Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 23, Hammond, Lake County, 15 July 1919 — Page 4

Page Four.

THE TIMES. Tuesday, Julv 15. 191!),

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PHI fiTI NG & PUBLISHING COMPANY.

The Lnk County Times Dal' y except Saturday and Fur.iay Entered at the postofflce in H&mmoad. Juuo 10S. The Tin ra Esst Ch!.? go-Indiana Harbor, dally except funday Enured ot the postofrlce in Eiiat Chicago. Novell. Ur 18. lJi3. The Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Enteral at the pos'offlce fn HdrnmonJ, February 4. 191. The Gary Evening Time Dallv except Sunday. Entered bt the postoffVe In (";ary. April IS. 1912. All under the act of MircU 3. 1S79. as second-class matter.

G.

roEtioN aovxxtiseto orrica. LOGAN' PAiNE & CO CHICAOO.

crease in coaimnn knowledge of domestic science and home hygiene the lot ot t.e modern moth?! wuhjjr a servant ic a haven of beautiful rest compared with that of her mother and grandmother. Yet there is more and more talk about emancipation from the toil of cooking. The menace in the situation Is the threat to the sta bility of the. home and the family. A must guard that. AboUehruent of the family and the home is one of the cardinal demands of anarchy and while advocacy of com rnunizing family cooking cannot be linked with social revolution it is unmistakably a step in that direction for it instigates discontent with the home and the responsibilities of family life. The country would be safer if the club women should drop the propaganda and advise those under their tutelage jo go and put on apron?.

-i-i,!'..- 3inn. 3iu;. oiu-s

'ca.i tor whatever ri(-n-iri.iii mtM 1

Carv Office Telephone- 137

Hammond fprtvite

C O'ftc-

:iarv ornee Telephone 137 assa-i Thompson East Chicago Telephone 931 fvsnj. Eat Ch'.nfo Tel-r-tv r.e 542-R! At I " ' " n -. . "I" . . - . . . O T

. tinit , & i i eier-none o.o

ndiana Karhvr i j Dealer) TC-pone Si"! lZ?'r"' Hirb-r (P.erort.-r .m.1 C!a "aYv. 1 1 Tele phone I3 Whiting Telephone SO-M Crown Point Telephone 42 .., r0" h?v y trouble rettlnc This Timm mc complain' Immod'ate'v to the Circulation Pepartment. w Tixjss will not he responsible for the return of any onsoMcitel arMrl.j. or Irr'ers and win not notice, anonymous rommunffitlons. Short signed letters or general Interest printed at discretion.

8 wafr Mlim$i

-stf rat t V?

Household HinLv--

L. ., . I . .,1

Toast

MENU HINT. Breakfast. Canned Apricots Soft Eoiled Eggs

Coffee

J . J m T nWK .

OTTT-TTr:,, CTT-CATIOTr THAW AWT TWO OTHIIK PAPEKS IN THI CAHrMlST KEOIOIT.

THEY CALLED IT BOSH IN OCTOBER.

ouan? o: idp iemocratic new spaDers .irmin, hoi p

are throwing cat-fit after cat-fit because the Republican j rapers refuse to believe that the Wi!goD league of nation? is a pood thlni; for America. !

WE always try to be a? rlr . n t

''AN. e.pei laliy when in conversation WITH one of the d. ar Klrls Y H")sE hands v e love to . lnrp ANI when on-? asked us how we lik'i HKR n--w drf fta we replied A FT ICR a little hesitation that It eet-mcd to

that RIPPLF.S a ions the figure like a PANTHER'S hid

w-alkinr down the

Cocoa

IP we happen to 1.-

st reet P.EHINT' one we shall hurry ahead of it

to g-

Luncheon. Bean Croquettes Tomato Salad Sliced Bananas

Dinner. Home-rr.ade Relish Radishes Broiled Bass Parsley Butter New Potatoes Peas Beet Salad Strawberry Shortcake Coffee

i Strawberry Shortcake Hull, xrash i and drain one quart strawberries:

place in dish with sufcar to taste; li large cut in two; prepare a rather rich baking: powder biscuit dough; divide in half, roll out one piece tc fit pie tin. spread with butter; roi: out other piece and place on top. Prick in several places with fork and Lake, in moderate oven about twenty or twenty-five minutes; split where it was buttered; place half on plate; spread with half the berries, put other piece bottom side up on top and spread with remainder of berries. Kat with cream or top milk, f an be made into biscuit and made into individual shortcakes if liked.

