Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 119, Hammond, Lake County, 8 November 1921 — Page 4

I'age Vour

TILE TIMES. Tuesday. November 8, 1921

.,, xitu-o).tu exiei.t rt;y .o! uico.saicc cau hanllv account Ur the ierservrauce wit '. which Sinclair Lc-wis' .Main Street has clung to fir

Ihm Tlmaa Jai Ciucasu-lr-aiaaa fct.-wbor. dally xipt

ucr 1. 1918. in lLk County rimw SatiifUuy tr.d Weekly JCd.ticu. ; JUreo i ibo putotottlco In U(usmui.a. v'&brutu-y 4. 116. ciuy Kaui Xuum e-.crbi .-oua. All UUUV Ul. net si aiai . io.a. s jccoutl-ot.u

cmc.vuo

UUn

. jf t-DlcA he iiuieaj i'ntifljuu si Indian dAjbt, uvefcort;- uu Clasj Aaw ieui.iu'..

"i-.K-r i.e uicr; iu ; ti,.lt tlit-.v max

.bwa ixui .. IcicvLiuue

cany a mure sericus message. Then it is bold with ,a rush the first few weeks of its life, uml its sales .i .i! fnllin.r ilY niiii ri-j :i I I 1 1 f 1 I H t :. I I ) r U r llP.'irS.

I'.ut eveu the fact that it id a. book, with a serious

ith

first

place. Today, almost a j ear after its first appearance, it is still one of the six books iu greatest demand at the book siores, and public libraries throughout the country report even now that no other book of fiction is more w idely asked for. Not many of cur best, sellers in fiction go abroad to foreign markets. They are too short-lived for that. It was reasonable to suppose that Canada should want

jci-'m 4 to see our .Main si reel. ihii wnen wigianu exuausia

. i CM.:; fWUu .3. . i:. !,.... .1... c.u,ld 1,.v i tn.nlloH

It yU klV 1U IrnilhU rITI,. Vum ItuM. r-

pUlnt Uameaiaiaiy 10 tb Circulation Uepiruuei. . tiumoai (private xcbaixe smu. JlOi. SIC. jCaJl tor toitvf uf'rmini wantsaj NOllClu lo .-jtitiCKlHi.ru " (all to receive youi cupy or ftl TlM at vrciiiKily a you hav in pr, pies tfo uot thioK tt bsa een ivat r was Dt aeot ia uj.-. rtemeiiiDt-i- that in i:iaii ervico ia not what it uei to t and U.ut oompumua ar t-.'ueryal from many sources aDout tlie train sua mau arice. I mm i'im bak lncretueo its Dunlin- iu;piueai aaa t t:lvlo eorcckUy to reiKB iu piiroa vu tuii. c- piuii n dvilnc ua wiiau you a uoi your rayor ai.u wa mii, act ptumpuy. WHO SUPPORTS THESE SCHOOLS ? Who 13 footing the bill tor free" education iu ihe United States? The Institute for Public Service teports the results of some research into the question cf teachers' salaries, which, in the light vf pieseut economic couditions. should be earnestly considered. There are, Fays the report. 1 ? colleges in the L'niied .States which are paying full professcrs less than $2,000 a year, while 140 pay not more than $3.0H. l'or int tructora, eight colleges pay less than $!,u00 while til pay not over 1 1,5 00.

Conservatism has always been i-hai aetei isiie of i academic institutions. Such salaries are doubt let's a ! .-urvival from the net so remote period when $t,ool was regarded by thousands of young people lit Una; themselves for the teaching profession as a prize to be striven for. In. those days a professor who received annually ; 2,500 was able to travel for study and research during j his vacations and to live in tolerable comfort the rest j

of the year. But to pay men cf learning and influence the meager salaries indicated by the above casts upon any community the reproach of indifference to its highest interests. The low tuitions, too, put upou either the community or the student body the reproach of getting .-omethiug for nothing; it raises the question, who pays for free education? And the only conclusion must be

mat Dy lat-K ot support tin? community and the snu.buir. 1 body tax the college faculty to pay the jusi co-ts of the j institutions. Tuition rates, public subscriptions and other means I of support should be made adequate to pay the men and !

women who give their lives to the work of teaching, living wages, an income iu keeping with the boner and jignity of their posit km in society.

