Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 118, Hammond, Lake County, 7 November 1921 — Page 4
Page Four
THE TIMES. wim.jiL--iim. 1
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS CO-CVAJiT. Tk LAte Oouatjr llue Ua.Uy oxcnpt rarly vnl 0Uni. iuiLril l Lh yoalouicw la j.Lhukuo':!. Juu it, lit. Xb Xlnu k-tmt Ciiicanu-Indiaina liArbur. Ually -C4pl 6uuUa. n.oieril tixa in-'.ivuliuo u liiml CiUuajso, NoveinDor 1. IS It. Th Uii County Times Saturday and WiHikly Edition. SaUereu us. (4a ivitoftto In HammouiU "iru4ixy 4. llt. I'n lisu ji E.volit4 XauM iuy -.c-iu ouU. (: fct u ivoatocuco IB Ciu-y, April lr, 1011. AJi iftte cl jf krck i- - e.-oulclu
2- l AVNi, Oj. CHICAGO
Cbi'.-ui r:bc Tluioa) Vikiixuo It lulitt.litl ia.Kt.t (AbCiKK'lor tuu CIjmj A4 i l.l'l""0 "Ij Jiuiaiiai tt!ur l.N.v UvKt; . XeKpuwun WtUilins . i'elrpi"'" )-- -twu r lul , . , , . 'i'l'ieytiDDtt Adl If you tx. uy iroubl- gettluK Ttui Tm uot..liU Unja-viuil-y to tu Ciivuia.. loii U'-paruueuv. tuuiiuou t j.ri vate xi1i;j; oiuu. iiui. Jlu (Call lor wDkUvw u'rTnu-:u "ntsi.; If you fli Ij rcivtt youi cupy or fH Tim as at i.ri-' ruj.ii j- jil.u Uav la I be t !-) do not think tt naa u:vu iwac r vu t kon'. iu ti.n.. tieiui-iuour ilia: in,, muii rico is nut what H uwd lc n3 and ti-it coinplmuia ri i.-ryi from tnr.y ourc-. about the trUo ana mH erJaw. 'I mm HujLf Has iicrvi- j ii nvi.tiit etjulpiiiem ana 1 i.'lvuj itrui;! ;o r-.ji ita it-ouH uu tuii. Hv pr-uiii u tuiviiB uk MtiKa yoa o uui ti your puvcr uu we writ, c: p.w.ii.tu.
cusly trie agent cf advantage; In short haulB th road I vehicle is at its best. If each develops its branch of
enterprise both will prosper, and each will act as a check on the other to the advantage 'of the public. That the railways will make a determined effort to meet road transport gees for the saying. They will do this, probably, by cheaper rates, by economy in operation, by reduction in terminal delays, and by improvement in handling methods at the depots. In thin way they will induco much traffic to return to their lines. Meantime; the loud vehicles also will be developing, for it is absurd to think that they have reached their maximum of efficiency. The overloaded motor truck always will be the object f repression on the highways, but the motor truck, in itself, is indispensable to Industry. Thus there is room for both forms of transport; co-ordinated, much that ia un-econcmic In the present systems will be re-
YOU YOURSELF DECIDE. You will Decide tomorrow wnc is to be your leader in civic affairs, who is to be your official representative who is to direct the destiny of your city daring the next fcur years. You will elect a mayor. You will elect, also, a city judge, a city treasurer, end a city clerk. You will elect councilmen-at-large and a councilman from your own ward. YOU will elect YOUR representatives. If you do ret vote, if you do not exercise your right of franchise, ou automatically cut yourself off, ostracize yourself, iron further discussion of municipal affairs. You become a hypocrite- A mcuther of words, a sluggard, a slacker. National politics begins at home. When municipal control falls Into the hands of other influences, when jOn begin to ccmplain that civic control, the activities of your police, your school board, your treasurer. Is unduly, roanjpulated and even prostituted for political Sain you may blame yourself for not taking a more personal and energetic interest in your municipal officers ar, their selectionIt's your vote that docs it. Think, when you Tote, Use your noodle. And vcte.
DIRTY POLITICS. The story primed in toe Cincago Journal about vice in Hammond is a tissue of lies from start to finish. The democrats ought to be ashamed of their handiwork. It is a foul blot on the city's fair name and they know It. The man who is responsible for its authorship and those who brought about its circulation in lhmmonxl by the trurkload cught to be ashamed of themselves. It was born of a desperate cause and Is a rejlc of Chicago's dirty politics in by-gone years. l,ot the democrats continue to distribute copies cf the paper from house to house in an underhanded way as they have been doing and seo how much good it will do them. If the nllegatlrns were true, do the people of Hammond iiot know that the democratic speakers would have attacked the administration with those charges from the public platform. According to the vicious article Hammond is a hct bed of vice and a den of Infamy. No other construction can possibly be placed on it- Hammend people know they have the cleanest jfoliced and most orderly city In the state. They have always bragged of it and let us hope they always will-. The democrats have a lot to apologize for and we believe the dirty writeup will be a boomerang on Tuesday.