T;K ery well ver.tr.ated.

THI" rl 1 I r-f-i-t. m V.lin.n thi i-.nltmtirt

Democratic rapers did not always favor a league of: an1 the pessimist u .hat

nations. Far from it. Two weeks before '.he armistice; .rrn, , , , i THK former wdiiM like to fall asleep

" - v..vv v. . v " i yjiy Ural yil lyraKr irl(i,U; Uiist-U.1.- I f ,-. i lii'Iid sion. On October 2S. 191S. the Memphis Commercial Ap- j ..-r,,-.- . , . tl , , . , 1 ELK to wake up and find mil how peal, one of th leading Democratic newspapers of the i

South ha.t i rnnsniciinnilv ,,i;.i,i .,.4., tv,oi l-1 " t"-f r the worm hiis grow

t i r-C" rtC"''" vo.ir copy of Th Ttsrss as Prompto.rr iV "J: rlst'..r !" !- th'n'c it his been

Fervlre 1. f V KememPer that the- mat eenVrfl fr-, 3 " """ tn b" " at complaints art

vice T-i l. "iii vim irun ano man ser- ,

rrnmnt in .t.i . - - patrons on i me. F9 K will act promptly" When yu do nof "our

'Sh "fe, r

There Is only room for one fag In Lake county ar.d that is the Star, and Stripes. There Is room for only one language and that is the language of the people of the United States. THE "KINGDOM OF GOD" IN SHANTUNG The officers of the Church Peace Union, which re-c,-nti.v jssued a proclamation announcing that the BritihWnsoa plan for a league or nations represented the first serious effort to realize the kingdom of God on earth were probably not thinking at the time of the fact that the diplomats who envoived this covenant also turned Shantung over to Japan, and that Shantun is now the headquarterof the opium trade which the Chinese government ha. been trymg so hard to stamp out by heroic methods which have challenged the admiration of the world. HowevT it has come about that people really do not expect words' to have any relationship to actual facts and conditions any more. Even the violation of the national integrity of China can be so well camouflaged in high flown language that it looks like an act of benevolent Christian statesmanship. Rut even camou-lage cannot prevent anything a rotten as that from making irs presence known if not to the sen e of sight, then to the sense of smell.

TRANSCONTINENTAL MOTOR TRAIN. Interest in the United States Transport Corps' -Victory Train" will grow as that train rolls westward. It is on its way from the national capital to the Pacific coast, and in its progress across the continent will probably constitute the most impressive parade ever organized in this countryThere are sixty motor trucks, of all makes, and sizes, loaded to capacity and manned by 2n9 enlisTed men of the transport corps and nine officers. The caravan i3 as comriete in i'self as any army unit could be. It carries all Its own provisions, camping equipment, repair outfit, etc. The men cook their own meals and sleep by the roadside at nicht. I, is intended as a constructive experiment. The engineers att'.ched the train are making a careful study of truck efficiency and road and atmospheric conditions The results will be valuable, to th government. They Fhouli al.-o be valuable for the information of the publicand for the stimulus to highway improvement That mar come from the tour.

THEIR JUST DESERTS. Interesting newsicomes from Turkey, it is extremely interesting to people who read the great book abou' the causes of the war, written by our former ambassador to Turkey, Henry Morgenthau. The foxv Enver Pasha and his murderous aides Talaat Bey and Djemal Pasha, leaders cf the Turkish government during the war, have been condemned to death by the Turkish court martial Investigating the conduct of the Turkish government during the war. The news w-ill be hailed with a great deal of satisfaction by the world. The awful Armenian atrocities which these brutes were responsible for, made the whole civilized world shudder. It is regrettable that Baron V.'angenheim. leader of the German propaganda in Turkey, could not be hung from the same gallow-s. The world will hope that the verdict of the court martial win be carried out and justice meted out. i probably wii; ' be. You cannot bring suit to set aside i judgment in Turkey as easy as you can in bank bandit case.

