Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 44, Hammond, Lake County, 11 August 1921 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TIMES. TTmrsdav, August 11. 1921 am

Tfca 1 JLa Comity 'lime ijaJiy xtj;t Ar-dy -ua Tis llxco dt Oiloa-Iiivliaii KAJiior, Oa11 txttji buoatty. uire4 i Uit vvotoiuco a. Ciuov, iNutuu Xiie ; County Tlt btLrty axa Weeily Bciitla. rfurti l me ;yuDce In liauinuuuo, e&ru-y i. isle. Xa Otuy oa 1ium ij4iy i.cjyi aujioay. i-u loftC m. We ioUiitit; ijft oo.,y, AprU 1', IS 13. All UiiOW o act f axi , lot, Oocoud-clwi aUr.

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ixl 4 a tiy to tb Clrcuiauon DptrUiiab ..,.o i (iirlvn.tstittia.sjia) Uluu, 3101, JloJ C.l lur wBMevif dorartmajt wnm-ixl.f iOHClt. XO SLBdCKIKiGlt if you fall lo roe. yaui copy f rui Timbi ai trcjtly i you lmv in the p si, p2i.a do not think u tun tteeu il or WJ , t teat uu luhx -it eiu coitus Umi. m0 u;iii trvioo is not wot It ued to be and ti t cumpituia .r eawytU from muny eouro about tii train axia mail ice. I Xihl qm lacrosse a iu ailiu eiulieut una la tjlviu arneatiy to resell 1L pairou on taut, iio yiauijii in fclviln( ua vnu you ao not uttt cur paper aua wo ui set proaiptly.

AN OPEN LETTER. Tha Grand Rapids. lUich. Frc&s lias printed "au open letter to Indiana." as the cupticn rt.ads. scuriut: tiie condition of bignwaya between Michigan Citj and Giry, on the lake shore auto route from western Michigan resorts to Chicago. One of the worst roads in tho laiddie west is that same stretch. "Travelers leaving Chicago for their summer homes must usa this road or take the out-of-tae-v.-ay route by South Bend. Travelers from western Michigan to Chicago, often on business bent must also use this highway or throw away valuable time. "For many this stretch of road is their only source of impression of th state of Indiana. They usually rut that impression into words suitable neither for the child to hear nor for the choir to sing. To them the "Welcome" signs along the way are the refinement of sarcasm. "Wouldn't it be an excellent state investment, Indiana, to see that the Michigan City-Gary highway was the best road in the commonwealth. Just as an advertisement, wouldn't it pay to put the "Welcome" intc good roads instead of signboards?"

iii.it tiicre are coCEtaiis ana ccivtaiis, uu JUiicats thai Ui baud tUjit locks tuw vl adie Uiixes a wu U. -IX a. , a lid tUiiS llc-ta bio cast! W4tu au illUictbuiLeuyj)' itaiij ought to throw the rel-able lufcsuiauou into iii'H.su mae-latioui taat lniemyerakce la verv baa tor peoi.'ie, veavlUt-r lakeu U13 tu.aed as a couktaii or stianj.il. A SIRANGE LErOKT. A report is currtUL in iiainunjuu that the park board intends, to make wbat in reality a private park of the iiammocd Lake Frcni i c k ncit summer and the new; is arousing considerable ad'.c.se comment. The restaurant piivikfce lease empires this j ear and it is said to Le the inuutiou of the paik board to lease the restaurant, bath house aud all privileges in one blanket lease, tucb a plia will arc use intense opposition among the people ci Hammond. If the bath house is operated privately, iusuud of by the city government it wiil mt.m an end to the good order which has been

kept there since the bath bouse was built. It will mean that publ.c behavior will be such that a private individual will not be able to maintain it and a certain class of patron with whom the police have trouble every year will do just about as it wi.ih s and on the other baud patrons of the place will be at the mercy of private management. We do not believe that the nark board's plan will meet with the approval of the people of Hamuionn. The park is a public am! not a private institution. It belongs to the city and should be operated by the city. To lease it to a private individual would be a mistake. There is no use cru'ng a bridge until we come to it. but there is no time like the present before a deal is closed fcr acquainting the public with the facts.

