Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 64, Hammond, Lake County, 2 September 1919 — Page 4
Pcge Four.
THE TIMES.
Tursilay. Sritoinr J. 1 0 1 ' . . . . faift . . 1 "'jHL"';
I (unlimited What couldn't the ultimate goat o it' lie 'tried? IVit Hftei all maybe the goat will always be h
i goat. It Is hard id change nature.--St. Paul Pioneer
BY THE LAKE COUNTY PKiriTlNU a ruDLisniini
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
COMPANY.
ross
A QUESTION ANSWERED. A iii.M- .t.ks what the demands made by the Iron ami S'eel Worker of Gary of lh 1". S. Stfol Corpora Hon are'' The ili-ma tuls of th workers of all the biu
Ths Enke County Times Daily except fU.urday and Suntsy EnU'ted at the posloftlce in Ilanmm.io. Juu I. 1 ". Th( Tin .es Fin ("hlcipi- "n 1nn Hirhor, datly except Sinliv F.nuved at the postotf'ce l: Kart Chicago. Nov ml.fr IS. 1J1S.
Ib I.fik Count-." Times Siturd-v rd Weekly coition. si corporations ate as follows:
Enifrfi at the .vis of flee 'n Hj mmnn.I. i-uruwry f. un. ( The .ry Evening Tines- lull ex-opt Sunday. En-I tered -t th ;ost. .f.'icf in Cary. pr'.l IS. 1912. 1 All nude, the -ict if March 3. 1ST'., as sec.ond-clns J matter.
G. I.O'
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FOREIGN ADVTRTISINO OTTXCM. AX PA I N CO
.CHICAGO.
rr.rn.T.i ( private .-x.-nnritc ) "lti 3101. 3102
fCa',1 for uhat.'Vr ! pii-tmviit wanted.) Ctry Offlrc , TriThon 13i r.sai Thfmp.w. East Obionce Td phon 931 F I. Kvuns. Enit riii.-ai Tel. -phone 542-R
Et Ct!1-3-o (Tub- - .wo Tjlenh.inp 8 3 !
Tji tt. u . - . .'. t i, ... . n I
i'"Ji.Tii ii'ir.'Li; l..'vs 1 ,J t r I icccro o
Whittr.g- Telephone SO-M Crown Point " Telephone 42 j If you hv any trouble retttnr Trip Times mnkts com- ; plaint trnrpi;.ite1v to the Circulation Department, i Ths Times will not bp rt-spormiMc for the r.-tnrn vf n? ; nnsoMcite 1 articles or lette-s and will not notlee nnoni j nous communication". Short fdgT.ed letter or general j Interest printed at discretion. j
LASO-ltR P AJT)-T7T CXRCTTX. ATTOJT TTT A.JT AWT OTHES PAPIB3 IN T3T CALTHMCXT UEQIOIf.
TWO
I. Ivit:bt of i'iH--t ivf- barpaininc. Knur- tat litriii of all nton discharged for union ail it .-, with pa for (imp lost H. The S h ur da . 4. One daw rest in seven. ( r. Abolition of 24 hour shifts. f. Inci'caM's in was sufficient to guarantee American ptsndards of living T. Sianilatil scabs of u'spes for all crafts and classifications of workers. 5. Double rates of pay for. all overtime work and for work on Sundays and holidays. !. Check-off system of collecting union dus and assessments. lit. Principles of seniority to apply in main taininir. reducing and increasing workers' forces. II. Abolition of company unions. 12. Abolition, of physical examination of applicant? for employment.
U. S. SOLDIERS FIND CHINESE FAMILY OF 16 LIVING IN SQUALID HUT
WHEN WILL THE TIDE TURN? Presently we will begin to save again, if
for no
tei lBt fei r5 v5.
. , NOaXCX TO STTESCSLTBERS. If you fall to receive your copv of Thi? Ttmts rroir.rt- ! as you have In ths post, please n.t thlrh It r-r ber !e?t or was not went on time. Ef member that tho unit eervic-rt ! n , t t t 1 1 . . . f. A . i -v. . . . . .
reneral from many sources about 'the trim ar.. "mll er- I soundt r reason than that we may spend again jit some 1CtriJinr laLot J? .!.,s maUlnar '"pment anA future time. We must by saving and production gradu- " Pirivinar earnestly to reach its ntmti .,n time P
prompt in advising: us when you do not get your paper and i ally get back into the national stocking that excess of we wwl act promptly. , . . .
currency now circulating ana wmcn is at once the incentive and the means of extravagance. It Is hard to convince the boys from the Bar-Z that they ought to put jy a little out of their rolls to go home on. but they
i usually see the wisdom of the advice before the last j yellow back is gone. We think it's going to be that way j with the country. We don't know when, but ultimately i somebody, shame-faced enough probably, and first look- ! ing all around to be sure nobody is -watching. Is going j to save and hide a dollar. Saving is catching like everything else and everybody'll be doing it next. The j realization, now getting home to many, that we are
spending money not made by extra work and production.