BACK TO THE KITCHEN. The South Bend Tribune believes that Mrs. Nellie Comstock probably will never be forgiven by leaders of women's clubs for her letter to the Evanston. 111., News-Ir.d-.v but if she should ever be in need the associated

d n'rolden husbands of the United States will take care of her. It was a brave act to tell what she thought of th? ! Evanston community kitchen and the pending of container j

meji.; around to the members; it was revolutionary. The modem woman has decided to get out of the kitchen and ono who tries to keep her there is a traitress. This is the diy of the restaurant, the delicatessen and of under iounshrd and discontented men. What Mrs. Comstock meant in her letter from Cali f-irnia back to the old home town of Evanston was that 'he American wif and mother will have to do as her n ;i'hcr and grandmother did before her get back into the i-i'.chen and cook and bake for the family. She will have to prove that there is no such thing as the servant problem by doing real work herself and thus justifying Jier e.-.:s:euce. She will have to cease trying to xist on the labor of others and become productive. Community kitchens and delicatessen counters are the final word of defeat for the American wife, says Mrs. Comstock. And she is right. Dispensing with cooking almost invariably reduces the home t j the plane of the lodging house. It undermines if it does not actually destroy the foundation of the home, which is the sense and understanding of th? mother's duty to feed her children. Close the kitchen, resign from toil and you remove this elementary and essential family bond. The commun.ty kitchen and the restaurant cannot, replace what is lost when a mother decides she will not work any more. Strangely enough there is no talk of emancipating the father from toil als-. If there js health and the right attitude toward thj? life there can be no servant problem except of woman's own creation. With the kind of houses men build nowadays, equipped with all labor-saying and sanitary devices, wi'h the marvelous advance in the preparation and distribution of foods through the stores and with the in-

a conspicuously placed editorial under th i

caption: "Peace League Bosh and After War Gabble.') This editorial is interesting as an indication of what ih I position of many of the Democratic party organs of the! country would be on the is.ues of toda, if partisan con sderations did not require them o defend the handiwork! of a Democratic administration, no matter how violative of their own convictions. What the Memphis Commercial j Appeal said two weeks before the armistice was signej j has great force today. The tditorial. in part, follows: j There will be no millennium after this war. ;

Trust not to a league of nations to preserve eternal peace. This league of nations, with i's world wide program, is hut another evidence of how little our learned men know. rPoor old Carnegie, horribly uneducafei3 and horribly

rich, picked up some apparent truisms which were ex j ploded fallacies and constructed a world peace plan. He i threw money behind it, great tanks of money, and he at j fracted highbrows and lowbrows, dreamers and some good I men. What a curse to civilisation the ignorant rich are. j Men listen to their foolishness and idiocies, often mistak

ing a success from luck for a success from well exercised minds. From 190fi to 1312 the brain of the world went milk

soppy on peace it was .to he peace at any price an 3 ; peace; without a price. Things had become so that the professional soldier was regarded as a cut throat and i ! writer on militarv efficiency was said to be a brute 1 Blear-eyed and hollow-chested women and thin-headed j and fatherless nif n were so busy talking of peace tha' j even as war clouds gathered they ceased not and mixeij their ululations with the roars of guns first firing across j the Belgian border. j There will be no peace after this war except a peace j guaranteed by force. There has never been any peace i except a peace by duress.

World peace conferences and peace leagues are as old as creation. Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel formed a world peace quartette, and Cain broke the quadriilateral The Jews felt that they were the chosen people of God and yet they could not live at peace with their neigh bors nor with one another. The Greek confederations were limited pace leag uers, but they went to pieces. The Roman empire, after it was gorged on riches, attempted to live, in a state of peace and fat contentment. It became rotten and the barbarians destroyed it. The popes in the middle ages attempted to establish a league of nations for which the papacy would act as a high court, where all international questions could be settled by arbitration. Soon after some of the nation opened war upon the court itself. Almost a thousand years ago there was a great bishop presiding over the diocese of Liege. He evolved a plan of abolishing war and organized a league of nations for the preservation of peace. Grotius, the father of modern international law?, the ribs of which system were kicked in by the kaiser and his associate thugs, had a plan of settling ail international disputes by argument and judicial decision. Napoleon had a dream of universal world peace The only trouble with his system was that h made him.-eli of Prance the arbiter. Napoleon and two emperors formed a continental peace league. That league made a fatal mistake by not giving England a membership. The power of Napoleon grew as dangerous as th power of Germany grew in late years. Russia. Austria. Prussia and England finally combined against Napoleon The rulers of these nations and fheir people wer just as bitter against Napoleon and the French one hun dred years ago as are the allies today against the kaiser

