Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 277, Hammond, Lake County, 6 May 1919 — Page 4
Page Four. THE TIM HIS. Tuosd;iy, May G. 191 :.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING COMPANY.
& PUBLISHING
Times Daily except Saturday and the postottioe in Haimiio.id. Juu
The Lak County Sunday. Entered at iS. 1'IUS.
Th Tin es East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, daily except iSunday. Entered at the postoftlce in East Chicago. November IS. 1913. The I.ak" Countv Times Rnturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the pDstoftlce in Hammond. February 4. 131 The Gary Evening Times Dailv except Sunday. Entered ut the postorfice in Onrv. April IS. 1912. All iiiitiur the act of March 3. 1 "47 2. .is second-class matter.
G. LOGAN PAYNE & CO.-
.-CHICAOO,
S103
TILIFEONIS. Hammond frrtvsfe fmhanep) S10". 3101
iCa.ll for whatever department wanted.
'nry ornce tu Thompson FasTchTcagoI
Eas? Chfi-ou-i cTi,. n-...- TM.nhor SIS
Tndtnna Hurhnr IVw Dealer -Telephone SO
BOLSHEVISM SHOWN UP. Out of all the bolshevist arrests made In Gary. East Chicago ami Whiting on Sunday only one was American born, the others eighteen were foreigners. In the May Day riota in Cleveland it was found that of the 134 men arrested for violent conduct, only five were American born. Thus the situation proved to be much the same as it had teen In Seattle, in the mot ambitious Bolshevist, demonstration yet staged in the I'nlted States. The samefact appears in accounts of the "Red" disturbances in New York, Chicago. Boston and other American cities. It is not Americans that are responsible for those disorders. It is not Americans that are subscribing to Uol-hevist doctrines and trying, by tongue, pen. fist and bomb, to Uolshevize this country. It is foreigners. It is men smarting from real or fancied wrongs suffered under oppressive Kuropean regimes and not yet sufficiently in touch with American in-titutions to recognize the free-
,lTcicphon doni and opportunity of this country, and to see that anj T;7.,nVion"5t!- ' legitimate thing wanted by the people here cau be ob
,r" Harbor (Reporter and CIassAdv ) . Telephone
tained without violence. Some of the offenders are naturalized citizens, but
biting .Televbone. SO-M men jn w0se case the naturalization has not "taken." Crown Point Telephone 3 j In practically every case the wavers of the red flag are
native born
z.
fi
ts y-m.
W ml' Pi JJ
tt.NK ef the
by-gone rn i s
ENOUGH EXPLOSIVES TO BLOW UP BLOCK ABE FOUND IN N. Y. "MEDICAL INSTITUTE
IN'
..ik U A S
things f. learned
while (loins farm
.71 Oft '
s H legs
thai w hen
nil.' that
n mule )im can tickle bis
WITHOl.'T miy outbid" h"lp. lb' Die Imlsliev itls won you
imagine the excitement
obviouslv men not yet Americanized. The
American, and let it be added, the vat majority of naturalized citizens, are found, whenever it come to a test, on the side of law and order as against the flaunting of an alien sstem. So true is this, that in nearly all the riots it has betn found ihat private citizens of thir own initiative take a more active part than the police in sunpre insr the Bolshevist demonstrations. Thus these violent outbreaks have turned out to
If you fat! to receive your copv of The Ttmits rrv.nnt-; be reassuring rather than menacing. What has been j
" ru nave in mi Tinr nieno n-. tv.4T.ip i Vin hor . . e t .u. k -.
i . r ' ' - " v ' " ' . . - I iiiph :1 1 111(11' (H I II r It; 1 f I til t II 1 .1 1 1 t .1 1 11U rlllvlii
1 1 1 -T I 1 i
proo
Z&SaER PAJD-TJV CTRCT7T. A TIOV THAN AW TWO OTHER PAPERS I IT THE CAitTaTET XEOIOIC. If you have any trouble trtttn Ths T'MH multea complaint Jmmedlatetv to the Cirrula io;i Detnr'ment. The Times w-iM not be rspons'ble for the rete.rn of any unsolicited articles or levters and will not notice anonvrnoia communications. Short signed letters of general Interest printed at discretion.