I hree

id it; and when other European coun

tries are asking for translations, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that our middle western America has produced a piece of literary art of distinct merit.

POOR VISION CAUSES WASTE.

It is no new thing to be told of the commonness cf det'"ctie cesight iu the United States. Repeatedly stateuieiiis have been issued by health authorities concerning the measures necessary for keepiug the isIou unimpaired. This advice has beeu directed to individuals and related to the care of their own eyes. The subject is approached from another angle iu a report which has just been issued by the American engineering couticil"s committee on elimination of waste in industry, h report which merits the earnest study of all large

j employers of labor. j The cimmittee finds it will be to emploers' adantag to protect the eyesight of their workers because

of the increased product ion which will thus be made posribie. There is much waste in industry avoidable wasU.1 ---because the vision of employes is not conserved. Of 10. one werkers examined in factories and commercial houses per cent were found to have uncorrected faulty eyesight. Of the rejections iu tr army during the war 21.7 per cent, were because of ese trouble. Men and women cannot do their best work when thus haudiea pped. Proper illumination is suggested as oue cf the ways in which improvement can be effected. That it pays to bae the workshop adequately lighted lias been shown by the experience of several factories mentioned by the committee. Betterment of the lighting system has increased output two per cent in steel pianis and as much as lo per cent iu shoe factories. One estimate is that the loss in production due to faulty eyesight is greater tha n the entire cost of i! hi luiua ion in this country and it is asserted that the Cost of providing prcper lighting in every industrial plant in the United Slates

vHj I.I le less tnan one per cent .i uie w.ige paiu. Such a. loss as the commit let- attributes to bad cyeMglu is not to be ignored: and if it can be avoided by so ccinparatively small an expenditure as is indicated it is downright stupidity to permit it to continue.

The Passing Show

A prominent auto expert STATts that the muter runs better AT night than In the daytimes OS account of atmospheric conditions HI T we think this must tj3 a mistake

ly

Vi; see so many cars Etoiqied IV secluded spots as wo g'j cur lonc-

W.W homeward at night MIARLY all Including among them l'ASiKXKH ladlca who MIST bs very anxious to get home.

II Alt ML; t has decided to ijo into SKltlOl'S work, ho got discouraged in IJlHOl'U when he met the statesmen AM) found so many comedians. SOMK of these days when finances C.irr a ltttlo t-asier, if evr, we ate ;UIN; to buy two or three l'Vlll of shoestrings for the express I'l'Ul'Osi: of having- an extra on IiujmI when one breaks JIST before church time AS it generally does. AMtt'AV a fat womar knows THVT while her husband

MAY call her a tub of lard UIO can't call her a spare rib. A Joliet girl who recently offered herself . . IV marriage for $3,"0 is now a wife IT pays to advertise. H cannot conceive why o.ili;i)OUV has not thought up Till: twentieth amendment by this time AMI why they are not pounding AW All en it. IMtMl'.STlC hbucs seem to bo oecul'i iiiii" a 'HOMI.m:T i-lace In the people's TIIOMiHT and yesterday we counted

putters displayed in the Min

ing the skull? Ans. A small amount

of fluid and several membranes protect

the brain.

II What muscle Is It that elevates the arm? Ans. Deltoid muscle.

3 li:if nr-i. 1iiT.olnrir-.rv- . , . i w.-l " 1 fOI

Ana. They are the ones over which the will has no control. 4 Does the fish have the especial value aa a brain food that has been claimed for It? Ans. No. C When should candy be eaten? Ans, During a meal or immediately after one. ti What is cambric tea? Ana. A mixture of milk, sugar and hot water. 7 Of what do the cheeks chiefly consist? Ans. Of powerful muscles. 8 Should eold baths 1" avoided? Ans. Cold baths should not be taken unless one can Ket a vigorous warm reaction or glow after them.

9 Does the temperature of the body rise murh above normal during viperous exercises? Ans. No. It remains at about OS. 4 dyres. 10 How Ions after eating is it be

fore tho stomach is empty? Ans. About, two and one-half hours.

