Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 109, Hammond, Lake County, 25 October 1920 — Page 4
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) V Page Four Tim TIMES Monday, October 25, 1920.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and Sunday, Entered tt the i.MoUice in Hammond, Juno ISO. The Times Enst Cliloatfo-Indiana Harbor, dully except Sunday. Entered at the posioflice iu Kits'. Chicago. Novsin. br Is. 1513. The Lake Oountv Times Saturday and Weekly I-.dition. Entered at the poatoftlce in HaimU"od. February 4. The Gary Kven.nu Times Daily cxc.-it Sunday. Kntered at the poetotttce in Gary, April 18. 1'.'12. All under tW act of March 3. is: . aa scond-claM mntter. ' FO KE I G N A TdV K RtTsTnTT fUj'i'li iii KN 1 AT ION' t. LOGAN l'AT.V'E & CO. T--"ZZ--"'Z.l ' HtiumuBl i prHaieexchanRe) HIOO. 3101. 3101 Call for whatever department want.-d.) Gary Office Telephone 13 N&as&u & Thomricn. East Chicago Telephone 941 East Chicm tTiie Times) Telei-hoif! Indiana Harbor (RejKirter and Class Adv Tel.-jhone '-Si Indian Harbor (News Dealer) Telephone 11S--J WhHicg; Telephone 0-M Crown Point Telephone 41 If you have any trouble setting: The Times mate complaint Immediately to the Clrcula Hon D-p : it tm i iL NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBER3. If you fail to receive your copy of Tub Times as rronjptly as you have in the past, please do not think It haa been lost or wan not sent on t'.-r.e. Remember that the mail ervice la not what it used to ie and '..:t complaint, are Cenerya! from many muw nbout the (rain and mail srrvice. Th Tiu'F" h". InTfenpJ its mailing eyu ipnieut find I str'vinsr earnestly to reach Its patrvs on time, lie prempi in advlrin us when you do not et our paper ;tui v a act promptly.
judging from the unearthly noise It ruade one would ju lge it was the latter. IT WAS FINE OUTDOOR SPORTHarry A. l-Turick, noted traveler, who lias just, rei nmed from it tour of the Caribbean for the Century MaKitiue, says that much cf the wholesale killing done in Ha'yii was by Southern officers and men who regarded "killing nigKcra" as real sport. This certainly does go alouR nicely with this administration's professions as a 'moral leader" of the world, which i.s sui i'oseil to he !ng awake nights worrying over K lf determination of i-to;ies" and the -rule of justice'' f hrotifrhout the eaita. Nothing more linitcrous has ever taken place in the history of this hemisphere than President Wilson's lectures to Huerta. about the Mexican governments failure to Rive the peons ri&ht which a negro !n the Mate of Mississippi would have been promptly iynehod Tor coining lynched, l by the politicians lieek-by-jow 1 with President Wilson in his crusade for the social and Industrial emancipation of black men on the i titer tdde of the Kiu Grande:
HOOVER'S REPUDIATION It muct be The unkindest cut. of all for the demo crats to have the man whem they had thought, to capture f:r lieir nomination sny thr.t the party has been all wrong ever since the signing; of the armistice. Yet this Is what Herbert Hoover s;ys, who was proposed la some directions as the candidate to be support by the two parties. Mr. Hoover tr.adT his choice for the republicans, missed The nominal ion. and baa remained Eteartfast and outspoken for the things that made the republican party attractive to him. says the Baltimore American. He saw and he sees, that s!nc the armistice the party has been under a single head, and that Mr. Wileon badly fumbled the league balL lie ias no sympathy with the n-.ar'yr pose of the democrats, who will seek to have it appear they have ben sacrificed in a great cause. He believes the cause will remain and will be juet as great and will he great!;- benefUcl by the rejection of the democrats st the polls. Tie reminds his auditors that Senator Harding has frequently expressed his sincere interest in an association of the powers for peace, and they need have no fear of failure to see realized their cwn expectations. As Mr. Taft says. Mr. Cox has swallowrd the. tenth article and made himself unavailable for the presidency. Mr. Harding, however, has repudiated it mi made himself the more available for the presidency.
