Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 242, Hammond, Lake County, 26 March 1919 — Page 4
Papre Four.
THE TIMES.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS FY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING &. PUBLISHING COMPANY.
The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and
Sundav. Entered at tr.a rosioinco in IS. 1506. , The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofnce In Fast t hit-ago. November IS. 1913. The Eake County Time 9 Saturday n1 Weekly ft'""' Entered at the posof!'.co in Hammond. 1" ebruary . The Garv Evening Tines Pal' y except Sunday. Entercd at the- "postoffice In Gary. April 18. 1913. ,.- All under the act of March 3. 1ST3. as second-class matter.
G.
FOREIGN ADVEKTISX1TO OTTICT6. I.OAX PAIXE & CO 1 Hit. AGO.
TELSFHOOTES. "imrnotiil (private exchange) 310( 31P1. 3'-" (Call for whatever department wanted) r,,rv o'ffc- Jp,"'rnr iil Nassau A- Thompson. Fust Chicago Telephone .ui I.. Funj, Ea Ch-co Telephone f'--" East Chicago (Tht Tritrs) Te ephone 37
inii-.rK Harbor (News Iealer) i. , 1 t
sense that God Kve geeee he will subside and endeavor to look pleasant. The temperance laws already on our statute books. supplemented as they are by our federal statutes, are amply sufficient to Insure prohibition and it may be said in ull truthfulness that the additions Pr. Shumaker sought were of a nature calculated. If not , , 1 . I . . 1
deliberately designed, to cause wuiesprrau "'vwuu. and disgust. Their enactment would have, made blackmailing a regular profession in Indiana and have placed in the hands of sneaks and bandits a most danserous
weapon thev could have used in the name m .- It i almost difficult to believe that the men behind these vicious bills did not realize their malign tendencies and deliberately promote them in the expectation of creating a retulsion in sentiment that would warrant the cont.n mnoe here of salaried officers to oppose ih Minor traffic This paper does not know who was responsible for check ing this proposed legislation, but it has to say that if -the republican machine"' did so. it is entitled to a decree nt honor and credit not usually supposed to attach to
i political machines. Fort Wayne News, i
fc"53 If K "Ja23
to
mm mv$
ere enough to mtko or. want to start for Germany iinme-.iiatcly. M tva a member of the ordnance detachment, ment, 312 Ammunition Train.
plays the " otai ;-o;-r g-'.-l t Hrlii on our com.i it u Ht-:i r.i France; lot's ;ae s :?: thlr.r und up-to- lutr. 1 1.
r lljn
At leaat one nnd powalhlr two parades for the loutli tii Id artillery in Indiana when It myitis from France
nere t nta tit e!y prom i (:! -- tli wari
AUDI ALTERAM PURTEM.
Editor T, :
Are t Me pwii
department today thr.'ui!!. t'oh n'l M-- victims of Andrew, chief itant to general thereby thev
T-."i'na Harbcr (Hep.irter ar.d
I'rov.n Point.
'II 211 S. .Telephone 4t
X.AEOER PAID.XTP C1BCTTX. A.TTOW THAN APT TWO OTHER PAJPEK3 IN IHI CALXTMXT SEOION. If vou bnve any trouble cettlnir Thf Ti.vt: makes compTalr"" imriedlatel v to the Circulation Pepartment. Thb Time vvl'l net be responsible for the return of any ur-iltctt-d article or lett-r and will not notice anony-n-rons communicatlor. Short sigrned letters of general -.r.'erest printed at discretion.
EVER HEAR OF FINDERS. It is an odd old world with some odd people in it PrnfMinn.! finders-men and woman who make a bus!
ness of retrieving articles of value lost in the streets, theatre, hotels and oHier public places and returning them to their owners for a reward form a surprisingly large number of the New Yorkers who are employed in queer occupations to earn a livelihood. One James Doughty, known among his co-workers a "Klna of the Finders." whose address is wherever he happens to be. is considered the moPt prosperous of his
Sometimes his earnings reach as mgn as
class.
