Hammond Times, Volume 10, Number 26, Hammond, Lake County, 9 July 1921 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TTMES Friday, July 8, 102',

L-Ml 11. J!

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

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COICVAVT, 1 Tha L Couuty lLui UuHy except H'ur4aj an WaT' l!Ill,lred l Lto P-i4.aic la Hjiiuio-..u. Jwu4 Tb Him-Em: Caicco-lMMA Harawr. daily sc9i i ' i. 19 11. ' ... '' County Tlir.-a SaiurOay and Wikly BdlUc ZV1 " lh oftofl;ic In Uwaicad. brmry i. 111. " ..." .-lw'y "S''" Xtm- i.i .c-yi tfr. b - 4aaxvi , ii, secuna-cUa

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NOTICK TO Sf'JESCKlBKRS.

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wumj do Hot think tt tu

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and ruinplHints ara

fronapUy as you hav in ti tmau Dl or was not .eat on Ua.c. i rvic is not what it u tn v.. .

Jneryal frem mny -o..rc, about the trln and ai.u l?lvln rninsi.iiy la reach lu. bafrona u -.

FEWER JUNE MAERIAQES Mtrnage licenses issued In the month Just closed now a decrease the country over, compared with the sacce ruonth last year. Cupid, of cours., U not to blame fcr the situation and h probably 13 not as cautlous as he may be given credit for being In some Quarters. Some of the decrease may be due to the fact thai prospective bride-grooms do not have steady work, but .that fact cannot be responsible for all of the unwilling, ness to wed In the most romantic month of the year. Those who fall victims of the dart of the little god ordinarily are so ebltvious to niaterisl afTairs that a little tains like lack of steady income doesn't bother ther. A more probable reason for the situation is the lack of homes for the newly-weds. It is likely that many who are working steadily, and are not only willing but eager to assume matrimonial bonds, are deterred by the fact that they can have no home to go to following the ceremony. It is the dream of every bride"s heart to have a little nest to fix up and attend to and be mistress of. Marriage changes lives of the newly married to a degree scarcely realized ven by those who have long known the wedded state and one of the changes Is-an intense desire experienced by the bride and bridegroom to have a home of their cwn. Couples long wedded are prone to forget the Joys .they experienced in fitting up their first home. Thcr . think of their early struggles and forget all abcut the triumphant feeling that came with each addition that ended to increase the comfortableness r.f thoir aiu-wi

The newlyweds. hewever. look forward to all such little 'occurences enjoys the elation of achievement which they later will recall only as a struggle but stil' fe-?Mng satIFfied with themselves because they made the effort and were successful. That Is why it is reasonable to think that lack of homes, rather than lack of work is the tauee of the " falling of in the nomber of marriage licenses issued. It is likely that when the housing condition is remedied there will be an increase over what would be the normal number.

ture cf tha course of study. But the material which is now belag offered in tha geography class Is not thd uainlettsUng body of facts it was Jn the days wiltn the chit! object of the teacher bieintd 10 be to have her pupils know the length of all th riyers in tha world, and the altitude of all the

mountain peaks. It is small wonder that the children j

often wearied of tM sort of educational setting-up exerciseWhy bother at the age of I., with bouuainj"

ttah, and make the cornering of this fact a momentous j

.iducatioual process in the life cf tbi child? Utah will always at?y where- it is now, and if for any conceivable reason we must know what state is to the east of it, that information is to be had at any time for the mere turning cf a few pages. The geography of today is a more humanized study than was its predecessor. We are couiias to s.ce that foreign countries in addition to harboring mountains

and rivers and lakes, are filled also with people. Thete people are busy making things and they want some things that other peoples make. These people who live in other countries believe things which in some chsea are different from things Which we believe. They follow cuBtoms which seem tc us very strange at time. Som of them speak a language which is not like the one we speak. More and more it ie to be thin material which is to be uced In the study of geography, if some educators who have looked Into this question are to have their way. It will hring about, they say, a. better understanding among nations; It will make for sympathy and a liberal outlcck on the part of the student. Tin- emphasis is to be put more on the people and Unir ways of

'iving and thinking, ythen ou their physical environ-

inent, whch was once about all there was to the study J t geography. And so it will come about in the end I

lhat instead of finishing his course in geography in the seventh or eighth grade, the student will continue it through the high school and even in college. For when It Is looked at in this light, there is nc end to the educrtlonal material offered by the study of geography.

