Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 35, Hammond, Lake County, 29 July 1919 — Page 4
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THE TIMER. Tuesday, .hilv 20. 101H.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING a. PUBLISHING . COMPANY. The Lake- County Times Dally eicept Saturday end undy. cuii'ica i tue potofnc in Hammond. June . luo. The Tin East Chlwgo-Tndlane Harbor, dally except unlay Enured at the postotflce in tt Chico, November X. liS. The Le County 1 tmes Saturday and Weekly Edition. Enteral at the pjs'ofnce in Hammond. Fe'jruary 4. IJl1 he Gary Evening: Times rail c-x-cpt Sunday. Entered at the postcfrice In Oafv. April IS. 1912. All under the act of Marin 3. 179. as second-class matter. rOKEIOn ADTXST1STNO OTT1C71. 0. LOGAN PAYNE A CO.. CHICAGO. Hamrtond (private exchange) S100. 3101. 510 (Call for whatever department wanted. Oary Office ' Telephone "I Kasau Thompson. East" ChYcago " --- ToK phone 931 F L.. Evans. Eat Oitcasro TflThcn' 542-R Cast Chlcaro (Ths Timb).. Telephone J?S fndiana Harbor (News 1 Valer)""""' - Telephone V(VHarbor 1 Reporter "1 r'ns "a l"v i Telephone :J Whftlrif Telephone SO-M Crown Point V Z1"1I"- Toiephono 42 If you hsve any trouble retftnr Tsr Trvies maVes com- ' II 'mrrl'dlate!v to, The Circulation Department. TH Tivri will not he responsible for the return of iny Onspllcitei artleTs or leife-s and t'l not nott anonymous eommunlcarione Shrt signed letters of ceneral Interest printed at discretion. 'Otn PATD.trr crac xattow t-b tan att two O TITER PAPEH llT THE CA-TTjrET aIOW. . , WOTICE TO STTBSCFJ-iS. . r you fall to receive your copy of Thu Tinr-s as promptll . 1 have In th past. p!?ise da not thin's It has been 1. C 1 OI" not "'nt "n tl,r,e Remember that the mall V n? 't ured to bf and that complaints ar f - mnv sources about the train and mall ser1. I. . . T,Me8 " Increased ita mulling equipment and s tarn,'st,5' tp reach Its patrons on time. Pe Pfornpt In Jvlfn us when you do nor get your paper and we will act promptly.
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There Is only room for one flag In Lake county ar.d that Is the Stars and Stripes. There is room for only ene language and that is the 'jrguaje of the people of the United States.
BREAKING THE HEART OF THE WORLD. President Wilson declared in his senate speech that If we do not adopt the covenant of the league of nations he brought it home, without reservation or amendment, we will "break the heart of the world." There is tome discussion as to whether this phrase was borrowed from Laura Jean Libbey, or from D. W. Griffith, the movie producer. The New York Sun asks how it is that President Wilson can say this when, a few weeks ago .he was telling Europe that unless the plan were adopted, the heart of the United States would be smashed; that it was the one thing America, with united voice, he being the voice, was demanding. Dropping these ribald floutings, let us take a hurried world census on this heart smashing proposition. The republic of China has a population of four hundred millions. Does anyone claim that China's heart will be broKen if the world does not unite to permanently protect Japan in possession of Shantung? India has three hun dred millions. Does anyone in his senses believe that India will be heartbroken if the territortial integrity of the British Empire is not forever guaranteed? Egypt hai a few mllilons who probably would not vote for this guarantee; there are a good many millions more in Africa. What about Ireland? Public opinion in both the belligerent and neutral countries is more sharply divided than the. people of this country have been permitted to know. There has been no such popular discussion of the question in the Latin American countries as to permit a showing of sentiment. The people of Australia. Canada and New Zealand cannot be said to be by any means a unit; there is strong opposition in all these countries. Who knows whether or not the heart of Russia, with her hundred millions, will be smashed by the changes in the covenant? How preposterous then, the oracular statement that the world's heart will be broken unless the senate of the "United States adopts the world constitution brought hoir.jby Mr. Wilson without the dotting of an "i" or the crossing of a 't": Mr. Wilson has no means of knowing that he speaks the truth in the matter, and there are numerous evidences that he does not. It is true that the hearts of some Of the European and Asiatic diplomats With whom President Wilson was closely associated may be deeply disturbed if he fails to make good his promise to deliver the United States senate. But that the world as a whol'. or the majority of the people in the world, will feel a thrill of anguish if the sacred covenant is changed, is as untrue as the assertion that the re.st of the world Is ready to ccept our "moral leadership" in the league, once established. We have had various manifestations of national jingoism and "blow-hardism" in the world ? history, but th assertion that the world in general accepts the doctrine ef our moral superiority, "our" being used to mean Mr Wilson's own moral leadership, is more offensive to th rest of the world than any other exhibition of this kind heretofore publicly made. The moment we embroil oui selves In every world quarrel, we lose all credit for that disinterestedness which heretofore honest commentarians the world over have been Willing to concede to u?, and we will be accused of a desire to use our power o meddle In and control the affairs of other people.
