Hammond Times, Volume 10, Number 46, Hammond, Lake County, 3 December 1921 — Page 4
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Pago Four
THE TTMTES
DrrcmVr 3, 1921
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Tka LAX Oauaty Tti Dwlly xct k-jtm m4 ' ItM " l6lr t postoftlow la Xittrcm-.C juoe J The Ttm,t ChJoZn4iana tUtwr. dally exceot fcundajr. fc.,ter4 .. th wetoilloe u ttaai Cfciajro, NaM or II. 1314. The Canty Ttmea ituMf .n1 Weekly SMfMvautered at ( otoffla Is Ktmiaoud, rrnry , Vtt uwr. April l.'. jsia.
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: iin.uiiy t the Clrcuiaiioo l)teprunii. ir.oua tartrate fciufc-; . 1 lux, JUL 3 ) . i1 artrf department wasted. 1
NOT1CK TO PliBSCHUUGiUi. rou fa ( rorfra otrr cepy or Cum Tin :vUy a you have tAa pa!. lee do not think U
" WM. a tWrf. rternmoir that in mau it wh41 a qm4 U b and Cue romplaiat are oai from man? Mtnwi aoit tae train ar.a mall ia l.m Has Imnm!4 Its tnaAUag equlpmmi mn 1 a earneeUy so met it iub( ou owe Urn prvtap wu us tu gov a Dot get yovr ppor dU wd wu.
EUROPE'S DEBT TO US. It wculd appear that almost every expert cornea v from Europe has a different theory or plan for :.ing the old world. Last week a Chicago merit returned urging that we grant our European .ora a 20 yearB moratorium on those $11,000,000,cnt during th war. Now Frank A. Vanderllp .-s home a scheme for uslnp the Interest to be paid 1'urope aa a sort of revolving fund that can ! to Europeans until they get cn their feet, mean- . e postponing hope of collecting the principal. It not be surprising to learn slmulatneously that it? people at heme have quite other plans for that rest, If and when It ia paid. Senator Watson, of Una, thinks England's $200,000,000 would be a ; nest egg for a bonus bill. tt Is sometimes forgotten in popular dicus.sicn
the European debt to us that if it could be paid to- . y at present exchange rates England would have to . . y 25 per cent more, France nearly three times and ether debtors proportionately. Naturally they V uld welcome postponement until the exchange re;J rus to nearer normal. Another point sometimes over- : ked is that if our Hurpan debtors paid us In goods, they presumably must, the effect of too prompt pay'rnt on our home industries and business might be Si sara' afl allies are experiencing through GerA:i.;n payment of reparations. German goods displacJing allied goods and contributing largely to the existdepression in allied countries. There is th fur;j'"r argument made by Helfferich. the forcer vice : hsticeUor, that it should not be so much wondered
that Germany cannot pay more reparations when the
cannot pay us what they borrowed, nr ht
irh otfier.
3 Whatever adjustment is required will hve to he
termined cn a world scale and include in its. scope .j! ot only Europe's debt to us. but Europe's debt in vjj' logland and reparations that Germany can pay wiih-,-tU injury to the rest of the world. The financfal ;j"ljustm?Bt Is the greatest problem of all.
combined. Contrary to the once rather general impression, now being slowly dispelled by the facts, th climate in this part of Alaska is such that domestic animals live and thrlva through tha winter without shelter. The i 11 and general agricultural conditions, for the region are equal to that of the Scandinavian countries which have, for centuries, supported populations running into the millions. As a dairy and beef cattl country, experts say. It ha a very premising future. Tbv railroad also brings within rench tke largest placer gold mining region of the world in the lclnity of Eairbanks and the Tanana river. This ntver b:is been greatly developed becausa of the scart if y of food, a condition directly traceable, of course, to the luck of transportation. Surveys mado ahow that
a moderate, though not an extraordinary, return may be exported from thla rogicn for many Jreare to coxae. Flacer mining, as Is well known, does not require the x pensive equipment and hence doea not call for the larpe capital that quartz mining does. The railroad, in this way, offera a poor man's opportunity to the advvnturoucly Inclined.
A branch taps the greatest coal field ever discovered west of Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Vettis .ire reported as running from 60 to 70 feet across. The coal is high, grade. All in all, the cpenlng of this railroad in what has pptly been called "The Land of Tomorrow" probably transcends in importance a good deal of what -we call current history.