NOTICE TO STTBSCRrBERS.
li mil
WITH a trv, don't do it. iM'U ambition for the liMMdtal! season IS t' Iih(- it iierd so well THAT the olTicf boy cannot iind much fault with it. AVE don't believe that a mother W ITH a ie u-boin babe could K've it more l.OVIN't; care THAN a youth with a new born rye-brow
CAN jiiFt
there will HE when th.
local so, iet
ands for all
PICKS out Iiuf
aitached Kills FUu.M IS to o and it would 1m
I the u n - i I
I'UKTTY develop
IN' the W E EE
I
lr ing if ' deadlock should
otlllg. I f.av one tliinK ! i i
ather doesn't let up !
w
TIfAT If th
pretty soon Al'UKEY Munson and we
will
MOl'STAi'lli; j;ies it HAS anbo.lv slarttd
1-Ii illIEIT I he us.' ,
in be prm:d
lost
in
of the vastly
in
superior
or was not cnt on thne PrmumW 'Sat the
eervlr-e t, not what it u-ed to be and that eomrda!nt ir ! America ha"- rseulted
" Cice: r T; T,ri.r;'rr " T'IL th .L" r.ll r.r; t.oor of law-al.idinc Americanism. The real Americans
striving- earnestly to reach its patrons on time. Bn ; are still
iouij-i in aavisine us when you do not get your paper and we will act promptly.
Nt ) one
f-oMior THAN an old ESI'EtTAEI.Y aunt
to
f r hew Ihk K'l'nV 1 of a returning
Tna itl w hen ;hi' i.i a in liden
With few and
aliens that are
m
SSgSi rs.
P"Mij.
f
There is only room for one flag in Lake county and that is. the Stars and Stripes. There is room for only one language and that is the language of the people of the United States.
GARY IS PRAISED. It i? gratifying to the authorities and loyal citizens of Gary and East Chicago to find that the state papers
American, as their father were.
almost negligible exceptions, it is only
Bolshevist. Such aliens are so small in numbers, compared with the native-born and the loyal naturalized citizens, that their revolutionary efforts are impotent. Their numbers can be made still smaller, as they doubtless will be. by deportation of the troble-makers. BoUhevL-m, despite the noise it makes, has not gained a toehold in this country. And God kms the American-born who wet" arrested are pretty low-down specimens of humanity.
1
LOOKING FOR THE STUPID. Fort Wayne is another Indiana city which as annoyed with bolshevist?. At a meeting the other day on of th -wprt scen'ed crew hv the name of Calven cot up and
are ready to give praise for the way the situation was (of, hjf a,litp.s 110t (0 believ the newspapers: that he
and his ilk were th only ones abl to give out any information about Russia, which leads the F t t W'ano News to, remark: It would be decidedly enlivening and interesting to
learn just how a flea-bitten ignoramou lik Mat Claren
handled. The Indianapolis Neus as editorially: "In Gary there was more of the real Russian article. The Reds met and denounced the government of the United State?, the government of Indiana, and the
municipal government or oary. .Mayor uoages naa an- , has acceps tQ reUablP information concerning Russia and 'nounced that no revolutionary tactics would be toler- j Russians that is denied to other men. Just what ated and he made his word good. Elsewhere in Indiana j qualifies him a a Gamaliel to teach others what is right there had been some aimrehension about what w.iuld i and what is wrong concerning affairs in this faraway
happen in Gary because of the mixed population there. The Reds seem to have been in a decided minority.
AXP nul .
there
lie
,1 1 :
A WOMAN alas hoo.-s THAT i she is hurt lit a
away from
At '1 Ti ENT tow n
the
her home
St Win bae to pet n"w flannel underw car VERY soon as both of us ARE pretty much the worse for wear IN that rtspect. EI'IHT ellow- s-pats E00K so cute to us even at our age AS they twinkle by . THAT we shouldn't wonder if thy would be
IT.lMAiai.T I1: a Rood of friendship
responsible many ripening feelings
THAT the papers will designate
HER as an unknown w ably diessed. about -0 v
email, fa ars old.
hion-
r divorce and a 1 i -
THE daily ground f, mony at our house OS Sunday were
BECACSE we insisted on our belligerent better half remaining quiet until the
INT' a stronger deeper feeling WHEN th-; boys all get home. THE fact of the matter is that whether you MAIiUT the girl or jilt her THE engagement is sure to result in squalls.