HOLD FAST TO THAT POLICY. Only two (if 11! forip'r service men who were killd in th- -plot-K in i-'tre. t ::;ul n tallied their govr : . war risk in'tranoe after being discharged. Tragedy is required, sometimes to point out our desperate carelessness. We become accustomed to taking cham-s; we become accustomed to "getting away witli it." In the hour of disaster cur negligence arises to rebuke us. Not. one of those 10 to'crans whose lives were snuffed out so ouickiv and unexpectedly would have.
ot his insurance policy lapse could he have foreseen
lis tragic end. Ten out of 3- tcok a chance. Ten out of 12 lost. There is a lesson In this for those who are iempted from time to time to drop their policies of government life insurance. To every man the moral is plain: Hold fast to that policy.
AUTO NUMBERS. It Is so arranged in practice- ttiat you cannot catch a speeder, for the very violation covers up the crime. The number" on the autos ere so small that they caoaot be read while the machine engaged in speeding. You lock for the naaVr, determined to report that chauffeur, but his number is only a blur. To catch some cf these autoa they ought tc carry figures as bi as a barn door. So the citizen ran do nothing to help enforce the speed law. "We hear often of people who complain of this, who would like to report the autos that defy the law. The other day we determined to report an auto which came screeching and howling six blocks away, but when it reached our point, of observation It whirled by like a cyclone, ej v9 fculd hardly tell whether it was a machine or a demon. But
I LJi""!t 1
A Toast : " Wilson That's All
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THE TWO TICKETS
Grant K. Hamilton ( "JutU-"
The -Passing -Show
BLAZING AIR TRAIL TO ALASKA. The importance of the proposed airplane flight from New York City to Nome, Alaska, lies not so much in the distances to he covered and the element of risk involved as in the more prosaic purposes it is expected to accomplish. It is to blaze the way for a transportation service to assist in the economic development of Alaska. The trip will demonstrate whether airplane transportaiion to Alaska is practical. Alaska just now is attracting much attention because of its coal deposits and vast forests of spruce which offer raw material for the manufacture of paper
TO alleviate h sjiui iukp u;.u 15 in-oiv 10 io- innuv the publishing business in this country. To fly over vast stretches of wilderness into the Arctic zone Is a feat of daring, but If the flight results in opening commercial air communication with cur northern possession the effort will be well worth while.
THE WOMAK VOTER. "Women care for homes more than for houses: for health more than for wealth; for real fathers and mothers and children." etc. A Scripps-Cox propagandist paper. And they especially detest a system under which a wealthy newspaper owner's son Is exempted frcm war service while their sons and husbands have to fight for their country.
A TKSSIMIST COM PLAIN'S that the mot e a man Is civilized the more cleverners In develops 1n being crooked.
A 'IDOM;it never fools a widow ItV talking like a schoolboy BIT a widow can easily KOOI. a widower by talking l.ke a school girl. nE rf our jicientidts makes the alarm ;ns AMit M'KMKT that the blonde American type vil.I. Boon be extinct and we must wire HIM at onr to find out wh"ther we are going st:pnTEI.Y or in a body as in the former rase vK wiih to go around son and pay pood bye IV our fond way to a dear red-headed hus.y rJi stly 90-calUd. or two. JI ST now the June bride Is l'It; dainty dish nr-ps w!.!i handles
HI T a year from n w she Aill.l. be using: an old rsg Just nke mother u?ed. oCR In a while we ? a man WHOSE feet are mo large that we worder IK he doesn't get tired dragging THEM around with h'ni. (some of these days people in this ( OI'VrrtY are poing to wake up and
