Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 56, Hammond, Lake County, 22 August 1919 — Page 4

Pfljre Four.

THE TIMEa Frirlaw Auirust SI, 1919.

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

The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofnc In Hammond, June IS. 1906. ' Th Tfn.rs East Chlci go-Tndlann Harbor, dally except Sunday Entered a the postotflce ia East Chicago. November IS. 1913. The Lake County Times Saturday an1 Weekly .edition. Sintered at the postofnea in Hammond. February 4. 1914. The Gary Evening Times Dail except Sunday. Entered at th postefrlco in Gary. April IS. 1913. All under the act of Alarch 3, 1S79, as second-class matter.

rOHEIOS APVXBTISINO OTTIC. PAY.VE & CO

O. LOGAN

liammond (private rxchanue) 31f!0, 3101

(Call for whatever department wanted.)

CHICAGO.

Hurv Office "THphone 137 Nassau & Thompson. East Chicago- .Teltrhon 9?1

L. Fvans. Esst Chtcaen Tlnhnni- 54?-Ri

East Chicago (The Times) Telephone 385 Indiana Harbor i.Vews Dealer) Telephone I !'"nfl Harbor (Reporter and Cl3sAdv.)I Telephone WhWiiy s. Telephone SO-M ( Crown Point Telephone 42 1 f vou hve any trouble rettlne Tnr Ttmfs rtwltts com- 1 plaint Immediately to the Circulation Department. j Tub Times will not he renponsiMe for the return nf an- j unsolicited articles or levfe-a and will not notlep nnonv-i

tnous communications. Short signed letter? or general Interest printed at discretion.

LA'S0SJrAJI?-TTP CIRCUT.AT70W THAV ATTT TWO OTHXa PAPEE3 IN THI CALUKXT BrOIOIf.

-, . NOUCB TO SUESCMBEBS. It . '? rrC''lve JOJr ropy of Thb Ttmws as promptiervi ,J n"v"n' on tlme- Remember that the mall Sice Ti ?rlnv sources aho"t train und mail sert I'trtZFJl T!MES h,8S ln"reased its mailing equipment and rromnr ln?rr,e!!,ly t0vreach ,ts Patrons on time. P. we will act" promptly3 WhCn yU d n0t K6t 0ur aper n

CIVILIAN AUTHORITY DISREGARDED. It has been the rule of strikes lately that the civil authorities have not been able to prevent disorder and rioting. That is Hamaiond's only reason for sending a plea for state troops. It was seen that the police and eheriffs could not control the strikers when they violated an injunction granted by the federal courts. At Argo, Cudahy and other places this has been the experienced Look at what happened in Olean, N. Y. These .are some of the things that Olean watched during the rioting when twenty men were injured and thousands of dollars worth of property was destroyed. They saw Mayor Foster Studholme bombarded -with rotten eggs and cans of soup until he was literally covered from head to foot with the ill-smelling stuff. They saw Sheriff R. T. Mallory stand heloless wfcil.

lion to detail ami judgment in driving and handling the'

car which brings ihe cost of operation down. And it is a fact that nothing breeds this necessary care quite as rapidly nor quite as well as the practice of carefully checking up on operating expenditures. The items which tell heavily on operating costs are the "fixed charges" depreciation, insurance and license fees. These are termed "fixed charges" because they remain the same regardless of the amount of use the car is put to. The other items which mu.-T bo considered and which are dependent on the amount of mileage covered are for fuel, gasoline, oil. tires, supplies and repairs. If automobile owners could but realize the full measure of increased efficiency and insurance against trouble which ther could .-ecure by intelligent attention care, and adjustment to their cars, as outlined in their instruction books, the cost of motor car upkeep would decrease and their satisfaction increase in proportion. The cost of the upkeep of a car depends entirely on the owner. If he uses it carefully and economically he will be surprised at the result. This is the day of the auto. If you have none and can afford one, now is the time to buy. They will never be cheaper. Next year thel will cost more than they do now. Any dealer whose advertisement is in this paper will be glad to advise you and is ready to talk tilings over with you.

