he has been on seven different fighting fronts.

Thomas Kennedy wired hi fol Wo la East Chicajro fiom New Tork yesterday saying that the Louisville tiansport had arrived and that for the present time he was assigned to the tailors' ward at St. Peter's hospital for a brief t me before any further Journey would he made. Ha haa arrived

STOMACH UPSET? " Get at the Real Cause Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands ef stomach eufierera are doing now. Instead cf taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment clogged liver

Germany would loed to endless complications, and the 1 and disordered bowels.

As an auxiliary to the siecret service oj the Depart- j bevcott would look ridiculous. The South particularly . Dr' Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse tht ment of Justice most of the 14,000 men who wor, the j wouM n?ver for 5; b,cau,e the ?muh has fuch Iffi, A. P. L. Btars in this territory came in contact with con-1 vl-al jBter-st in selling raw cotton to Germany, und Or natural functions, away got indigeatioa ditlons and Individuals which convince them of the im-lminv ifl absolutely Ftrinnod of this commodirv F.verv. end stomach troubles.

hull, baloo wae raised by Southern1 "yu.Jlav? ?V I'J? 2?U

11IUUI.11, lUlli,UB V-UdLCU, iiJJCCH.C HJUl, I congressmen when Kngiand hld up a shtp or two bound, jary, don't-care feeling. n- ambition or i for Germany with cargoes of cotton, before we became energy, troubled with undigested foods,

buckwheat flour.

The chocolate covers the color and taste of the dark flour so it is practically as

good as when made

with all white flour. This use of cocoa or chocolate increases the food value of the prepared dish. Bacsf 0 Ckaict Rtdpa tmt jrt$

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Chris C. Petersen, CHIROPRACTOR

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East Chicago Of lice: Cohen Bide:., hours 9 to 12 a. m., 4:30 to 5:30 p. m. Indiana Harbor Office: Barker Building, hours 1 to 4 p. m., 7 to 8 evening. Also by appointment. Office phone Indiana Harbor SS5. Res. Phone East Chicago 1112.

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Walter Baker L Co. Lti. EsubhUiMl 1(89

DORCHESTER, MASS. !! nil

The spirit of. good citizenship manifested by the members of the American Protective League is a distinct aset to the community-. Their plan to continue the organization as a volunteer adjunct to the authorized lawenforcement agencies of the city, state and nation, is in keeping with the high serrjo? they rendered during tb.3 war, says the Herald-Examiner.

ponance or -watcniumes ? in matters wun wmcn tne pun-' ore remembers what

l.c is but little informed. While realizing that the ordinary means of coping with the enemies of society and government are ample in normal times, thej- see the possibility of emergencies in the future, when their srvlces and experience might be tstsful. To this end they intond 10 keep their ranks closed up and remain on call ftfter their dissolution as an official body, Februarj- 1. That , their plan involves no expectation of reward, either monetary or through publicity. Is an added honor to thm.

a belligerent, and how tamely those same Southern congressmen accepted the nws of the sinking of the L-nsi-tania. The individual who has an aversion to the purchase of Hun products because of the barbarities whicl that race has wreaked on helpless and wounded, will find sympathetic - company. But for the nation to embrace boycotting as a policy would expose us to the charge o!

littleness as well as of economic casuistrv.

you should take Olive Tablets tho substitute for calomel. . Dr. Edwards' Oliv Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with dive oil. Ifou will know them by their olive color. They do the work without grioing, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you cart eat what you like. At lCc and 25c per box. All druggista.

Hammond Auto Slice! Metal Works 690 Hohman Street. If v o 11 I

radiator i leaking, bring it to is and wc.vill repair t for you xnd not overcharge y o u. AVe

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"THERE is a Phonograph with tone so natural that it reproduces voice or instrument with marvelous realism a Phonograph that plays any disc record of any make without extra attachment and that in structural excellence and visible , beauty is a triumph of the cabinet-maker's art ! The W. W. Kimball Co. make this wonderful instrument, and when you see and hear it you will recognize it as the Phonograph you have been seeking.

work.

guarantee our

also replace new cores

make and repair Fenders Goods, Tanks and Lamps. PHONE .O?

THE TONE IS SO NATURAL"

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THE COLONIAL 153-A State St., Hammond. FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR. Authorized Agent for KaMman Kodaks

Phone 46c

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