$225,000X00 WORTH OF UNITED STATES WARSHIPS IN ONE HARIiOR PLEA FOR CURTAILING NATIONS' ARMAMENTS
THE MOTOR TRUCK There is no lenger a monopoly of transport. Road and river have come to compete actively with railway. But the motor was the first to break the monopoly and remains everywhere as the great revolutionizing fcrce. Britain is just facing this problem. The railways, emerging from government control, find that during the Sears just passed motor transport has reached the point where the road vehicle gets the pick cf the freight and not a little of the passenger traffic. The yearly loss to the railways through this competition is put at 6,000,000 tons. Wherein is the advantage? Obviously in the mobility of the motor vehicle. Chcosing its traffic, its rates frequently are lower. But, not only In freight rates has it the edge; it can transport goods more quickly, and, what is vital to the shipper, with fewer handling charges. Thus, even where the rates are equal or even slightly lower on the railways, the advantages cf road-borne freight are so compelling that the operators of motor vehicles have a waiting list and can pick the loads they prefer to haul, leaving the remainder to the railways. Clearly, each mode of transport is essential. In long haulage and heavy bulk traffic the railway is obvi-
GETTING RID OF RUM. "The way to get rid of the rum in the country is to drink it," said a certain congressman during one of the Volstead debates, and It begins to look as though he was right. So long as there Is any ten dollars a quart liqucr in hiding there will be those who will risk jail to sell it. So long as there is any considerable taste for whiskey, there will be those who will pay the price. The booze habit was a long time In forming, and it will not be brcken In a day. The men who have a liking for liquor will continue to hanker for It probably as long as they live, but year by year their number will become less- Only a few young men are acquiring the drinking habit now, where before the days cf prohibition millions of them were cultivating a taste for alcoholic beverages. Ten years bence a great majority of the habitual drinkers will have passed beyond, and the number of those who have the desire for drink to an extent that will prompt them to buy it at smugglers' prices or risk the poison of the moonshine stuff will be proportionately fewer. It's a long, hard game, this enforcement of the prohibition amendment, but let nobody think for a moment that the temper of the people is toward a return of the saloon. An evidence as to how they feel on tWs subject may be found in the defeat of practically every political candidate who has recently run on an out-and-out "wet" platform.
"Cherokee weds in war paint," says a headLifc Probably reasoned, "Eventually, why net now?"
Announcing for the First Time in America
C h&ff-) TfrA XT O MARM
The New Mysterious Element
Latest Scientific Discovery
ADIOZONE is the net result of exhaustive study and experimentation in the vast arena of chemistry and science. The discovery of this new, wonderful and mysterious element was not mere accident. It was the triumph of faith over hardships and doubting men. Radiozone is a European discovery. It is evolved from a combination of precious and acetic liquids and with the ai dof a patented vacuum Respirator and special constructed Ozonator, are instantly disintegrated into millions of Dry Gas Molecules rufneiently powerful to perform their militant mission in destroying germs without harming the delicate lining of the mucous membranes of the nose, throat, bronchia and lungs. Through the agency of the Respirator and Ozonator, Radiozone radiates to the remotest recesses of the Respiratory organs that are affected with such diseases as Catarrh (Ozaena) Acute and Chronic Bronchitis, Laryngitis. Rhinitis, Hay Fever. Rose Fever. Asthma. (Phthisic) Hoarseness, Coughing. Whooping Cough. Influenza (La Grippe) Catarrhal-dcafness-headache, Cold-in-the-Hcad (Coryza) and Incipient Consumption all of which pre indicated by the following symptoms: Hradache, dull, heavy disagreeable fullness or pressure in the head Confusion of ideas.
Memory affected. Irritable, Morose, Despondent Offensive breath. Difficult breathing, noisy and wheezy. Nausea. Nasal obstructions or watery discharges. Lack of ambition or energy. "All run-down-out-of-sort-feeling." Dizziness. Loss of appetite. Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Deafness, ringing in the ears. Chilly sensation followed by slight fevers. Disturbed sleep. Continual coughing or hacking to clear the throat. Expectoration of mucous and phlegm or unusually parched, eac. All of the above mentioned symptons as well as many others which we have not space here to mention are common to the diseases enumerated; yet thousands of cases every month suddenly terminate in Pneumonia, Chronic Bronchitis or Consumption and invariably hasten their victim fo an early grave without ever having manifested onehalf of the symptoms here mentioned. Radiozone is now skillfully and scientifically prepared by the most eminent chemists and pharmacists in America and in the "most minute proportions, like gun powder, which is formed of a combination of Salt Peter, Sulphur and Charcoal, the ingredients are simple, but the product of their combination is Powerful, Speedy, Effecting, Amazing, Startling.
