Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 71, Hammond, Lake County, 10 September 1920 — Page 4

P.-ce Four

, THE TIMES Friday. Rpptpmher 10. 1020.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS 81 THTS LiXE COUNTY PBHITIHO ft PTTBLISTrrNO COMPANY.

The Lke Countv Times PaJly except Saturday and Sunday. Kindred at the yostoiiiee tn Hammond. June , 19(. The rimes East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally except mJ.iy. Kntercd ct the postotcs in East Chicago, Novem-b-r 1. 1013. The Lake County Times Saturday find 'Weekly Edition, ''bnli'p J a; the po.-jtoflicti In Hammond. February 4. l;llt; Th.i Gary Evening Tunes Liu.il y except Sunday. Knctrert ,-t the posioftJCrt in C.arv, April IS. 1S12. Ail under :)io act of March 3, 1S79. s second-cl.i.ss

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VKRTISINO IIEI'RKSEX TATION" 2 dc CO. CHICAGO

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riMiiiuni ( private exchange) 31o0. 31U1. 3102 (Call for whatever department wanted.) rv Orticrt Telephone Th.tnpson. East Chicago Telephone 9SI t Clttcago (The Times) Telephono 283 i nna Harbor (Reporter nd Class Adv Telephone 23 . ! t Harbor (News Dea'er) Telephone ll 3S-.T u'.w.ig Telephone .S0-M v.ii L"oint Telephone 3 If ou have any trouble getting The Times make comin immedi.ai el y to tho Circulation Department.

NOTICE TO Sl'GSOKlBEKS. If you fall to recfivo your copy of Thb Timbs ns ;r-.rurUy h-s you have In th.i pnst, please do not think it has b"-n lost or was not sent on time. Remembor that the ma.l f-rvi.-o is not what it usod to be and that complaints are -veryal fmni many sources about the train and mail serv -. The Times has increased its mailing equipment and Is f riving earnestly to reach Hat patrons on time. Da prompt ;i wi isiuk; us when you do not get your paper and we. will 5 roniptly. SQUARE DEAL IN UTILITIES. Senator Warren Q. Harding, republican candidate for president of the Unite! States, expressed some derided views on the public utility situation in an address' before the American Electric Railway Association recently at Cltvelond. In discussing the unfair financial burdens imposed on public utilities, and especially upon electric railway lines, by the war and its consequences, he said: "The capital which seeks to render a necessary public service merits a square deal and must have it. OH time values are out of harmony in the new era of money's changed measurements. Stable financing, righteous earnings and Just returns must be based upon a proper charge for the service rendered. "I believe in strictest regulation without conflicting authority, because all public utilities must yield t'he voice of public interests. But the same power l. . i protects the public must protect the public service, whether that servant is capital or the workman who operates the utility. "Destroyed credits must be restored and flexible circles of charges must be provided, so that the public may pay justly for that which it demands. The exploitation of ten or twenty years ago justifies no failure in gocd faith' today. The public, which is served, has an obligation-no less than that of those who serve i

also increased, as an' farmer soon discover. Much of the Increase in jis announced by the census to the Influx at good wages, ly to the city fcr relief from not fall to take Into account and the other i'mcs of living tent any advantage they may the farm.

who moves to town will population of our cltlea, bureau, may be credited Those who look longlngagrlcnltural work should the certainty that rents will offset to a large exhave gained by quitting