.allies
ALASKA'S NEW RAILROAD. j Opening of railroad communication between An,i borage and Fairbanks, Alaska, thus connecting the Southwestern coast of the great peninsula with the ; Vukoa river district, is probably as great an event Jin American pioneering history as has happened since opening of the Union Pacific railrcad and the ;.;ronsequettt development of the American west This railroad, among its other achievements, will ,;biing within reach of settlers the famous Susitna valr. an extremely fartile area larger than the state of lewa and approeching the size of Iowa and Nebraska
WORXIUO HARD THE VICTIM. Despite fears he may have had of his ability to undergo the round of luncheons, dinners, receptions and
to bear up under the American plan of conferring honors, Marshal Foch appears to bo standing up well. He may not especially enjoy the tf renuouanesa of the welcome he has received, but he has endured it. Ever
since his arrival it has. been a continuous round of
activity for him. If he would have preferred less exuberant manlfestatipn of American regard for himself, he hns been tco polite to show itTo a man of Marshal Foch's years the constant attention must be wearying, it is possible that Ameri
cans are a bit excessive in honoring a hero, a bit more demonstrative than is needed to prove our regard. It should be possible to exhibit our feeling without rushing the object of our admiration to exhaustion. However, that Is our way and whoever becomes the target of our adulation muit bear it or take the risk of offending. The demands we make on public characters admit of no exceptions. When we have a hero at homewe give him no more rest than we can help. We treat notables from across the sea in the same way. The French Mve had the reputation of being mercurial. Before the war demonstrated their substantiality under strain, their excitability would have been considered their chief quality. We know now that they possess a devotion to principle-and a sclldity that excites the admiration of the world. If the French are mercurial when they can afford to be, the American people are sentimental when sentiment is excited. We let our emotions have full play In greeting those whom
we consider entitled to laudation. Were we more moderate in exhibiting our regard, perhaps it would be not less sincere and it might not. weary so greatly the person against whom It is directed.
There is nothing finer than
Coats Are Ample and Warm.
Every dealer is authorized to give new goods or your money Lack if your Buckeye Malt Extract does not prove better than anything else you have ever tried- Every item that carries the Buckeye name and enjoys Buckeye fame is pure, wholesome, uniform, palate-pleasing. Try Buckeye for Baking and Home Uses. If Your Dealer Hasn't Got It He Can Get It From THE BURGER BROS. CO. (Now 47 Years Young)
222-224 Webster Street
Cincinnati, Ohio
ww'Jl'lr'tirVft?t5Ti
IF WE DON'T dye without the aid of Germany, civilization will die at German hands, is what advocates cf protection for the American dyes industry mean to convey.
A COLORADO professor say gasoline can be distilled in enormous quantities from shale rock for 16 cents a gallon. All right, rrofesaor, go ahead. Who's a-hlnderin you?
EVELY N'EfVlIT tcok poison and called her lawyer, but her press agent seems to have been the first
to respond.
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IT TAKES YEARS TO ESTABLISH A SOUND BANK
The money that most people have to invest takes years to accumulate. - It is only reasonable that you should investigate before making an investment, therefore WE invite you to consult us for INVESTMENTS
General Banking Reel Estate Insurance Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent
American Trust and Savings Bank "The Bank That Service Built" 187 STATE STREET (Near Postoffice) HAMMOND, INDIANA A. J. SWANS0N, President DANIEL BROWN, Vice President H. 0. REISSIG, Secretary-Treasurer
seems to demand strictly ntillty Wit.se-:. that nt like it In character. Styles In coats roy he more varied also when aklrts are . to be nrn with them. The re.-.tles sej has never shown much enthusiasm over getting Into one unlfonn and pe;id!ng the
greatc part of Its lUe so unrbed.
Ilowcvcr. If jeu are co.Ueniplailng n new street outill, jca may take rout choice bi-tween Hie suit hrt'.rn nt the left, with Its plain slmr! skirt and straight-line con, niailp of polret twill, and al.e edlclent Wnlcker stilt at he right. For tft :4rr..'kcr suit sturdy materials ar to be chosen, as homespun or cheviot and the like, and with such materials wool hose and smart calf-skin shoes ara to be worn. Hats.
Copper Hackles Belie the Owl. Owl Jiackles continue to be perched lh on the newest headgear. They have taken on more seasonable plumejre and are dyed dark grny or black, with a conch of sliver. In addition to the tendency toward he fuchsia shades and purple, copper will bo n popular color for fall. One hat recently shown Is a close-fitting toque entirely covered with large leaves made of copper-colored quills. Another copper velvet hat
has a short flat brim, slightly cut awny
season, may be called rlose-fittlng, and they flare at the hand. Rows of braid, vuched on them in n r.lg.ns pnttern. reest the same decoration on the skirt where there are tbrfv croupa of this couching. The collar is plucked opossum In the natural gray tni) and white of the fur which tones in wvir with every color tifced in coats. OprrMirT tr vbtam Hmmu ummt. Chsnflle Oalla and embroideries. Chenille balls and chenille embroideries are used on hats and dresses for fall.
slivered hackle feathers, posed against the front of the crown.
