Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 287, Hammond, Lake County, 24 May 1921 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TIMES I'uosdar. May 24. 1021.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

MX X ,

county yarjiTxjffa ruBwocxxra COJCPAJTT.

Tha lLk County Xunev VoSXy except Saturday and unCay. luntwea at tba puatuuic In tiuuuiauu, Jui J, Tha Tlmw-Et Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally cp unsay. Junterad ttt the postotncw In but CUicao, Novein. oer 1, 181. The Lak County Timaa Saturday and Weekly Edition, "entered at lha poatoftlc In Kaonmoua. tebruavy . !!. Xi Uary Krealug Xlraaa lAnly e-..et suua. binlareC at Uit poatotiicw ut wary. Ayril 1', 111. All ua4r Ue act of Marcu a. loi, aa eecond-claM mat tjr.

FORKION ADVERTISING REPHKsiKNXATION G. LOUAM I'ANK A CO. CHICAGO oary OflUa Tclephuiio 131 Naaaau at Thompson. Ut Chicago Telephone Mil fcUit Chicago (The Timea) Telephone a Indiana tiaiBor IHeporlflr and Claaa Adv Telepliuue ij iiiaitiim L&rbur l.Nowa Dealer,' Telcpnone 111-J hUinf i e;epiiouo o-J -ri.tvu iolnt . Telephone IX you have any trouble setting Thi Tmu iiiJte complaint iinuieaialely to the Circulation Department. fcUuuaoad (private exchange) . 110U. 3101. S10I Call tor wluiivr Se arimsiit wanted.) NOTICE! TO SIJB3CRIBKR3. If you fail to receive your copy of Thi Tims a promptly aa you hare In the past, please do not think tt baj been loet or waa sot sent on tirtic. ntminiDr that the mail service is not what it ueed to be mud tt.jt cumplaluls are goner yal from many sources about the train ana mail service. Tub 'i'liiii hut Increased us nyullutf equipment and 1 al.lvln earnestly to retth it patruun on time. Uo prompt in advising us when you do not get your paper and we win act pt-onipdy. IMPOKTED "MEDICINE." France ilans to end more champagne to America this year than last, when 285,000 bottles were Imported for '"medicinal purposes." It would appear that we are fast becoming a nation of Invalids. But, of course, the well known rebtoratlve qualities of champagne will go a long w.-" toward paving the country, and If 20,000 bottles won't vhy 600,000 perhaps will. By the wav. what Is champagne designed to relieve?

GERMANY BEGINS TO PAY Although Germany has been paying the cost of maintaining the armies of occupation in the Rhine region, the reparations commission in Paris announces that the first payment under the reparations agreement has been placed at the disposal of the allies. It is said to be 150,000,000 gold marks. It is announced in a statement from Berlin that the remainder of the first billion gold marks "will be paid within the period prescribed," which will be a"iout .lune 1. The stipulation that payments shall be made in gold marks precludes payment with depreciated currency. The statement was recently made that the money which Germany will be able to save annually because It has no military machine to maintain, will readily cover the iV'ments which must be made to the allies. Germany's Industries are uninjured, and the nation should soon readjust Itself to the changes enforced by the outcome of the war. Europe's hope for economic rehabilitation depends on the promptness with which the currency issued during the war can be- retired. As long as curicncy remains at its present low value unnecessary I'urdens will be placed upon the poor, who find that their earnings are not sufficient in many cases to maintain themselves.