NOTTCX TO STTBSCBXBIKS. If vou fall to re-elve vour -opv of The Ttvrs a promptv a vou have In th" pt. rlase do not think it bns beer 1 or was not sent on time. F.cmember that the mall Fervice 1 not what it ued to be j.n 1 that complaints ar T'neral from marv aources about the train end rial! erv'ce. Tin Times has increned Its maillnK equipment ann i trlv(n Mfntlv to rpnc'i it patrons on tim. n
prompt In advlslne us tthen you do not set your paper nnd j jj,, g)?e pairly well dressed
e -win act promptly.
T-. .1. '-23a 'Sl '
WHAT ABOUT AMERICA? "U'hile Mr. Wilson is in Paris trying to make the world safe for Great Britian. France. Italy and sundry ether European countries, trying to device a league to enforce peace, which is in effect a league to enforce war - -war to be waged by its members upon any country that refuses to submit to their decree the fire of Bolshevism Is sweeping through Europe. It is an alarminc coTfiarration and three thousand miles of water will not be sMe to keep ,t from these shores. The great fire has laid Russia waste. It. ha? entered Huneary. neighbor to r.ermanv where there is already sparks and much smoke.
There i not a country in the whole of Europe that is;
rot in the most sinister danger. It is hiRh time for President Wilson to be considering the danger to America n the present European situation. America's rights are
tne pres'.aem
00 a
day. and he calls it a "hard luck week" when he hasn t earned at least ?:0. He averages, he save, from $10 to 520 a day. "How do I do it?" asked Doughty, who is just under
Well. I've got a pair
j of sharp eyes. I hang around in crowds in the theatres ! ?nd other public places and I just, find things. After that 1 carefully read the lost column ads in the papers and
collect waht reward is offered. If there is no reward, 1 pawn the stuff." Doughty says there are quite a number of women "finders" who are quite successful. "They can go where men finders can't," he explained, "and because of this recover many pieces of jewelry which other women lose. Women, I've found, lose things more of-en than men. Thev are more careless. Our
greatest pickings come at night, when the women attend theatres, and in the morning, when mrsf of them do theif chopping. There's very little lost in the afternoon."
SOME men ore very lavish in their t leu AND itlo v-ry lavish of them. THF.1U-: is phnty of luk in THM world for the fellow who
spends
FoVKTF.nN' or fifteen hours a day looking for it. X one can look more thouahtful and BH loss than a candidate for oftlca next yo.tr. TIU-; K'cat difficulty ATUiFT forming an intfllinent opinion about the
FI I F' T of prohibition in Russia Is
THAT they act jut nbou' the same whether THEY are drunk or fob- r. SOMETIMKS think tt e hate prORresive harbor shop AROl'ND here SlfoFI.D say not. here's one In Buf
falo advertises
"WE n do it all in 30 minutes cut your hair, shampoo
"SHAVE, manicure, shine fhoes ana TRESS your pants while vou are in
the barber chair." PARIS connoisseurs says that th VJ13 Hurgundy IS the b't since 1S65 MI'HT save us few bottles NO. don't send it here, we'll be over. MR. WILSON says he loathes rlgmy mind THERE are other.
AVE try to keep naie out oi our nti 36 the
ESTEEMED
do for the.
