Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 28, Hammond, Lake County, 21 July 1919 — Page 4

Page Four.

THE TIMES.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING &. PUBLISHING COMPANY.

The Lak County Times Daily except FavurcJay and 196 Ent'red at th postoiac- In Himmo.id, Juno Tha Tinea East Chieigro-Indlana Harbor, dally except Sunday Entered at the postofnea In East Chicago. November 18. 1S13. The Lake. Ccnnty limes Saturday anfl Weekly Edition, tnterod at tho pjstofflce In Hammond. February 4. 1314. Tho Gary Evening Time DhIIt excert Sunday. Enlerec et the postofriee. In Gary. April IS. 1912. All under the act of March 3. Ib79. as second-class matter.

LOGAN PAINE & CO

-CHICAGO.

Hammond (private exchange) 310o. 3101. 3102 n.w rtee r Kll'lcu'r department wanted ) Vi, fl Th L." Telephone U7 r I v Thj;m!n --st Chicago Telephone 931 W E?" rh'-"1 Tcl.-Ph. -no MM! f;i. ffeZ (T,,B T,ME!" Telephone 3?S $n ",ror l-vs Dealer) Tel. ph-.ne mV Harlwr (Reporter and Class. Adv. .TH'ilmno 2SS Crown rp;rV Telephone 80-M Crown Point Telephone il B!alnrf L.V", "y trouble retting The Tivr. makes comPlaint Immare v to the Circulation Department. onJlt.l LrVV ' "0t rPnnelble for th return of any JToiT; ILL"' rl17 Cr if"8 aru1 notice ar.onv. ln?erM? uY "V0' Phort s,cned letttre or general nterest printed at dircretlon.

Mondny. July 21, 1919.

oiaB PAPERS II? TK1 CALUMET KFOIOW.

m j&vVfX? '?ur, of Th, T,v a. Prompteervlca !a not hat It u"e k Rer that tho m,U eneral from .rfJ 1 l1 nnd thst complaints ar to striving larestlv . "ci"ea'1 milling equipment and prompt In adtuw - each 'V on time. P. wm act promptly Whe" yOU do no et rour nd

Ther Is only room for one flag In Lake county and that la the Stars and Stpipes. There Is room for only ene language and that is the language of the people of the United States.

FORD'S ILLITERACY. They asked Henry Ford who Benedict Arnold was Ford said he was a writer. They asked Ford what a mobile army was and Henry said it was an "armv mobilned. He didn't know who Andre was. And vet' Ford objects to being railed an anarchist! Anarchists an a rule are brainy and educated men. Some of them would be insulted if they were called Henry Fords. Ford's Illiteracy and ignorance as it was brought out at the Tribune trial as astonishing. It was not only astonishing, it was pitiable and ludicrous. And yet what could be expected from a man who filled a ship full of long haired men and short haired women and took it to Europe to "get the bovs out of the trenches by Christmas." r i i . .

"'ua"s Delt" man anybody else Jim Coussins of Detroit knows jus how smart a man Henry Ford is. GOLDEN STREAM POURING INTO EUROPE. Hundreds of thousands of foreigners who hare made and( saved thousands of dollars apiece here in America, are sending their savings overseas, says the Calumet Record in commenting on a Times story. The matter has come to be very serious in the Calumet region. Money is pouring out of local banks in a steady stream in drafts to Europe. These drafts are said to be generally for at least $1,000 and often many times that amount. The Calumet Record has no suggestion to offer as to the ethics or morals of the situation. It is. however, a very serious question. These foreigners have come over here. enjoyed the safety, health and prosperity here and now are leaving the country or at least sending their money abroad in tremendous amounts in the aggrega'e As a matter of news it is this paper's duty to call particular attention to this state of affairs.

wi.iv. firm inn., .nun nutni nave some claim at least to the local investment of a large portion of money made here.