; but our savings lent to the government and which we
are being taxed to pay the interest on. will help the process. 'That is how. If not when, we think the circl is goinsr to be broken and the dog stopped from chasing
'.NV; '.Vlv-),' l . Jr
4 i'
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I'NTIl. h- can start on 1 lint M )N';-V!NDKI t-.ikmc tr.p. TIIK Rr-at trouble for sop.i ef Mil'l'i r bo-s iy that
tr'P in Krv
,M 'I'!'. R jromg nvr th
they .;)-(-. io Ct'MIC b. mo and bej-m at t'v- b--
Better cail up The Times ar.-i
1 hav it sent to your house every
night. Then you'll be sure it wi'.l be there.
J
his tall Kansas City Star.
COAL CRISIS ON WAY.
If the people have neglected to buy their coal sup
plies for next winter because they took the warnings against a coal shortage to be propaganda by fuel interests desiring to sell coal, they should be fully disillusioned by Mr. Hoover's statement that the whole world faces a winter with inadequate supplies of coal. The British mines have not been producing enough
for domestic needs and countries which formerly relied;
ju c-iifiaiiu iui uijj.ui? ai f viii; 10 ioo!t io America i
for at least part of their needs. Rut this country is little better off than England, for the fuell administrator
declares that. America faces a shortage next, w inter of I
48,000,000 ton. and to meet our own needs production at the mines must be increased at least 2,T7o. ooo tons a week. To add to the seriousness of the situation, many aliens who have been engaged in mining are returning to Europe, while labor unrest is preventing the maximum output by mining forces available. By moving the coal from the mines during tho summer and keeping up the demand, production will be increased, it is believed, and the danger of shortage and widespread suffering next winter minimized. If the majority of consumers wait until fall or winter, however.
to buy supplies, when railroads are congested w ith crop j people a chance to govern themselves, his league unmovement, when the coal movement is normally at its dertakes to validate the settlements that have resulted
height, and when cost of producing and shipping coal is from all the monarchical intrigues of the past
higher than in summer, there is no way to avoid
ruericiin soldier and family t..- I:
i; . u i e winch the phoiegraph was taken.
The Passing Show I
1
V::
to heur
AVK haven't li'irl re. u h of prime lately
HUT then who va
c. p. ? A I'OOK girl tr.iy n;t be able KIDK around in a limousine 1 DOKsVT hs.ve to wor!r
flie. ts loved f-
t ho crov. n
WHETHER money.
PERPETUATES WRONGS.
"Under articles 10 and U of the treaty," ?as Sen
ator Mrffinr.irk of Illinois "th -rnntr dr.no in itli . THE more, we look ner conirrr
and the fruits of the selfish and perfidious policy of the THE more we are convinced' tin-
past are guaranteed to the wrongdoer." Those are the j an 1
paragraphs under which the league of nations will guarantee existing territorial boundaries and political arrangements. In epite of the frequent declarations of the President that the war has brought out a new order of things, marking the end of imperialism, and giving the
tl.e
sV
GOl.N'iJ to he when they grow up. foMK of our very swretest Kiris have do s-'
Mn'II wa.kirg w:is "t.
THAT v, i : h
nee tf.e ear strike
expect to he overwheltncd
Ql'EElKS in thus what is the
ma:1 shorttv arking
liI'T hiiiK to do to reduce Till: c-ilvr-s.
vv . ri:
to c,o sr'n-.erh:
reduce
OPTIMISM that ceuses men TO hunt rabbits In the business district
AXP plant orange grove? in Ali-l:a
ONE reason why we are not porter tlv8 n VCi: n re e i n ip that for ;t
Xr.MKKfi of ears V.'E bie h-' tt so b;iv v, i ; h our regular work THAT we haven't had time to buy ANT beautifully enrraved stork certificates.
b;i;ii: GLi4r.irvou began y
' t-V (s2"S p Better Babies
The exre-rr-.t mother ewes it not only to her5?.t to prepare for an easier birth, tut to her child who should h stror.eer, healthier and more rebus-. throuch her careful and intelligent us?; of
t
llscd by 3 Generations At all Dru.sts. r-pccla! Eootlcr on MotHcrhcod and Tatsy fr--
HUMAN much
r at u re
t
AXP we fuspeet that our I'RESU'EXT wantel us Judgment
su.-r end !
DE LUXE TtiEATE
HAMMOND NEXT WEEK fiandcy. Tuesday, V.ecnezrJay, Thursday Mary Pickford in "The Hoodlums7' We tliink it's the gre-cct clianctsr study in Mary Pickford's c:i.c cirser
THAT'S DIFFERENT
By Probasco,
shortage and much higher prices. And with Europe clamoring for coal from America, no one would be safe in predicting to what level prices will go. The -wise consumer laid in his supply of coal earl5 this summer, but it is not too late to exhibit some evidence of wisdom by covering next winter's fuel needs new. These are what the fuel authorities declare are "cold fact3 about a burning question."