Kl'l that they cannot MAKE a living: by quitting work. THE auto driver who never has any place in particular 'I O go and is always in a hurry to get there IS never concerned over the price ol aoi.ii: p. r KalV.n. W K don't know much HI T we do kii"T that a fell w HEARS o many complaints and frv COMPLIMENTS that he la OFTEN tempted to regard d'-afnes as a blessing: rather than an affliction. TWO words that we get pretty
profiteering
are
and
TIRED of
propaganda. IT Is said that the mother's diet EkiRTSES a marked Influence up-f-n the I BORY child and as we watch THE f jture mothers of the rare
JlIUl,AMI,Y sundaes
downing: chocolate
IV the ice cream parlors
WE often feel that the African type
is hound to become predominant WITHIN a few yeara now. WE oftrn think how funny it Is
Til IT a man will Fand for a lot of H1 C tat L
Republican Ticket PRESIDENT Warren G. Harding. VICE PRESIDENT Calvin Coolidge. V. 8. SENATOR James E. Watson. GOVERNOR Warren T. McCray. CONGRESSMAN Will Tt. Wood. rnosEcuTiNO attornev Dwlrht M. Kinder. JCT;K CIRCVIT COt'RT E. Miles Norton. JUt-GE CRIMINAL. COURT Martin J. Fmith. STATE PE.N'ATOn C. Oliver Hoira. STATE SENATOR James J. Nejdl. STATE REPRESENTATIVE Oscar A. Ahlgren. STATE REPRESENTATIVE James I. Day. , STATE REPRESENTATIVE Otto G. Fifleld. STATE REPRESENTATIVE J. Glenn Harris. JOINT REPRESENTATIVE (Lk and Porter) Jay J. Overmver. COUNT Y AUDITOR George M. Foland. COUNTY TREASURER n.a,'.ph B. Bradford. COUNTY RECORDER William C. Rose. COUNTY SHERIFF William H. Old CCUNTY COIIONKR' Edward E. Evans. COUNTY 5UVEYOR Kay Seely. COUNTY' COMMAS TONER (First d:strict) Gerae O. Schaaf.
COUNTY COMMISSIONER (Third district) Jamea Black.
Democratic Ticket PRESIDENT James M, Cox. VICE PHRSIDKNT Krankim l. Roosevelt. U. S. SENATOR Thomas Tapgart. Governor Carlton F. Mc'ulloch. I.I EUTENA NT-COVERNi R Samuel M. Foster. CONGRESSMAN. 1 0TH D!ST. Fred F arnett. Hammond. Ind. FROSECUT1 SC, ATTORNEY William J. Murray. East Ch:cag . Ind. JUDGE CIRCUIT COURT Fearlee A Parks. Eart Chicato, In 5. JUDGE CRIMINAL. COURT John D. Wells, Gary. Ind. AUDITOR John A. Tokaiz, Whiting, Ind. RECORDER James V. C'ostello, Gary. InJ. CORONER John McDoTineli. Hammond. Tnd. COMMISSIONER. 1ST DIST. Mrs. Fred Carter. Hammond. Ind. STATE SENATOR George E. Hershman, Crown Tosra Ind. STATE SENATOR Mrs. Margaret McClure Turner, H?-ni-m-nd. Ind. S T A T E R K PR E SENT ATIVE Ferdinand Kt-tcike, East Chi'a.c , Ind. state n err. f. s enta tt v e W.!!-,am McAfee. Hobart, Ind. STATE REPRESENTATIVE Mrs. Myrtle Meara. Hammond. Ind
bossing FROM his daughter hn HE won't stand for any frr,m hi mother. AM) if you let a man mea.ute HIMSELF you'll always find HIM stretching the tape a littV. THE complete brutalnat in IND ICED by war and its horrors HAS not worn off entirely as yet 4 N D even though we do not a! way? get THE fall fly as we painfully swat at him WE thoroughly enjoy making him ERVOlS and that much at least WE always accomplish.
ZTE3- -Scientifically Exmir4 Glasses Pitted. Satisfaction Gnaranteerl
STOP llfu SWN Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There is one safe, dependable treatment that relieves itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Ask any druggist for a 3oc or SI bottle cf Ze:..o and apply it as directed. Soon vou will find that irritations, punples. black!.' ds, eczema, blotches, ringworm and sLiiilar skin troubles will disappear. Zemo, the penetrating, satisfying liquid, is all that is needed, for it banishes most skin eruptions, makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. The E. W. Rose Co.. Oevelaad. a
Hammond Optical Pario
Landscape Gardening FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, SHRUBBERY AND HARDY BIENNIALS All Prices Guaranteed Reasonable PETER FOX PHONE 1151-J 739 WALTER ST., HAMMOND
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