Diaz, has brought the country to the political, economic and social degradation that now prevails. Those who rule temporarily m Mexico, and thos who seek their overthrow, are all actuated by the sitne motives and hesitate at nothing calculated to accomplish their ends. Possession of the scat of government for purposes of loot is the arubititon of every leader. To forward iu cause each party in turn has sought to iurry favor with the United States. Th" disgusting nacillaiion of the Democratic administration towards Mexico id t'resh in the public mind. First we had the personal war between Wilson and Hueita, which accomplished nothing but the- death of t.enty or more of our brave soldiers. Th-. n came the advent, of Vilia and his fuls mio eulogy as the liberator of .Mexico by former Secretary of State Bryan. Next Carranza got the upr'er hand and control of the capital city, and we hastened to lecogni- bin government and send him an ambassador. Now Villa is gaining prominence one more, and making seiious efforts to ingratiate himself with our officials at Washington, while increasing his control in Mexico and th:eatening Carranza. Through all those years we have

seen an alternation of embargoes and free passage for munitions from this country inio Mexico. Col. Harvey claims to have indisputable evidence that when the last shipment, but a few weeks ago, of several thousand rifles and 30O.0OM rounds of ammunition for the Carranza forces arrived at Juarez it was promptly divided between tht Carranza general and Villa, under a previous agreement between those gentlemen. We hear a great deal nowadays of our solicitude for ' humanity." Hundreds of millions of dollars are t-p'-nt to feed the oppressed people of Europe; our soldiers are fighting at this very moment to prevent an clement in Russia from continuing their career or destruction; in fact, our President declares that the war from which we have just emerged was fought in the interests of humanity in general. But through if all we remain blind

to the fact that just across our borders are over 1", 000,000 people who have been the prey of conscienceless bandits for over a hundred years, with but brief periods of relief. Everything points to an indefinite continuation of that state of affairs, yet not a word do we hear of a move on our part to end it. Mr. Thomas E. Gibbon, a recognized authority on Mexico, gives his conclusions at the end of his recent book. "Mexico Under Carranza." "What Mexico needs." he says, "and what I believe she must have, is the intervention in her affairs of some saving power such as

England has afforded to Egypt and our own nation has j

afforded to the Philippines, and to Cuba, in a degree, under the authority of the Piatt amendment. " The in stance cited by Mr. Gibbon occurred while the Repub licans were in control of our national affairs. Now that they are again in the ascendency in the legislative branch, with prospects of early return to the executive, il'C country may look forward with confidence to the formulation of a defini'e policy toward Mexico that will put a speedy and permanent end to the disgraceful con ditions that now prevail in that country.

MAN AND WOMAN. GERMAN SPIES FOU TEN YEARS, ARE SIIOT

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Firing scjuau takiii (.t-iimn spits, walking between the soldier, up 1o wall to execute them.

This picture, one of the mot I vears in a Chamn.-icnn villao-n i n

striking photos of the war, has Swiis peasant. Wobably the man

had fake naturalization papers. During the war they were caught telephoning information to the

lurt reached this country. It

thows a Prussian arc! his woman companion who had lived for ten

Germans through a secret apparatus. Their information led to the death of forty French soldiers. The two confessed and were marched to a nearby wall and shot.

CHARTERS FOR PREJUDICES. A judicial precedent was established by Judge James M. Carpenter in Pittsburgh. Pa., recently when he handed down a decision in the Common Pleas court refusirg to grant a charter for a no-tobacco corporation. Judge Carpenter expressed the opinion that the law creating corporations with judicial sanction, by granting charters, was not intended to provide for the incorporation of associations for the promulgation of theories a. to the cfrects and consequences of personal habits; especially if not eonra bonos mores, and concerning rnn. sequences in regard to which both laymen and doctors hold varying views. It doubtless will be said by these petitioners that one Judge's belief does not prevent the holding of other opinions. Yet th estatement of the court represent? fairly, at this time, the opinion and sentiment of nine-teen-twentieths of the rrtale population of the United StafeF. Whether 1n the next fifty or one hundred years public opinion will undergo a radical chance and demand the prohibition of the culture, sale and u?e of tobacco is an interesting question.

EVEItT man thinks h Is MAKRTlXi"; a (t;rl th.it is and he is ruin

diff-r.-n

1!L"T the difference Is not as OKEAT as he think it i.. L. YT.S. w know cur cigarettes smell awful IH'T if they try to put them out of busi nefs AVK shall study bolphev jsm, very assiduously.

C'N'i: advantage of an editor havir his wife

I.IIT IT'S

m ?'ir ta!

