Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 274, Hammond, Lake County, 2 May 1919 — Page 4
I'airc Four.
Till; TIMES. in
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS SY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY. The. L' County Times Vn '! except Saturday and Sur.dsv. Entered at th poMolhcc in Hrunmid. June li'06. The Tin s Fast Chtca bo-!nd !nna Haibor. dallv cxrert Sunday Fio-:id at the pestoltice in ilast Chw Nov:n.t.cr ! 5. 1313. The Ijikf County Tinifn - SMurd.iv !id tt'rrk'v Fuitb-n. Lnteresi at the r.s'oifieo tn Hammond. February 4. 1M4. Tb iVjry Fvenieg Ttmrsi Pni! v cer' Sui.d'iy. tered M the r"stoftiee in Ghtv. Aprt! 1 lt'.2. AH :t;d.r the act t..f March 3. js sccc-nd-class matter.
rOTtllttlT A X'VXRTISINCJ OTTICX. LOiTAN I'.'a.vu & CO CHICAGO.
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'- Chios jtr (Tm T mfsv Telephone 2 1 li T-d'xo. HirV" V. Pc3lf.i- .-! bene c'v-' ;""1 Il-tJ.-i' R.-r-rtrr .. claims" AdvV -1 ohone V c; wTi't'njr Tr'rii'v-" 0-T own Feint Y"----T-lctnii.! II UM" y.M-D.W CIRCT7T.ATIOTr -rwv wv Tvro OTHER PAPERS IIT THS CALtHrrET 2EGIOr7. ivJ.f ?-VJ "nV "'"'No fttlne Thf T vr mo '.-. coml1" Ttvrs t i T7 not he rr.ipnnt'hlp f,.r t'e o.-tvi-i of n rS' "r,?"W - ,,.M.'o' o'er,"' trV- frV ":",,,(," s'inr sintd Utters of ccnorsl tnterert printed at discretion
foi th a dis-mal wail against ihe dame, ami aga usi :he IdiIhs the dear iutlr girls don't wear when they dance. It is said lht the club pot al! ''lot up" abuu; l h matter a: a i . cent meet ins am! ha- prepmed ni'iiioiial. on ihr Milj-Ot for Il't Minisieria! Ascctaiion. i he I'arrni Teach-' r ciuh. and hf l!cnc olcni and Protcc;ic Oulcr cf Klk It is inir.c to M'c that flu- Mcriiiil Ki!ih is juit on Hie !anrc and tint the w--ll sprinj: of ouili ! st;j4 d iii' and rollutod niih the tic ad cat of inhibition. As neat ly as we can s-.t the line in wart no.- :' i!r ; ct 1 n.ii inxasicm of jicr:ma! libenj, the cru.iitie : reals to havi its incctdion in the inability of the ineii; bi i s of the Poj-tniphtlv c'.v.b to "do the ti-;" ' "f ' : tieAt'ft and lie. t dances. Hence the dl-nial mo: n The;. iuM can't bear trt see thcr;; rjo r.c w hat 1 bey 1 lein s-.-lve- cannot i: i and. i!n ifinr. seen i . put on tl . lai. Aln'ost one hi ;-. ",s the poo! caH.n.-: th;-t .p.-in v.-ould ;;n:;h U'- tlio n:-r '1 hat outh's :- vv cot : ccn cd maiiuscivp; should c:o;-.-Therc'f soaiethins cite iu that pnem ahoilt throw i nr.:':- winter carmems of repr-ntanc in !he fsro te . and from the i.pec;;'c!e p-c.-i. ntod at mjuh- ol the dan'"' "here quartt r chut maidcnh.ood w rithes and wr ij:f;!-a i the wretitlins embrace of lusty jotiin. we're ,-ure th'admonition has been liiora'dv obeed. To bo suit, such m". ties may shock the aged and the infirm, but after all n'l.it s tl;o odd-" We're .coins to 'nae b.ilr.l'ovism i'i this o:'ur.;r pretty ;oou and the cirls m.phl as well bnetting in to; m for nationalization. The pi eseni -day dance, we may rest assured, is pre 1 1 K-'oil p ;' jc. 1 oi ! ; x ne No s.
