Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 76, Hammond, Lake County, 16 September 1920 — Page 4

Page Four The times newspapers ST 1KB liXE COTJ3TTTT PEKITISO & wmr.ts-rrn The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and lC4 ; " fc;iUcrc,;1 ttl tl10 Postou:ce in HanimonU, Juno 2S. The rimes East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally exctpt feunday. iliutred a the potioC:ce la East Chicago. November IS. 1313. The Luke County Times SaturJav and AVerklv Edition, fcjlfered at the poatofuce in Hammond. February 4. lJltiThe Gary Evcn:r.jf Tim-s lj.uly ct-ii ijunUay. Entered tt the postoilice in Gary, April JS. 1312. All uudtr :lo act of ilarh 3, IsTtf, as second-class matter. KOREIGX ADVERTISING KEPRESEX TATIOV O. LOUA.V I'AYXE & CO CHICAGO Hajiimond rrivate exchange) 3100. 3101. 31o2 Call for whatever department wantod.) Gary Office Telephone 131 ?assau & Thompson. East Chicago Telephone 931 East Chicago (The Times) Telephone Indiana Harbor (Reporter and Class Adv Telephone 2S l?'.? Harbilr (News Dealer) Telephone 113S-J Whiting Telephone- i0-M Crown Point Tei phone 4 i i J ou have trouble petting The Timzs make comPlaint immediately to th Circulation I '. partment. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. If you fail to rtceive your copv of Tun Timbs as rromptly as you have in the past, please do not think it has been lost or was not sent on time. Remember that the niaii service is not what it used to be and that complaints are generyal from many sources about the train and mall s.ervice. Thk Times has increased its mailing equipment and is striving earnestly to ream its patrons on time, tie prompt in advising us when you do not get your paper and we will act promptly. OUR NEIGHBOR'S PRIMARIES The Chicago newspapers seemed net to have learned the lesson the people of Cook county tried to teach theru in the past. Yesterday's primaries proved again that the way to be elected in Chicago is tc be damned by the newspapers. The overwhelming victory of Thorapsrn's velvet-working machine show3 how little the j.e-"ple of Chicago fear or regard their newspapers fcr the majority of them fought Thorn psemisra bitterly. Chicago liA.ec to be wet and wide open. She adores the gocd Mender and the good-fellow, no matter whose monry it is that is being spent. Another expected result was the defeat of the blatherskite Hoyne on the democratic side of the fence for states attorney. It took Ci ic.Ago eight years to size up Hoyne. but finally the false alarm uncovered and he went dewn to a bitter defeat. The Illinois primaries, as a matter of fact, will furnish food for thought and subjects for screeds for many a day to come, but the big idea is that Chicago likes Bill Thompson. TREND IN LAKE COUNTY. Once in a while we hear something of the FarmerLabor party. Especially in Lake ccunty does this party mate a noise. A large labor demonstration was held in Indiana Harbor recently, and everybody claimed intention to vote for the Farrner-Laor candidatr-s. That will mean that much less voting for Cox in Lake county. LaPcrte Herald. GORKY CHIDES THE REDS. The despot wao are new ruling Russia and endeavoring to spread their destructive tenets over the rest of the world are not making everyone happy, even in Russia. Most of the Russians who are bitterly opposed to the Leoine and Trotzky regime are afraid to speak out, but occasionally a word of protest is heard. Maxim Gorky writes in Pravda, a Moscow soviet orgap, that "it is time to go to work." He points cut that "everything now belongs to the people, but the destruction of these belongings increases daily. Houses are demolished and fine furniture is used as firewood. Revolutionary Socialist policy is assuredly a very beautiful thing, but we must work. We have created an atmos-

THE TIMES

Thursday, Sept. 16, 1920.

phere of general Idleness and criminal negligence. We have never worked so ill or so dishonestly as at present. To be sure, this ia in part the result of malnutrition and consequent bodily weakness, but in the main it procoeds from a lack of the sense of responsibility." How long wjll it take Russia to go completely to pieces, under the process of destruction and non-production?

