Hammond Times, Volume 9, Number 28, Hammond, Lake County, 11 September 1920 — Page 4
September 11, 1920.
THE TttTES
THE TiMES NEWSPAPERS bt t?BlB laxk coutttt PRwmNO as yrraiiismNO COEPAHY.
The Laka County Tlmu Dally except Saturday T3 Sunday. Entered at the postofiic In Hammond. June S, loa. Tha Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, rlally except 8unday. Entered t the poatoElce in East Chienijo. November 18. 1913. Tha Lake County T!ms Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the postoKlce In Hammond, February 4, 19 V6. The Gary KvanlOK Tlms Dally except Sunday. Enterad at tha poatufllce in Oary, April 18, 112. AH under tha act of March S, 1879. a second-class matter.
iXREIv3V ADVERTISING REPRESENTATION' G. LOOAN rA.:. .r .0. CHTCAOO
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NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. If you fill to reefciva your copy of Thb Times as promptly a you have in the past, please do not thtn. It ha been lost or waa not sent on time. Keruembor thai tho niatl service Is not what it used to be and that complaints are generyal from many sources about the tram and mall servlca. Thk Times has Increased its mailing equipment and Is etrtvlng earnestly to reach Its patrons oi time. Be prompt In advising ua when you do not get your paper and we will act promptly.
"GOING ALONG Ever since Gov. Cox visited President Wilson at the white house on a Sunday morn not so many weeks ago, later announcing that his "mind went along with the president's," the democratic candidate has more than ever borne the burden of the administration's failures. Large numbers of democrats are disappointed with the management of governmental affairs by the president and his cabinet and others in responsible positions, rromlses ljave not been kept and plain duties have teen neglected. President Wilson's refusal to accede to a compromise on the peace treaty and the league of nations pact must be held blamable for the failure to conclude peace with Germany. Twenty-three democratto senators stcod with the republicans, but their stand jyas repudiated by the president. Gov. Cox, by his adherence to thd Tpo!!cle3 of President Wilson regarding the peace treaty, proposes that another test of strength shall be made In the next fenate, for he hardly believes that there will be enough changes in that body to revenrse the opinior the majority as expressed in the votes takeni President Wilson kept in the backgTouTiQ!TirrIng the San Francisco convention, and many7 democrats thought they were nominating in Gov. Cox ti'mart'svho
would recognize the right of a majority,: f thdscnate to have a vcice in the foreign policy Df vth$iUnited States. But Cox makes it plain that he subscribes unqualifiedly to the president's program to place 4ha Jugment of one Individual against a majority? JhQ senate or probably three-fourths of the membership-! that body, if other democratic senators dared Jojote ihelr convictions on the treaty. "$f$$&kr Z ' '-P SUPPRESSING JAY WAIKEHS.!"" Somebody in Missouri has taken a little tlmft from the demands of national and state politics -to propose a plan for dealing with the Individual -who ha3 come to be known as a "Jay walker'' the person vhj "cuts the corners" In crossing streets. The state legislature will be askeT'TO'ftass tfc-'lull that will provide a penalty for persons'nvho disregard the rules of safety as applied to traffic on busy streets, thereby fretting the souls of automobilists who are in a hurry to get nowhere in particular. '.. , There is a possbiility that the leglafatufsAif "Mlsu Eourl will recognize that drivers have seme rights which pedestrains should take into consideration that all blame for accidents does not center in the man lathe car. sj-;&v'-v If the driver of a motor vehicle run.'&strlan down he can be haled into court and forced to explain, but tha person who Indulges in the somewhat rural business of Jay walking goes on his way ln. Justified anger, e he believes, or makes Informat Ion a gainst the drlvar who chanced to bump him. Fining the person who gets knocked down through: hi3-cwn carelessness would at least be an Interesting experiment. " SAVE THE EAGLE. r'i? Only prompt federal action will save the American eagle from extermination by bounty hunters More than eight housand eagles have been Slaughtered along the cofctal region and river valleys of Alaska alone since the Alaskan bounty law went into operation on April 30, 1917. The law provides for the payment of B0 cents for each ball or "Aiueiican"" eagle killed. s?asMiv la order to swell their gains. It Is declared, bcunty hunters are no longer limiting themselves to Alaskan
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territory but are reaching out Into the British province , adjoining Alaska lu search of the rapidly-disappearing eagle. H is even possible that by this time more than one-half perhaps more than three-fourths of the entire ppecies has been sacrificed and that within the next year tr so there will be very few American eagles remaining alive with the exception of the scattered few to be seen , caged for life like malefactors, In the xoologjcal parks. The bald eagle never has been an abundant species. Eftimates of Its numbers are said to have been greatly exaggerated. Up to the year 1917 the only territory where the bald eagle thrived was along the coastal region and large river valleys of Alaska. Here the American eagl built its nest and multiplied exceedingly fc- a bird of its sl.-.e. Advocates of the Alaskan bounty law declared that the American eagle was destructive and that its numbers must be kept down. The war of extermination followed and has been kept up ever since. The general indifference to the fate f the great bird of splendid tradition Is due, beyond uoubt. to the common lack of information regarding Its threatened extinction. The crusade for the bird's protection should enlist the enthusiasm and sincere effort of bird lovers and bird students throughout the country, of
our scientific and patrictic 6oci?ttes and of the public
press. It is only by the prompt passag of a federal law protecting the American eagle that our national
bird can be saved from total extinction.