BUSHNELL'S ANIMATED WEEKLY IN 8 REELS

CMifi JUSTICE OF UNJ7OSmTS

ff POLtsiH AND urHtAMXN PLCiAT

GENEVA-rttil t?CC 0V

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GOVERNMENT FLEE. 7 OF 287 WOOOtN 3tiPS OlA TEP

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FQU67 'T OFF WTH A6Y OF?K f7V JC3CFF0 TP Tlt THE 7?ce

NEW WORLD FOR OLD. In their efforts to put into the curriculum something vital, educational authorities are turning more nd more to the subject of geography. Not merely in (the grammer grades do we find it. now receiving more attention than it used to get; but even in the high schools and colleges it is being made an attractive fea-

UNCLAIMED MONEY industrious an,d careful persons, who find it not always easy to adjust their expenditures o that they may run somewhat below their incomes and thus afford a bails for adding to the sum laid away for a rainy day,' and who anxlcusly scan their bank balance after mak

ing out checks for the month's expense:, probably wondered to themselves when they road that more than $33,000,000 was lying in the United States treasury waiting fcr its owners to tend and get it. ThU money Is not due as the result of successful uits against the government for work done o supplies furnished It simply represents interest coupons on the new issues of government bonds put out sine the beginning of the late war and is immediately available, all that is necessary to obtain it being to present th coupons for payment. It is not nrcetsary even for the owners of these millions to make personal application. All they have to !o fs to deposit the coupens in any bank and fhe matter will be attended to with no further trouble ou their part.

The money referred to is chiefly the interest due on Liberty bonds which have not been converted Into, per

manent securities. The coupons on tde temporary bonds beiug all cashed, the bonds themselves should be presented for exchange for new bonds, to which all unpaid coupons are attached. This can be done through any bank, without expense to the owners, and it ought to be done promptly. The millions of dollars the undeposited coupons represent should bo canverted into credit at the bank, through deposit, the same as cash or checks. The large sum would add to the circulating medium, and Its place is in the banks where It will be available for hns,Irtss users, and help in restoring commerce and industry to a baslso f normal activity.

VlfmM mpmm Wvn Mt mm, IfiF tt' t 5 DOC H 7"? I MONSLV TFIIKS.' j P0S7tmTCK MJ MS N I bJ5CtM60 FAmem, SWCE WE'LL SAY H "XRWfiA't fn HTTRHCTiVF PffOPOSWON r& -Lr S V SHOULD BE X-Pt 1 CO"Q MOUSIXm t ffc 'f JfjL Qfl . rTlC sPd tjkJW

HOW MUCH

DO YOU KNOW?

th flurti of t.pe?oh !n st. Havre sobbed wtth

l a yninym for corri

dor "M. Is th'; torpi

stand for? of the earth

1 What "AH day the unrrow?

U'nat mfnc ? 5 What 1 What

called? a A'hat thr di.star.oe from home plate to pitcher's box? T a r-ron liablo to prosecution who makes a paurlt'rl article for his own u1 and docs not offer it for i-ale? 7 How heavy a ra:n constitutes a cloudburst? S What r.imo did Washington prefer for tht capital? 0 How r.iany worrl. arc thfft in the dictionary! 3 0 Wai the btrth rate of th world reduced much because of the worl4 war? na-rrm t Frtdny'a u-otloMa. 1 What I the htthent city In the

country? An. Lcadville. t'olo. The

City Is 10,190 fret above nea level. - What :-ate In the t'r.ion do not have any congreronal ditrict? Wyemlrn. New Mexico, Nevada. Ariloria and Idaho, Their eonjtrrsdinen are elected from the tate at larxe.