JAZZ COX. By Edward Hatton No oithodox musician plays ragtime from choice, l.taslne Waguer or Verdi syncopating Kaust or the Intermezzo. Even Kipling's Omar, when he "smote 'is biooLiin lyre" and winked back at the foibles of the wcrld, did not descend to the cabaret catch-penny

j school of orchestration. , The masters played to the intellect, to the higher

passions, while poor Omar but touched the chords cf satire. Yet. a man must eat, and even Wagner or Vordi or Omar, starving, MIGHT have forced a jazz note for a crust of bread. Jazz is net music, it is a false note, but it sometlmts pays for a passing moment. Candidate Ccx may possibly" be able to produce h'.?h class stuff. Up to the present time his selections have been decidedly Jazzy, with a pianissimo accompaniment by Fifth-Cousin-Removed Franklin D. Roosevelt. Cox has jazzed on every political subject unter the sun from prohibition and Wilson's league to his latest and jazziest of jazzes, the "dampaign" fund. He may "get away with it" at a peroxide picnic or a midnight minstrel shew, but when it comes to the intelligent American voter, the good old home-style tunes sound best. Jazz Cox and Fifth-Cousin-Removed Franklin D. Roosevelt may make a let of noise on the street corner with their pisarinktura style of campaign syncopation, but "America," and "The Star Spangled Banner" as played by Harding and Coolidge, are, after all, the

i tunes that the American people like best.

The - Passing -Shozv

! THAT TOLEDO ccuple married in an airplane j evidently believe that Eying high is the proper way j to start wedded life.

THE TLAGUE in Vera Cruz is one more of the

I many plagues that have afflicted Mexico in the last j eight or ten years.

COTTON is quoted in New York a few cents higher per pound than wocl Thich may be the reason you get so much cotton in ycur all-wool suit.

THE EMPLOYE WHO produces the gocda does not have to laugh at the jokes of the boss to hold his job.

THE VOTER who can become enthusiastic over a "canned" speech must be hopelessly partisan.

RETRIBUTION WILL need to become a better sprinter if it expects to overtake some rascals.

A "HALE FELLOW WELL MET" never gets very enthusiastic over telling it with scft drinks.

IT IS a lucky man who Is able to act as tls own pinch-hitter when he gets into a tight place.

EVERY ACTIVE politician is a crook to the active politicians in the opposition party.

WHES YOU take a slant at the new fall prices you discover that they have not fallen.

POLAND has Issued a plea for soap T11UKK U always hope for a NATION that feels the need of soap. SOME profiteers need to do a lot of lying; IN order to do a little laying up. MOST any roan knows that too maty ULTCHEIIS are In the barber buliness AND moit any woman knows that too many UAUDEItS are In the butcher business. I'HOUABLY no other social situation tUl'ALS for awkwardness thes one VIli;HE two twelve-year-old boys have just been INTKOUICEU to tach other by a fond parent IN the expectation that they will

start right in HAVING a good time together. A pussyfooting candidate IS one who steps through the back DOOIl to cajole the cook Into voting for him IlL'T we shall of course MENTION" no names. ANOTHER, reason why there are so MANY arguments is because you never have ANY trouble in finding people to DOUBT the things you are sure off. WE hate to say It but a cringeins fidelity to the TUt'TlI compels us to. The sancs: most COHERENT, most industrious, least volatile AND best co-ordinated nation in the WORLD today appears to be none other than THE defeated, bankrupted and MOST heavily burdened Germans. IT might hMp to humble a lot of

MARRIED men IK they would reflect oa whether their VIES would enjoy being: widows. WHO can remember when a fond mother I SEO her small change to buy shoes for the. baby? DO nut squawk about your tough luck Jl'ST think of the number of times YOU should have landed In jail and dldn t AND be thankful. ONE curious thlny about being around IN pants on a hot day IS that it doesn't seem to make a