51
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Residents of San Diego. Cal., have a fair understanding of what it costs the J. S. or any other nation to maintain a powerful navy. One hundred and fifteen warships end tenders were anchored in the harbor at one time recently. They represented an expenditure of $225,000.000. In this fleet was th U. S. S. California, the latest word in superdreadnought3. It cost $40,000,000. The naval shore establishments at the port brought the total investment represented to $250,000,000.
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The new U. S. S. California in the foreground and several other warships in the $225,000,000 fleet, at th right of the California in the background.
The - Passing - Show
Monday, November 7, 1921. t for It?
5 When FhouM candy be eaten? 6 What Is cambric tea? 7 Of what do the cheeks chifly consist? Should cold baths be 'avoided? 9 Pops the temperature of a body rise much above normal after vigorous exercise? 10 How ions after eating- is it that the stomach iu empty? ANSWIES TO SAT1TB.ZATS QCTCSTICmS 1 "What 1b an xelec? Ans. A small three-masted vessel. 2 What is the yard on a vessel? Ans. It is a spar suspended crosswise on the mast? 3 What are the three signs of the Zodiac under Autumn? Ans. Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius 4 What is zwelback? Ans. It Is a wheaten bread slowly baked until it acquires a uniform yellow color. 5 What fabulous serpent was said to be able to kill by its glance? Ann. The cockatrice. 6 What is rhe ornamental screen behinri an altar called? Ans. Reredos. 7 What is a shillalah? Ans. It is a short stout club. 8 What is the keeper and driver of an elephant called? Ans. A. mahout. 9 How many spinal nerves are there? Ans. Sixty-two. 10 If a hut object is touched and the hand jerked away does the brain known about it before the hand is removed? Ans. The action is so sudden that thu brain does not know of the incident n' t'l ni'ter it has happened. ABLE TO DO HER WORK After Long Suffering Mrs. Siefert Wai Restored to Health by Lydia L Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
WELL even if ld Job DIM have boils UK never as far as wo are advised HAD to go through AMY political campaigns. WFJ have our moments of confidence IX which "we decided after all THAT no matter which side wjns , THERE isn't going- to be quite as Ml'OI hell raised as some folks THIMv there will. Fl'SS'lf how she never noticed HE has pimples until about a MOTI1I after they g-et married. THE persons who get rich quick ARB trifling- in number COMPARED to the vast multitude THAT get broke quick and ARE eng-ulfed in th-i Down and Out League. JI'ST at the time when our EYES are bothering- us and we fear A?m tremble lest blindness be IX the offing, we read In the press THAT skirts will not REACH below the knee next year. A millionaire sugar magnate MAS hanged himself and here all the TIME we were thinking that LIKE to a m. s. m. was pretty sweet. WE have not had time XOR opportunity yet U te
FILM SMILES -end so forth By Ki Speed
'Give iicjht to all who are in darkness and a remedy to the afflicted everywhere"
Suiting cur actions to the words, to all who are afflicted with any of the diseases enumerated above and who will call up our special representative, phone 3115 Hammond, and he will give you a Free Treatment at your house without any obligation whatsoever. A revelation and happy surprise is in store for ycu and yours we assure you.
Radiozone Corerisny of America, F. Brumm, Special Representative. 164 Mason St., West Hammond.
G.
Radiozone Laboratories of America Toledo, Ohio Name Street or R. F. D ? City State Occupation Age. . . . Affliction
Manufactured Exclusively By the RADIOZONE COMPANY OF AMERICA TOLEDO, OHIO, U. S. A. G. F. BRUMM, Special Representative Hammond, Indiana
LIKE FILM
HAWK
VKKV comprehensively the advanced
thtxjry
THAT a girl always closes IIl.lt eyes when kissel AM) fear that as a member of the CLASS between 41-48 WE shall have to call for volunteers. THEASIRY officials issue warning AGAIST a new J50 counterfeit WE assure our creditors THAT we are watching our SMALL change very cloaely. AX editor gets some I'LET letters but the RALAXCE are on the other side AM we are always more scared THAX hopeful when WE open our mail. MEN are queer fish, a lot of THEM who would touch whiskey AT 15c a copy ARE now cheerfully paying TSe per copy and think they ARE cheating somebody. LEMXE Is going to start a bank HIT personally we would prefer the mattress TO the bank Tvenlno starts.