IT is i ae the

b!y true t!

tim powder. iy v r,. jv a riot hi np.

many persons

NO LET UP IN THE EXPENSE. Tt Is not yet given out what of expense .to the federal treasury was incident to President Wilson's trip to Europe, but we may depend upon it that it was something substantial. For at no time and at no place was there any sparing of prodigal expenditure. We are familiar with the story of the original voyage of the President with his fifty chefs, his jazz band and his official florists and confectioners, and we are given to understand that the ostentation and spectacular display were continued throughout. Even -when Mr. Wilson delivered that miserable speech in which he so lugubriously called attention to the fact that "most of the people of the country are not well dressed" he was splurging recklessly on public funds and attempting to discount the royalty of Europe by the gorgeousness of his establishment in Paris. One mieht have supposed that the occasion of his return would have been attended by a certain degree of simplicity, especially in view of the fact he was returning to "the land for which he was homesick." but nothing of the sort. On the contrary the overworked federal treasury was raided once more to Invest bis return with all the spectacular effects of a triumph. At the expense of the people five dreadnauchts and thirty-six destroyers steamed out thirty miles from Sandy Hook to meet him and boom a noisy "welcome." Arrived at the harbor forty-Sve battleships and a world of smaller craft participated in the demonstration also at public expense. President Wilson was given a great home coming but the people paid the bi'.l just a? they paid the bills for his departure and his sojourn in "foreign parts." Perhaps this aping of royalty all right and possibly it is approved by a majority of the American people, but then again perhaps and possibly It is-n't. At any rate at a time like this when the. country is simply staggering under a burden of debt piled up by the incompetence and graft of the federal administration it ill becomes the president ti countenance suc'i treasury raids as that indulged in to make it appear that he returns as a conquering hero instead of as a badly worsted and much discomfited individual from a tourney of "mind matching." The President is a greaf preacher of simplicity and plainness, but It is observed that it is simplicity and plainness for the other fellow. For himself he insists upon the trappings of royalty and the barbaric splendor of a potentate. Fort Wayne News.

TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING. An englneerinc expert says that a motor truck coine

i eight miles an hour along a highway, though moving only

.'twice as fast as a truck going four miles an hour, does four times as much damage to the road-bed. If the speed is doubled again, making Ifi miles an hour, there will be 13 times es much damace as there was at the four-mile speed. The fact is reduced to a mathematical formula, thus: I "Poundage on a road which amounts to the Fame as damaee increases as the square of the speed." Th is

weight is a far less important factor than velocity. The same reasoning naturally applies to a touring car or a wagon. It is probably new to most people. J may be verified by any doubter if he will take the pains to experiment and observe as carefully as the engineers have done. One state has partly recognized it by charging higher license fees for fast vehicles. Such experimental work ushers in a new era in what the exper's call "mobile transportation.'' It calls for thorough knowledge not only of the destructive rower of vehicles but of the resisting power of the roads they travel over. It is a big subject, growing more important every day. One of the bis universities has decided to establish a department of "transportation engineering," deal.'ng particularly with this subject. If the knowledge already available were generally diffused, it would be worth hundreds of millions to the country. NO PLACE IN U. S. FOR THEM. "Signing the Peace Treaty with Germany has resulted in a decision by the Department of Justice that the great majority of German and Au.-tian enemy aliens now ar large under parole may be realesed from all parole obligations." says a Washington news dispatch. All very well, for thousands of so-called "enemy aliens" turned out to be pretty good Americans; bit' how about those we imprisoned because they wanted to wreck the country and turn it over to the Germans? These men were enemies of the United State? when they were locked up. and they have had n- chansre of heart. Enemies of our nation then, they are so now-. Let tr, get rid of them by sending them back to their "dear Germany" and "beloved Austria."

A WAT on a vara ion THAT he g-ets thrcueh hours "WITHOUT hearing, shouldn't, say thint? I..IKE that in th paper"

th

rassi'v-

"Oh.

you

IF we were Henry Ford's JiENTALITT

wouldn't

juryn-.m passing on

"WE we'd

i was ijrnorant.

SAT he wss lihterat ar at that. MUK is just, full of d:s

d let him fr

HKRil we wre nurir.? on ha:nc nire bed of parsley sr.d we

;i"I thing of jf. who are not UNTITLED to thm As'D it is also true that rrmny peonie fail TO hiv the cord thln,.- of life "WHO are entitled to th-rn. "WJ! don't know-

that looks es

Soldier Boy

New,

r"

Th many frlrja of Ju.-k .Immrrmar. will he pleased to '.earn that .he hart rt;ji ntd from s,-r. nvr in France He and Mrs. Zimmerman are th" guests of .Mr. and Mr.-. I". Hybar-t-er and Mr. and Mrs. len rihaip.

llo Wlmrr, er. who has hf f'. f a t , i s x T)

returned Ciary nol-vi.-oting relatives in te.j to return to his

1 la ! y home e n t w e e k

in Jcffeison stree

the pres-j

GROWN POI

Mr. and Mrs Ernest Shortridre entertained a party of friends at a beach party giver, given at Waverl Beach on Sunday in honor of their 21t wedding anniversary. A most enjoyable time was spent. Jud E. Miles Norton and family left on Saturday for Jones. Michigan, where they will sper.d a vacation of several weeks' duration.