P'.H.H i; saw- wlo-ih. n.uish the bolsheis's
th.
con 1.1 van-
SNOW I N't i report
in England, acccrdinc to
AND there's quite s frosty KEKhlXt; in ItRly murh south.
farther j
TENTION! Here's Buddy!
The people generally were sound Americans and they used the United States tank corps slogan in dealing with the revolutionists. 'Treat 'em rough.' was the watchword, and those Reds who did not escape from their hall through a rear entrance had all the revolution they wanted when they met the crowd of loyal officers and citizens. "Perhaps the whole story at Gary i told in the simple statement that speeches at the mass meeting were made in a dozen different foreign languages. Those who engineered the gathering were not, Americans. They did not speak or understand Engli-h sufficiently well for this country's language to be used to express their wishes and desires. They are here by our suffer
ance ana by our lax immigration laws, trying to tear I
i land?
The very fact that men of Claren's type declare newspaper information to be untrue stamps them at once as ignorant liars who presume that others are in their class. The sources of newspaper information are so varied, so complex, so democratic, ami so universal that it is impossible for a publisher to carry on a line of deception in his news columns. His editorial columns may be biased and warped, but his news columns reflect the truth as it comes from the several source?. This does not mean, of course, that all newspaper stories are true stories, but it does mean that it would be impossible for the papers to cover up and misrepresent a move like that in Russia if it were, indeed, the godly movement headed by great and good men as Claren and his crowd represent it. In the first place, we may be sure that the majority of papers would seek the truth and would really play it up
down our institutions and substitute anarchy. The real I
people of Gary will not stand that, as they demonstrated forcibly yesterday. The whole state is preparing to welcome home the men who foucht to nvpservn the Ampri.
can nag. Indiana is ;n no temper to tolerate stay -at-1
homes who try to substitute the red flag for it." The Chicago Tribune asks some pertinent questions which the local Bolshevists had better find time to an-
frwer. It asks boldly: "Why not fire the intruder? j "We have just had another spectacle of riot and disorder, this time in Gary. It was no question of Gary )
;omg loco. Gary at heart has proven sane and judicious :n the treatment of public affairs. It i.too bad that Gary had to be the scene of a disgraceful turbulence wrought not by those who have at heart the best interests of the city and nation hut by those who care least about civic consciousness, good deportment and reputation. "The matter of a place fit for heroes to live in mean.? nothing to the imported radical. His chief aim is to make it unfit. The nation is obliged to men like the mayor of Gary and the mayor of Seattle for firm Americanism. But it will require a sturdy Americanism indeed to withstand a continued flow- of undesirables. The movement of radicals should be outward, not inward. "I- Morris Lieberman, leader of the Gary socialists, interested in the political emotions of the mob he encourages? Or is he more thoughtful about the amount of disturbance his following can create? Does it matter to him if his cohorts are Russian or American? Does he take care that only American citizen' follow him? Not so. If undesirables were to be deported tomorrow, Lieberman would be left shouting his execra- , tions into the air. It is not Americans of the home fit for heroes' sort who tag after Lieberman. "If the red flag waited for Americans to wave it, it would have to stand alone. Bolshevism is not. the Instrument of people who were free before the exponents of Bolshevism had done walking in manacles. What. then, do Bolshevists mean by ranting their crazy doctrines here? Why not in Russia, in Hungary, or in any other place where Bolshevism is welcome? And why do we let them rant here?" Ill JL-I jwm. JJ U.lll i mil
j most conspicuously were the Lenine-Trotsky" aggregation
even remotely akin to the paragons thrir ignorant and degenate advocates in America represent them to be. But there is probably no use making this statement to anyone so profoundly ignorant, so densely gullible, and so fa tuously blind as to imagine that a fellow like Mat Claren possesses "information" that the poorest amoing them has not. Mat hasn't any information nor does he believe that he has . He is merely presuming that there are others in the world more stupid and even less informed than himself.