WITH Ilrest i
OH. very well, just ship
UNDESIRABLE FOREIGNERS. Seattle newspapers say 1hat the strike in that city was engineered by seven men, five of whom are foreigners. They could not have succeeded without the active or passive aid of thousands of Americans. Since when has it become necessary for Americans to ask Russians to show them how to obtain redress for actual
nHshhor
recognize
BI T tte tin fel
women
all
rot be-ng given enougn common . snnoefl wrones? It is incumbent on the working-men
Hum ifti"- ;
"Has anybody heard so much as a whisper
the slightest consideration of the future
welfare of j of Seattl'- if the' hav an-v Prld,i ,n their country and !n
.. , . t. 'If Imtrira bis a
America. asked t oionei ni.e. . i . ' i ei!rners packjng and to put none but Americans on gunrJ
single advocate among our comn-.i.-o.-ur1 .... r. ,
conference no slcn to that effect has appearea in u.e
i its ability to manage it sown affairs, to send these for
case Germany is
a Jn i it ted To the league of nations family S ;f we'd like to be a mere hired man and EAT at the ee.-nd tb and X"T be supposed to attend family prat f i s. WHOINEEE is Sam Rrone
AND what did he ever army unyttay?
WE read with great Interest that all j parad
the matter
that it is muddy u..o..
cargo of
shoe polish over there j
AND tell the boys to stop their complaining. NEVER put off till tomorrow what you CAN drink tonight. WE suppose there's no trouble
ABOUT fitting th lady anjtels with robes AS of course It wouldn't be heavtn unUrs every CrIRE is a perfect 36 AND thy can Just keep the under-rob'-s OR whatever they call them In s'ock AND let all the girl angels trim their own.
GEE. aren't the hold-up men GETTING ft bit thick around here, wot ? THE Kir's wear tlrefr hair nowadays IN such a way that makes It extremely difficult FOR a man of our retiring; and timid
NATURE
into their shell-like EARS, though we suppose we can g'-t
USED to rrost anything if we keep on .
practicing LONG enough which In
I certainly
suni.l. rlo. crovidlnc we don't run!
out of girls. OF course we are by no means oil rtFT we do net remember a time when
IT seemed to be as necessary for the TOSTOFFICE department to FURNISH so many excuse for the rotten mail SERVICE as it does now. THE omniscient Abo Martin has found a lot of men TvwriSF. tires look tetter than the
shoes they wear.
of the I n .id St ?. i e
a "peaceful Pone; rat ion" -have l.-rn mulcted u'
Anderson in the demobilization serv- "f.f ty-sevr n billion dollars. thousa:-.usvf
iee. Colonel McAndrettx said the i'"gi- lit e atid the deransement of r.-.r ment would parade in I nd iana pol i.s j economic system which had it ado them and possibly at Fort Wayne. He ux- i the most powerful and prosperous reo.
(rested that Iafayettes and ft. wajneipi,, .n. v.-o, Kj TI,-. the shrewd
and that RloominKton take j Yankee who could e'i wr.e.den nutmcs"
i part in the arrangements for the In- and boss wood hams to hers hd so.-ne-
I 17 -
! voice i of the
! thine orpin' 1 he a Unwed
put across on l.mi. Mas f1 nowf rs rf tlie pAvf rn-
' ment of the United S'atr
this case w
published reports." We must insist on plainer speech from the Peace Confcrer!Ce Tf Mr. Wilson is speaking for the people of the United States he must take them more into his con-
PGer.ce. ...rj :e fti men who roam around in the secret pav
and who shall douct nis;-- ...
over their affairs.
There has been much discussion about immigration.!
but there is need for emigration of these alien meddlers in American affairs. If the law does not cover their case. Congress can change it. There is need also of more rigid precaution against the entrance of such men. The
However lofty his a:m!