and his Germans. After two trials Napoleon was beaten i and sent to an island to cool off and die. j' .Then we had a Holy Alliance, whose purpose was to j hold Europe in a state of peace forever. ! After 1S70 we find Bismarck making a dual alliance ! for the purpose of keeping peace and a little later we find a triple alliance. ; And now we hear preachmen? of how the peace of the world is to be maintained. It is to be don.- by the j governments becoming "uplifters." The leading high I brows are to evolve a system wherebv all differences be ! tween nations will be composed and all disputes wi'l be ' settled out of a book of civilian beatitudes to be pre pared later. There are to be no more big armies and. therefore, no more war just nice little armies and dainty little, war ; ships. . , i If some nation becomes recalcitrant, its leaders are !

THE pessimist feels the same wy AP.Ol T it but he sees no reason wake up.

1VE ar- ptror. frr Ihe r'P'al of H'Xl'RT taxcji r.n almost pvrrMhiK Rl'T the boudoir cap K think that ought to he soaked S d and plenls.

WHEN Mr. Wilson wrote that f inny!

thing AI'.Ol T breaking; the world's h'art

HE must l:ne been rraeU' inc P.E 'O.ME a column conductor.

EXCLAIMING, sotto "GET thee behind us Sain ' AND now the Senate WILL arise and sins thit beautiful sonjr "HOW Ton Gonna Kep Him In Washington AFTER H's fcten Taree? ' OH. well, the higher Ihe hog the fewer the EATER? thereof.

THE influence of mind ovr matter CONTINUES strong AND after reading: the Sunday

up

keep them from burninsr. Do not add salt until the peas are nearly done

j and avoid overcooking them especially' wnen the. young peas are used. . Time will vary accord:ng to the age : of the peas. There should be little

NEW 5 PA PER syndicate doctor's col-1 if any water left to drain from the mns j Peas. If anv is left save it carefully and

let it replace a part of the milk in the sauce. It ie inadvisable to add soda to soften the water or to decrease the time for cooking;. Soda injures the flavor and probably destroys some cf the most valuabls properties cf the peas, and other green vegetables.

RECIPES FOR A DAY. Bean Croquettes Mash left over baby lima beans and add grated onion, two tablespoons of finely minced parsley, one teaspoon of paprika. Mold into croquettes ar.d then roll

in rlour, din in beaten ectr and milk 'cupful of fresh nineannU iuic th

and then in fine bread crumbs. Fry) juice of two or three lemons, three until golden brown in hot fat. cups of white sugar melted witfe Creamed Peas Remove the peas three cups of hot water. When cold from the pods and wash. Cook until , add to it a pint of cracked ice, twe

hon in just enougn Doiun water to! quarts ot pure water, and mix thor-

TRY ThiSE Strawberry Fruitade Now that straw-berries are plentiful in the market, try this fruitade on a hot day; you will find it refreshing:. Mash fine and drain two quarts of thoroughly ripe strawberries. Add a

:st that

of the dealers have adapter j

NEW business motto: WHEN" in doubt boost the prices and ADD r,1 l-r per cent. ONE of the talented fashion writers WTfOE stuff we loe p read SPKAKS of a thin black velvet jrown

WE had rorthinjr from HOUSEMAID'S km-e to lumpy jaw. NOW that the country is TO be bone-dry THE torch uhich the Statue of Lib

ert y

HOLDS aloft in the act of

the world should be.

oughly. Serve with tiny cubes of ripe bananas and pineapple floating about in the glasses. This quantity will serve a company of TeoD!e: if

for home consumption, less may ba made. Hominy This costs but little and is nice for breakfast or supper. Place is much as you want to soak over night, then in the morning place in a large kettle with plenty of water, on the back of stove or over a Blow fire and cook till tender. This could bt cooked in a tireless cooker. Salt to taste. This i3 nice eaten with milk and sugar, or fri"d with bacon x ham 'rippings.