THE PENDULUM SWINGS BACK. The New York legislature has passed and Gov. Smith has signed bills authorizing Sunday baseball and moving picture shows. Under the two bills baseball games may be played and moving pictures exhibited on Sundays, providing that consent is given by the local governing body. The bills were fought by the Lord's Day alliance and other deligious organizations, but were sup
ported by the state Federation of Labor and umerous business and political bodies. New England has been under the thrall of Puritan ical bigotry for nearly three centuries. This malign in
j fluence pervades Anferica and occasionally, breaks our in
various anti liquor, anti-tobacco, anti-dancing, anti-happiness crusades. A camel's hair undershirt, sackcloth ami ashes con stituted the Puritan's idea of ideal existence. They came to this country to enjoy religious liberty and immediate!;, prevented everybody else from doing the same thing. Fancy the effete East with no ball games and r.c movies on Sunday! And even now local bigots may prevent them under the law. However, the pendulum is swinging the other way Teople are demanding the right to think and act for them.-elvea and to do as they .lease s olong as they do aot interefere with the rights of others. This is real liberty! America should be satisfied with nothing less.
TO THE POWERS THAT BE The Boys Want to Come Home! Get 'Em Home Toot Sweet!
Consignment to e-nrlj fOnvor of these organizations was announced by the war department today: Military police companies 272. ando 294: base hospitals. 6 and 131: sanitary squads. 11 ami 17; advance hospitals. 2-A and 2-B. Mobil.- vcnter.nary section. 1"-'. M.) and I'1?. Mobile hospitals 7 and 1" Company D. .".10 engineers service battalion. Headquarters medical detachment and companies",, t; and of the .ixth battalion of 20th engineers.
tie.d. lire. man. who fought With the Sixth Marine Regiment in France, it was learned here today. I,ee ; now recovering from two wounds, three operations ami gas in the army hospital at cjuantico. 'a !e has- fought in Mexico and Nicaragua.
The Kust hleimo plnnt of the Interstate Steel fc Iron Co.. whirh had lHti l,o s in the service reports that r.5 of them have been discharged and hack at work.
I. lent. Ir. .1. K. nrummond, son oi .Mrs. linos Drummond of Eir street. In- ! fiiana Harbor, met with slight injuries! when an aeroplane in which he and' several other officers commissioned In the recent war, made an ascent from j Detroit to Cleveland on behalf of the ' Fifth Liberty Le.an. The machine's de- j
ncent to eait was due. it ih said, to
I oiy-- misunderstanding asi to the
p. ace of landing. The other officers fared worse than did Eieut, Drummond who has since w ired his mother of his safety. The machine was completely wrecked. Lieut. Drummond heads the dental department at the General Hospital No. 36. at Detip t. Michigan. Recently he isited bis mother at. the Harbor.
The (np I'lnMrrrr, ciirryln rillier the fw Testament nor hla'i
officers and men. was the first of sev- j mother's picture warded off the Hun en transports arriving yesterday t o i,ul le t . t ha t pierced the heart of Pridoek. She luought the 127th infan-lvate Alexander Patterson, of Sharon, try field and staff headquarters com- pa. Among the personel effects lepany. medical detachment and H4th . ,f ived by the family are a copy of the infantry brigade headquarters, all of i New- Testament given by the Y. M. C.
.'he Th- i t -second
I i v i s 1 1
The nllln: of four more troopship ari ying o.fii" officer-i and inui bai e cleared from French ports, the war department announced today. They are: T ie l ;rea t ' Northern, w ith 2.71 officers and men from Brest, due at New York about May ;: the Antonio. Eopez. with 1.174. from Bordeaux, due a? New- York May It; the P. I'eSatrusKzui. with 1.412 from Bordeaux, due at New York May It. and the Westhore. with :t 1 Horn Nazaire due at New York May 17.
Grain warehouses are to be erected in Iceland, ting the grain in cold storage, as it were.