carrying out the intent of the eighteenth amendment rigidly, bu' inoffensively, save to those who are boot on nullifying it. And such persons have no rights in pur u:ng that illegal course. There are two things to be done by the prohibition statute: One is to define the prohibition; the other is to provide methods of enforcement. Prohibition is best defined by denning the thing to be prohibited. As intoxicating liquor is the thing it is right and proper to draw the line against any liquor that intoxicates. The limitation of .one-half of one per cent of alcoholic content is strictly In accord with the intention of the prohibit io amendment. It is in line with the profession;- and understanding of the whole movement. It is what everyone should have expected, and as a matter of fact did expect. It is not an exaggeration of the principle; anything el.-e would be an evasion and a nulliflcat ion. Indeed, we do not see why anyone should complain of the definition. To the anti-prohibitionist it should be especially welcome as really forcing the issue on the pub-
i lie. The 2.75 beer, as many drinkers know from many j months' trial, is a nauseous beverage, probably ruinous
to health. It lacks sufficient alcohol to counteract the effects of the sourness and the ferments that it contains. To persons who crave alcohol it would surely work much harm, as they would be likely to use larger quantities in order to get adequate stimulation. On the other hand, the concession of this mawkish Stuff would inevitably prevent a real test of the effects of prohiibtlon, whether material or physical. A stimulation of the social and recreational effects of conviviality would be kept up. Economic and financial c.onequences would be obscured. If there be anything experimental about fhpresent new departure in sociology the meaning would be blurred and the popular judgment obscured by the halfway application of the principle involved. On the other hand again, the elimination from the law of vexatious features, personal searches amT invasion of the privacy of homes is both wise and just. It prevents the law from becoming an instrument of fanatical persecution. It places the issue of universal non-alcoholism .-quarely on its merits, uncomplicated by offense against privacy and personality. As a weakening of prohibition itself the relaxation is neglible. Few persons will have any store of liquor to speak of and still fewer a reserve that will last more than a few months. It cannot be said that the good features of the law, balancing strictness with good sense, are specially cue to the wisdom or sense of right by the dry element. Many vicious enactments have been proposed and mech destructive nonsense talked. But. on the whole, a good average result has been reached. At least, if it becomes final, the people will have a chance to decide on what prohibition really means and whether they realy want i' in performance, without being provoked or lured in'o putting side issues above the main question. THE CAUSE OF FRICTION. One reason may be found for the racial troubles in this country that have sprung up lately between th
'white and blacks and that is the treatment given the I negroes by the French while they were soldiers in the I A. E. F. The French, both men and women, made much
of the American negro and the tale is not a pretty one. U turned the heads of the blacks, who, as is well known, are very susceptible to flatteries by white people. American soldiers and writers who saw some of the negroes in raris, came home with some sorry tales of the French. Some of the negroes themselves were very much discontented on their return to this country to find that they had to resume their former servial life and would not be permitted to mix indiscriminately with others than their own race. The feeling Is very bitter among the negroes in regard to this treatment and they resent it forciblv.
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Till" prior pacliors seem to be
HAVIN'U .uh a bum time of It THAT what we are afraid of ts that some Ott'JANlZATION will be starting a NAT10N-WIE drive f--r thir bene(U AS they did for the suffering; Armenians. AVE decided n ask our beloved pastor for A TEXT for the day and h scratched HIS head a niinut- and said "Till; prudent man forc'th tho evil and provides an extn t j r . NE thing we have noticed about mtoi IS that nj matter how- old ar.d rackrty they get NOTHING ever hapr'ns to wear out the (I R F; AS EC1TS. THE president of rnn.TTia rays thit r'r h.-rr is not.