much secrecy
of hostile nations to create disturbance on such pretenses
; as were made for the Seattle strike. Oiher naMons pro- ' tect themselves by requiring foreigners to obtain pass
ports, showing who tney are. wnence tney come ana on
what business they come. That system is needed in this
i -- tho fpelinr en eendered by
P'nd manV contradiction, that the establishment of a p-ible peace is dependent upon the saori,e cf any
. i i..renAonr must bo removed. I
part oi .inifiiii un-. i . j.-.. . . v,a iritt be nr-
And Mr. VMison cannot . nnnfrv rfrin the troublous times. Under it an ad-
i ministrative officer could
DO WE WANT A LEAGUE OF NATIONS? To the Editor: President Wilson says we do. Congress gives pretty clear ettdence that we don't. We have been taught before and all through our school days, that our constitution, our "made in America" constitution, was the guarantee of our liberties. The foundation of our prosperity, the. rock on which our nation was built. We have been told that our forefathers, when they made this constitu
tion "buildcd better than they knew." We have been fed up ever since we can remember on the patriotism and wisdom
I . l'ackinln a .1 A t I f'i- r I n ft n ft W Otl"
to whisper sweet nothings! . i.ir,.,, but now comes "Would
Row" Wilson and wants to steer our ship of state clear across the Atlantic to put us under a new constitution; a made in France constitution, made in France by Englishmen, rrenchmen, Italians snd Japanese and a "southern man. who rather favored secession- to use his own words. Hitherto we have always been rather proud of our American congress proud of what it could do and proud of what
It would not do. True we sometimes
found fault with it. That was our privilege. But yet it Ttas representa
tive. It was our governing body. We sent It there. It was ours and there was
w.n Viis-her Rut row comes along a
higher bodv to which we must sub
orihe. A council international, which
can av to congress. "We desire that
vou do thus and so." Tou Americans
cannot have everything your own way
You need not blow about your Monroe
doctrine any longer. We will attend to
your world politics for you: you need not worry. You may attend to your little domestic Rffalrs. but you must be
I careful to do just as we, say about j things. This is the great superior high council. We French nnd Jnps and I Italians and representatives from six or j eight other nations about as big as ens of vour states, end English (mostly
English) will see to your national wel-
'TENTION! Here's Buddy!
miffed to hold the Monroe Doctrine in one r.anu
the other even interfere in the affairs or Europe. I-et us come down to earth. Our own doorstep needs attention.
MARTIAL LAW IN BERLIN. ; The series of strikes which have been racking Berlin or the past two months recently came to a lull owing to the drastic measure of Gustave Noske. the Minister M War. who has put the city under martial law. This measure was necersary because things had reached en acute rtage: th?re was looting on the streets and in stores. Paper's could not be published, department stores were r'oed rnd sabotage was generally practiced by the strikins workmen. Tr i? repoued that three soldiers entered the rooms of the Imperial T.epgue Aeainst Social Democracy a Tew da;-s Ego. bound the cashier. ar.d abstracted 40,0fl0 marks. Alreadv several casualties have resulted. Government troops have been forced to fire at rioters. ne trreat strike in Berlin is under the direction of Majority Socialist leaders but the .report is that they have accepted p'aces on the executive committee of the strikers in order ...r-t'ne the strike from within. There are thirty-
refuse , admission to roving
J propagandists without risk of their being pulled through 1 the net of court procedure. j The refuge-for-the-oppressed theory about admission
of aliens has been overworked. The present emergencyproves that there is now danger of the American people being oppressed by these refugees. The tramp whom the kind-hearted housewife invited ino her house for a meal gives orders and has undertaken to run the house. He ought to be kicked out. Portland Oregoniac.
Shifts brlnsrlng rM home from Europe are due to sriite today as fellow: Argentina, with lt and l"4th transportation corps companies. Susquehanna with 17th Railway tt,,neer regiment, complete. Georgs Washington, with 13ith machine fun battalion complete: 112th fl.ld signal battalion, complete, with a detachment of 55th service company, signal corps. Ser. llwln chrelher of Se. Hammond, is home on a. ten day furlough f-om Fort Waine. and Detroit, Mich.
Jiirare. iou may n jou won.. i. ' i vour doughboys over info Armenia to
make the Turks behave, but w? English
.......... Mr
Atianon corps uum ., tl-t Cwmin
who left i rencn. eic. i.. - ----- 1 s i - J m ft.ir C Iff! flTT OT
the Inland Steel coiomes '
German territory a i i-u'F""
I Ton don't want arv of that, iou Know
Rsbe I listed among those
their employment at
mill in answer to military duties.