I The Passing Show I

FEED AMERICA FIRST. The record-breaking exports for .Tune are the culmination of the policy of the administration, extended ?ver a period of many months, to furnish food and clothing to

the afflicted people of Europe regardless of how our own population was made to suffer thereby. While the president was at the peace conference he gave evidence of his solicitude for the warring nations of Europe, and his astonishing disregard for the welfare of America, when he sent the cryptic cablegram to congress asking for the grant of a lump sum of $100,000,000 for the purchase and export of food. But. that apprbpriaion was but a drop in the bucket to the immense quantities of foodstuffs that

have been denied our own people in order that the Jugo-;

Slavs, the Czecho-Slovaks, and the Alsace-Lorrainers should not go hungry.

That policy of Europe first and America last has been .

the deliberate, individual, personal course mapped out b nobody else but Mr. Wilson himself. Congress clothed the president with full authority to stop such exports from

, the United States as he saw fit. There were no restric

tions whatever put on that grant. His was the power o feed America or feed Europe. He chose the latter course.

:-e the result. The constantly mounting

and now we

cost of living has been a continuous warning of what was J

coming, but Mr. AVilson remained deaf to the cries of distress from his own country, and turned his ear only

id that came from Europe -where he

his striker-demitv sheriffs fra-emd wtti-, to the entreaties for a

strikers and participated in the rioting, a'ding and abet- onvned for seven long months. ting the strikers in their assaults on the men employed Now he seeks 10 have C0E5ress pul1 his chestnutf to take their nl.nreo . out of the fire. In effect he says to the senate and hous;-.

t -n-ii I -v-nn sec what a strait we are in. Find a

A. Dempsey struck

on the jaw and felled and also hit with small shot. And all this they had to tolerate. They were powerless until the state troops arrived.

solution." I:

WHENEVER we are ruzzlcd at the attitude of THE tobacco reformers VB always wonder when a lending reformer

GOES to heaven WHAT improvements he will Institute first. "WE suppose after the strenuous efforts THAT some congressmen make IX serving the people In their lorif? Prince Alberts THET wonder why on earth SOMETHING doesn't harpen. CHILDREN are great Institutions and THE only trouble is that a EOT of them seem to have DISCOVERED tho fact quite early in life. AFTER viewing our esteemed friend T II EDA BAR A In her version of Salome IN the dance of the seven veils WE suppose she did it just to refute the CHARGES of some of her nasty critics WHO pay that she has never anythinK on. ABOUT the best a man can hope for from his wife IN recognition of his earnest efforts TO entertain the company IS that she won't say an thing worse THAN that his stories are longwinded. A PEDESTRIAN in these automobile

days SEEMS to have about as much consideration SHOWN him as an innocent bystander DURING a strike riot. MR. BURLESON may have a PERFECTLY clear conscience BUT we imagine close observers

THE DAY OF THE vAUT0. In the advertising columns of this newspaper today are numerous advertisements of the automobile industry and its associated equipment. This special edition is but an evidence of the great interest taken in autcmobiling. The automobile industry several years ago showed its greatest activity in the spring. As summer waned and winter drew near, interest slowed, but that is so no longer. The auto industry is now an all-year-round industry. Cars have reached such perfection that they are always ready for us, no matter what the weather. In fact, the auto is more of a winter necessity than It is in summer and hence the auto business is as brisk now as it was in early spring. Perhaps you've often heard it said that it's not the first cost, but the running costs, that tell when it comto owning an automobile. Mayhaps, also, on hearing that remark you have mentally ejaculated: "Oh I don't know, !t does not cost me so much!" and let it go at that. But do you really know what it costs you to operate your car? True enough, the cost is not so much balanced against the service the car renders you and the recreation it affords you, it is a mere trifle. It is interesting to note, however, that scarcely one motorist 1n one hundred has any idea of the exact, cost of operating his car. It is also interesting to note that given cars of the fame make and model, and granting arso that fuel and Cil prices are the same per gallon, one car will cost a great deal more to operate than the other. As a genera' rule it's more or less a case of individual care and atten-