INTOXIf'ATINc;. lr.K to
M's probably try-
ADVEKTISE the Isthmus. WE of'n wonder what has become of the o f. boy whoso mother ClIASKH hun down town every ?iturilay atternoon so -his
STSTEIt .ouid fike ttfifhtuti in the kitchen?
b.-ith in the
II" you rl. Jaw
mthinn nctinM man's
SO.IK officer will grab you HI T if you violate nature's law TOU grab yourstlf sooner or later. ANOTHER cor.,1 thine AB'H'T woman's surfratrn jj that a married MAN'S uif in itow h'ame thing. ON t h (jov crnm.rht "I ONIi:n what he's been up to
uffering better half.
PON'T epank a child on Its bad behavior NATURE has provided a EAR better place. TOl' know a sympathy strike IS called a sympathy strike because IT alienates about ten times as JIt'ni sympathy as it excites. WE notice that one legislature tried o have a LAW passed inflating- that eggs be sold by THE round Rt'T If we were framing the law, we would Insist ON their betr.g sold by the sme'.l. TOU see b'fore a man joins himself in matrimony TO some fair damsel he says "I'D better be making some money" AFTER he is married he says "I GOTTA rruake som money." THERE is plenty of hope for the HUMAN race as long as fathers CARE enough for their families TO lug home buckets of ice cream these hot evenings REALIZING as we do that the avrasrr- man HATES to carry any package HOME since prohibition came. one of our young married girl friends who has
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MENU HINT. Breakfast.
Peel the cucumbers and cut in
slices lengthwise. Eeat the ecs rood rind rim the slices: into tr.-m
merries ana cereal with Cream t Sprinkle on a little salt (and penBacon Omelet Toast; per if desired), and roll in cracker Coffee i crumbs. Fry in hot grease to a
: froiden brown. Serve immediately, i Ur rol!inp;pin to crush crackers.
Corn Fritters j Tea Biscuits Sliced Tomatoes POTATO DISHES.
Luncheon.
Sponge Cake
Dinner.
Tea
l Potatoes au Gratin Cut cold
boiled potatoes into dice and then season with salt and pepper ard place a layer in a baking dish. Sprinkle with fine crumbs and ore tablespoon of finely minced onion, two tablespoons of finely rr.:nc?l parsley. Place in a second laver and
TrQTfii r?v-riTFs season, then pour over the Inst laver ltitu kuiiu. jtWQ cupa of cream 5auce. Sprinkle Raspberry Pudding Two cups with fine crumbs and bake in a mcd-
nuies. on cun of
Radishes' Iced Soup Browned Pork Tenderloin Mashed Potatoes Steamed Squash Lettuce Blackberry Pudding Coffee
flour, one and one-half tablespoons er!,, e oven twenty-five mini
K.nVW t,oo, t.o n.u,lf i uiaio v usiarus nuo or
mashed potatces througrh a fine sieve
tablespoons shortening-, one teaspoon j jnto howl and add or.e cup of n
salt, one cup milk, one egjr, raspber- two well-beaten eyes, one teaspoon ries. of salt and a pinch of mace. Mix Sift the dry ingredients together, thoroughly and then turn into a bakWork in the shortening and mix to a iffclVaVou S S roft doujrh with mil. Add ecrp, well wtes. eaten, last. Spread a thin layer in Potato Dumplings Grate four a buttered pan, cover with an inch larree cold boiled potatoes into a mixlayer of black or red raspberries, and j ing- bowl and add or.e and one-half then a final layer of doug-h. Place1 cups of flour. or.i and one-half teain a steamer and steam for three- j rpoons of salt, one teaspoon of pep quarters of an hour. 'per. one smail onion grated, three Bohemian Cream Four ounces ' tablespoons of fr.ely r.v.'ne.ed parsley any kind of fruit, one pint cream, one egg- and three tablespoons of pelatin, sugar. : water. Mix to a smooth dough and Stone the fruit ar.d sweeten to then form into balls the size of an taste. Pass it through a sieve, add- j egg. Drop into boiling water and ing one and one-half ounces of gela-iccok for fifteen minutes. Lift aid tin to every half pint of fruit. Mix I dram well ar.d serve with cither well, then whip the cream and add brown stew or cheese f a ure. the gelatin ana fruit gradually to it. ! Pour all in a mold, set it on ice or : Aluminum fieanstT. .Dissolve where it is cool; and when set dip ' twenty grams of borax in water ar.d the mold a moment into water, and i a third as much ammonia as ;. ou then turn it out ready for the table.; have of water. Shake we! together. Fried Cucumbers Three good-J apply and polish until the white gl:tsixed cucumbers, two eggs, salt : tering effect is seen that is always on cracker crumbs. I new aluminum articles.