WOMEN AS JURORSThat consideration of sex differences in govern -Tiient affairs cannot, be entirely obliterated by the Nineteenth amendment to the constitution is made apparent by the dlscusslcn as to the part that women are to pUy in Jury service. It is taken for granted that the new voters will have to bear their share of resimislWllty hereafter in passing on the guilt or innocence of persons accused of crime and in deciding civil suits. Hut at once the question arises if it would be proper to call upon them to serve In murder trials, where the jury is not released until it returns a verdict and may be locked up fr several days and nights. It Is assumed that it would not be at all to the liking of women to be subjected to such an experience. t Is an Interesting prospect, this of having women rix our jviries. One speculates as to whether their natuwi' tenderness of heart will cause them to be more lenient to wrong-doers than men would be. Or will they conscientiously stifle impulses of mercy and -t s'ern Justice be done? Illuminating comparisons of masculine and feminine obstinacy will al&o be permitted by the new order of things. The more one contemplates the subject, the richer are seeu to be tbe possibilities for study of differences in sex psychology. Then there is the qWstlon of woman's willingness 1') serve cn juries. AN ill one hear such reasons offered for ,iieas to" be excused as that it Is necessary to remain at home to "put up" preserves, to care for a sick child or to attend to innumerable other household unties? Jury service for wemen promises to be a knotty problem. It Is not surprising to learn that special rules for their benefit are already considered necessary.

No doubt the influence of women at Ihe ballot box has been expressed forcibly heretofore and tbe most marked difference to be observed will be in the increase in the numbr of ballots cast.

MANY A MAN, on discovering that you think well of him, tries to convert your gocd opinion Into cash.

SOME GROUCH wants to know if the election boards will be expected to provide mirrors and powder puffs for the voting booths.

THE 'RETURN TO THE FARM. There is a growing belief that high rents and the general high cosQ of living in the cities may not be an unmixed evil after all. They may have the effect of causing many persons to return to the farms and discouraging many others who plan to move to town. And if there is anyone thing that will help to bring conditions near to normal it is a return to the land. Many farmers are inclined to magnify the opportunities of living in the cities through comparison of the high wagespaid in industry with returns from work on the farm. They fail to take into account the high rents and the Ifact ' that they become consumers instead of producers. Of course, the costs of operating a farm have greatly increased in recent years; but while these costs are greater, the cost of giving In urban communities has

IT SEEMS LIKE a waste of effort for government bulletins to tell the public what happened to it a month before.

SOMETIMES THERE is a difference between saying that a man has an automobile and saying that he owns one.

MANY A PHARISAICAL politician wonders how all the rascals were chased Into the opposition party.

THE WISE MAN consults his banker before he hands money over to a stranger for any kind of stocks.

WHO can remember when it meant something when they called them nickelodeons?

Nervous Breakdown

- "I am so nervous it seems as though I should fly" "My nerves are all on edge" "I wish I were dead." How often have we heard these expressions or others quite as extravagant from some loved one who has been brought to this state by some female trouble which has slowly developed until the nerves can no longer stand up under it. No woman should allow herself to drift into this condition without giving that good old-fashioned root and herb remedy Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. . Read the Letters of These Two Women.

North East, Md. u I was in ill health fotir or rive years and doctored with one doctor after nnother but nori'i helped me. I was irregular and had such terrible pain in my back, lower part of my body and down each side that I had to go to bed three or four days every month. I was very nervous, tired, could not sleep and could not eat without getting sick. A friend asked me to take Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and lam sorry I did not take it sooner for it has helped nw wonderfully. I don't have to go to bed with the pain, can ea without being sick and have more strength. I recommend your medicine and you are at liberty to publish my testimonial." Klizabfth Weaver," K. It. 2, North Last, Md.

Minneapolis.Minn. " I was run down and nervous, could not rest at night and was more tired in the morning than when I went to bed. I have two children, the youngest three months old and it was drudgery to care, for them as I felt so irritable and generally worn out. From lack of rest and appetite my baby did not get enough nourishment from my milk so I started to give him two bottle feedings a day. After taking three txittles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I felt like a new woman, full of life and energy. It is a pleasure to care for my children, and I am very happy with them and feel fine. I nurse my baby exclusively again, and can't say too much for your medicine.'.' Mrs. A. L. Miller, 2633

L. 24th :t, Minneapolis, Minn.

Nervous, Ailing Women Should Rely Upon

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LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINK CO.. UYNN, MAS!j.

The -Passing -Show

M'HSI.MO our grievances SAPS our vitality to auch an extent THAT we guess we will start WEA.MNO them right a.way. A.U you know it Is not impossible THAT some of those who are finding It the hardest TO meet the high living costs AnE saying the least about thorn.