' ' nre department was called

J-retz .vianutacturine Co. plant Saturday Afternoon, the cupola

their frame building having eauaht fire, a spark from a passing train heir? th mause of the bUze. Slirh? darnaee was dr.ne. While Howe'.l Parry was cenunc from the Let fire on Saturday afternoon, riding a hicycle Malcolm Tagr. on a mctorcyele ran into him near the corner or Jackson anl North streets and threw him from his wheel, severely bruUini? him and knocking- out a couple r,f teeth. Tae was jroln at a pretty R-ood sseM and was unab! to sf-p -jj T.!n Miss Marie Biee ts takin? a two weeks' vaeation from her duties in Co. Recorder Johnson's office The Peoples State Bank of this el'v purchased th I.etz 22't. percent bonds, totaling $110,000 Saturdav mornlnsr and will offer them for sai beginning July 21. The bond issue was made for the purpose of erecting two factory build. ngs to ea."h of the rapidly increasing business of that roncern. Miss Alice Hill spent the week end with relatives at Michigan City . Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Kn.ght of Chicago spent the week end with Mr. end Mrs Frank Knight. The marriage of Bert Thompson, Jr . son of B. J. Thompson 5 and 10 cent sior In this city to Miss Edna Sievert a Hobart young- lady, has been announced. Miss Mary Cook was a guest of Miss

! Kdna Bierwagon of Gary on Sunday. J Miss Lola Barnes of this city has I .'u.eepted a position In the. Gary

sehocls. Misses Barnes and Olacer and Leo Glass of Gary were entertained a e. dinner party at the Barnes home in this city on Saturday night Gov. Goodrieh. has made the appointment of Judfte W. C. Mahon who Is spending the summer in the city as one of the delegates from this stat at the eleventh annual meetine of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology to be held in Boston.

Mass.. Sept. 2 and 3.

ANYTHING

now Kuril. WE -sucrose our symp.it

UGI1T to cmhra.ee the famity

new as a

entire human

BUT we crtalnly find it IIATlD to be sorry f-r a rich old fool WHO loses ST 0.000 ON some fake po'.d brick game. THERE are h-ts ff tunny thincs IN the world BUT one rf them t not f.ndintr that

minis of th-ir.cs are higher Ti'DAY than they were 3 -week ago.

Jfepb Pnilraia, one of the- old Co. L hoys has b'-.on discharged and is now in East. Chicago vts.tini; his many frlejuis P.uirBzn has been in Franre for over a year ari is very glad to set back to familiar sin foundings. I'rank McMahan, brother to ( hulk

; M'-M.-!iian. formerly w 1 1 h the .'M'l'.h ! rcuiiuion train ex;o., ts to ' ba-k in his home town. i;-i:.- Cir. as,. Thursj day. Brother Chalk snys that the onj Jr !""" i hi brother e v.-.r h;o! a smeU i"f is f po-rt r when he took a

h: ve. Fi.inh is a ro'h on one of Hcie Sam's cru.se;s.

!h

Dr. will s a era in. a n d w

Frank IMrriv, of the Harbor. on he iimonust his many friends rr. Vervis will be discharged li be hack in the Harbor about

V.'l

-ant f p

rerfect ion

!n this

LEA R V on tasting lnc btC caT.r,.)t t0

it that i . is n-ith-i

1

AND our

IF you remove ethics from sioii

a pr''

-I

ONE ho never p rmi anv farther

coorj man is

himself to gi

A cjoop many times you'd have NOTHING left but the srrinning : ton.

