Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 32, Hammond, Lake County, 13 September 1919 — Page 4
Pa ere Four. eauju.iLj 1 l
THE TIMES. September 13, 1919
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Entortd at
l'uuea JJaily except Saturday an j
tha pobtoftico In llammoaa. Jun
i no BundAy. 16. 19iia.
The Tln.es East Chloago-Tndiana Harbor, daily except Sunday Entered at the postofSc in East Chicago. November IS. 1913. The Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly .edition. Entered at the jos'.offlce in Hammond. February 4. 114. The Gary Evening Times frail except Sunday. Entered at the postofrice in Gary. April IS. 1H. All under the ct of March 3, 1879. as second-class matter.
roREioN ADTESTisnrc ornca. O. LOOAN PAINE & CO
.CHICAGO.
Hammond (private exchanger S100. 3101. 3102 for whatever department wanted. Gary Of flee Telephone 137 ssau & Thompson. Kast Chicago Telephone 931 .vans- Ea"t Chicago Tf!rh"ie 542-R iast Chicago Th Times) Telephone 383 Indiana Harbor (Xews lealer) Telephone S02 Tnna Harbor (Reporter and Class. Adv.). .Telephone 2 S3 Whitfng Telephone 80-M Crown Point Telephone 43 J.f "v ny trouble retting Tb Trvs makes cornt( the Circulation Department. ,,KJi Times will not be responsible for the return of any onaoucited art cls or ler-.ers and will not notice anonymous communications. Short signed letter or general Interest printed at discretion.
worry, into Influenza and other diseases. Now it may bo well to instruct the public to take proper precautions against the contraction of colds an 1 allied ailments, but it ia doubtful wisdom to insist that influenza is bound to recur in any considerable way or 'that an epidemic is possible, when there may be plenty of reason to suppose thai no such thing is going to happen. The power of suggestion is well known to physicians and psychologists. It has come to be one of the powerful influences in the practice of materia raedica. The persistent suggestion that you are going to have health may actually lead to the warding off of serious diseases in some cases, it is stoutly averred, but whether that be true it is undoubtedly certain that fright produces worry, worry produces weakness and weakness lets in disease. So let us not. discuss influenza nor any other serious ailment until such time as its actual appearance forces us to do so. and even then we should do so calmly and
with moderation. Muncie Press.
Sa5 P;1? CIRCUX ATIOIf THAU AJTT TWO OTBZS PAPERS IN THZ CAI.TJMXT aXTOIOIV.
. NOTTCB TO STTBSCSOTERS. r as voUhflV?nr!;,Xfy.0ur,ccry of The T- " rromptEa?r.h.aV ".Vll Pastl "ot think It hns been
' . - ' 1 1 - i i time.
rvjce is noi ceneral from
vice. The
Remember that the mall
r! " Ued '1 he and tha complaints ara Tivrl, orces about th train and mail aer-
1s KtrlvSrr c u.s msI equipment ana
Y l" cn us patrons rrempt in advising us when you do not get we wia act promptly.
JAPAN PLEASED. According to reports. President Wilron declined to become a patron of the International Anti-Opium Associ- . ' , 11 i . - . 1 1 - . . . . 1 . - nU.i.Al T.. .... . . ! t n "
i ailOII 1Q V Illllit, nilltu Urdu' I'lt-aotu jUiKllirnc iint .
ests," but the presi lent did direct that the American State Department send a letter to the general secretary of that association commending its purpose. Words have been the narcotic administered by Dr. Wilson to the t'nited States for the past six years and now China comes in for a dose. The prescription faithfully adhered to is warranted to destroy national pride.
on time.
your paper
Pa nd
fev lilx ff5
BETTER HOUSEKEEPING. Scores of merchants are interested in the "Better Housekeeping" number of The Times today and make their appeals to the leaders in every household the women. It is these latter who are the bone and sinew of the great shopping public and in these advertisements
CRIME IN THE ARMY. Out of slightly over 2.000,000 men drawn from' all classes in this land and sent overseas as s-oldiers. it is significant of their behavior that only ten military executions for crimes cemmitted abroad were necessary. When it is reirembered that these men were far from home and removed from all restraining influence of home ties, that many of them were taken form the slums, that some went reluctantly, that there should be so few that broke all bounds of decency ia a remarkable tribute to American manhood on the average, for the army wa3 a conglomerate of every race and rank in the nation. It
CARDINAL MERCIER OF BELGIUM, ONE OF "EROTC. FIGURES OF WAR, REACHES U. S.
