Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 286, Hammond, Lake County, 21 May 1920 — Page 4

air Four.

THE TIMES Tridny, May 21, 1020.

THE TIMES

BV THE LAKE COUNTV PRINTING A PUBLISHING COMPANY.

Th LaJre County Tim Dily cpt Saturday SanJsy. Katered at tn potot'lic to Hammond. J una it. laus. Tha Tin.s Kaat Chloajo-Indlana Harbar. dally uaday. Entered at the poatoiac in Kaal Chicago. o uitier 18. IJIS.

Tha Late Cotinty Tlmea SaturJy infl weeKiy "'""iT Lircu t the catol.aca ;n rittaraonJ. Fobruary .

n v' v l ' ' " ' . ... - - --- ly did. Fellow-statesmen deeply respected him aud to the bereaved lady who was his devoted helpmeet and his ambitious sons, he leaves a history that they can love and pattern after and a name that will long be revered.

iut:

lit ths pojtolace in Gary. April 18. lClt. ,, All uadsr the ct of Ucrch 3, 1S70. as aecona-c.as" ciattir.

rOXlIISn ADTIKTISIMO OMXC. m G. LOGAN PA l & CO CHICAGO.

SEEING AMERICA. A few years ago some Americans Interested in promoting; the scenic or resort attractions of the nation evolved the slogan "See America First." That was before the war interfered with the summer exodus to Kurope. Aside from the 2,000.000 soldier and others who went abroad "on business," for the last six years our people have been compelled to confine whatever sightseeing they might dovi America. Thus the cam-

tiammond (private exchange) 3100. 3101. 3101 (Call for whatei department wuui)

N'hsmu & Thompson. Kust Chicago Telojnon jg'jjpaign calling attention to what there is to bee in our liX1'? land has been greatly aided by force of clrcumIndhma Harbor (Reporter aiidCUs. Adv.) - Telt-phone 2li stances.

VVr.UlBK , ieili" crown Point Telephone a

If you hare any trouble netting Th Tim maKes com

plaint immediately lo the Circulation Department.

NOTICB TO StTBSCXIBZM.

If you fall to receive your copy of Thi Ttmw as prompt

The bars against European travel have been lowered, but the facilities for carrying the many who might wish to go abroad are likely to prove woefully inadequate. It is estimated that it Is not possible for

it aa you have In th past, please do not think It ha i more than lOti.OOO to obtain accommodations on translent or km not sent on time. Remember tnat the mail ,

errlce in not irhat !t used to be and that complaln ara ' At lantic vessels during the coming season. These

General from many aource- about the tratm and mall ,,,...,. :.,,,,.. that KPon.!1T1 wl i,r ,r liv.lv

to be disappointed in the expected influx of Ameri-

w-te Trr tt x. ui a . a incr....." itH mftl'in enulDment ana

In atrlvinff ear?estly to reach lt patrons o time. rrenipt In advising us when you do ot net jrojr paper ana o will act promptly.

THE PASSING OF JUDGE E. D. CIUMPACKER. It ill health due to the stress of his labors at :ibhington had not forced Judge 10. I). Crumpacker, the Tenth district's distinguished l epresentative, to lttire to private life, fhere is no telling to what .-u-triy heights he might not have risen in his political career, but h i.-s ambition was to serve rather than to be served. There was a time when he could have had the nomination. The late Theodore Roosevelt when pres--d on, that occasion vo undertake a campaign that (t;!d force him under a great strain. Indeed, when at his political zenith he was men-

ioued in connection with a republican presidential!

nomination. The late Theodore Soosevelt when president, fi equen !y called Judge Crumpacker into couni! on matters of paity and national policy and former rietddent W. 11. Taft often summcned him to the H hit" House for consultation and no one stood higher in Mr. Tafr's estimation than Judge Crumpacker. He was deemed a favorite son of Indiana and won 'lie appellation ly dint tf the most excellent work he diii as c njrresman. Judge Crumpacker's death will bring mourning to the Tenth District. He was Us passionate admirer. He considered the irianufacturi - as we!i as t he farmer, his constituent and his jotfrneys over the district were always tours of triumph He never did anything in Washington that made him tear to face the people "back home." Their interests were even more to him than his interests. He ame of a distinguished Indiana family and he made the name of Crumpacker one of the utmcst respect. He had no fads or hobbies, but was a homely citizen of the magnificent old-fashioned type. Nothing save him greater pleasure than to welcome at Washington the humblest of his constituents and he would

