Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 196, Hammond, Lake County, 7 February 1921 — Page 4
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Tha Lake County Times Dally except aturuay and ' the postotiica in UammunU, .-una
me i.ajte county Tim Saturday nd V7-klv FMiUon. MiteroJ at the poetodcs in Hammond. February 1. 191. ina tiry hveni rim- -Dhi! c- ce t.t Sunday. tnred t tha rcstotTicn in Gary. A;r1! l'T 1913. All uaJtr the aol of iar.U i. 1!:, as secoail-claaa
.. J1" rtmesEaat Chicago-Indian Harbor, 5U1 excapt
)he "world progresses, so doe-3 the tjemand fur .steel increase. Just as sure a today vi!i lie followed ly n morrow, the Calumet, Replou will Increase. perhaps not so rapidly as it has .lore v it the last, decade, luit U will ineroate be;unil the conception of even the a erase cp tiniist. K'ven the topographical features of the region are advantageous. Flat to the point of nionctony, the flatness nevertheless facilitates rapid communication. Superlatives are always dangerous, especially in surmising, but iu looking at the future of the Calumet Kepion surely justification can he fcund for t'ne thought that some day, ir is here that the greatest, eerif r.ui "lion of industries in the world will be located.
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1 OHEKJV ADVERTISING ttEPI'.ESEX TATIO.V '-fM.A.N I'AvNK & co CHICAGO
-y Offlc- Telephone 13J f""su Thoinrs-.n, Hast Chicago Te;.i.l.oi;e 931 VV '-hi.-aisu j"!,o Tunes) Tcl.u.hone. r ; "J'aim harbor l Keyorter anj Class Adv TeW'turn 1'V. . .Ki.aiia Harbor (ws Dealer)-.. Tf Irphon 1 1 'S-J r,!-)ntr xeWvUc-im St'-M '-'-.') Poin - - T.-l.j.hon 4J r you have iy trouble (tett!nr Ths Times make corn- ., mneaJHtely to ibo Circulation Depart ment. iUimoid prlvat -xcr-apge) -tJ(. 3101, 310J 'Call for vh; tver dgt.flv'nrnt wnntwl.) NOTICE TO EL-ESJUlnEriS. TT von f.l to fer"v your copy of Tib Times i "niPt.y as yrU liave In the raft, plcr.se do net think 1! ham Dctn lost cr .as not .-nt .it t.nie. Kmrub.r tint th mall : i :j is not h4 tt nr,i i,j be and t..;t complaints art t, .' erv r':',i ",fclv source about tha tram una" mall ser. iai l.Mts Iih.1 irH.r-.p,i its mailing eaulpnipnt and Is n inc earnestly to i pacli t:s patrons on time. e prompt ', ' -" '!"" us m hen joj not e t jour paper and wo win t. promptly.
IEE CALUMET EEGION Tiie r..-puit that the Icgislatuies of Indiana and 11;!!ois propose to act in tc njunction toward the (e'f'opinent of a grc:(t harbor on the shores of l.ake Mic-higan near Wolf Lake la exceedingly good news .' these of us u-lto Imvn the interest of the Calumet rt'"S'-Jri so much io heart. Wliou we remember tbar -ccnty years ago there was only one railroad in hi.li.".l... that being the Madipcn and laJianapolis liai!toad. which was state financed, -.lie present ptag.j c- development borders on the miraculous. Previous to that first railroad all commercial eontmuniaition of 'T.y extent ticpended on the ta.e-owned can;.!.-, nhicb vio a total failure. Today. ia.s.-;lng through Hammond alcDf. there are fourteen rni'road sictcms and the Calumet Kesri on in general has eighteen railroads. 'ectrica! and steam. traersins in territory. Knor".;"iis factories and piam.-i stand where within the mem'"y of living man there was n at bins but t-wamp and ir.i.'es aDd tiu'cs of undci c k ped ground. Hammond.