f
? f - v. 5 S ,e ' . V ' 3
'f-,f -V"r , . - i
No Help From IVIr Wilson
(From th BROOKLYN STANDARD UNION.) One of the newspaper supporters of
the president expresses the hope editorially that he will try to persuade the railroad brotherhoods, who Insist
that the government shall buy the rail
roads, "from the delusions which pos-i sess their minds." "Nobody home." That's the slang used to express empty-headed ness. It cannot be applied truthfully to Mr. Wilson's well furnished brain, but if the implication were to the affect that he had no will power, Sacked courage or the power of initiative when dealing with certain forcs, it would apply to the president. Remember the Adamson bill. He crawled then and, worse still, made the country crawl. The railroad brotherhoods went .to Washington and boldly threatened to tie up the entire business of the country unless the president and his con
gress give them an eight-hour day and a large increase in wages to be paid not by the railroads, but by the people in Increased passenger and. freight rates. No arbitration! The brotherhoods would not stand for any parleyingThey said in effect we are but two million out of more than a hundred million, but the president cf the United
States and the elected representatives
they axe sure to find much to command their attention 1 had ln U l"e best Ur Iana anoras- ana ine worsl were The Beason is here when the home and all its occupants ! not barred if ther met tbe required Ph'slcal standardmust prepare for winter and every line of trade is ready That there were F feW f the Wm iS r?ally aFtonihinSto meet the demands of the householder. We commend I While U is t0 be regretted that any n"rred the record the attention of all of our readers to these advertisements i'of the army' that lt W3S 80 s,ishtIy t'ed is a cause
U you want to save money, deal with these Advertisers Ul ""sl4U,uu'
who are prepared to save you money, and you may win a prize if you read them caretully and write us why you think a particular ad. is the best.
THIS IS AWFUL. The 6trfke of the garbage men of Newark, N". J.. who demand a wage of J10 per day, convinces us that the labor eltuation Las reached an offal state.
THE PRECIOUS CHILDREN. It is a pleasure in these days of storm and stress to eee that our schools march on for another year's fine work in teaching the young how to meet the problems of life that axe to face them in a few years. ' There is something appealing in the spectacle of a school unloading boya and girls with bright and happy faces at the end of the school day, while their parents are occupied in one way and another with the vital and intricate problems of our civic, state and national life. We wonder sometimes if parents are giving thought these days to the fact that the hurrying years are 6lfpping .way and the time will come when these children will face problems that will be nearer solution then than now, and that it may be up to these children to decide these problems. The world seems to be rushing on in an ominous way. There is even something fateful in. the way things are going. . God grant that these happy school children may be given the best of everything there Is in life, for they are only young once and youth. ages rast nowadays.
Other offensea were committed, of course, that received lesser punishment. It is significant of the democratic spirit that ruled in the army that of the officers
subjected to general court martial substantially as great j a percentage suffered conviction as in the cases of the1, men so tried. There seems to be no indication that 1
officers were dealt with more leniently when placed on trial than the men under them. The record of the behavior of the army received commendation abroad and the offiical records confirm the belief that the praise was deserved.
Cardinal Mercier, at left, and Archbishop Httyes of New York, watehin? parade of First division in New York a f :w hours after the cardinal's arrival in U. S. Cardinal Mercier of Belgium, one of the outstanding figures on tha world war, has arrived in the C. S. to personally thank America for the aid piven Belgium. When the Germans entered Belgium and pillaged and ransacked that country the ajred primate called upon them to stop. "If yoa hnve no rerrard for the laws of civilization hie regard for the laws of God," was his word to them. His first public appearance in the U. S. was at one of the many thousand spectators who paid tribute to General Pershirg and his gallant First division in the parade in New York the day tha Lardinal arrived.