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ADMIRAL SIMS' FRANKNESS AM) HUMOR IN LOAN SPEECHES WIN HEARTS OF WEST
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NO PLACE FOR IT HERE. er-end:ng vigilance is the price o! lav. and order. The police department? of the ariou; enicj of tlie Calumet region, federal opera tie;--. the county sheriffs' office and all pood citizens in Lake County must co operate to prevent any disorder or Bolshevistic propaganda in the Calumet region. We think too much of our patriotism here; we love nur country, our homos and our children too vail; we respect, the thousands upon thousand.-- o." those bo-, s of ours who tvont to Frane.to fight for Liberty to do dalliance with foreign agitators or red flag vaers. If there are any Rassia bo!.-Ip.a its or Bolshevist Wmpatbizers In this reg'on .-o-.vir; the seed of anarch, of nationalism, of rommunism h-t thei set elsewhere In a hurry. The people cf this county are no' ready te share their wive:', sisters and daughters with the abominable crew who If they dared would practice openly what they advocate at their secret meetings. V hope the Calumet region is juf full ..f i r, ; !ian-n?.
A NATION WRONG. If appears, from Italian torn-tent on :'a pre; cut j crisis, that Pre.-ident Wilson is sufi'cnng from an a"o?u:d ! 'misconception." When, speaking as '.he repres-entative i of America and the othr allied nations, with the -- ! prova! of Great Britain and Fiance, the President under-! ook to point ou. exactly why Italy should not be given Fiume and Dalmatia. he failed to realize, the Italians say, that the Italian people are with their government in this matter. Perhaps he did. It is hard for other Americans, even no'w-, i.o realize it. But the strange thing is that this: should be the whole burden of the news from Rome.! "Wi'son has appealed to the Italian people over Orlando's head. He has tried to drive a wedge between the people and their go eminent. And this is a sad mi.-take, because the people are with their government." It is a most astonishing disregard of the point at Issue. The Italians do not discuss the merits of the case at all. They do not attempt to justify their claims to Fiume and Dalmatia by at guing that those claims -square with allied principles and with the principles that
Italy professed throughout the war and endorsed in the armistice agreement. They do not. attempt to prove that Italy needs the u.-p'ed territory for her safety and development, and the Jugoslavs do not need it. AH they ay in justification of their eleventh-hour break with their allies is that the Italian people -want Fiume and Dalmatia just as much as Orlando and Sonino and King Victor Emanuel want, them, and are willing to antagonize the whole world for them. Which proves nothing except this i hat the 'Italian people today are just as wrong and selfish and stupid about the peace settlement as their statesmen aio. And after their noble war record, the world expected something better from them.
nao government of. lor .iml by tne pco as our governmental administrators men
live.: of exclusion from touch with th' professors, judges and professional mi!
:!ary men are of the class sot apart from touch with the interest?, need- and ambitions of the common peopl.-. However high their ideals and intentions, (hey have v. i practical underri anding of the world of affair . THE FACES YOU SEE. Im-iead of taking the street car. walk hum" suia tune and for entertainment study the face-. You will b;' greyly mteroftrd if you use v our eyes and vour mind. You will fnd ?H kinds; some sad, some sciwlin:. some intense, some angrv. ;om happy-all expressive of the soul within or the phase- of love in which the da? are sptm. Wo hoard one wom.-n say to her husband a they passed by. "We can't afford to buy that," and she .-eemed to be the sweete.-t thing along the street. An other woman, stopping her companion, suddenly ex claimed. "There. forgot thr button.- for the waist." Still another said to her friend. "Lot's co to the movie." And hero is a smiling dam.-el clutched by a khaki !ny and she is not sayins a word. Here go three fair la --n s all abreast, just giggling. There is a man with a face full of fierceness as lie thinks if he pit's tha' do;-! through he will make $:0.i. A young mother pushing a bab; cart and the baby in it down the street is the hono ' guest of the thoroughfare. The.-e are onK glimp.-es : the hundreds of people we meet, but of all those hundredthe happiest face we saw was a blind man's. And h works at a piano factory and walks a mile to and from his work every night, and morning throucb crowded street;-. lie looked a? if the sun. the blue skies, thflowers, the music were all made for him. and. indeed, he showed it in hip kind, placid face, for it seemed like a turf rous star shining down through a v alley of cloud. THE WILSON LABEL DISGRACES TABLE. Troof that the astounding appointment by President Wilson of George B. Ilerron to the conference with the Bolshoviki on Princess Island has not gone unnoticed in religious circles comes in the form of a vigorous protest from the board of the Paterson Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, of Paterson, N. J. The protest read? as follows: "First, we condemn the appointment of a pronounced and operative free lover to anything in the gift of the United States. "Second, we demand the immediate recall of George B. Herron as a representative of this Christian country to Princess Island for the conference with the BolsheviUi. "Third, this resolution is to be forwarded to the President at Washington." It would seem that President Wilson has forgotten the influence of the church in this country. What a hotbed of strife, and discontent these United States would be without the churches! Perhaps some will say that whatever religious views Mr. Herron may have should have no influence upon his appointment, but as a Christian nation, a nation containing thousands of men far better qualified for the position, the appointment conies as an insult to the American's intelligi nee. He should be removed at once!