congress fails to retrieve the country in a w days' tim-. from the blighting effect of the months of Wilson misrule, then we will hear the president crying, "It was up to u Republican congress and they failed. Elect a Democratic congress and me and we will set everything to rights." But since the campaign of 1915, when the people were buncoed by "He kept us out of war," they have been accustomed to draw their own conclu.-ions from the official acts of the executive, and have already, in their own minds, fastened the blame for present conditions where It belongs.

MORE BUCK-PASSING IS NOW ON. The administration and near administration papers are now indulging in some cheap gabble about the failure of the new congress to "do anything." This amounts to a confession that the party in power for th past six years has made a mess of things and it is necessary to do something quick to pull the country out of a hol-j. There would have been a chance for congress to do something beside pass the appropriation bills if President Wilson, in fulfillment of his plain duty, had called it into session five months ago. Now the senate is called upon to consider vital international questions, necessarily to the exclusion of domestic questions. The attempt, to pass the buck is characteristic, and the extent to which the correspondents fall for it shows how wide-spread is the control of the administration over the channels of information that flow from Washington.

WILL detect a tinge of forced AND nervous gayety in his manner WHENEV ER he comes in personal CONTACT with the cold and dispassionate M It. WILSON who will probably LOOK at him as if he were only hanging AROUND on sufferance.

UP to the hour of going to press we , ha-, e. i LOST all hopes of getting a croix de S gu-rre i

l-'CIt .ill the back-breaking work we PUT on our war garden for two yeais WHEN a woman HAS In ( n shown through a house

THAT is much larger and finer than!

ii n y SHE can ever hope to have SHE says: "Well. I'd hate to buy the rugs for it." THE hoy who is father to the man ACTS like a step-father more than IF some pretty girls we know were to die - ANYTHING else. QUITE suddenly about all that COULD be put truthfully on their tombstones "THEY wore lovely earbobs and DANCED the shimmy well." IT seems as if the class of 41-40 IS not to he called out after all, to do militia DUTY at th? Standard and thus one ot THE dear girls who lives nearby AND whose hand we love to ela p NOW and anon WILL miss an opportunity to kiss a real HERO THOUGH we do not doubt but what

SHE will find plenty of other opportunities.

iwrwnm'rmriivmBTmwr'' 1:1 rn miiilin nfir-im iri m 1

Voice

Of The People

C. 8. Feature Service., Inc. EEEAKFAST Cherries Bacon Rolls Oatmeal Scone Coffee LUNCHEON Egg and Lettuce Salad Brown Bread Sandwiches Iced Tea , Tapioca Cream - Sponge Cake DINNER Mutton Croquettes Baked Tomatoes Mashed Potatoes Romalne Salad Elackberrles with cream BF-EAKJAST Baked Apple Omelet Cornbreaii Coffee LUNCHEON Cream of Spinach Soup Croutons Fruit Salad Thin bread and butter Gingerbread Iced Chocolate DINNER Veal Loaf String Beans Risotto Sliced Tomatoes Chocolate Cornstarch Pudding Cookies Mi sceHaneous Recipes PLUM BUTTE3 Select deep purple plums. Remove pits, place m preserving kett.e and add enough water to prevent scorch lng Cook slowly until skins burst and juice runs freely, then press through colander. To eacfc quart ot cooked plums allow a pint of heated sugar, ground cinnarron and mace to suit the taste and s-mrr.er. stirring frequently, until very thick. Be care ful that it does net scorch. CANNED CORN Remove husks and silks Place ccbs In boiling water fcr ten minutes. Im merse qu?ikly in cold waien Cut the corn from the cob with a thin, sharp