DON'T SCARE FOLKS ABOUT I INFLUENZA. Possibly the physicians and health authorities are
wise in warning persons to prepare themselves to resist j "buckler that thrived on doing dirty work for others, Aus-
the coming influenza next winter, but it must have oc-jtria today Is but a remnant, incapable of speaking for
AUSTRIA'S DEGRADATION. The depth of degradation to which the once powerful Austrian empire has sunk is significantly illustrated in the report from Pari3 touching its reply to the peace terms that were submitted some time ago to its delegates. Dr. Karl Renner has formally notified the peace conference that his country's counter proposals are on the way. He might as well have sent the document with the notification. For there is only a shadow of the peace conference left at Paris to receive it. It wasn't worth while 3ticking around on the Austrian business. There will be no duplication of the ceremonies which attended meetings with the German delegation. Vile as the Prussian outfit is. it still commands a small measure of that formal courtesy which ever has existed between the governments of states. But Austria is too insignificant for the smallest pretense of courtesy. "Stick it under tha door," might have been the answer sent to Dr. Renner when his 'notification was read. For there Is Virtually nothing left of Austria and what there is can command nothing of .respect or sympathy. At best a catspaw for Prussia, a pompous swash-
1ITINE WILL HAVE HUGE PARADE SUNDAY
of the ninety-eight millions of Americans not belonging to our brotherhoods must do as we say or we shall cause every railroad in this country to go out of business at once. There will be suffering and Ceatns, and millions of loss. That is nothing to us. We have the power and we mean to exercise it to the full. Against such. a challenge, delivered In the manner 4t was delivered, bo matter whether the cause of the brotherhoods was Just or unjust, any other president, Democratic or Republican, we ever had would have used the whole force of the United States government to Justify its own existence and authority as a representative democracy. No so Mr. Wilson. He succumbed without the semblance of a fight. The president has, so to speak, no mental original jurisdiction when it comes to deciding matters cf great
moment which involve antagonizing .1 strong organization like the railroad brotherhoods or a strong influence of a monarchial and political character such as Lloyd George was able to exercise when at the peace conference he imposed the league of nations scheme with its forfeiture of American sovereignty, as it was originally drawn, on Mr. Wilson. The president won't make - much headway against the brotherhoods.
holds three hundred and fifty thousand dollars in Liberty and Victory loan bonds, which la an unmistakable indication of the tenor of patriotism possessed by the members and officers of the First Catholic Slovak Ladies' Union, and a deed of which European speaking people can be justly proud.
FASHION'S FADS Nothing makes a prettier suit for a growing girl than tweed. Ball tassels finish the soft girdle of some very pretty coats. Dark blue satin and gabardine makt a pretty combination.
Navy blue, black and the various shodes of tan are the fall color. Buttons and girdles are still the moat Important points of trimming;. Children are now more simply dressed than they have ever been. Collars and cuffs are eoetimes laced with ribbon of & becoming shode. Little gir!s' girdles are of narrow rib,bon tied in a soft bo win front. Make the blue serge dress the" foundation of the schoolgirl's "warjfo'ke. There are .many frills and pleating about some of the new evening frocks.
rc von readins
rHATS DIFFERENT
By Probasco;
curred to many rersons that the too. frequent suggestion that influenza will come will have a tendency to produce fright and to aid in some measure to bring about the very conditions that it 13 intended to resist. Muncie physicians say that undoubtedly many persons were virtually frightened into influenza last winter If they bad colds they magnified these until the colds actually developed, through the weakening effects of
itself so that it can he heard. It makes an answer to
the conquerors of th enemies of decent peoples, but it Is merely a whisper of which no notice will be taken save to deny the plans the pleas made. What Austria has been told to do she will do because she is powerless to resist. She hardly exists today and she will not exist tomorrow unless she obeys. It is a hard fate, but a merited one.