BUSHNELL'S WEEKLY CARTOON MOVIES IN EIGHT REELS
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PROBLEM OF THE ALIENS. With aliens from Europe arriving In th eUnlted States at the rate cf more than 20,000 a week, the problem of helping these incomers to fit into activities of this country again presses for solution. Heretofore it has been the policy of the government, after assuring itself that the immigrants would not beccme public charges, to permit the aliens to look out for themselves and the natural result was a drift to the large centers of population and to the foreign colonies. A better plan than that is necessary or the newcomers to the United States will render the problems of the cities more acute by the attempt to absorb thousands who are strangers to the language and customs of this country. The government might well take a little time to Investigate the fitness of immigrants for certain lines of work before they are thrown upon any community to shift for themselves. No doubt many of them would be found well qualified as agricultural workers, and It would be a mistake to send these into overcrowded industrial districts. Many aliens proved troublesome during the war period because of their sympathies for old-world customs and their ignorance of American institutions. The Immigration laws have been strengthened by placing safeguards against radicalism, but It la even more important that immigrants be helped to engage In the work fcr which they are best fitted.
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EUYING TOO MANY DIAMONDS. Teope are buying too many diamonds and not enough alarm clocks, in the opinion of William J. Rose, an official of the Pennsylvania railroad. Conditions in the United States for more than 18 months could hardly be more tersely expressed than in the above words. Enough persons in this country have been living extravagantly to create a situation cf serious concern. With the ability of bo many thousands to purchase diamonds has come to desire to acquire many other things that are not in keeping with the ability or disposition to establish a bank account and save something for the inevitable rainy day. Fortunately, the disposition to indulge 1h extravagant buying is losing some of Its zest, and whether it Is due to a change in the mental attitude of the people or to the "tightening up" in financial and Industrial circles, the benefits should be appreciated. There is such a thing as money, coming so easily that its value is not properly appraised. The United States Is passiDg through such a period. The money that has been spent injudiciously during the last few months can not be restored, but It is not too late for the beginning of the practice of, economy which, if continued after the slgnlru? of the armistice as it was practiced duirng the war, would have been an unmixed blessing to thousands.
MANY A RADICAL who waits on retribution to overtake him dies of old age.
THE INNOCENT bystander who gets hit may not be as Innocent as he looks.
THE ULTIMATE consumer Is hardly ever able to issue an ultimatum to the producer.
Sunday services at the Eva.ng-olic.al
Church: Sunday School wiil besrin at; 10 a. m. Morn ins; Services at 11:'m!
Evening services at 7:30 p. in. E . try one Is Invited. J. Moran of Atchison avenue is viJitinsr friends and relatives at Momence, fnr a few daya and is expected home Sunday. Mrs. -Win. Broderlck of Atchison avenie was a visitor In Chicago on Thursday. Jrhn C. Gelst of Ch'cas?o. was a business visitor in Robert3ale yesterday. , Mr. and Mrs. C. New-ell of Pearl street motored to Evansv'.lle, III.. ci Thursday. George Starring-, son of Mr. and Mr-. V. Starring- of Myrtle avenue Is confined to h i? home with a c-ise of tonsliitis. Mrs. TV. Hubler of Atchison avenue, left for ElKin, 141., to vis.t with her friends for a few days. Mer!? Hummer who was a Ruest at
W. the Starring home on Myrtle av
!ft for hU home in Canton. Ohio, last T ie May. Mrs. Lee Jewett of Roberts avenue, was the Riiest of her sistrr Mrs. Ertvi Cole of Hammond on Thursday. Mrs. El. Curren and sifter Mrs. Wm. Worth of Hammond visited the r mother Mrs. Charley Market of Myrtle avenue Thursday. Howard Hroderick returned to h.s home en Atchison s venue from a few days visit with relatives at Marian, Ini . Mr and Mrs. Earl Smith of Indiana Harbor iv-te visitors at the El. Ju'.ier home on Indinnarolla boulevard, tie
fore pait cf this week.
GAME FOR GRIFFITH
WORK SEEMS to be about the last thing some folks imagine they need to make them happy.
GRIFFITH, IND.. Sept. 11 The! Griffith Colts will cross bats with tho Gary H. H. A. C. next Sunday. Sept.j 12. at the Griffith hall patk, same to be called at 2:30 p. rn., so let us sej you all out next Sunday end hvlp thej
home boys win.
Ti trie r. t - : effort can furnish.
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Millions JSJoiu Livin May Never Die
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"Too good to be true," you say. "No!" says Pastor Morton of New York City, "it's as clear as the noon day sun to the devout and earnest student of God's word the Bible." He says the old order of things has ended and that we have actually entered a new era in which "the desire of all nations shall come." The greatest desires of all the people of earth today are for peace, happiness and above all else life ! Continuing, he says, "Not only are there millions now living who will never die, but before we have progressed far into this new era all of our dead friends and loved ones will be coming back from the land of the enemy Death." Surely this is of great interest to all, for who has not lost one or perhaps many of their dearest relatives or friends. Pastor Morton has delivered this message of comfort in many of the largest cities in Amejica. He is to be in Hammond one day only.
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AVMSIDNV MORTON-"'
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All are invited to hear him in the I. 0. 0. F. Hall on State St., at 7: 30 o'clock Sund
evening, Sept. 12th. The lecture is absolutely free and no collection will be taken.
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BRINGING CP BILL.
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By A. Task'
INCOME HK-JJ 1
COMGRATULATiONS
( WLHE - I WEAR
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SMOCK IS POPULAR FOR MORNING WEAR
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Tiie smock which originally came in with fashionable art.-sts and pardeners and later wad worn by everybody has now become popular for morning wear. It is far better than the k;mona and a little prettier than the gingham apron. Some of the newer ones designed for such wear are actually beautiful. Here is one of the prettiest seen recently. It is made of white crepe embroidered La black worsted.