1 s thf women
imment of the neighbor
WHENEVER they see us at the THEATHE in company with our lor.FSoldier Boy News Tony P. Keilinnn. nt Il'fr, who win with Ambulance .. V t'oinis!, in the Canal Zone, jeturned to !, s home Friday even'ng. He has been in 'he jrv ii'c eie pn months. John M. Klein f Hommond. return-
1 .7UPT started housekeeping j WENT iito a grocery establishment the other day j AND a ked for a round of live beets
AS her husband had told her he had no use V R dead ones.
WE don't suprose we eiught to confess it. but the weather
IS so hot that
about old Will Taft's WOmu.ING on the league of nations IT always makes us hotter.
CROWN POINT NEWS Happenings Of A Day In Lake County's Lively Capital.
ed from Bordeaux, France, recently, I
rind epent several days nt liver visiting r;ai'ves and friends.
rrut. John .1. Mnglnot of St. John, an i vi el hoi,-. from everseas last Saturday. 11 - saw twenty-two months frv!ce w t h the Headquarters Uom-
panv. .if'ih Engineers, ten of which
we;., spirt in France. His regiment .-.i:ld for overseas on September 9th. ISIS and landed in Glasgow. Scotland.
ENFORCEMENT OF PROHIBITION. In voting its draft of a prohibition law, the house of representatives will probably please nobody altogether, although, in truth, its mea.-ure ought to satisfy everyone except in one respect. The exception is the refusal of trial by jury' to persons accused under the law. This is a denial by right which no degree of enthusiasm excuses. It is a violation of the American spirit of justice and fair play We cannot believe that the semte will ever allow such a monstrosity of oppression to disgrace the federal statute books. But. apart from this, the law is well framed. It seems o carry out the purposes aimed at in a reasonable way,
YES HE IS NOT. One of our Democratic friends gets hopping mad and writes us a personal letter givin us Hail Columbia and several other things because, according to his tell, we are unjust to President Wilson whom he characterize? as "one of the best friends the common people of this country ever had." God help the common people of this country when they have to depend on Woodrow- Wilson! Mr. Wilson, an aristocrat and a Southerner, is about as good a friend of the common people as the Prussian junkers are of old man Clemenceau. He has nothing in common with them and never did have. His very writings show that, and we recommend to our Democratic friend a perusal of Woodrow Wilson's words that he may becom better acquainted with them and he will change his mind in a jiffy. Mr. Wilson's blue-bloodedness is notorious. His eveiv action
(shows that he is a man of small sympathy and little pa. I tience with the common people. What, may we ask. has j he ever done for them? Where has he ever shown any love for thm? If Woodrow Wilson is a friend of the com
mon people, whose friend was Abe Lincoln, Tom Jefferson and Andy Jackson? HOW DO THEY DO IT? The same people who are telling us how our national rights are safeguarded under the league covenant, would have told you five years ago that it would be impossible
j for a president of th United States, under a law author
izing the secretary of war to take over the railroads as a war measure, to turn them over to his son-in-law, the secretary of the treasury, and that a decision of a federal
court that his course was illegal would attract no attention 1 whatever. When it is remembered that the prst presiI dent of the league of nations is to be the last president iof the independent United States of America, you can
Imagine just how much constiajctive growth the league of nations will make within a dozen years, no matter what we may suppose it is starting with.
RIDING BREECHES PREVAIL AS HORSE HAS HIS INNING
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The Misses Jessie Peuihe.r.e and Carrie Gosch will leave the first ,,f August for a month's tour 1 1 mil irh ehc West, stopping at the principal points of interest in Colorado. Miss G s.-Ji is a teac her
whenever we rend ln the East Chicago s. hoots
Miss Ma Kramer spent the wee.k-end at Michigan City with friend. Mrs. Rose Oonnisons. of Chicago. U visiUng with her sister, Miss Nellie Northing, for the balance of the week The city council has purchased a new fire truck, costing in the neighborhood of II.COO. which will be a great improvement over the apparatus now being used for fighting fires in Crown Point and wi'l do away with the horses now being used Miss Eiillan Schmidt, who has been si lt the past week, has so far re-covered fcs to resume her work in Cie-rk Wheaton s office. Miss Alice Hill spent the week-end with relatives in Michigan City. Deputy Sheriff Daughe-rty took a
era I "-he.'s at thini. but owing to ih,.; number ef peep!" being around his flight for liberty was j-h.-.i t h-. :!. He v. as can --lit. brought tm k and placed i'i jail. As far as could be learned he was arrcs-od fe.r burgiariy nt one ,.c thnTth i.d cities iLid with several o-u.ot -; was btii.g brought h'-re to await tt ia'..
was transferred to
France. Owing t its late arrival ln Fiance the organization never saw anay nerviie at the front hut was held over theie until July 1. 191S, on vro is construction projects.