3 Since the V"nWn Siockyard In I Chii-asn were established In 1.5 i-nv j

many animnl have been received and o'.d? An. A total of 53fl,Oiio.'ono. The yards ar the larRest In the world. 4 What ia heat-lightnintr? Ana. Ueat-lisrhtning- ! far off lightning flniihia rvflecten from higher strata or cloudy. 5 Wiiat Is black strap? An. It is a low era-1cf!U(tar cane mulasscs. What is the verajr time American children attend school? Ana. t'ix years. 7 How are strawberry vine.- propagated? Ana. -My runners which strike rot at the end and produce newplants. S In America where are the mapno! ins best known? Ans. In the gulf ktateti. 9 How old i Noah reputed to hav

been when the deluxe destroyed all hu man life save himself and his family? Ans.-Six hundred years. 1A What lu the Latin and poetical name of Swltierland? Ans. Hlvtia-

"I understand that a private alv-w-Ing-of the films already has tak' n place In Washington," Mr. Daugherty added .

May Show Big Bout Movies Around U. S. WASHINGTON. July 8. rrovt-tcd tat censorship boards approve it Is possible that motion pictures of the rompsey-Carpentler fight may liff Shown In other states than New Jersey. There is a federal law. parsed some tim after the Johnson-Jeffries bout, forbidding the interstate transportation of fight pictures. While ho. -ontured no opinion with regard to this law. Attorney General Daus;herty yesterday lodicnted that If state boards approved and no protests were received by the T-cpartment of Justice, exhibitions of the pictures would not be Interfered with.

HOW MUCH BLUFF JN JANUESTIONI At Least That Is What the Administration at Washington Wants to Know. . WASHINGTON. July S. fcomethins akn to a '.ai&ntic game of bluff, or a srrio.u misunderstanding is fcoin:? the rounds of London, Toklo and Washington, correerninx HrltUh-Jap-anese-American rt'latlonf and the probable renewal of the A rJ, 1"-J apanese alliance, It wns aid here loday. Lloyd Gcor?e stated flatly am! without quallttat ion in the houiv of cooimons that an Iniporfunt statement on the Japanese situation" wa 'dependent upon "replies rereived from the United States and China." The highrt ofnclfil of the adminitratlon declared equally as flatly anJ without qualification today they do not know what the Hritlsh premier is talking about when he speaks of "re piles from the t'nit'-d States." According to the niost authoritative source, there has been nothing received from Great Britain that calls for a reply,

either formally or Informally. Not a written word bas passed between .the two governments on the subject of limitation of armament or the renewal cf the A ntrlo-Japanrpe ailianco, it was said.

day In battles. Firing breke out in the Belfast ciatrict while Crown Forces were e&rcH lng tor arms and a woman waa klUe! and a constable wounded. It v. a rumored a number of lnn Felners wer killed and their podlcs removed secretly.

QT

VIOLENCE SHIFTS

COULD fl

KEEP HOUSE Without Lydia E- PinkhW Vegetabla Compound, Says Mr. PitU of Newburgh Newburgh, N. Y. "My trouble waa a weak back and I could not walk two

tired out. I read of Lydia E. Pinkhaja's Vegetable Crapound hi a newspaper and decided to give itatrUl. Now lean do ray own work and walk with etae. I always keep the Vegetable Crseound in the house.

Jit certainly ia rev 4 beat friend and I

cou! d not k eep house wi thout it. I have recommended it to many and always shall. You may use this letter if you wish."-Mra. Edward FlTTS, 2 High St., Newburgh, N. Y. It bas been said that "backache to an invention of the Evil One to try woraen'a souls," but even so, it is more often a symptom of a female trouble which sooner or later declare itself. Day after day it drags a woman down and night after night prevents restful sleep. Such woman should follow Mra.. Pitt advice and try Lydia E. Pintham'a Ve$--

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I AaVlA ri-ltvrwMinr? nA iT t KTth

INTO ULSTER Letters about your health will be giver.. Belfast. July The seat of Irish' careful attention and held in trict connviolence has apparently been shifted dence if you write to Lydia E. FinVhar. from tha aouth into Vlster rrovinc ' Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Theireperiand many casualties were reported to- ence of over 40 years ia at your nrvtee.