cans, for, while the number is considerable, it will make little impression when scattered over the lands which the tourists are likely to seek. In seeing America one is not necessarily confined to the public facilities provided for travel. It is ixsibje to go far in one's own conveyance, and last year tens of thousands wandered up and down and across in their own machines. They went where they pleased and when they pleased, and many of them carried their own camp outpts and were independent of hotels and other public entertainers. More pecple saw America last year than ever before and there is reason to doubt that the number will be increased this summer, for the going habit, once contracted, is disposed to grow. In many localities the tourist business is the mainstay of the inhabitants. Florida's annual income would shrink amazingly were the tourist crop to fail, and the same source contributes heavily to Colorado ami the other Rocky Mountain states, not mentioning California or the Atlantic coast resorts. The plea to "See America First" may have been prompted by those interested in railrcad travel, but the perfection

Mttained in the automobile has made realization ios-

sible for many who would never have essayed a long (rip otherwise. When facilities are increased. Americans may again eek Europe in greater numbers than ever before, but

they will at last have possessed themselves of a know

ledge of their own land and will be better able, to appreciate the things to be seen abroad since they already have seen America.

GEN KRAI, PERSHING'S strong inclination to keep c;uiet while other fighting men are spilling: the beans is not the least of his recommendations.

REMEMBER, men, there are hip pockets in overalls. And the police won't search a person garbed like an henest working man.

a.Hi i j h. .jj, -& 1 . - ii v'

This is the official first prize medal recently awarded 0k Grore Butter at the National Dairy Ehow.

First Qiiaiity

The experts of the National Dairy Show only confirmed what a million housewives' already knew when they awarded Oak Grove Batter the first prize.

'Anybody can make bntter. But to make uniformly good butter that is an art.

For 36 years this organization of dairy mad butter experts has been making butter. They understand and use all the arte of good butter making. That is why Oak Grove is mighty good all the tim.

Your grocer can furnish you Oak Grov Butter. Order a pound right nw and notice the difference.

ciilosser Brothers

Makers of Good Batter since 1884

1884

PLYMOUTH 19S1

INDIANAPOLIS 1M

FRANKFORT 1913

FT. WATTm 1J17

S. & H. Potato Co., South Chicago, Distributors Calumet Region.

The Passing Show

AITOTBZ3 eocxl thins to remember IS thiit tile ina-n you owe money tj DOSSTTT care a tinker's dam WHAT your views on the T.e.iirii of Nut ion .-ire. A rOSCECUMBEB limy le a crook. BUT you'll have to udinit THAT ho's nnxius to rise In the world. OWE of our delightful critics CALI.S u.i a crvss l. te n a yapping Missouri hiund AND a Kank.ik.ee river yellow jacket. BUT outside of that he reads our stuff right AXONS and perhaps we can WIATHIE tho storm. AlfOTHSS evidence of middle a Re is arMT.T.T.INQ. of "Wizard Oil" aft-r completing thj TASK of spading up a few beds in the new Barden. XT it wasn't for th fact THAT they have to hustle around AJ7D borrow some money every time THEY are broke some aOEN wouldn't K'-t any exercise at all. ANOTHER Careful citizen you meet ETEBY once in a- while is the man w ho CARRIES but one eiR,(r at a x i Tn s( he can't off.-r ou on.-. THE worst of the t'ut.ble r put.-i t ..n IS that the larger it . ts THE surer it is to hurst. THE feminine mysteries an- Kettiu to BE almost entirely mental. BUT wc don't supjose they'd IYEH be able to take all the rui off fn .in THEM if they wanted lo. AJfS the betting in that th-

GTBJCm who flnd.'S it necessary to tell YOU i.ho I.? not that kind of a girl 13 almost always that kind of a cfrl. SUMMER Is romlns and men will ONCE more be reminded of the fad that NATURE made a mistake WHEN she fixed things so that the Kirls can't SEE their own elbows. THE mure of lJla.scv Ihane.' stuff tiiiii THE more we feci like sair,: MORE nostrum, more nostrum. THE neighbor women would make line REPORTERS as far a-s f 1 im,; Hie ne-w s is concerned

I ; MUNSTER

horn May 11. and died the folio win .-'aturiay. Mr. C. !'. t- roon and dausrhte- K: of Deiiott. are viaiitin relatives he,, fc r a few days.

Mrs. Chailes Van Sternberg and son. Mrs. J. hn Kinsma and ton of !...

J'., of l-anaina. arrive,! at 'be ing. visired her sister Mrs ivie-

parents, Mr. and -M rs. I....j,s Wedncsdav.