IT MIGHT AT LEAST BE TRIED. Would the ladies be indignant if it was suggested that it would help a lot if the practice were carried on lK-1 o ? "There will be no pink teas in Memphis this sun-nier, but such rocial affairs will give way to garden lawn parties," said Mr. T. F. Kelley, secretary of the "Feed Memphis Committee" today in discussing the plans of that body. Plans have been completed and the city hrs been thoroughly organized for carrying out a big home food production campaign here this year. Four-minute woir-tn,
Vnlts ordered back o te I' lilted tate frequently lesve In France- a few off.cers and soldiers to care for p.ropertv or to adjust the accounts of the organization and these are deputed of their msuil unless notice Is given the postal authorities, says a .....r,,,t of th postofftce department
todav. As correspondents in . .... ft.-n are informed
r ( ... A a ar.fi r e 1 a t i v e
.u.. .... -.nrtinent advises that
such mail be marked
addressee
this
that
ate remaining in
Emit . ynunget son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sas?, of Whiting. surprised his psrents on hist Saturday, by his unexpected return home from Ft. Ringgold. Texas, where he received his honorable discharge. This is the first time the young man has been home in two years.
Lieut. Josn Hook, son of Rlehnrd Hoo'tc, Highland, received an honorable discharge snd returned home, Thursday night, from Camp Sherman. Montgomery, Alabama.
'Please forward
st'.ll in France.
Giry p7l-
i .v.. etrit-e committee council's executive i kers. motion pictures, posters and window decora-
two nieim.'tMB tio no. - j - board equally divided between the Majority Socialists ; tions. buttons bearing the slogan "Feed Memphis" and and the Independent Socialists. Since it is believed that j , Spade in the confer, and other means have been adopted th Majority Sociali.-ts are in reality fighting against the j for boosting the movement. Posters and a supply of strike it is expected that a deadlock will ensue between garden instruction books have just been received from the two groups. j the National War Garden Commission of Washington. As far as can be predicted the present quiet in Berlin ! Mrs. Kelley announced, and a motion picture showing is onlv a. lull in the storm. Sooner or Ir.ter one of the what the war gardeners have done in other eitic.- will factions will doubtless dominate and will probably be j be ioaned by the commission for use here, able to do so by the use of force. The Greater Berlin j "The garden spirit in Memphis is flourishing," said Workingman's Soviet is now the chief organization in j Mrs. Kelley. "The city has been divided into communi the capital, and it is a grave question whether this groun ! ties with a "Feed Memphis" sub-committee to be commi 1,. rontrolled bv the more radical or the more sober! posed of five women with the chairman a member of the
" ill u1-
elements in the city.
pa
fo
remain
e'.an who entered the medical service o- the government at Rahw.y hospital , ,-amp Dix. N. J, several months ago . .,. t, inrv Monday, enroute,
S(I lilt""!" . .
Moines. Iowa, wnere "... . '..A,-tVJrX-
. 1 1.- r tk nA r
pects V, receive mi oirn ,0 Gary to resume hi practice Tcrai.. work at the army hospital na8 been that of tah.n mang ed and tabled solder, and transforming ?h(.m into well men. Thousands of uch cases have been treated and the IuL surgeons in the United States H,-, engiged In th work. - J tf.AMSl
. in V" ranee fr-w
. . J n
u ueo has irfn,ir -
WIlh the Gary Motor Truck company.