Put
i:iKht j-flrt division, composed ps from Tennessee. North and Carolina, and Florida, was refrom duty on May 2 to prepare
the It's
convoy is now
The of tro Smith based
for return to the L'nit.d States, war department announced today.
a ss i e, n men t to early
'. . overseas, a photograph 0f hi
fr and a fountain pen. are damage one bullet.
nioth-
fy
i
There were those In the mericnn Army in France who seemed to bear charmed lives. In that great number may he included Private Erho Lutz, Company K. lOSth Infantry, of the 27th Division. a New Yorker. Private
Eutz was the only soldier in his company to escape unscathed. Praised by
his commander. Lieut. Prangen. Eutz i said to have been in the "thick of eyeryth ng." caught in barrages, raked by machine-gun fire and almost constantly under sjiel I-ti re. saw bis comrades drop all around him. but he tome out unmarked. I
expected within three week-'.
Theodore utter of Michiuiiin nienuei in Hammond, received a card from his i biolher. Andrew E. Cm lei; of Creston. j ind.. telling oT h s arrival in New York j fit ni overseas. He was in the SISth j
Tank Corps.
XVIIbur txiuuh. Hoteril.iIe. returned to bis home on Roberts avenue after being honorably discharged from the American Expeditionary Forte in France. He held a very important secretarial pos-ition while overseas which . as u wonderful experience.
Albert l.nrson and t.forsf . Schuster are the latest Cnited States army recruits accepted by Sergt. Cramer. Both irc Hammond men. They enlisted for overseas service in the cava ! r y . Seven medal for hrmfP) hme heen awarded Carlton l-ce. former Marsh-
Mr. nnd Mrs. . Phillips. Merrill vllU-, received word that their son. Willam had arrived at Hoboken. New- Jersey, ami expected to get hack home before bmg. He has been overseas fr some time.
Kdril t.lriird, V lilt Inc. has arriVr el in New York after several months tervice in France.
Finish ud the Victory job.
' ' ' .'iil :- ::"': , ri" : . - : - r . ' . fk I' " -'" -pl" - 'l - , ' 'A t l 'v . ; U f A t -.., , t i4 t . , ,. . f- j ' i yrl $ A - r - l ' 1 ' : 1 t , t, . a" 't ' i " 11 S,rA li'". V X V -' I . - . h l -i s i f .-5 Hvfe &H tiS'i I, i a . 4 mi n. t C-i4
cf
Charles L. Pichel and shells and other exp!osies found in his "medical institute." When New York police raided the offices of Charles L. Pichel on West 45th street, New York, in search of narcotics they found enough high explosives to blow up aji entire city block. The explosives included shells, gun cotton, dynamite and TXT. Pichel, a discharged soldier, was suspected of peddling drugs to dope fiends. Pichel says the explosives were left in his office by a friend.
v
oiee
of the
People
; NEW CASES i INSUPERIOR C0UR8 AT HAMMOND
ARE WE ANY BETTER THAN THEY?
Time?:
recent i.su 'ins a ti rt ; Industry."
he ir-u to
rci:iiei-s w
s of The Times e on "iv.lshey ism Th-- w riiers tells " tilt rica lii if a lot rkiiK on the rail-
Edit. A cent:
a nd
how
of ft
road'' by permitting the. Hammond Selioo! Hoard to conduct school in a room belonging to the railroad ant! makes this sad state men:, "but as soon as they found that it meant some work without pay. they dropped out " Your paper a few nights ago stated that only twonty-tive .Hammond men saw lit to at'end the T'nited States and Indiana Public Health Ser ice l.-ctu res on "Vene real Diseases." In the same issue East Chicago complains its good citizens diti not attend a lecture on "Eessons In Co-operation Learned from the War." No doubt our good people and those of East Chicago decided that it did not pay to att-nd those lectures. The foreigner imitates ruir nativs born citizen and has adopted his motto. "I get the money." When you get the money, whit need do you have for brains? Are we. ourselves, doing all we can in the line of Americanization and set f-ctlucat ion ? D we know the English language, the Constitution of the Vnited States, its history, the story of its great men? How many of us own or have used "Hryee t American Conimonwaltb" or "Von Hoist's Constitutional History of the Fnited States"? The two best books on these subjects, and. disgraceful to us. one was written by an Englishman, the other by a Cerman. ' Why complain of the "foreigner" while we ours' lves neglect our own opport 1111 i 1 ies to Americanize and educate ourselves? D J. MORAN. Hammond. Indiana. May 6. 1011.