-n

THE Ant'-Saloon orcardrati

s t a t c m n 1 s

KEEPS -sendirg pub'.iratii-n

USi

for

ALONG the paTHAN oecasi-o-riif st in a

h e. f tempt at ion allv to swell o

his

PIS, SO LUTE way

k what he'd do

:n t in marr.od.

f be weren't

Tuesday. He spent several months overseas and says in the net war he wan I.? to spe-rd his tune in America. - - -- Word itiik received today by th Hit hers of East Chicago of the arrival of Private Fred Goodwin of the 243rd M. P. U. S. Army, on the sh p Imperator which docked at Hobo-ken. N. .1 . , o.n the Hill day of July Ifuf-. Private Gocdwin traired at Hat tieshurg. -Miss, and sailed for Fran-, e ,,n th- 1 lt'n day of July, 191 S. He landed at Brest, in

l-'rar. -., on the lTfh day of ,!,,lv. 1 r 1 8. He took part in the Anjcntie offensive, and was in many othtr laige engagements.

BAYS $2.11 IS A FAIR PRICE TNPIAXAPOLIS, Ind . July 21. dollars and eleven cents a bushel for wheat is a fair price and grain dealers handling charges are. not unfair, is the opinion of Charles B. Riley, of the Indiana Grain Dealers' Association. Figures on handling costs h.ad been r-sked hy the Indiana Federation of Karn.eis, whosea members assert th farmers are underpaid for their grain. Decisions on an appeal to federal authorities ;S expcted this week.

vc 1 rr.-t

"1 ADVISE EVERY SICK WOMAN To Try Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound."

"I advise every suffering woman to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

AS ; fcoi.-d

- pare n'iy

hut

MEXICO NEEDS HELP. As our soldiers are returned from Europe, and matters in that distracted country become quieter, our attention is turned once more to affairs in Mexico. Little has been heard from our neighbor to the south For the past two or three years, not because the government has become more stable or more widely accepted by the population, but because of the overshadowing importance of the war in Europe. Xow almost every day brings stories of continued upheavals in Mexico. Tt is said that the Carranza government is tottering to its fall, and thai Villa is gaining strength for a renewal of his attacks on some of the principal cities of northern Mexico. It is evident that the coming years are to see but a continua

tion of the guerilla warfare that, since the abdication of against burglary

LESSENING TAX BURDENS. England has already reduced the excess rrofits tax from eighty to forty per cent, and our own congress would do well to consider whether it is wise to discourage business enterprise by oppressive taxes on profits and incidentally curtail production and business enterprise and expansion. The war is over and it is the business of the government to assist as rapidly as possible in restoring normal conditions. Primarily the excess profits tax was intended to increase the revenue of the government and get back from its own over-expenditures on emergency purchases a portion of the extraordinary outlay. England has already instituted policies of reform in taxation which will do much to relieve the pressure upon her industries and business enterprises. We on this side of the Atlantic must adopt the same course or suffer a "slowing down of business enterprise and discouragement of business initiative.

AND we find if hard to

UNDERSTAND ho-the

lot of

men

ORGANIZATION - an -lay

AFTER they've fr. w a n T c '! .

m a 1

ever th i t h

IT Is a mean old cus who says HE'D 1 :k e to see the tills WEAR rr.ore clothes and less talcum rOWDER

;hi be a pood nlin for u all to ,

IT 11-i

s r i k a WHV should a WORK to f'lrni--cii.v to others WHO refuse to u na r.imous.

"Private- VMlliam Sehmuser. Lansing. pot his honorable discharge st Camp Grant and came hoir-.e u r.e vpee t ed. It sure was a surprise. landed July 12 in the United Slates and sure is glad to he home :n dear old Lansing.

lumber of peop;e i the means of exist

work, let's make

Mr. Mary Mrhtiltz. I.unslnr e-d a letter from her sen.

Edward t-chuHz. saying he at Fort Sheridan hospital thought he's get in ; he

i t 1 ward -.he. latter part of : i ; ,-.

recel v

Edward was still and he d isi-harge e Iv

tiih'iMi'i!ll'!!!'ii!ii ii, I impound font has l - Hl Mdone me bo much 1(1 v pJ"y!ljgood. I had female I fir ' ' ' Jiweakness,mflarriroa-

1

1 r,.

tVi'-eon. 'C.i-e?-'T": - ? ' -vis. e . '

If ' 1 !! f i i! i( w'

fv-.

i

Better call up The Times and have it sent to your house every night. Then you'll be sure it will be there.