1-ittle tlrace he Krus v?.-

Oh a ri e.-

home cf her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Kaski c-n Monday to make xn

txtended visit in the states Miss liiirne the primary teacher, went to Crown I'oint Wednesday evening to atteit J t.v co.iinitjneetnent e tie IS';;;. The Parochial scuool hcid tneir f.aniin.'iVion S if ii'dr.y. r.Mr. find r-.-. 1'aul Sekema mourn tli.- lo-'.-i i f th. ir inr..nt son. John, Jr.,

taken i

St. Margaret's hospital VcJi:e:day . olie las bronchial pneumonia. -M:. and Mrs. Alfr.vl Van Steennerg o Lar.sing visited friend.-; he-v 'fa -. c!-v.

Don't M.row your psptr iwi; without reading the want ad pae.

BUT we fear th considerable

would

DirriCULTY in

story INTO ItH words. WHEN Mrs. A starts t.. f SOMXTHINO that has be. h'r in

x peri, nee

dumti

II Mrs. 11 n t.dd te

'If

r yM?$ twenty ' -l.QpM On the - bloodh i- On the

STRICT confidence it MAKES Mrs. A mad ail over to find THAT some Ihk mouthed woman WHO just can't keep a seen l HAS already told Mrs. 1'. all about it. ANOTHER pathetic little feature of EVERY. DAY life IS the little girl w hos'o fashion.-. hie YOUNG mamma ties Iut up

had be.-n

SO that she l.M.ks as if sh born in corseis.

ATTENTION has b. PACT that it t".k I! y.-ars to puss

a:i. d to the I'. S. SelKI.1'

THE Susan M. Anthony a tie n.lmeni WELL, the Se;ite Vil lie- . p aCCUSe. OI pro.-i .i i a tie y as far as w can tiud Old.

What Supports the Heart? By N. COOK, M. D. Tha heart u the hardest worked organ of the human body. It beats on an average cf seventy times a minute from the minute of birth to the minute of death. Every half minute or every thirty-

second beat, the whole of the blood in the body is pumped through the heart, so that the dual heart moves about sir tons of blood in each

four hours.

purity of that

lood health depends.

On thf strpncrfri rf

-V 'Ce? -s'- v the heart denends the

strength of the body. The question then is, how can we keep the blood pure and the heart strong? What is blood? Blood is only digested food. No man is stronger than his stomach, because physical strength is derived from food di

gested and rsimilated. Deaths ascribed to weak heart and ''heart failure," should be called weak stomach and "stomach failure." It is this dependence of the heart upon the stomach which explains the relief from ''heart trouble" effected by the use -of Dr." Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. This remedy is for diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It purifies the blood, eliminating from it the substances which corrupt and poison it. Even this alone would take the strain from the overtaxed heart. But Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery also acta directly upon the heart itself. It strengthens the heart's action. This is the time of year when we need a reliable tonic. Texins (poisons) pile up within the body after a "hard winter," and we feel tired out, blue and di.-tcouraged. If you want vim, .vigor, vitality,; try this Spring Tonic of Doctor Pierce's.. -

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Jtf? --v1 , V ' Mmj -SAW

sm mm. a

5 rSff';lim.'Jr-,

6619

ve solve

your washday problem, dear!" "Do you suppose that I am going to let my wife worry over the washing, when BlueBird is so easy to buy and soon saves more than it costs?"

UCJ

SLLCTR'.C CLOTH

UifflL

has the right idea about washing clothes. The rocking copper tub with its twin six water action dashes the water through the clothes seventy-two times a minute. It takes far better care of the daintiest garments than hand washing. It washes with

ease the heavy things that are so difncult to get clean. See these BlueBird advantages Trs tub is oure copper that cannot rust, corrode or scum the clothes

Its mechanism is fully enclosed in a beautiful white enameled cabinet. Even a baby can play around BlueBird while it is operating. Its 12" power driven wringer swings

to all positions so that you can wring from washer

tub to rinsing water, then into bluing water,

then from bluing water into basket without moving the clothes washer. Have a BlueBird washing in your home free You owe it to yourself to drop into our store or phone us for a free demonstration in your home. Call today.

t i l r B"ur'-Bird' j

iflM in'. ri-s& If WilYTF-

Norlkra Indiana bas & Electric Cooipany

571 Hohman Street, Hammond, Ind., Phone 2300 Indiana Harbor Display Room, 3402 Elm St., Phone 811

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