PARTICLE of difference tlOW thin the seat is on account of THE high cost of living. THERE is not much to be said FOR the citizen who is no bettei than THE law compels him to be. ABOUT the biggest bore imaginabli IS the man who goes round impartingINFORMATION for which no one cares NO one wants the friendship OF a man who wants your friendship FOR what it is worth to him. AN" experienced editor gets pretty much OYER his sensitiveness but still he is ALWAYS rather glad that the ANONYMOUS letter writers as a general THING don't use postal cards.

KEEP LOOKING YOUNG GRAY HAIR Can be restored to its original color with VAN'S MEXICAN R HAIR COLOR RESTORO It ia not a dye, but restores the hair to its natural color, so gradually that your most intimate friends cahoot detect its use. You will be highly pleased with the results, or your money refunded. At all ifiwn SUM rr kottk. The Kells Company NIWIURGM, N. Y. DISTRIBUTORS

touch with he whole vorid.

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Backs

respond promptly to a light application ot

'Zii?"hl affective liniment

renders its big ser

vice in giving corr.fort for the many ills of every-iay life. You will find many uses for it.

Absorbine.jn

'Sfmc UNIHgNT

Is an antiseptic and germicide, which makes it a better liniment and increases its usefulness. $1.25 a bottle at most druggists. W. F. YOUNG, Inc. 79 Tsmpia Street Springfield, Mm.

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If you are using soma other baking powder because it costs iesa than Royal, get a can of Royal Baking Powder from your grocer, make cake or biscuits with it, and compare them with those made from the cheaper powder. The food will be lighter, of finer flavor and more wholesome when made with

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Absolutely Purs

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Powder

Made from Cream of Tartar derived from grapes Royal Contains No AlumLeaves No Bitter Taste

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oots at Our Disposal

None worth less than $12 and up to $15 Limit of two pairs to a customer This Sale, Price .

Only through the close co-operation of one of the leading manufacturers of Women's Quality Footwear were we able to secure these Fall Boots, $12, $14 and $15 value, to sell at $8.95. Every woman in Hammond who is at all interested in taking the "HIGH" out living should attend this wonderful Factory Outlet Sale.

up-of

to-the-minute the cost of

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Women's

$12, $14 mi $15 High Shoes

The Season's Newest Styles $8.95 You will find these shoes distinguished by that simple elegance that makes them particularly attractive to the smart dressers. Ladies who appreciate authentic style combined with unusual quality. We are showing them in the beautiful two-tone effects. Brown kid vamps with field mouse tops. Black kid vamps and gray kid tops, black kid vamps and field mouse tops, and patent leather vamps with field mouse tops. Also allover brown kid and allover black kid. Hand welted soles and leather Louis heels. Button and lace models. Sizes lxl to 8. widths AAA to D. Choice . . PCJ

Heres Another Remarkable Value Shown in fine black kid and beautiful dark brown id. Hand stitched, flexible soles and military heels.' Priced for this sale at

Women's $8, $9

an

Classy New Styles $5.95

d $10 High Shoes

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In this lot you will find the greatest values ever at this low price actually worth up to $10.00 a piir. They are simply unbeatable in style and value, shown in brown kid vamps with field mouse tops, black kid vamp and field mouse tops. Hand stitched soles and leather Louis heels. Sizes 2Yi QC to 8. Widths AA to D. Your choice at PJ.ZJJ

School Shoes For The Children Made of long-wearing materials, the kind that stands hard knocks and scuffs yet they are good looking and comfortable and very reasonably priced, too.

$10, $12 and $15

Low

'flOAQ every conceivable style: hand turned and Goodyear welted liOCJo sniper RrpnrVi and militflrv hepls; fiizps 2 1-2 to 5: widths AA-D

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