- Rrr.tt has seen n
service while
all you want to do is vote the money and the men. snd really now that is about all we want you to do." America is so generous and so rich. Why she really is the author of the league of nations and of course yo. Americans will fall for it. How delighted congress w ill be when Col. House and tt.rrv White, both representative Amer
icans (in fact there don't seem to be anybody else) both "forward workers" with high statesmanlike abilities are appointed on that superlative overall high council, to send down orders to the American congress. tinn. .trt,ivri our United States
soldiers will be after their playful experience in the trenches of Europe to start off to the east to put a quietus on Turkey. A thing that Europe never would or never cou'd do. How fine H will be If. when they start on this glorious expedition our truly efficient secretary of war. Baker, will be the one to furnish the munitions of wsr. How long would it take for the casualty list to get back after a campaign In Turkey? In the meantime while these things
MIh Orllla rt of oliarLo. In. , f rf on in Europe why bother
dlans, received word yesterday that ,v,out such trifling problems as the rail
roads or a building program, or unemployment, cr reclamation, or anything
to b-- prr-
1 veriea ana nis nation to art tli" part or ' iMti Quixote with its chief magistrate I assuring the character of Sancho par.za j on behalf of the nation that tried to I strangle h!rn at birth? Has ho allowed
.he Jaokalls . the ".'-all.-'i.u rv Flush
fund" to take possession of almost every newspaper off j, - from the Atlantic to tl-.e pacific and establish a "reptile press" issuing "ceitirt circular" thereform whose main object like the orangemen in Ireland is to support and maintain the British government? Has he allowed epoilgtiral Oanuk"". built ing cockney and contemptible fortes, to bully him ar.d dominate rot onlv his public affairs but his private
bupme?. Has he forgotten that Ensland claims to own more than half of North America, that her possession c Vancouver Island give her control of the straights of Tuca and therewith the harbor of Puget Sound? That the naval base at Halifax gives her control of Um Atlantic lanes between the Units'! States and Europe that her pessessfen of the island of Jamacia gives her control of the Panama canal (even tho w
had not already surrendered its visa to her) that she has possession in Hon
duras and British Hiuina: that shu con
trols Brazil through her ownership of
Portugal: that In fact England is our
only rival and competitor on the west
ern hemisphere? Is it. not time for the United States to exclaim with the queen
mother Jeany D'Albert (whose three sons, kings of France, had been removed
by poison, bullet and the knife) to maVe
way to the throne for Henry cf Navalre.
My son. whatever happens In your
kingdom that shakes the throne that
menaces the people cr tbat endangers your life or welfare do not trouble to
look for the cause but cry out at enr. Heny of Navaire'." And so with us. the people of the United States, whenever snything happens that is ominous and menacing do not trouble to look for the cause but cry out. "England. " Visualize for a moment the positions of both England and France during th war of the rebellion. On the south in Mexico was France with MaximiUian and his irtny watching and waiting, on the north, in Canada. John Bull (Eng
land) watching and waiting until the North and the South had become exhausted and guerilla bands were roving the country over, then France from the south and England from the north would advance and divide these United States between them. Now- my 6eaTank all this you must forget and be a christian a democrat and give a kiss for a blow. Do not dream as those nation builders. Eogan Blaine, Thurman. Trumbull and Cleveland did. that the flag of tb United States would fly supreme from the North Pole to the Horn. Do not
believe what Mr. Olney told Salsbury then prime minister of England. "That the United States was supreme on th western hemisphere when i choose to assert Itself." as Mr. Olney was the only
democrat authority quotad by Mr. Con-
Mr. n Mrs. Walter Swet of Highland, are the ptoud possessors of a beautiful pair of vases made, from huge shells. They were sent from Germany by their brother, John Swets. Company C, Cist Engineers. He also sent two German machine gun shells.
Hsrry rro. Hobart. rrho baa been overseas during the past six or eight months, has received his discharge and has returned to his home at Hobart.
roy In his answer to question m re league of nations. It would seem that he in this Instance indulged In the bad practice of some lawyers in quoting from the cltator without reading the cases. Mr. Olney was secretary of state
in Cleveland's cabinet during tne - xuela incident in which England was told not to land troops or establish a footing on the soil of Venezuela or elsewhere on the western hemisphere snd rf Mr. Conroy will look up this episode h will have a case in point snd on sll fours in the application of the Monroe doctrine. MAURICE.