!fPEC!L TO THE TIMES) "WHITING. Ind . Sert. 13 The opening of the fifteenth bi-ennial convention of the First Catholic Slovak Ladies' Union of America will be colebrated by a parade which is expected to be the most gigantic ln the history cf Whiting. Fhould the weather be favorable, thousands of Slovaks from the Calumet region of Indiana and the vicinity of Chicago will participate in the parade, which is to start at the Slovak Home at 2 o'clock p. m.. Sunday, September 14. Andrew L. Baran will officiate as gratd marshall. The program for the day is as follows:
10:30 a. m. Pontifical mass at St.1 John's church by Bishop Joseph JI. Kouldelka. 1:00 p. m. The rational officers and defegates of the Ladies' Union and th various lodges and clubs will form in line at the Slovak Home. 2:00 p. m. The parade will commence, headed by Andrew U. Earan. grand marshal. Whiting's police come next, followed by the various lodges from Chicago. Roscland and Pullman, 111., Whiting. East Chicagro, Indiana Harbor and Gary. Next will follow in automobiles Bishop Joseph M. .Kouldelka. Mayor Walter K. Schrage, the clergy, thi nationnl officers of the Ladies' Union, thf deleratc. and more societies. The parade wll lead to the Whiting park where Mayor Sehrae will welcome the delesrates and deliver a brief address for the occasion. Rev. Benedict M. Rajcany wiil welcome the delegates 'briefly in an address in the Slovak tongue.
Mrs. Anna OndraJ cf Cleveland. O., supreme treasurer of the Ladies' Union, will then address the throng, followed by mus e and exhibitions by the Sokals in the art of physical culture. On Monday and continuing through the week, mass will be served at St. John's church and the convention will meet in session at 9 o'clock. Tuesday evening at 7:30 a play will lie staged at the Slovak Home by the Slovak 'children of Whiting and Indiana Harbor, under the supervision of Rev. Clement M. Mlinarovich of Indiana Harbor. Wednesday afternoon at three the
delegates will be given an excursion ln automobiles to the Chicago parka. At six o'clock in the evening they will be served with dinner at Phil Snidt's place. Thursday evening at 8 o'clock & banquet in honor of the delegates will be held at the Slovak Home. Friday evening at 8 at the Slovak Home, a moving picture play, entitled, "The Transgressor," will be shown. Saturday will mirk the close of tha fifteenth bi-onnial convention which, no doubt, will go down in the annals of the Ladies' Union as the greatest and grandest convention since its organization. It is confidently expected that the future will reward it with continued growth and prosperity. At present its membership totals approximately fifty thousand members, following close upon the heels of the men's organization. The Ladies' Union Rre the proud possessors of an enviable record which they have recently established among the female Slovak
institutions of America. Their treasury
GOOD N!6MT
MABE.L
WELL . GOOD f4 G WT
EQ.- SEE. VOuQ MOTHER
12 STCvnD'.N5 THCCE. in
... . , , ,4. ,
ai night :i!i!;ii;f.in-
WILL 1
I ? 1 !!. ' 1 I r-r-... J
( "t W$M J THKTJ ' S & Ml wi'K-
r;
HANK and PETE
SonE Careless rJ css om tas bird's fart
By KEN KL1NG
LETS vyliil ScCTtAMO YAtipi , Pete - 1
fUAtS T4 fAMOvi V C-jj'C. M w 8CAj Aaoot j STcgy eee
I Bk' Hone.
A
f
,-. .
V TUX I
1 -K
-
T-te ACe veizv strict- !.(. Y.CT tuat PcOB- ?UYOvJep-
-rfo: liT SENT HPR B"
5oit; al tciv NctmNtf T
Co WGd1
: am' At
T
I J
W
J
l2o VfAts y IT FOR J
5uT A CTTC TApGcessjess,
3oss
( fat tfn m
vi4at wnae Yco
MM
.1
1 u-t
X fCti-COi To SCRATCH'
TH HoMOCp-AM OFF
A WATCH BFO(ie
1. 1
1
mm
- simm h
ASSORTED NUTS
THeT SlHP Wvo ulCiTeS
piDiMG ir am evpp.ess TfLAlrA AMD exPCTS H(t To c;AD IT.
ringing, UP
a . v, vcfu-. ""-".!
" -
, - . . 1 1
I
Willie name.
TME TWO OCEANS
THAT
AMBf2tCA -
NOW TELL US WILLIE WHAT
OCEANS' o'ALTy'7
' jr II -svr - 11
oAL'ry e
ALL Tr-iE-
MACKECEL ME2E(Nd
AM' CDQPlSVi-
M-iAXST !Kl IT
TEACHER !f(
6
Splint er
People We TO MEET
t
Mil
iff' m t . vzj v . . '
Ase "yoo
Plicting:
with
THE CLP JAWE aHO '-u;trs" n-J?. wwixt male. ZY tS PPPV OvEB H6J2 -