By JOE PENNINGTON. biaded knife. Pack in jars. Add,one level teaspoon talt to each quart jar and enough hot water to flil. Bon gently for three hours; set aside until the next day. Then boil 1 hour more. Remove jars. Tighten covers. Invert to cool and test for leakage. Wrap with paper and store. DANISH CUSTARD 2-3 cup sugar, carmeiied 3i cup sugar 5 eggs 1 quart scalded milk H teaspoon fait 1 teaspoon vanilla Put two-thirds cup sugar in agate pudding dish, plate on hot part of range and stir constantly until sugar is melted and a syrup of light brown color is formed; then set pan at once

!in larger pan of cold water to stop

cooking and iet stand about one mm ute. turning the pan to allow caramel to coat sides as well as bottom Evjt eggs slightly, add plain sugar, sca.d ea miik, sa'.t and vanilla, and strain ed into pan lined wr.h caramel. Set in pan ot hot water and make until firm, which may be dtermined by inserting a sliver knife rn center ot ca tard. V.'hen cc!d custard may returned out. and the carmeiized suga' will surround it like a sauce. SAVORY STRING BEANS iTo be sirred as a main duh 'Kitho"' m'at ) Cook beans in past enough w'ater cover unti! verv tender ana erv? n i

i sauce, made cf two si-.res of t.acon c lln.ur.v squares ar.d cr-ou '-viil or j smali m.nced onion unit: the tac;.:, is crisp ar.d the or.'.'.r. i.sh ei.e--.'-I Stir in one cupfuj v...'iA a:.i aj "boiling point, add one tabiespoonfu. ifornsstarch. dissolved m a verv int -ro'.c milk. S'lr until we!', cooked an i (thick, season w-:tr salt pepper su paprika. Serve with r,asiea r.owr..-' jrotatoes, a saiad anl a dessert ! I luncheon or airin r

TERRIBLE TESS

Bv Probasro,

CONGRESS, unable to do anything for hard now promises to repeal the tax on soft drinks.

'likker,-'

THE new prosecution of the meat packers should be

conclusive. Bring out the truth.

DEtTtES THE STORY. Editor Times: Tho "Association Opposed to National Prohibition" is flooding the newspapers of the country with tho charge that the million-dollur fund which the W. C. T. V. is seeking to raise, while ostensibly for the items named in its budget. Chill Welfare. World Prohibition. Women In Industry, Moral Education and Americanization, is really to be applied to finance a campaign, for an amendment to the constitution prohibiting the manufacture, sale and use of tobacco. In reply to this accusation of securing money under false pretenses. Miss Anna A. Gordon, th-5 national president, gives out lie following statement: Headquarters National W. C. T. U. Evanstan. Illinois. August . 1919. The general officers of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union in reply lo the statements issued August third by the "AsM.n-iat ion Opposed t' National Prohibition" stair: First: Our organization is not in a federal amendment campaign against tobacco.

S.coivl: The money received in the Jubilee Million Dollar Drive is not beimj laisvd to conduct such a campaign but will be expended for the purposes named i:: the budget. Third: W are In an educational campaign ;igainst. toKieoo and have been in such campaign for more than thirty years. In this campaign we have the sympathetic co-operation of leading educators and Sunday School workers. Th- Woman's Christian Temperance Union since its organization in 1874 has proven its worth and has justilted the confidence and esteem given it by the people of our country. In every campaign which it has conducted or In v. hieh It has had a part its work has been done openly and in the future w!'l

! be carried on in the same way.

By this fale barge- this Association hopes to be able to lessen the influence of this great organization of Christian women, and to cripple its efforts to rai3e its .l-.ihilco Kuinl, hut the work of the organization t. too well known for this tc eflwt it v-ry seriously in Indiana. CULL A J. VAYHINGER. r res idem Indiana W. C. T. U.

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