1 LJ. J lU 1 Caterpillars Watch for Enemies. The caterpillar Unows that there ij safety in number, and whole companies may be found feeding side tiv side while K a sharp lookout

their bird enemies; but when a

caterpillar is by himself In- seareoly dares to moe for fear of ntt,-;M-iing attention.

I

li-J'':-:'I ''

CV''V & Invalids NO COOKING The "Food-Drink" for All Ages. Quick Lunch BtHome,OrHce,an.i Fountains. Ak for HORLICfCS. tsr Avoid Imitations & Substitutes

UNIVERSALLY POPULAR Fresh Home-Made C?ikc. Ti kes orj'y Three Minutes to Make One with "INSTANT"

Fires. EvarifwiUe,

Sir' tVfaSni

Always

Iresh upply

at your

grocer a

i x MAIN STREET ABROAD. Like certain species cf moths, best sellers in fction are notoriously short-lived. With an appetite whetted by display cards and other publicity devices known only to book publishers and dealers, the reading public pounces upen the best seller on the firt 'ay of its appearance, and for a month or two nothing will satisfy it but this oue book. The best seller in fiction which will hold its place at the head cf the list for six or eight months is a i are book. In unmannerly fashion these widely read books are always crowding each other out of first place- Latt come, sold first, is the slogan in the world of best, sellers. If the best teller is of the lightest sort of fiction, it often fares worse than those which

IF England has plans for four new battleships for next year and four the following year the need for hurrying the armament limitation conference is tip-parent.

Tin;

dvWS tl- cue jici low in s

rhhorhoo-1 with the fvl-

Slmon

A close friend of Woodrow Wilson, in collaboration with the former president, is preparing a history of the Wilson administration. We should think they would prefer to keep it dark.

IT is suspected that nature made a sericus mistake when she provided only a few weeks of sweet corn ou the cob and a whole year of hamburg steak.

AFFAIRS at Washington must be in a fairly promising condition since Director Dawes has made no pungent remarks recently.

Announcing for the First Time in America

The New Mysterious Element Latest Scientific Discovery

RADI0Z0NE 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 mn. Radiozone h a European discovery. It is evolved from a combination of precious and acetic liquids and with the aid of a patented vacuum Respirator and special constructed Ozonator, are instantly disintegrated into millions of Dry Gas Molecules sufficiently 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 t'ie Respirator and Ozonator, Radiozone rad ates to the remotest recesses of the Respiratory organs that are affected with such diseases as Catarrh (Ozaena) Acute and Chronic Bronchiti-, Laryngitis. Rhinitis, Hay Fever. Ros; Fever. Asthma, (Phthisic) Hoarseness, Coughing, Whooping Cough. I; fl lenza (La Grip-e) Catirrhal-deafness-headache. Co!d-in-the-Head (Coryza) and Incipient Consumption all of which are indicated by the fdlowing symptoms: Headache, dull, heavy disagreeable fullness or pressure in the head Confu-ion 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-cf-sort-feelin?." 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 cf mucous and phlegm or unusually parched, eac. AI! of the above mentioned symptons as well as many ethers which we have not space here to mention arc common to the diseases enumerated; yet thousand? of cases every month suddenly terminate in Pneumonia, Chronic Bronchitis or Co?sumpt on and invariably harten their v:cH;r. to an early grave without ever having nnuilested onehalf of the symptoms here mentioned. Radiozone is now jkilKully and srientihaHy prepared by . the most eminent chemists and pharmacies in America and in the most minute proportions, hke gun pewder, which is formed of a combination of Salt Peter, Sulphur and Charcoal, the ingredients are simple, but t! product of their combination is Powerful, Speedy, Effecting, Amazing. Startling.