SUE there'? . kick in tint 2 75 bc.r CL STejMl;r:.-, kick ,ko rur-. I
V. Hlt.i; it rr aily asn t any of our
i PL'SINUSS. darned or ot herw- !?o I IK v.i- trt S"tne Kiri v, e 5houi'i throw
MAT-tax all amusement TiiKY of cuurse hai n'. forgotten
MISSOLHI legislature. M i; often hear it said By person? whom we rupr'e are in a rOSITION' to know
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THAT a girl can do anything sh" wantfi with a man
; AWAY our kn:tting ai'.Lgciher AN b I"" gin to Irani how- to cook, the: LKTL HNTNe-. 2n-l lieutenants Mini' CAT knittiiiK- . V- I-: at ise to full length
AND so'-ond sheriff Liarrio:' u!U- I AT least such is our experience
) ALTHOUGH we are ready Zi hour
BL'T when the men reach about 4 4 THi: girlr never seem to want TO do an; tiling with a chap, of that oge
Wi'-liamS. Sims U 5 N
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ma turn THAT thcie won't he anj thing doing
j IN the rc-i fla?; line in Lake county
F.rtAIK or no parades ; I.LT the bomb bo.c fail w her they j may. I ?OMI;TH!N'j seem? to hi" j HIT old man ISurlcson ihrro ho Ut j 'N !h'.' raw m other word.-. ! 'IT 1 1; y 3 r h t o u r h o u s o i 1 MAT he rouchlv iiido.j into two
in the day to , EC convinced that such Is NOT the truth. Wll'LL say it was a fine morning for anybody TO bo called as Queen of the May GITSS the rorls better rass up May day ami roftpone it TILL Whitsuntide or at I'art
I SLPTLW JLSIMA.
The west is jrottinp: its first g-limpse cf Admiral William S. Sims, the man who commanded the U. S navy in European waters during the war. lie is touring the west now speaking for the Victory loan. Sims laughingly remarks that the loan folk thought said west "would like to see an admiral in captivity." The tall, square-shouldered sailor wins his audiences quickly by his frank accouxt of the navy's work and Ris wit.
American soldiers reported aa mJ&:ng- In aetion hereafter will not be presumed to be dea-i Ly the war department after t!i expiration of fix
months. A eabl
from Gen. For-
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NTION2
Here's Buddy!
s li in? received by the department stated that systematic search and choking" of records was daily it-d'o -ing; the lit of tnissin? and that therefore it was not deemed adv fihle to prosuim-
1 deaths too soon. General Per-hing 'said, however, that the d'-ath of n.i.---; s-ing officers and men would be piei sumed in cases where circumstances ' surrounding the disappearance would ! mdiccte deatii an-! where efTo-ts ! locate the men had boon u n -'j-'c' s.-ful-
pontifical high mass at ton o'clock on May IS when Bishop ehartrand of d anapolis will t. the celebrait and will proaoU. 'the so-.-' ce? will be held ;it the Holy Ti.n:tv church. On Sunday evenins a mas? m(:'.;.; will be held at Hie ha'l cf th Knisni cT Columbus Nicholas Gonner, u' -or of the Cathol.c Tribune of Detro '. villi address the nieettng-. Mr. Oonner t.- the editor of the only Catholic di.ly news paper sn the United States Local arrangements for th eonvpton are in the chare- of John "W XViniberg. It i? expeetfj that -h) delog-ate? w-'iT a t c ti u .