Industrial activities in Germany are being resumed and markets are being sought tor the products of I he mills and laeUried. The claim wad recently made that the allies would actually pay the debts of Germany, aithuusu it would be doue indirectly. v THE YEABN1NG FOR EDUCATION durpiiiic w " tauita ia:i jea. jy tuu iujIi to the colleger; at many of tus laige iUiiitutioud there weie iiiuie applicants lor admission than could be accomodated, scarcely less surprising is the revelation made :u a recently taken census, oi the number ci persons Wiio are luKiug college courses by correspondence. Thirteen universities report that they axe giving ;uatructiou by mail to a total of more than 40.01)0 men ..ad women. Tiieee cot respondent students are lor ttio most pan older than those who attend college, and they are drawn from all walks of life and from abroad as well as from every corner of the L'nited States. The Lr.ivesity of Chicago reports that !t has enrolled in ka ?oi respondents department one student living above the Arctic Circle in Alaska and another in a remote part of China. The courses cover a wide range of subjects. Business course are most popular with the correspondence pupils of the University of Wisconsin. At the University of Kansas foreign language ate most iti demand; ; t the University of Kentucky practical mining, at the University tf Oklahoma education, and at the Universities of Ciiltago, Indiana and Texas, 'English. This yearning for education, it is safe to assume, is prompted by recognition of the fact that learning makes for success in business. The correspondence students are taking courses of which they cau make practical use. If they are employed in factories or mines they want to know the science that is back of their jobs. If they work in offices they seek acquaintance with the underlying principles of their business. These students will be the self-made men and women of a few years from now. Denied, probably, the opportunity to attend college and take the courses leading to a degree, they are making the most of such chances fcr obtaining an education as are available. This shows grit, and grit Is one of the important factors that enter into success.

THE FACT that a man is continually getling himself into deep water is no sign that he Is a -good swimmer.

DESPITE THE FREEZE not all the plums were Killed In Washington.

A I-OT OF folks will find excuse for additional eccentricity In that approaching ccmet. '

The -Passing -Show

How mat

CALIFORNIA has not yet advertised earthquakes as a desirable addition to the wonderful climate.

Nobody has sympathy for the eld beau who permits himself to be inveigled by a vamp.

WONDER IF AN ice profiteer ever thinks of a hot place!

IT WILL SOON be time to make plans for the f.nnual vacation, if any.

SOME FOLKS have no sense of humor, and othe-3 have a sense of bad humor.

rnoi'iairrvs the th'nR

A.I our memory goes haek to tn time WHF.N our idea of the chief mission OK th parasol was to enable j

to hump Into when carry irm over. IF six slim K'rls ?top to talk ON the sidewalk you Spt IST without much trouble ni'T if two crn fds stop to talk "n Till! sidewalk you have to WALK out in the otreet to get by. AV looks could kill THE undertakers would be ttnnninu night and day buryms husbands. H 10 see by a Texas paper WHICH has made a study of the subject 1 hand that the girls down there AMI-: now having Texas e.-.-rs painted on I 111.111 stockings and until this S t 1 U llH.S we do n-'t want to go to Texas AS the painters are said TO make the spiders so life-like THAT a man who always tries to be holpful AM) polite would be in imminent danger i: should think of savins "pard-m me" placingTHIS accent on the me and trying TO pick ofT a spider. PEOPM3 would have a lot more MOM-'.V in the bank if they were not A I.I, try in to ft something for nothing. THAT husband who made HIS wife tend the furnace last winter IS now watching-Hl-Ut spade the garden IT has just about r ached the point WHl.Hi;. when the first baby comes Al.OXi the loving parents buy A Ford tor It INS l i: A II of a baby hugy. i: when we are all prh tint i oi -is i s AM every day Is Sunday WH do not imagine T1HT Satan will ever have t IT.OSi: up the Hades Houfe KOH lack of patronageIHi;i(K Is good in everythint; AMI vvr have to say one thing f"'.TIIK Kntrlish sparrow

III: has Kreat adaptability. THH o, f. man wh., usi-d to iiav To l'.'-trti to sermon that lasted an HOI It and a half rto-v has a OV who gets mad 1I-' the sermon la.-,ts mote than KII-'TF.KN' minutes. IIIVOIK i: lawyers niakMOMiV because C'-upl'-s imagine THAT it js silly to matte I.O i: to one another after they marry.

'I weights In a .lav..-

HOW MUCH

BO YOU KNOW?

QUALITY

SERVICE

A FAIR PRICE

i 111

e Best the Country Prod

uces i

ffw ill If f lit w

J. V all JJLamJ JL i &mjr

i- mSm

ART, Schaffner &Marx, Society

Brand and Michaels-Stern

Suits for men and young men, smartly hand tailored, selected from higher priced lots and specially priced. Get yours to wear Memorial Day, STERY fine suits, re- OOME of our finest 1 v duced from higher garments, suits of priced stocks they a quality you've seen wereworth$45 now . priced at $75 now

.50

5 32

770 fC3J

ICAUFMAMM & WOLF - HAMMOND. Ind. I Double S. & H. Stamps Tomorrow !!llllll!l!!linill!lininil!l!H!ll!!!!!ll!!ini!!!lll!!!i;!!