Irving I hiifken of Hammond thinks
1 feus pretty short after two years in . the army Three suits of clothes and j as many pair of shoes have been! pressed n hrn by admiring relatives!
ar.d he got into the eivies toot sweet
gt. Jimmy Johnmin, one of the volunteer merr.beis of Company L arrived unexpected, and is around vis tIng friends. Jimmy was the oy who lad the vove that made Company E Prst in a s'ns;ng contest !n camp. Vhi;e in Franc he was on the Y. M. C. A. circu't as a performer. Jimmy's mainstay was "Ireland Must Re Heaven for My Mother Came From There." He will render a few nu:n-
fcers at the Ind ana Garden. when tie Chalets of the Blue give their dance rn Wednesday eenmr He has been in the fervice f,,r over thirtv months
hunch of prisoners to the prison at Jeffvrson ille on Monday. Mrs. E. A. louche had the misfortune to fall on Saturday tind break her wrist, slipping on a rug m her home. The injured member was set by thts eieir'.or and she is resting eomfortahly. A prisoner who had been brought from end to Crown Toint to be put in jail, made a quick getaway on Monday night .about 5 o'clock trving to elude the of. I:cers with whom he was in charge. He ran down the alley alMig the Rarthol---muc bakery, the officers discovered him and save him a uuick chase, firing sev -
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EAD
Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take
GOLD MEDAL
The netior.al remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it is an enemy of all pains resulting from kidney, liver and uric acid troubles. All druggists, three sixes. I for h nune Gold Medal on ererr fees end accept m imitation
TERRIBLE TESSIE
By Probasco.
Fonr transports, bringing- home 12,332 American troops. sailed from Hrest on July twenty-fourth for New York, the navy department announced this afiernoe.n They are The Santa r.anla with l!."r'; the Juiia Lu'kenbaeh with 215S nnd the Texan with 2141. all due August S. and the Mount Vernon with "7?.". du July SI.
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AN Knglishman drown the other day when he swallowed a glass of beer "the wrong way." Another vindi cation of prohibition.
COUNT Iyarolyi is said to be on his The more the merrier.
way o America
EVKX a .275 ba'ting average hasn't much kirk.
3c!!e Baruch. daughter of Bernard Baruch, taken at Islip horse show. The Victory horse show, held under the auspices of the Islip Pole club, at Bayshore, L. I., is attracting the society folk from Newport tc Washington. The photograph shows Belle Bnruch, daughter of the wellknown "IJarnie" Baruch. arrivinr at the track in her car. Although driving her car. Mis-j Baruch is wearing a riding habit.
Mr. nnd Mrs. I'lmide illittan of C 1 Point, received word from their son.
John Claude, who has been in the f.erv ice in Mfxii.fi, that he had been notified that he would receive his discharge the first week of August and will return hom at om-e. The Mu'h and Tent .i-thlrd Infan-
try regiments enmplete. of the Second j Division sa;led from Hrest on July 3. j aboard 'he Prineeni Materkrt nnd the j V'rgini.tn respectively, and are due at I Newport News August 3. the war de-jpai-tnient announced this afternoon. I T!i Minnes-tan with 1,931 officers Jand men and the Santa Clara with
1.672 sailed e-n the same date and are due at New Orleans August 21 and New York August 31 t e.pect i ve!y. The tour transports carry a toia of 11,377 troo;.
IP IT HADNT 6EEN FOO TESSET, MR. "THOHPSON Ml6-fT HAVE EMJOVO THAT LITTLE MOTC. TPtP LAST SXJK&bY
1 know why papa
TXON'T TAk-fL OTP HIS GOAT
"TO HELP VOL FIX THE
f? MR?. 35AV1S HE'S
v50T A Biff HOLE.
HIS SMlpT !!
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HANK and PETE
PTE HAD TO BLAME IT ON 6OME0ME EL&E By KEN KLING
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JNTil VAC TglGS TO pAUiK IT-