AlTl.ll results, Crown

H i; Card z:. lir: a girl i? dead In lovo MM1UMONV is about the only thing Til AT will bring her back to life. AVi; imagine, both leadingCAM)Il)Ali;s have resolved by THIS time- that in cate TIIUV ever run ayain. THKV will try to fm-.I campaign )IAVCKKS who will do things differently CilVH a man a wad of money AU you'll have a ha id time ClY IVCIMi Turn that lot O clothes are not good clothes. IT Is claimed that immigrants (HOll.ll be shown what to eat and how TO prepare it well they ( A V provide the drink without Instruction.

tP1

HOW MUCH

DO YOU KNOW?

J

1 In Grecian mvthology what were oympths of trees and forests called? 2 What is an oak apple? 3 where is the Obi river? 4 Who founded' Georgia? v Who was Omar Kbayyam? C What is an oratorio? 7 Who was Osceola? 5 What is pemmican? 9 What city is the capital of California? 10 Who was Pocahontas' father? AJTSWXB.S TO YASIEEDAY'S QUESTIONS 1 What keeps the brain from toueh-

"Give lig!:t lo all who are in darkness and a .remedy to the aff'i-td everywhere'

Suiting our actions to the wordo, to all who are afflicted with any of the diseases enumerated above and who will call up our speciil representative, phone 3115 Hammond, and he w li give you a Free Treatment at your house without any obligation whatsoever. A revbtion ard hppy sun-rise is in store for veil 3rd your- we a-ur" you. RaclioTore Cortarv or America, G. F. Brumm. Specie! Representative. 16 V'ect M-soi Sv... West H m.nond.

Radiozone Laboratories of America Toledo, Ohio Name . . . . S'reet or R. F. D C ry State Occupation Age. . . . Affliction .'

USE SLOAN'S TO WARD OFF PAIN LITTLE aches grow into big pains unless warded off Ly an application of Sloan's. Rheumatism, neuralgia, stiff joints, lame back won't fight long against Sloan's Liniment. For more than forty years Sloan's Liniment has helped thousands, the world over. You won't be an exception . It certainly does produce results. pev.etrates without 'nibbing. Keep this old family friend always handy lor instant use. Ask your neighbor. At all druggists 35c, 70c, $1.40.

Manufacturrd Exclusively By the RADIOZONE COMPANY OF AMERICA TOLEDO, OHIO, U. S. A. G. F. BRUMAL Special Representative Hammond, Indiana

mm EMODELING Wm EPAIRING ELINING Wm EFRESHING pi p :9 TOtTE CLOTHE2 AT THE M IGHT PRICES Pressing While Yoa Wait ONE DAY SERVICE ON CLEANING SANITARIA CLEANING SHOP Rear Majestic Hotel Phone 2298

Goo

Good Healtk ite

for h I!

d Kesulfs A ym I k?n m '2ZZC Off - "t-f; if'' T.&r-V: 1 , ' i JrX -'r-w Hs, s

Well J ana uerrous, ani

Keep Efficient by Keeping This Letter "Will Te!I You Hew "I suffered terribly even month, au'l was tilv ;;ys ti: .:)

1 had indigestion, and often t onid net do a i ili:pr. I was this w ay about two years, and had to slay home with in y mother. I tri -d boveral medicines, then I found a hook of yours, and mamma told me tn try the Compound. So I got a bottle of Lydia K. Pinkharu's Ycav-iubl' ('cmiK.iind, and it certainlv worked wondor.s with me. I have taken six bottles of it, and am still taking it when I feel the need of it. I have already recommended it to a number of working girls, who are taking it. I am working now, and stand up all dav and feel tine. I am glad to say that i'inkham's medicine did a lot forme and for my mother, and wo only wish we had taken it a long time before." Hose Sciioeit, 4S7G .Vnnuneiation St.,2sew Orleans, La,

This letter is but one of a great number received every year from women, young and old, and from almost every walk ot life. These letters testify to the merit of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Miss Schoeff works for her living, but on account of sickness was obliged to stay at home for two years. During this period she suffered terribly at times. She tried several medicines without finding relief. Finally she tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and in this letter tells what it did for her. The Vegetable Compound contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and can be taken in safety by any woman. Your livelihood may depend on your health. So try

.Lcici, EL

w w wJw

V,

9

UYOIA E.P1NKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS.

SERVICE

FIRST

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Get acquainted with the money and time saving "station to station" service.

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