1. What part of Uie human anatomy Is the piderm's'.' AVhieh is the biT-K.-st Indian Ite-f'-rve in ( "Mtiiria V Where wav the Tltinia Tliule of the nric-ter.t Unmans? !. IVliit I is h I -ilibv-rn t ?

6. What is i d-'tc's

7. What v d.-ruin-V V What is a chip's t raff rai IV Wltat kin-i of nn .animal is a b!jr ham ? What Jn infant by bi-sectini? i

AITSWXK.S TO TESTIKDAY'S QUESTIONS 1. What Is a ; ,(! 'i : i rrant V Atif. It Is a warrant im.'.fM '.ms . polios cfl'io r to s-'-ar'-li u leni-j inr an stolen property. J. What (ire o or..;,, ry tint.-.? Atis. They ar.) subviued ilrits o-'b as firey. 3. What Is a .v-'lna;ao,r- -.' Ans. It !. an appitrtus uvi-.l for K;-nail:n5 by mt-ans of arms, lmJr.i-. !'ar;-, etc. 4. In what s'- ty was "Tupvy" n character? At::-. -In L'te T. i 'a bin. 5. AVho nrft the ; era I! Tro atore .' Ana. The opera vv as w:'. t- n by V rdl. ij. AVhat is h ti;usr-:; V Ans.- -It is a Miull pet ! -r.-i '.ed f .-'-pta. lor holuins aroinalle v : nej.--r Hat' ili.B salts-. 7. VNTiat ar? the t;ire,- ;-iia nO Ati.t. P.rtti6h bulaim, lu!cb atid x'v -iica oila n a. .. M"ht l. 5iin',v-M:ii'i',"M?? Ar.s.---It is an impairment ff v i.- n e.ui.-ed by exposure of the eye to the glare of Snow. 9. "What 1 a prr-tt? Ani.- rt 1ii b.errin:;-like tish f..!,:.d !i !lua:s -ti the Atlantic const K r"r... 10. Are yriow crystals i nr eS'.ki ' Ans. A i 1 he HI ( a U" two vn.e.V iTV.oii:

i.wr a'ik, tli- y rut filnaj s h'-Mii -ii-li ivlii 'itio.r tix .sides or p.x. in ua

Try a ,MJirnes V'ant Ad" t-.-j -r- v ) 'v'a

ft' Mw iCt

5k

GENUINE

9 W

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H r- M P U DURHAM tobacco makas 50 good cigarettes for ' 10c U n ? V " n

il 4.4.

Plants

For Memorial Day

pecially Priced for Quick

AH these plants are in full bloom, all are of good hardy stock. Choose from :

DAISY in 4-inch pots 2Sc ROSE GERANIUMS, in 4-inch Pois .... 29c CANNAS, in 4-mch pots 2Gc OXCELIA, in 4-inch pots 35c ICE PLANTS, Morning Star, 4-inch pots. 35c

WANDERING JEW 18c C0LLEUS 18c YW cho.co of CABBAGE, CAULIFLOWER. CELERY. PEPPERS, per dozen 10c TOMATOES. ASTORS, EGG PLANTS, per dozen 15c

GERANIUMS IN BUI (IN 4-INCH POTS)

ZUc

DOUBLE STAMPS TOMORROW

DOUBLE STAMPS TOMORROW

KAUFAAMN &. WOLF - Hammond. Imd

J

THE UNIVERSAL CAR

.! ) 5

$588.42 Hammond, East Chicago, Gary Equipped with Self-Starter, Deuiour, table Rirns, Extra Kim and Tire Carrier, 30x3V2 Non-Skid Tires We represent the most thorough and up-to-date motor car factory in the world, turning out the best all-round car on the market today the most adaptable to every need of every class of people. The Ford Service organization, of which we are a branch, is the most extensive as well as the most intensive organization of its kind in existence, consisting of over 18,000 Service Stations in the United States. It is our duty to uphold the high ideals of the Ford organization in this territory, to deliver cars as promptly as possible, to give quick and thorough repair service and courteous treatment to all customers.

E. N. BHHN

EiLL My i tin j$Mi hIS i

HAMMOND Phone 650

EAST CHICAGO Phone 947

GARY Fhcne 1760

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