MODEL OF PIONE E R A VI ATOR AND HIS MACHINE IS NOW IN BERLIN MUSEUM

TERRIBLE FUSS IN ENGLAND. The mischief is out and the London press Js filled with the horrified ejaculations cf "Old Subscriber," "Vox Popull" and "M. D." particularly "il. D." Cocktail! Would you believe it, the American cocktail is Britain's lat, menace. One "M. X." writes to eay the race is perishing over night because of it; another "M. D." comes back with the hiiaricus assertion that it is a great little appetiteteaser lie the jaded. 'And so it goes, while a mighty audience groans or applauds, as the spirit or spirits moves or move them. One combative doctor, refusing to be cut-argu-ec, carried eff a cocktail, in a bottle be it understood, and analyzed it. Then he staggers into Fleet street, screaming to the world that he has discovered his reputation at stake on it gin and vermuth mixed. In itself something to destroy the body and poison the soul. r From that point the debate becomes technical; it' ranges over the number of cocktails one should of should not drink. One, or perhaps two, it is suggested might be withstood. Eight or nine, one after the other, seems to some of the dectors, excessive. A climax to the defense is reached when 3 member of the American Club in Piccadilly remarks with a yawn you can sense, that "America (though

RETURNING TO ART. "Man cannot live by bread alone," a thought reflected in the poet's advice to the hungry man with two cuius to buy bread with one ami with the other "hyacinths to feed your soul." European countries now only slowly recovering f:om the war are exemplifying the great Truth. France, Italy and Great Britain are turning their attention again to art. The materialist would say, "Why buy pictures when you need bread?" But they know well that

1 spiritual and Intellectual needs must be satisfied as

well as the physical. The French government has recently acquired some aiuab:e art treasures, not after the manner cf the German looters, but by purchase. Among them was a collection of Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities. The British National Gallery has just become the possessor of Miliais masterpiece, "The Carpenter Shop," at a cost of $52,000. The fund was raised by popular subscription at a time when industrial depression existed and yet many contributions were received from persons of moderate means. It is unthinkable, of course, that France would ever consent to part with the treasures of the Louvre, but the wealth she could derive from such a course wculd be incalculable At the present rate of exchange American purchasers of French pictures have an enormous advantage. Certainly it would seem to be the time to enrich our great public galleries. There is a complaint of lack of funds. But surely Americans are In a better position to buy objects of art than are European art lovers.

Sk. A'.V'"" - . ' '

OT11EK p-rsoa is too oujy TO take so nuch time off says THAT ha if afraid to, APTEll a fellow has lli;i,D a girl on his knees I "Oil a few months HE g'-ta 6 0 ha iniagln'! Hi; can support her f r life.

HOW MUCH BO YOU KNOW?

BEHOLD NEWEST OF FREAK PARIS FAD?

Model of Otto Lilian thai, ploner aviation inventor and his first flytnj machine, now prominently 'placed La Berlin Museum. Otto Lilwuathal, inventor and pioneer in aviation, met his death perfecting one of his machines in 1896, just twenty-five years ago. His first idea of a flying machine was to have the winga shaped like those of a bat, the apparatus placed around the pilot, and then have the man iump off a hill and let the machine glide through the air to the ground below. It was in one of these leaps that Lilienthal was killed. As a tribute to his inventive eenius a model of the inventor and hia machine baa been placed in the Berlin Museum. .

The -Passing -Show

INVKSTME-Vr opportunities GIU1ET us on every hand WHICH la Just the trouble THAT meet so many peopl. A aaai win uit THE public comb la PAKLOH. car washroom BIT if his wife uees his comb HE makes a gre-at luss over it AXU is ready to flsht. IV opportunity walked right in WITHOUT knocking EVT:x then a lot OF men would b out. O.VE of these "heart" writers GIVE.S advice to a d!stractJ rORRESPO'DE.vr who simply can t be alone WITH a certain young man FOR two mlnuteg without his tryingto persuadeIIEH to let him kiss her and she MIGHT have added THAT the only kind of kisses worth HAVING anyhow Is the kind TH.VT neither person chiefly concerned

KNEW did.

was gclr.er to happen till It

A man never appreciates EITHER his hair or his health I'NTIL they pack up. AIS'D leave him. PEKHAPS we become unduly UEPKESSEI) over this matter at times A1 probably, when we come down TO brass tacks not mere THAN one out of every thre LOOKS as If she had FORGOTTEN" to put on two or three OF the most important things WHILE dressing for the street. A princess can't understand WHY it Is that the eligible FELLOWS in her home town HAVEN'T pop eyes and adenoids LIKE the heroes la tha movie odiums. ANOTHER little pathetic FEAT CHE of every day Ufa is the WAY a aorlaiist ALWAYS wants to nbae with SOMEBODY and thinks when the

I 1 Wh-it was the arta of the former ; Kussla-n : r l- .' 2 What comr.acv founded Jiir.cs- ! i 3 Did Aescp. the- Creek fabulist, , 1 ltv before or after Christ? j i 4 Who elected Jeffers.-.n Davis pres-rJ-'-Rt cf th Confederacy? ; j 5 Where was the tattle of Winches-' j t.rr fought? 1