j OH DEAR! WE'VE GOT 'EM HERE. Intolerance Is the crving evil of our time. Apparently the spectacle afforded by the innocent and wholesome pleasure of the voting, the calm recreation -"f the; middle-aged, and the dignified rest of the. ased is too much for the crabbed tpiri' of the eternal "re former" whose hot blood surges at the prospect of interference. Guided by the jaundiced eve and nmed with the Procrustean rule, the kill joy goes rubbering about seekinywhat he may regulate and bring under subjection. The truth is, that our trend today is back to the Blue Laws, pnd the tithe-man: back io the steeple-crowned hat and the ducking stool; back to the grim visag" and the p.-alm "entuned through the nose full seemly." We witness the vl manifestation in almost every activity of our do;. all directed at the regulation or the s' pp ', of something or somebody. Let u- bo more specific. Here we s-o the Fortnight!'cluh of Fort Wayne, a holier-than-thou org: nidation mad-.' up of musty o'd crustacean-; am! flea -let ten forsilr, putting
FORGET IT! Some of us who have so long looked to Paris to fittingly apparel the American woman of whom we are so proud are jarred a bit wondering whether we will have to abandon the si vies of the gay capita! and adopt tho:-e of Tallahassee, Fla. A bill just introduced in the Florida Legislature provides: "From and after equal suffrage has been established in the State of Florida, it shall be lawful for females to don and wear the wearing apparel of a man as now worn publicly by him." We w.l.o it that "the wearing apparel of a man as now worn 'publicly by him'' does not mean any one man Senator James Ham Lewis, for instance the drafters of the bill had in mind, but refers to the ordinary hideous male costume varying from morning coat, plug hat. spat and the other things down though the corduroy outfit of the navy, the tight breeks of the army and the flapping continuations of the navy, to the soup and fish for evening;. Mon t think we'll like it. but suppose we must wait until we find whether this is to be mandatory or not. In the final analysis, though, we believe the "new woman." L.ke her by and large, will be very much the same woman as of old, with good sense, good taste and ar feminine as over.
TO THE POWERS THAT BE The Boys Want to Come Home! Get 'Em Horpe Tcot Sweet!
Mrs. Viary -rbnlt mtcintrd n meeting at 1ViJ C'os;ntv hu.ldms. Chicago, givei by Co. K. IS'.'nd lufantry in which her ?on served. She met Sjers;t. McCuIlon. who is back from service ar.d was aoepia.nted w.th Mrs. Fchultz ?-n. I'd wanl. and also Paul Schulu. of aLnsitiR
Mm. Ferdinand IJarkorr cave a wfl. come bono- party at. her hcvne in honor of her brother. John Trinoski. who just returned from service overseas.
Alignment o early fonvor of all oiganizatlons of t 't St'th division was announced by the war department yesterday. The Jfth is composed or troops from Kansas. Missouri and Colorado.
Fifty-three offlrers and 1,412 men of the -Sth div iumti arrived In New York today on the Finland from St. Nazaire. They Included sanitary and ordnance detachment? and companies A to K inclusive of the 103rd engineers, some of thom assigned to Cainp Grant. The Finland ais br.vjprht the 'jr,d. 45th and ?5th ba--- ho.-pitals: the Cd and 10th convalescent camps. From Bordeaux. 2.052 treops arrived on the steamship Henry P.. M.i'!ory. These included the 2n3th fUel ;: nal battalion complete. The.S4th .iiv ision i national army. Indiana and Kentucky) for Camp Grant: :;04th. nC'-'nl and .137th battalion tank coreps. ll'h. 2lh and pi?th aero squadton and 23th evaluation hosiptal.
Pefer 1 pton nf HlahlamU lias Just , . i ' . d word that hi;' son. John El-n-.an. who has been servipfr in the Sifrn.':l Corps :n France f.- the past year, has reached Camp Upton on h:s way "lio'l.e.
branch of the Gary school system work w.ll be rpene-i next week under the direction of Major Meade. 1. S. A. retired from active service, the plan of w-hieh has been epproved by the government as a measure beneficial :o the students physically anad in a m'litary way.
minmf nt to early eomot nnnouneed by Washington today are: Headquarters and companies A. E. C and D, 504th Engineers: Fourth Battalion, wagon train headquarters and wapron train companies 1. -. 3. 4. and 3. 23rd engineers; Base Hospitals S2 and S3; Evacuatloa hospital 24; Evacuation ambulance, company S.
I
CATHOLIC
SOCIETIES TO MEET F.VANSV1LLE. Ind.. Miv 2 -TUnr have been completed for the state convention of the Cathol.c societies of Indiana in this city May- is and 19 am!
LOth. The meet'.nir wli lopen with a
Victory Gardens
John Oliver and Tcrrenee Tanner of r.obertsdale have returned from se -ice overseas and it is unusual for so many boys .n one family to tret home from war service at oni time.