THE ULTIMATE GOAT. It's a rare newspaper you can pick up nowadays which does not inform you of new strikes being called or voted on somewhere. Everybody is striking except the poor old ultimate goat, who has never had sense enough to form a union and goes on trying to be a good citizen, paying every added extortion meekly and humbly, and bearing all the burden of tho world's troubles. Some day the ult-'mate goats may wake, up and then we
PREDICTS DEATH OF CONSTITUTION. "The Constitution was founded on the law of gravitation." wrote Mr. Wilson in his "New Freedom." "The Government was to exist and move by virtue of the ef flciency of 'checks and balance'." "The trouble with the theory is that government is not a machine, but a living thing. It falls, not under the theory of the universe but under the theory of organic life. It is accountable to Darwin, not to Newton." "It is modified by its environment, necessitated by its tasks, shaped to Its functions by the sheer pressure of life. No living thing can have its organs offset against each other, as checks, and live." In other words, in the opinion of Mr. Wilson, the Constitution cannot live. When he entered upon the Presidency he took an oath to "preserve, protect and defend" the Constitution. But it is a poor defense that
REFORM a m.-in by SEXPIX'r. him to con-.-r. .-. AFTER all. whit gteater joy ia Is there to be
! the
l.
I.fe
FOUND some
than
l u nr. in c up araiiist
PEEinilTFUI. co very
nnd
iir.xr'
d.s-
Ai:i: MAETTN is crki-.st ' ii n w inter ! op FOK low s!.o3. THE reason the spiri" of MORTAL should not be rrouj j r E'' A U? E it !i -isn't broken down under the.
AS we found e.te rday wht'e r"-. rains through OUR desolate p-ird' r, and findnir the re RESIDE-: our lone cucumber THE one with th -Atrip ap.l curvature, of the fp!';', A. CUTE little tftm.ito wi-h a g;ish in cr.e side WHICH made it leo'.i as if it wi ieughine:
HMH cost cf hvitiR IT is eis to s'-e antom .j--ickir k THAT t'r'i-; country has U iio... s
eeneral
-h of ;
( .cAY VJiFE. AS GOT A
1 LOT CP NERVE TO ASX
HZ "TO CAQCV THIS HLAVY
Pi:kA&r WOMF !'!
APTEIR WftPO CAY AT
TME. OFPlcE ftNO I'M ALU
"ICEOOUT. I WAve To
Do'ou tmink M
A ACrAY MULE.7?
c t'-n'rai sit
a maxim repeatedly demons-rated at the Paris peace conference.
will gee a real union, and a real strike. When a group a man offers who does not believe in his Client's case
of men threaten to "tie the railroads up so tight thev will never run again," the ultimate goats will come right back and quit using the railroads. How would the rail road employes like that? When the landlords raise the rent too high, the ultimate gcats will go on strike and live in tents until the rents come dqwn. How would the landlords like that? When the profiteers boost the price of sugar the-y'll quit using sugar. The possib'iities are
SOME of the relief movements are counter engine trouble.
bound to on
JUSTICE will ...ive to show speed as well as fairness to meet the demand in the food cases.
ITSEI-F to death a'
lion. THE truth is that th' WAS of seme trancrcssors are pretty oft AND that's probably tho reason A EOT of pious folks Insist, en helif -i n p In AND old-fash ior.ed he'.!.
FROM the way tiur.RS 3r
a Jays WE miftht as well bet-in buyinc LITTLE bos dolls to piny uitb AND lh' -i io nrourd r"o: t!.c girls or. the hero's
Mil- ' eace
1
i n s
A.S tb-- w er? in is:bbUl'I.b we see that ir men! s HAVE been resumed
El T -p " !, ve deeid'
in v inoib'.e in w-r. untary eni
W&Xr ; M WZ h A AEMV MULE"
I. I!. 55$lf c5t, ssc'-A
V'-S c-
1 not o throng i
r.E : ru itin c
ITT Land t.
office nee for
as t hi "i seem"
n r '. :: " in ,
ban.!
FIOHTINO with the;
;a n '
Uh
lan
i n tr n o w -
OR t-avfipe I'russlg-i gtiard M'HI-.'H is i! bout th" only ii;3-.j.-ement th it would l rid u AS a n-embrr of the 4 1-46 class to go : to v 'i r. I
AND asking li. J1
m vv h a I
THE was sor.i TilEV m.-ii-.i t. THEN' ibcre jP
d.-ess ri"w.ida i n and n. ; h- n . f-u.iij-h kind "
HOWVCLLBb EI6WT
WHY MENQV- aptetcs a. U(QO
Dv THELOFPite AnjD vou'RETI
All t iRED out voo'QET motgoing TO CAR'V TM05E1 y
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HANK and PETE
'PETE'S RECOVERY SOUNDS DOUBTFUL
iiy hXAl kL
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