G What was the- purchase system tn i th.j British army uhich was abolished ! :,. 15T1? i 7 What other country. In addition i to the United States, had a financial

pan!" '.n 1S73? Who w.is Garfield's opponent In the camraifn of S "When was i'.lut-.'r.atlng gas introducet In this country? 10 .At tho mouth of what river Is Hampton Roads? iSSWIKS TO WEDKXSDAY'S QTJisnoK-a 3 What Is the highest, denomination of postage stamps in this country? Ans. J5. 2 Who is the eldest cabinet member at prc-RTt? Ar.s. Secretary of the treasury, Mft'.Ion. He 1s 65. S How old is Herbert Hoover? Ans, He is 47. 4 Does a grass-hopper chew Its food? Ans. It is one of the class of insects which, chewy and swailow gome parts of the plant the7 attack. 5 Who was kin of Germany 1.000 years ago? Ans. Henry the Fowler. He inaugurated the Saxon dynasty. 6 When did Cutcnberi start the practice of prir.tir.g with movable type? Ans. About 14SS. 7 What was the first name of Cham plain, the discoverer of Lake Champiain? Ans. Samuel. 8 Who inverted the barometer and when was It Invented? Ans. It was Invented by TorrioeiH in 1643. 9 When was tho war of the Bavarian success? Ar.s. la 1778 and. Jn 1773. 10 Where was the battle ef Bunker H:U fought? Ans. At Breed's HilJ, near Rinkrr Hill.

Read The Times Want Ad

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Shown here is a vary fa&hioaakia madam e wearing black (ruaatleta with a sleeveless frown. The (doves which, are banded in white, are attached to long narrow ribbons that stream from the shoul-

BUY THE ORIGINAL Reports have been circulated that for some time an -unfortunate situation has existed, at least to some extent, la the grocery trade in the practice of soiling goods in buik, with the representation that such gcwls were the products of well known ma'nuf avturer. 8ueh practices ars difficult to detect and to itop. Oni recent case Is the following: On August 4, 1921, la tha Municipal Court of thS Dorchesrter restrict, Boston, John 1L Ryan conducting a trrocery store undr the najr.e cf Ryan Bros, charged with the untrue- jid misleading advertising, in that he filsely rapreser.ted a bulk cocoa to he Baker's Breakfast Cocoa, was found guilty and fined, Ryan paid the f.ne. It would seera that the bast assurance a consumer could ha'e la to buy only tha products ef well-known and reputable nianufacturers m the original packages, properly labelled and also bearing- the name, guarantee and trade mark of the r.akr.

CLOTHIERS IN convention were advised to buy now because prices for winter stocks wouid be no lower. Oh, well, overcoats are far from our thoughts Just now.

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GERMANY OWES U3 something like $241,000,000 for maintenance of the army cf occupation. Any nation that doesn't owe us money these days must owe us a grudge.

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220 East State Street Phone 4014 $3.00 Orders Delivered Free

Skinned Hams

43c

6 to 10 lb, whole, 36c "2J IL L.I li. J

W, UCM, y IU . . . Sliced Center Cut, per pound

LUNCHEON ROLLS, 3QC per pound MEATLETS, very fine, 9Q per pound OOC

BACON SQUARES, per pound DRiED BEEF, per pound BACON, per pound

(The above are Miller & Hart's products, sugar cured, none

finer.) SWIFT'S BOILED HAM, per lb .... . SWIFT'S BRISKET BACON, per pound SWIFT'S BACON, per pound

19c 50c 2

58c 19c 28c

PINK SALMON Tail Cans 12c PURITAN MALT and 4 oz. Hops 75c

1"

tieese

Very mild, Young American, per lb

LUNCHEON, very rich Q C

BRICK, full cream, Wisconsin, per lb . . PIMENTO, in glass PIMENTO, 1 in package GINGER ALE AND ROOT BEER, qts. .

for 64c

28 c 18c

14c

Grand Ma's

Large pkg. 13c 1 to a customer

2

Box Hjmd Dipped

0 c Chocolates 20c

utter

Gilt Edge, rub, it's 4gc delicious, per lb ... . LIBBY'S SWEET PICKLE RELISH, pint jar 25 C REID MURDOCH'S SWEET PICKLES, quart 4fiC jars, at (Pint jars at 25c) SINCERITY PITTED CHERRIES heavy syrup, 3 0 C No. 2 can SLICED HAWAIIAN 0f0 PINEAPPLE, IVi can UUC SUGAR MELTING A Peas, 18c; 2 for. . . .

n

Fresh stock, 30 to 40, the big ones, nhile they last, Qfjp 18c lb; 2 lbs for... JXJ CHERRY PHOSPHATE IHr

40c

$5 Down Easy Monthly Payments

1

very special RUNKEL'S COCOA, 1 pound

02 pound, 21c)

Cookies

FIG NEWTONS, per pound LEMON per pound .... ASSORTED, per pound .... GINGER SNAPS, per pound ....

18c 18c 18c 12c

Let us deliver your groceries at a cash and cary price Phone 4014 and we will send them out C. O. D.

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