Total number of easualtles to date. including 03 reported: Killed in action, including 3S1 at sea, 32.C25; died of wounds, 1 3.467; died of disease. 22.880: died from accident and other causes, 4.507: wounded in action &S percent returned), lSiS,7?0: missing not Including" prisoners released and returned 4,133; total to date, 276,372. '
(Mr w
MUENICH
MAKES APPEAL FOR HELP 1 I NTtR. NATIONAL NEWS SERVICE! T.ONU'.'N. May 2. Kvk t a ria ? - .i o. (tie p..ip'il;it i'-n ef M:;ni'li ha" - -'!r.,. at-p-aled to the German -- -I eminent for ht-'p. a-.-eordmg: to t j llerlin correspondent of the la;ly F-
press t'nJay. Prussian troop. 1 "!-: a Iradmg- p; t in the ttoi'm attack which defeated f-Ba-.-aiian lteds at M.;n.ch. The P: -sians, however, were coldly rece . v d by- the Bavarian peasants. soir.e of the me-.nbt rs of the cm-
! .ii.imst reg-ime of Munich are reported i io have been captured.
Mr. and Mra. Drue-bach f Ilohart, have received a telegrram fronl their son. George, that he has landed safely in New York and expects to be. efoine within a couple of weeks.
Herbert Hnrtnup, Hohart. vbO has been overseas during the past six or einht months has landed In New York aud expects to be home shortly.
llmunuel I.orandos, a returned soldier from o.. ryef,s to Ft. IXMiis. Is vtsittnsr Mr. .i-iii Mrs. Georpo Metzt?er. fsnii Harrison -inet, t'oiry. bavins rrcslefl Wednesday. Sol-iier l.ornndos was a inei-.iber of Company C 105th KiiK'neera in 1 runce and relates that his resriment had been under fire freen.cntly and was one of the first to break throtish the 11 ndiiiiejtsr Hno, passinu the canal, beyond it. and In another attack Ins reei;::ent. advanced seventeen miles in one day and captured thousands of prisoners when the li niment was hrought back to rest.
The liner ieue Amsterdam, docked at Hoboken today with 2.070 men. largely from the 77th rtivislon from New York City. The remaining detachments of the division are due to reach here on Sunday aboard the President Grant. The Nieue Amsterdam brouKht the 3ri2nd FiitrineerR, 4." officers and l.-lf!) men; 77i!i Division head, quarters detachment. 3''5th Meld artillery detachment and tli ?2Mh Casual com pa n y .
Ancel II. Ja-knon, nun of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Jackson. S10 Claude street. Hammond, arrived from overseas on the transport Freedom, the first part of this w-eek and is expected to return to Hammond soon.
Military training. n?
Mr. ami Vlr, J. 1- nium of Hammond reecived word today that their son. Jerry, who thaine-i at Cct ip Purduo, arrived in New York from, overson? this morning.
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A GARDEN'LL FIX YOU Take the doctor's tip and get into the garden says the National War Garden Commission, cf Washington. "Here's how to increase the sire of that pay envelope" this is virtually what otie manufacturing concern says to its workers every time it gives them their wages. One message which this company, the Berkshire Knitting Mills, of Reading, Penna., has printed on its pay envelopes urge3 the men to plant gardens and thus help to knock out th H. C. of L. The company which is cooperating with the National War Garden Commission of Washington in encouraging Victory Garden planting this year, snys to its employes: "The war is won but gardening Is not done! Everywhere you look the high ;ost of living greets you. Don't, forget that the vegetables you raise yourself will taste much better than these you buy at a high price." Hundreds ct manufacturing con:erns throughout the United States have discovered the value of aiding their men in home and community gardening! and as one report to the National War Garden Commission caid it has been the means of "turning good workmen ir.to hotter workmen." Factory gardening has been one of the biggest phases of the commission's patriotic work. Any workman or any other person in the United States can get one of the Commission's free garden booklets by simply writing for it, en"loair-'r twewcent ptanm for TOFtis-.-
Finish up the Victory job.
HOW A YOUNG GIRL SUFFERED And Was Restored to Health Bf Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Told By Her Mother.
Brooklyn. N. Y. " I cannot prai? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comn pound enough for what lt as done fr m y -iCSn daughter. She was
Jiw 1 years of age, very
sickly and pale and she had to stay home from school mostof the time. She suffered agonies from backache and dizziness and was wit hout appetite. Forthre months she was under the doctor's care anil got no better, always complaining a.bout her back and side aching so
I didn't know what to
do. I read in the paper about your wonderful medicine so I made un
; ' IW my mind to try it. Sh
r.j iv has taken hve bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and doesn't complain any more, with her back and side aching. She ha3 gained in weight and feels much better. I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to all mothers and daughters." Mrs. ' M. FixORE, 51 'J IJarcy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. For special advice in regard to such ailments write to Lydia E. Pinkhara Medicine Co., Lynn, Macs.
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Charity Begins at Home, You Know.
By C. A. VQIGHT
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