E N 1. 1 G H T N I N replaced

WITH a

1T.OP.AHLV is beginning;

pop-hot t le.

by this tinr

honeymoon trip in the East, and when they return will make !fiicago their fui ure home.

Griffith enjoyed a light rain Sunday evening:. We- need much rain. The concert at the M. E. church Sat-

Mr. aad Uri. Oeorire Ellin, of Killer. ! '

ii v ii I 'JfllA, 11AC I rv i rii VIU t'l III?

TO think.

find out what the people really

1 hf.r cac cnirtviarl alt nrolnt i r

arrival on this side at New York from ,, , T . .i - , . , .. ,. , . . Harold Jones of East Chicaao, leader of

listed with thfc marines early in the warl

1 J i irr "in rr

and passed at that time the test for j

; sharpshooters, being one of the threuj ! who were accepted at Gary. He won several medals at Quantice. Va . during;!

the period of training there. I

FENTION! Here's Buddy!

TO THE POWERS THAT BE The Boys Want to Come Home I Get 'Em Home Toot Sweet!

miy tw enty-fcur per tc-iu cf w hat it j

was on Armistice Day. Novembci war department announced ihi noon.

Lieut- Frank Duggaii, W'bitinc has ioi1 his honorable discharge from the v p navy, havin? heen stationed

it Pel. -am Bn', home yesterday.

Y

and iet-irned

Mr. and Mrs. Charles r. Banff, of Fillmore St., Gary, were very asreeably .and pleasantly surprised la:-t Saturday (when their son Oscar, of the L'niteJ States navy since the first days cf th'--j war. walked in on them. Oscar received

his discharge on Tuesday of last week.

the Jones Trio, introduced the perform

ers in a manner fitting: the Lyceum director. His selections on the cello won the audience from the very beginning. Miss Esther Jons at the piano ga-. e the audience confidence in her ability, both as a soloist and accompanist. Paul

Tour troopahlpa. carrying- 11,418 offi- j Jones did not make his violin talk, as ccrs and men. sailed on July D from ' did his brother. Harold, but his clear. French ports for New York, the war I true notes bespeak for him a great fudepartment announced this a f ternoon. j ture on his favorite instrument. TheoThe ships are the cruiser South Dakota, ! dore Moor, cashier of the First National with l,S!fi troops, due July 1; the Bank. Hammond, r. nderd two beaut. fu! Kaiserin August Victoria, w ith 5.S35 solos; his full clear voice re-echne.J

due July IT; the Panama, with sweetly to all parts or tne DU.oir.g

Marjory Cress wt-11 of EaM Chicago, rraoer, compKtly took the audience by stern". She was exiremly generous, giving t . nd t hr'e mchores and eat h one a masterpiece. Her self-confidence, clear, a. strong voice, and r leasing persona': will win t rinds for her whrver she - Another com ert with Evapton talent promised for Griffith in the near fut-

1 roops.

2,20 troops. du July IT: and the Dri

ll, the kotan. with 1.581. due the l!Uh. aftfr-i

Relatives of John J. Mnginnt. of t. John, received a telegram Saturday, stating that he has arrived in New-York.

Daniel Qulnn. nobertsdnle. bas r"turnd to his home on ICOth street, after receiving an honorable discharge from Camp Taylor. Louisville

Tne ma.rrlag-9 of Miss Amelia Maters, sister of Miss Freda Mai. rs of Gary, to Corporal J. Schaak, v ho has- Just returnfd from overseas, took place at the home of the bride's brother. William Maiers at Ambridge la'st Saturday morning-. Immediately following the cere-mon-ie our.tr couple left on a short

jt GRIFFITH j Michael Wislan. living east of town I had the misfortune to have the ends j of the fingers on his right hand com

pletely amputated by getting caught In the sb'kle of the mowing machine S. B. Woods and family. Dr. Malmstone, tha doctor's brother and family of Chicago, the Jones trio and the Misses Esther Liahtfoot, Dorothy Moss and Lillian 'Welsh attended the Gideon meeting at Cedar Lake Sunday James Scott, superintendent of the oil riant is oniovfrg bis vacation.

vou reading Th- Times '

CARLETON HOTEL 30ARDING HOUSE FOR ME' RATES ACCORDING TO ROOV PHONE HAMMOND 3030.