1 What keeps the brain from touching t!i skull? 2 What muscle is it that elevate.--the arm? '! Wh'it are involuntary muscle.4 Ioes lish have the especial valu.as a brain food which has been cla' -
OJ-tietes
r-x-iiX3X30-WXlXXX)CCg
THAT best coal is "WONDER" COAL from the mountain-sides of West Virginia. No clinkers, no soot and less than 75 lbs. of ashes to a ton. We also handle the "Old Ben" Genuine Franklin County Coal and
the best frades of Anthracite. A trial will convince you. Maginot Bros. State & Colubia, Phone 105 174 Fayette, Phones 374 and 146
Pottsville, Pa. "I Buffered with female trouble for four or five years and
fiPjlllillwlsTt fit to do nil HU mv work at time.
and took medicine from a doctor and got no benefit. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound advertised jn the newspapers and took it and got ail right. I gained twenty pound3 or more and
am now able to do my work. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to my friends and you may use these facts as a .testimonial. Mrs. SaLLIE SlEFERT, S13 W. Fourth Street, Pottsville, Pa. The everyday life of many housewives is a continual struggle with weakness and pain. There is nothing more wearing than the ceaseless round of household duties and they become doubly hard when some female trouble makes every bone and muscle ache, and nerves all on edge. If you are one of these women do not puffer for four or five years as Mrs. Siefert did, but profit by her experience and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
fjAPTI ON writers for films seem to concentrate on domestic conditions. There is littla in home life that U not reflected in titles of photoplays. In consennf nee. "The
Daughter Pays" because "wives,' foolish, discontented and otherwise.
dominate "A Man's Home neglect the children.
and
"When Youth Rebels" the f amOr Upper can generally be rehd upon to quiet the insurrection. "Yesterday's wTfe" is usually considering candidates for tomorrow's husband.
"The Woman Game" is safest when played in the silent drama. It will be observed that "Society Snobs" like to see their name tn newspapers read by the common people. Dan Cupid will be disguised as Conway Tearle at "Love's Masquerade." Thousands of people have been toaked because the slock they bought in movie projects ivas watered.
Owen Moore has discovered that a man is seldom called upon, these days, to apologize for stepping on the bottom of a girl's skirt.
"The Way of a Maid" is to insist upon having "Her Own Way." "Everything for Sale" sounds like the wail of a man wearied from moving his household effects.
'"One Wild Week with Bebs Daniels'" is a movie sign less exciting than it reads.
"The Woman He Married" is beating her husband to the movies.
rj.n-. . iTT-S 1 4T i
Why Can't Yoa, Too; Well and Strong?
Be
FEW of us realize how precious good health is until we begin to lose it. To be well is to enjoy life and make good time for those around us. To be constantly ailing is to miss life's pleasures and to look with envy upon our robust friends and neighbors. Are you one of the unfortunates? Is your health slowly slipping away? It's time, then, you looked to your kidneys! Much sickness of today is traceable to kidney weakness. Its increase is alarming. That's because it's usually unseen or neglected. But it's easy to tell if your kidneys are weak. You may have only backache; a lameness, stiffness, or sharp stabbing pains; dizzy spells, headache, or annoying bladder irregularities.
If you have these symptoms, suspect your kidneys! Remember that delay may result in serious kidney sickness. But why dwell on the dark picture? Rather think of the brighter side! To remedy such a weakness is to add years to your life and to regain the health and strength that enables -you to enter life's daily battle with joy and enthusiasm. If you've reason to suspect your kidneys, read the stories of these Hammond people. They tell how they have won back good health through Doan's Kidney Pills, the world's best-recommended kidney remedy. Doan's have helped thousands. They should help you. Ask your neighbor!
"Use Doan's," Say These Hammond Folks:
Making "Gas, Oil and Water" mix is the latest screen miracle.
Selznick News is one screen publication that cannot be "entered at the post orfice as second class matter." It's a first class explosive.
E. Thorn, proprietor furniture store, 328 N. Hohman St., says: "I suffered from rheumatic pains in my back and limbs. I had no ambition to work and I knew my case needed attention. When I was advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills. I did and they soon drove away the pain and fixed up my kidneys." A Lasting Effect. Three years later, Mr. Thorn said: "I am just as pleased to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills now as when I endorsed them before. My cure has remained permanent and I enjoy the best of health."
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Mrs. A. F. Robinson. 443 E. State St., says: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills off ad on for several years and have found them to be just as advertised. Every time I catch cold it seems to settle in my kidneys and causes backache. At these times I have a dreadful pain in the small of my back and it is difficult for me to get about or stand on my feet any length of time. I feel tired and out of sorts. I use Doan's Kidney Pills and they give me prompt relief."
DOB-
sum s
Kid
siey
Fills
At all dealers, 6(k a box. Foster-Milbum Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.