A PERTINENT QUESTION. Hammond. Ind , March 35.
hr brother Francis, who was 22 years of age, had been wounded in France, and died in the hospital there on Jafi. 2?th.
Joseph a years
Soldier
of active
oversea
so common? Just so t,un.x -- e.-e. to the fore, that should be enough for us and hereafter we need not worry about our eongresr-. for th-y will have thst super high council to tell them where they cn "head In " Good-bye. free and independent America. Call off your fourth of July celebrajons. your Washington and Lincoln birthday festivities and while you are a'-"t it squelch those Americaniza-
, tnr ties. NO more arrests iur nvi
position I Cullon Barn-. ejrnour soldier rrl ,aUjl )irf your hats when the band
the famous Kainoow uivision. nas
passed the necessary examinations for entrance to Bordeaux University, snd
llarsld Klklaa anil C harles Monroe. two Columbus soldiers overseas, with the American Expeditionary Forces, have informed lelatites there In letters, that they are billeted In a penitentiary building at Bay, France. And each has a nice seperat- cell to himself, but they are not piisoner?.
the
Editor Timks: r-i- ,.,if T.ee-al Notice that
Board of Public Works hsie served notice of repaying State Eine st. and charging property abutting on the sf. I would like to call the attention of property owners on State Eine St.. 1f they will examine the map in Rav Seeley's office, which will stand as authority in any court, they will see Slates imi t boundary is marked by the ess'.
curb line of State Eine St.. leaving th
whole of State Eine from ogaen st. south in Illinois. Now where does th-
Hammond Board of Tublic Works ret
its authority to improve Ill-nois streets and assess It sgalnst Indiana propertt ?
TAAl'AltK.
l)r.
If K. Hynn
l.rry phyalclon In
year.
A SALARIED REFORMER'S MOAN. Dr. Shumaker of the AnU Saloon Erague is reported to be in "qu a rase because of the failure of the legislature to pass certain very drastic and unreasonable bills he had presented at the recent, session, lie is said to hold "the republican machine" as directly responsible for his failure and to be breathing out vengeance and
.t..M.r against it. If Dr. MiumaRer is gi.tcj wn.i w.
central committee. Plowmen with teams win report to
. j . i . i. i.,.ci v a ; r. n ill annnlv i'.etn' . service for the. past
. .. . , . .. ... j . -....',e.l to the naty hospital at inn
!o save lost motion. The home food growers, our VictoryGardeners, will be supplied with instruction books which we' have received from the National War Garden Com mission. Seed will be furnished to those who cannot afford to pay for it. In place of pink teas the Memphis women will amuse themselves this summer by having
garden lawn parties.
. i -i- .i-v-o e rtur-
adelphia. exten.v.nn ..t..m. - inc the inf.uensa epidemic, has returne,i to Gary and resumed his practice at fiS't Uroadwsy. Mr. rcore Rabe. of Elm atreel. Indiana Harbor. I In reee'pt of a telecram this morning announcing the
..f n,i-v;i: of her nusDfcna sun m'
will not accompany the division home, he has informed his parent.--. Barnes is one of the number of men hein? sent to the university by the United States government.
rrlval nay JT Tntbllt across the county line, loaded down with trophies who has recently been discharged from the army, arrived home last evening from New York. Mr. Tuthill has aeen the horrors of war in all its real-
ltie and aome of the stories lie tens
1 1 I I I I II w
II
i mi i .I I 1 1 'i Diirif- iii.riii f
trm
Take "he Times and keep in ronstant effort.
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J
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"ZZLJ II
in
mi i lrearms onramunuion
$ Shobting'EillirH 2 - el
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This Might be a Good Tip for aBnk Cashiers, at That.
By C. A. VOIGHT