WITH CORD TIRES

WITH CORD TIRES

$455 Less Than the Price of September 1920 '

Reduced Prices

tStptember- 1920 S-Pasa. Tour. $2050 Roadster '. . 2050 Sport Car . . 2140 Coupe. . . . W) Sedan .... 2950

WITH CORD TIRES

Jul) 1921 5-Pass. Tour. $1595 Roadster . . 1595 Sport Car . .. 1675 Coupe. ... 2400 Sadaa .... 2495 WITH CORD TIRES

All prices ta.. Detroit

WH V is the Liberty Six acknowledged to be a great car and a wonderful value? The answer is easyLook at its remarkable new LibertyTriple Head Motor, 53 h.p., a distinct engineering advance. Look at its perfected Pressure Lubricating System, with Special Oil Regulator. Look at its sensational Dry Gas Vaporizer and Special Manifold. Look at its wonderful flexibility of 2 to 60 miles on high. Look at it record of service. No Liberty Six has yet given out. Look at its fuel and oil economy. Averages 18 miles to the gallon of gas and 800 miles per gallon of'oil. These are facts that establish proof beyond question. The Liberty "ENGINEERING FIRST' Policy has made them possible, y At the present price of $1595, which includes cord tires, we claim that the Liberty Six is absolutely the best automobile value in America. We will match it in engineering, in workmanship, in performance, in speed, accel-

V

asfTt' eration, power, economy and endurance, with any automobile in America within $1000 more than its price. $ If you are going to buy an automobile, be sure you inspect the Liberty Six with its wonderful new Liberty Triple Head Motor. This is -'the Car with a Reason for every Why." Come in or phone for a man. No obligations

at all.

If you are thinking of a closed car,

keep this in mind. Liberty built its reputation upon its smart closed cars. At the new prices, we offer you the biggest closed car value in the countrySee these cars. Compare the value. Judge for yourself. fj ff pi fi ff fi ft Among those who have known it intimately, the Liberty Six has always been voted the one big, outstanding value among central class cars. At the new prices wc believe it smashes all value-per-dollar records REGARDLESS OF CLASS.

liberty Dealer & Company East Side Garage and Sales Co. Calumet Ave. and Becker St. Phone 386 Hammond. Ind.

IT-?-

A' Sin Tjr.-awif-

Store Hours 8:30to5:30

Store Honrs Satnxrliy 9:00 K M. to 9:30 P.M.

MONDAY

Wicker Porch Chairs Very high back, wide arms and comfortable shaped seat, made very strong and durable. Monday Bargain, very special (t O QQ at only ej)Oee7Q

Girls' Gingham Dresseo Made from good quality gingham; nicely . trimmed. Sizes from 8 to 14. Regular QO prices up to $1.75. Monday e-OL Ladies' Bloomers Made from pink cambric, trimmed with ruffles, plain and lace edge. Regular 59c val- -Q ues. Monday, special at O Sale of Bed Sheets Bed Sheets, 81-90, extra fine quality. Regular $1.89 value. Specailly priced for tf "I OQ Monday, each 1 o-7 Glass Wash Board Standard sizes. A regular $1.00 Board. Q Special Monday, each ViC

Library Table Solid quarter sawed oak or genuine mahogany Table, heavy pedestal base, oval top, size 2Sx 42; complete with drawer. Former price $59. Specially priced for Monday (fjQQ CA only, each 4 O O D U

Women's Tan Slippers Neat for dress or everyday wear; Igiht tan two-" strap with ball strap vamps, neatly perforated, strong leather soles and Cuban (f O O C heels. Monday only, per pair. .tPeJeO tJ

Black Hose for Children Bif Special for One Day Famous Black Cat Hosiery for children. Fast eoler, first grade and quality. Sizes 51. O O to 1 1. Monday, special, per pair.". ... O W V Boys' Tennis Oxfords Sizes 1 1 youths to 5'. boys. Best quality rubber soles and canvas uppers. Special "1 OQ price for Monday, per pair aj) X - Coffee Mill Arcade Wall Coffee Mills, blue or black enameled glass canister. Sold regular at 1 Q $2.25. Monday Special, each . . . P A Men's Work Shirts "MoorerV brand, patent sleeves; high grade Blue Bell shirts, sizes 142 '7- Regular Q 98c kind. Special at Ui7C

Men's Sox Men's Sox. hlack color, double heels and toes, slight seconds of 25c quality. Very 1 f good wearing. Special at 1 VV