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-vv. in .ilia ruyiiiiuus luuusinai region wnicn nas so ' -ently sprung into existence, and without undue cp'.misni on our part, and which we belieie, wi'l evenl-!;-'!y prove to be the world's greatest center of jtidust- : ii' 1 acti iiie. Thp godfi certainiy favored the Calumet He-Ion "hen they fashioned thu world. Tako a map nf th North American rontinnt and jut examine the facts ee-!?d. ,!ituat1 at the snutliern end of r.ako Superior, cne of the series of grer-t lakes that form (ijo --vate.r.t expanse of fresh water in the world, it has -hipping access to thousands of miles of inland coa?f ;.!.! through th WcUand canal the high peas themselves can be reached during the warmer month.. Within ensv distance to the west flows the Mississippi -that great natural channel to the Scuth. This is rot the place to argue whether Chicago made the Calumet Kegion -a hat it is or whether the Calumet Kegioti made Chicago what It is. but. the fact remains that Chicago I? on our border and Chicago's prfgrofsj .anenterprise tits it to be ranked forever as ono of tho wonoers of the world. Ceolcgica'ly the gods were again kind. To tire Northwest across th? Canadian border ' e fertile prairies over which year by year the golden f.trpet of ever needed wheat is gradually being' more cuenalvcly rprcad. All roads East from there. s$ fiT.ua cur own middle and Western states. lead to Chit-ego. Nearer borne lies Wisconsin with its copper and iron mines. .Mineralogists tell us that Wisconsin's metal resources have barely been scratched. To the Foutheast in Kentucky, Ohio. Virginia and Pennsylvania lies the great coal mining region ef the United Ptafes. situated as it i.s the Cslutnct Region is an ideal place to bring our coal arJ iron together and make steel. This exactly what is happeniug today. Steel manufacturing is our greatest industry. The world has had its phases of existence well defined in metals. We had the. Etone Age. -when men chopped their firewood with tone ss?s. Then came the Bronze Age, until today we have the Stee! Age. Steel is so essential to modern conditions of life that fundamentally (here seems an incongruity in the thought that gold is the precious metrl. As Industry and corjiineroe develop, that is as
HAS THE DEAN ANY BONDS ? j College professors often have strange not tons couj cerning economies, as we have observed during the past ' eight years of a professional presidency. Now conn s ; the dean of a New York: college of Commerce with the i mggestlon that on a given day all the people who hold ; liberty bonds burn them. lie does not stop to think that many of the holders of liberty bonds are people J vho invested all the savings of h life-time in these bonds ! 'n order to "help win the war." They were the motb- ' f rs and sisters and wives and sweethearts of boys who
were ever there, and tney responueu giauiy to me call to "subscribe until it hurts." Fo them to burn their bonds would be to destroy the savings of a lifetime and go down to old age In penury and dependence. Other people bought bonds liberally but invested only n very small proportion of their wealth in that manner. They could destroy their bonds without "suffering great inconveniences. There are still others who bought no bom's at ail. but invested in securities of other kinds, on which they have realize.! good returns. Vndcr the policy proposed by this college dean, people who bought liberty bonds would destroy them in order to Ifff-spn the obligations of the government and enhance the value of the private, securities held by the man who would escape some measure of Income taxation If the liberty bonds -were destroy eel. Sometimes we are inclined to ; k, ' why is a college professor'.'"
, DON'T WASTE SYMPATHY i Defeat is always unpleasant. But defeat for Germany was avciuable. She need not have started the war. ; Therefore, a' though no doubt loss of "even one bank , f.f the Khine" has created a national depression In Oerp;any as a noted lecturer said the other day wo rpies J tion if "sentimental reasons " are mostly responsible ! for the depresF;on. as be asserted. Nor can w Imagine j why Germany should grieve more over such a los3 than j France might reasonably do, should Tari.-, "fall." In any case, it is immaterial what psychological j i 2Vct occupation of the left bank of the Khiue by the j .'-onrjuernrs of Germany has on the people of that conn- ! fry. Starting the war, they should have been prepared Tor any event ualifv --prepared fo pay as well as to col ' loot.. If thev cannot take their medicine without making wry faces, so much h worse for them. lHt why should we be askod to sympathize -Kith them'? 1 is well enough to tell the facts nbout conditions !e Gevi many ant! to paint, a picture of German distress men' il and physical, hat. nil! serve as ft wrning to others not .' to emulate Prussian i-ni, but let it always be borr.e in ' mind that Germany has got off vouch easier than some
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If You Have Electric K0T0R TROUBLES CALL HAMMOND r'roi.p t a.-J tJlicicr.t Service A'w.-v. ri!.-r.;0ND ELECTRIC SUPFLY & REPAIR COMPANY The EJ-.tcuic f.lolor lo3piial
142 S Llcy St.
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of those j.lic cr'mln
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Her wav out is throush rcper.tanee anl atonemeni-.