1S.-;t--R.-om I; s. t.a 1 1 1 mo i t-iinal Kailro i a t ion. Room 2: nith vs. Wa istr.-ttoi- of ( way Co.. of 1S236 Adoption ; petition of
Hannah ad pt ion
damages: Steve Sohn - & Ohio Chicago terad Company, a corpo-
REFUSES TO ACCEPT RESIGNATION r.xcluic I utile by the 1 nl ernnt lonal es Service nnd London Daily Epresi. (The Secola is the. leading newspaper in Northern Italy.) MILAN. May t,. The Budapest soviet has refused to accept tie resignation of the Communist government of Rela Kim and bus decided to resjist the entente forces, according to advices from the Hungarian eap'-ial today. A general mohilization 'of the proletriat has heen ordered by the se.viet.
damages; M. Stilivoker D. Mines, admln-"nesep.-ako- & O. railIndiana. in the matter of the Lawrence Harris and
Harris, his wife, for the of Stephen TotH.
IS 237 Room 2: American Coal and Supply Co.. a corporation, vs. Superior Laundry Co.. 'incorporated. 1 52?S Room 1: note: Lazar .. Saric. James Wi I-irissey. Paul E. Crund- !. ftinsj business under the name of Sni ie. Erissey and Crundwell. li'-f',' Roe n 2: divorce: George S. Wilkes vs. Ethel K. Wilkes. lS2(o Po-m 1: adoption; in th natter of tin- adoption of June Vern.l: ne Cresrg. by John R. Cregg and Amelia Cress, his wife, lvti Itoom 2: receivership ; Albert Given vs. F. & O. Manufacturing; company, a corporation. isin Room 1: divorce:- Edna Radloff vs. Edward Radloff. 124 4 Room 2: account; I-azar ,W. Saric. James V . Brissey. Paul E. Crundwell vs. Nick Andrfis. 1 9 2 4 r. Room l: divorce: Mary M. Rose s. Samuel Rose. 1S24'". Room 2; foreclosure mortgage William C. Kindel. Henry W Kindel and Fred W. Kindel vs. J . F. Kindel. Charles L. Kindel and Sylvanus E. Lambert. 1J24S Room 1: appeal by defendant Antony I'.arterzek vs. Walker D. Tlines, I'. S. S. R. R. Admir.ist tutor. 1S24S Room 1; petit on: in the matter of the petition of S. Saraph'n" and his wife. Julia Saraphine for the adoption of Mary Stuknls. 1S249 Room 1: damages; Daniel How ard vs. Walker D. Dines, administrator for New York. Chicago and St. Louis railroad, a corporation. t?t25f Roo.-n 2: replevin and foreclosure chat. mtg.. the Brunswick Balks Cullender Company, a corpo. ration: "William Meihofer, identical with William Maihofer. 1S251 Room 2; injunction: Samuel S. Saxton vs. City of Gary and T. W. Englehart. 1S27i2 Room l: Quiet title; Le ('rand T. Mf-yor vs. Otilla Raecher. 1 S 2 5 :; Room 2: divorce; Theresa Ptni. vs. Nick Stivi. l,2"il Room 1: divorce: Olive Render vs. Bender.
YANK SOLDIERS TO PARADE IN LONDON
f INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE! TiONDON, May ti. Urn. John. .1. Pershing, the American commander-in-chief, will hold a parade of American soldiers through London on May 4th. the Daily News stated today. - King George will witness the parade and salutes will pass between him and the American commanders.
Cure for One's Wildness Comes High.
By C. A. V01GHT
VHV Pidm't "loo AWj't AFFORD ) V As AUUTie To Pt.V ' T TVirXT'S Vmv f NITM OS TOO UUCtg. CEE VHiZ-iME l0SES V Pel:NY 7 J S ( "TOO NlAMV "BMXS )
f iVtT H Nou'u "Tp f - She's eeu SET TUr IwdSme'li. X?2W ( Taviug leovjs Atu ) vomavj's I if ALcRicn-r viwtee. at Fins COCF LAST -" NtA DoctXRS EACH, J Nea covt Me-REAcizeD j J '-Cl-u 1 1