OTHI. makes summer seem suro

the passage of

AKOL'M and telling about how WE should have made IK we had bought a lot in euch-and-such a place W1IK.N' we first came to town

1 should soil it at prevailing !

prices W f. should have such-and-such an AMOl.VT of money to Invest

I Sinclair Oil or some other lively' ftock. . !

TIU to have to Beachen

lay aside Palm 1

WHE. they are. two fools in a fam-

AND hunt pants .

up a pair of last fairs!

ily THEY are not necessamly man w ife.

and

A clock that isn't running IS at least right once every 24 hours' i

Ar you know thats a -whole LOT oftener than most men air right. HOW kind the world Is after all. WK were examining a wasp the other day AT" a reasonably safe distance

FOR instance a fellow advertised f'OB a wife and his own sister ans-

j we red 1 THE advertisement. I WHAT has become of the o. f. man I who got ! HIS reputation for being ( POOH but honest?

state's four fish hatcheries located at Kiverslde Park, Wawasee, Tri-Lakes' and Bass Lake. ' According to George N. MannWd, s-.i perlntendent of the division of fish an.l game, the exhibit Is the largest since the state began fish culture work in 1311. There are baby Ish, parent fish.! fH-h in nil stages of development and! of every species familiar to Indiana! waters. Mr. Mnnnfeld and George Berg, superintendent r.f hatcheries. ar,' at the display to explain the work

visitors .

MEE HOTEL RESTAURANT James Congles. Try Our Half Spring Chicken Dinner. You Will Like It.

fry a 'Tines Want Ad"

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rOUNTWNSo- BOTTtEt

AD the thought occurred that while

to us

AVE have heard her waist mentioned IV the most favorable terms I..M MEIIABI.E times WE never In aJl our life heard a sarcastic REPERE.NCE to the ridicuioualy disproportionate SIZE of her lips or her almost

COMPLETE lack of bust. - ! BOYS are a. 3 hard to understand as women !

' MANY BABY FISH

j ARE PUT IN LAKES i INDIANAPOLIS. INTi.. Sept. 3 Ov-' er three-quarter.-- of a million bahy; ; fish of the black bas.s, crappie, pcrca "'id blue gi!l specie- will be piunlol r In Indiana lnk-s and streams tins

year. They wer pi opanted at the!

AXD we were never able out.

I

Super "rRlecfrfc AzBexicaa Lcdxn Wo-iiiiii Mac&iaa

to figure

WHY a boy m ill chase a truck AT full speed for two blocks

I order to hook on behind for halfi a block. j i WE have found that none of the ! E.TPERIE'NCES through which we 1

pass on our

BRIEF Journey through vale of tears

this old

A.D laughter surprises us more THA. to be sent upstairs TO get something for our wirt under the most

EXPLICIT instructions where it is

to Just

ANn actually to find it. WE have It on pretty good authority THAT the Iceman sees so much kitchen .NEGLIGEE that he often WONDERS why women are referred to AS the fair sex. THE marriage license clerk sees the optimism BIT the Judge who grants the niVORCE sees the pessimism. PROBABLY the commonest of all the FI TILITIES to which flesh Is heir Is sitting

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Sold on Easy Payments lCXn EFFICIENT 1007" SAFE Let us demonstrate this washer in your own home next washday. The Electric Shop 643 HOHMAN STREET HAMMOND Phones: 678-2455

Stop in when

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it

Learn

about this plan

you re passing -

pend wisely

"and own Tie NEW EDISON ' Tht Phonoerapk mnth m Semi " There's a way of spending money that spreads incomes over bigger "sandwiches." Big business calls it financing. Government calls it budget-making. We call it the Budget Plan. Would you like to own a New Edison ? Our Budget Plan will show you how to "swing" the purchase, without cutting in on your present necessary expenditures. Now is a good time to buy. The New Edison has advanced in price less than 15 since 1914; this includes War Tax. Mr. Edison has kept prices down by absorbing increased costs out of his own pocket.

STRAUBE PIANO AND MUSIC CO. Hammond, Indiana

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96 STATE ST. HAMMOND, IMD.

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