5-he cannot reasonably expect remission of any penalties before she has given proof of a change of heart rnd a sincere purpose to mr.ke amends for her crime-?. THE L00NEY ARTISTS If you had your choice. and you have which would you rather be, a Tacllist or a l'adist? Weil, you don't have p be ci!ber. if that's how you fee! about it. but it doesn't cost anything and it's the latest fad from T'aiij. so why bang out? Now dont ask for definitions. Only a Da.Iiit linows what a Dadirt is. and even be isn't sure. For it were so vulgar as to know positively what Dad ism Ftiinds for. he'd cease to be a Dadisf. Do you follow? The Taeti lists are Just an offshoot of the futurists. Their art is the art of touching. If you get a (brill from running your bands through your husband s pockets, of if you feel something surge up within you when you've sat upon a tack, you're a Tactillst. Don't squirm. If you are one. you are one. and you might, as well be resigned. It te hard to write about. th"se 'nigh -biuw artbtle subieots. It Is so easv to be misunderstood. .Ius because you are a Tactiiisf, and so devoted to the art of touch, i.s no excuse for going around among your friends and workiuf the art. No excuse at all.
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Human Factors in Good Service There are three parties to each telephone connection the party who calls, the trained operator, and the party who answers. The telephone user shares with the operator the responsibility for good service. Accuracy in calling, promptness in answering, clear and deliberate talking and patience on the part of the user and the operator, are essentials of good service. In making 30,000,000 calls daily, millions of telephone users become integral parts in the Bell System and contribute to the success of the service, ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
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w?nnK YOUR Wav? The Efficient, Cheaper Way rcith the Simplex TJie InefRcient. Expensive Way 6y .anJ
9 o'clock the ironing finished work beautifully done kitchen cool housewife fresh and smiling rest of day for other duties, recreation or pleasure.
11 o'clock in the morning only a few pieces ironed kitchen hot housewife tired and discouraged hours of hard work ahead.
No woman should do by hand vhat a machine can do better for her
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Does the Work of an Expert Hand Laundress in One-Fourth this Time
I Live the !nrirv of an abundance;
Conserve your titnc r.nd Mrcn.th by ironing "the Simplex xx ay." Do our entire ironing in one hour. l-Iiminatc lifting and pushing of irons and !unij, tiresome standing. Cut down your gis and electricity billshy-uingtheSiinpix total cost of an ironing only 2 to 4c.
Kkclric Drive Siraph- Ironcr for
of. fre.h, well-ironed linen! The b.nnjes supplied " i;h ckctrio current, even heat and uniform pressure of Power Troncr for the form cr for (he theSimplcx produces a mure beaati- v. -shing machine user. Hand Power i'ul lmiih tlian possible ith a hand Simplex for the home without C..S or iron. The Simplex irons every- electricity. Eight sizes. The Simplexthing except shirtwaists and skirls, is durably made to last a lifetime.
Come in, or Telephone for Information Regarding Trial and Easy Terms It it's anything you need from a Drug Store, let Summers show you how yo:x --,.r, set--7 he Best Price The B '-t Qua!tly and I he Best Service. It costs you no more r.nd we like to v. ait on you. Yve have the rtoek immediate deliver.'.
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PATHE PH0MGGRAPHS RECORDS
Pr. scription Specialists MOHiilAN STREET NEAR STATE, HAMMOND, HMD. TELEPHONES: 1420142128. Ws Give 5. cc H. G-cn Trading Stamps
FEDERAL ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE AND VACUUM! CLEANERS
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