i Household tiintn

MENU HINT. Breakfast. Stewed Apricots Omelet Hash-brown Potatoes WafHes Coffee Luncheon. Cresm of Potato houp Taked Beans Lettu. e Sandwiches Apriv-ot Whip Tea Dinner. Veal Croouetes Boiled New Potatoes Creamed Peas Strawberry Ice Crc-vn or Perries and Cream with Fany Cakes Iced Tea or Coffee

heapinp tablespconfuls rice, celery or celery salt. Fry onions (cut in cubes) in bacon fat, cook and blanch spajrhetti. wash ric e, cover meat well with 'water (about quart, add rice and cook one hour in saucepan (just simmer), rhen add tomato, onions, celery, spaghetti nrd sweet pepper. Reason with s;:lt. pepper and paprika to suit taste. Mock Duck Take a thick fl.ir; sto.uk. split open, season and stuff vv-.th rood bread dressing. Wrao and

OiirLost dna fcuvd Colurnr s

on it find heio uou

rind what uou he Lost

tion, pains in my sides and painfu'. periods. I suffered for six years and tried many remedies without benefit. The doctor said I must have an operation. I read about Lydia E. Finkham's

Vegetable Compound in the newspapers, and cince taking it I am cured and nave a nice baby four months old. I feel like 2 r.cw woman, and havo recommended your medicine to my friends. I would be rrlad to have everybody know what your medicine did for me, and if any write to me 1 will answer all letters." Mr3. Mary Caliguke, 217 South Main St., Herkimer, N.Y. Every woman at some period or other in her life mav suffer from just such disturbances as Mrs. Califrtire, and if there is no interested friend to advise, let this be a reminder that this famous root and herb remedy has been overcoming these ailmentsof womenf or more than 40years. If any complications exist, write Lydia E. Pinkharn Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of many years' experience is at your service.

TIf ATS DIFFERENT

By Probasco.

tie secure

with

FOR THE MAIN COURSE. Veal Croquettes One cup cold

cord in oblor.o

shape so dressing- cannot pot r,nt. Steam for shout o.n hour ami a half. Take from kettle- brown in greased frying pan. remove cord and serve in meat dish in circle of smilr bo:!rd then butter-nrowr.ee! potatoes, make a gravy of the neat juice, thicken with flour.

Scalloped Potatoes anrf Ham Use

rooked meat, finely chopped, two j the boneless smoked ham for this. rups boiled rice (hot), two-thirds j One thick slice or two ttin ones :s :ups stewed tomatoes, esrjr, one I Plenty for one family. Lay one slice tablespoon minced onion, one table- 9,f ham bottorn of taking dish. c , , j ( over with as manv raw sliced pospoon minced parsley, one and one- tatoes as noedH c;prmkle crped

- - i I"' - v cnw liiv'-'tv4 'i;uiii vii t .1

A CELLAR full of booze is no insurance these davs

tablespoon:? coli water bread crumbs. If a deep fat thermometer is used

for the frying the renuired temperature is 800 degrees F. Mix rice and meat together thoroughly. Add tomatoes, seasoning and beaten epfr. Spread out on platter to coo. Shape into croquettes. Dip in beaten eeg, diluted with cold water, then in bread crumbs. Fry in deeo fat. hot enoug-h to brown a piece of bread in forty seconds. Drain on brown paper and serve hot w-ith tomato sauce. French Chop Suey Three-quarter pound round stake, one-quarter pound fresh pork, cut in half inch cubes, three large onions, one-quar

ter can tomatoes, one-aua-ir box

Pour enougrh milk over it to almost

cover it. Bake slowly for about; onehour or until potatoes are done and have absorbed most of the milk. No salt is needed if ham is quite salty: otherwise a little salt, aUo add pepper to taste. Salt Cod DiTiner Two pounds snlt cod. six medium potatoes, throrj canned whole tomntces. watercress. Soak codfish several hours in cold water, changing once: boil potatccs. cut tomatoes in halves, drain, dredge with flour and saute in butterine. Wipe off fTsh and broil until brown; serve on a hot platter in a border composed of alternate potatoes and tomatoes, with small bunches of cress placed at intervals; serve

HA , HA : I GOT OFF EASY - THE Vv.'FE" S IN THE COUNTy

AN 'I HVDJ"T A THING TO 0X3

TON 1(3 KX niT THAT OW

i3op.es he to jcatm'..:

braghetti, one-quarter sweet pepper, with drawn butter sauce.

C I'M SORftVij COME ON A)W j Pg-OMISET) TO THE HOUSE: TO TAic. Mvl A WHILE. THIS i WIPE. "CO THEjIi rvEiNtc-.' ! movies: Y

f&Y) 1 1 ' JULY 1 V ." 'J I " " "