The American First Division today comple'ely taking over the outline of ; the post of the bridgehead from the ; pecond Division, which entrains r.eat ' Wednesday for home. S:x days will b required to transport this division, j which, became famous at Re!!au Wood.) from the Rhine to Brejt. Neither the, F:ist nor the Third Divisions, the last j In the occupied area. Is scheduled toj start hom before August 15. Man-

time the Eighth infantry, made up of Volunteers recently snt to Europe, is expected.

Hwry H. Armstrong, brother to J. A. Armstrong of Grapevine st . Indiana Harbor, who enlisted in the first days of the war and was assigned to guard du'y during the pea e conference, is on h:s way home, having rcach'd Camp Mills. Soldier Armstrong has always made his home in this citv and is very kcll known her. His coming home will be hailel v. Ha ilflinh by hip many friends.

The strene-tn of the American army Is ;

to be slapped upon the wrists and the other nations are to cut its acquaintance. A bad nation is to be treated much as a society bounder is snubbed by a fat dame who re fuses to remember that some of her immediate ancertor were rot slingers. We are in the very flux of problems whose solu'ions demand strong minds, strong men and maybe Mrong force. If the little nations are to become free and ind" pendent with big doses of democracy i will drive some of them drunk and mad. Thinking that democracy means absolute liberty and freedom of actions, regardless of law and convictions, on the slightest difference they will fly at one another's throats. A people an well as a kins can make war. It is time that our intellectuals stop higbbrowing. Go to book and go to history and learn something. It is time they realized that the brute is in nation? as it is in man.

'Get Your Digestion in Shape Many rii me nts arc caused by stomach weakness. Faulty fiigestion leads to biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, sallow skin and eruptions. Maintain a healthy condition of the stomach and you will get rid of the chief cause of your sufferings. Do not neglect the laws of health. Keep stomach, liver and bowels in order by timely use of

PIU.S

Lsrt S; of Any Mccfieina in tb WoriL Sold ewrywbcro. la boxe, 10c 25c

Were you ever disappointed with your Home-made Preserves?

Even the best recipe can't make allowances for the way sugar will harden into candy or for the failure of a jelly to "jell". Thousands of women are finding- the ideal preserving syrup is a blend of Karo (Red Label) with y2 sugar instead of all sugar. Preserving done this way is always uniform jelly that really "jells" jam that is neither too syrupy nor too thick. It gives you preserves with the natural fresh fruit flavor This fine, clear Karo Syrup has a natural affinity for the juices of the fruit. It blends the fruit with the sugar makes your syrup rich and heavy, and holds jams and jellies firm and mellow, with not the slightest tendency to "candy" in the glass- - For Cooking, Baking and Candy Making Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. In all cooking and baking recipes use Karo instead of sugar. It is sweet, of delicate flavor, and brings out the natural flavor of the food.

171? p p A book of sixty-eight pages that gives you the beat recipes for sure results in preserving. Easy to follow. The Corn Products Cook Book is handsomely illustrated and it's free. Write us today for it. ;ORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. P. O. Box 161. Aeu York City CHICAGO OFFICE

213 Et Illinois Street

Chicago, III.

A GOVERNMENT report says that driving some of our aliens back to Europe, ing else in this country appeals to them booze, let them go.

prohibition is j Well, if noth-!

as

muca as

THE most cruel, inhuman thing about the whole peace settlement was that the Germans at Versailles weer not allowed to make speeches.

FORMER Chancellor von Bethmann-Hoilweg offers to stand trial instead of the kaiser. The only thing the Allies can be sure of In this amazing suggestion is that it is another Prussian trek of some kind.

Open Air Dancing

INDIANA GARDENS Every Saturday and Sunday Evening. Roller Skating Every Night Excspt Saturday ard Sunday Night. MUSIC BY STERLING. Cents 50c. Ladies 25o.

Ml M K ax -

m m m

(red Label ) dfi sugar

Makes perfect jarnSjjeUies wmJ preserves.

h'i , itli

ill

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i i i ii i f n ii i j 9 i rrrf i"- iu-.w ts

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