Longer SJclrtc. Skirt lengths are nr. Jetermlned, designers differing, but In afl ensos there la some Increase In Iciiith, even for street things.
COAL COAL A Complete Line of Good Clean Coal for Domestic Use CALL HAMMOND 274 FOR PRICES Wholesale and Retail ILLINOIS COAL CO. YARD: $30 WEST STATE STREET" ,
In front to moke room for a swirl of ; banl.
Long fifsves. Long sleeves, witb pfc tid?r-ut-m soam, fnll owtiy frt:i hv vi:t, a:ul are bold to th v-tU ty t fhrro-T
FORMER
SOLDIER
GETS GRUB STAKE TO HIT WOLVES Unable to Find Work That One-Legged Man Could Do, Homer LeClair Turns To Red Cross and Now the Coyotes Must Pay.
INTERNATIONAL. HEWS SESVtCEJ REjv'O. Nev., Dec. rulstked by the Ked Cross with a borrowed saddle horse ani trapping outfit, Homer LeClair, one-legged ex-torvlce man, took his 103 pound of grit to Truckee River canyon, about ten miles east of Reno, where he proposes to "clean up at the expene of coyotes and bobcats, which he saya are swarming- in that region. LeClair was e traoper In Xevada, whe he also rode the ranSe In day before the war. He enlisted In ttie regulars and went to France as a MMKtl.. tf til. QaAAnil tMvl.l.lM eaf
in trie Twelfth, and then to tne Fifteenth Field Artillery, with which he saw nearly all the hardest fighting of the hard-fighting outfit. Then tie traa !ent to North Rusula
vlth thn Archangel expedition and he i fought the frigid cold and the "Uelos,"
as the Doughboys named the Bolshe-vikl.
LeClair did not loee his leg, which
is gone Ju.it below the hip, until he waa grain a civilian In the United States, employed as chauffeur by a major at Camp Pevens. Riding a motorcycle one dark nlKht he collided with a truck, the amputation reultin. Mkinr hl way to Reno a few
weeks ago, LeClair sought vainly for ome work a ons-legged man can do and felling to find it took to the sagebrush with horse, traps, mess-kit, a piece of bacon ' and some flap-Jack flour, to make the wolvea with their pelta keep the wolf from his door. There waa doubt as to whether ho could ride a horae, but he ended It by riding one with a banner to advertise an American LeRion vaudeville show. "I can da It," he aaid. And he did. He said the same thins? when he starteS for Truckee River canyon with
trapping outfit.
PHIL SMIDT That Means Good Eats at Old Time Prices A RECREATION PALACE SECOND TO s NONE IN INDIANA Reservations for Parties PHIL H. SMIDT - ... - Indianapolis Botlevard " Near Five Points Phone Whiting, 25-26
hla trapping outfit. .
I .1
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HOW WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE
May Escape the Dreaded Sufferings of that Period by Taking Mrs. Block's Advice Hopkins, Minn. "During Chance of Life I had hot flashes and suffered for
' a two years. I saw yLydia E. Pinkham's iev Vegetable Com-
pound advertised in
the paper and got good results from taking it. I recom
mend your medicine to mv friends and
you may publish this fact as a testimonial." Mrs. Rob
ert Block, Box 642,
I Hopkins, Minn.
It has been said that not one woman in
i a thousand passes this perfectly natural I change without experiencinc a train of ;
very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot nasbes, inking spells, rpots before tto eyes, dlizy spcli9, nervousness, r.re oniy a few ct the symptoms. Every woman at this age ehouid profit by Mrs. Block's experienco and try Lydia E. I'inkham's vegetable Compound. If yon have the cliflrhtest doubt that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-1 pound will, help you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn. Mass., about your health. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence.
Hundreds of People Made Glad
Last Thursday we mailed several hundred checks to the members of this year's Christmas Savings Club. About Fifteen Thousand Dollars were Distributed in all There will be more next year, for each year this easy way of accumulating money grows in popularity with the people. Plan to join the new Club now open for membership and tell your . friends of this easy way of saving money. Tell them not to mistake the place.
Citizens Nation a Hammond, Indiana
1 Bank
J. C. Paxton, President
W. D. WEIS, M. D. J. C. PAXTON
Wm. D. Weis, Chairman of Board
P. H. Fedder, Cashier DIRECTORS LEO WOLF W. G. PAXTON R. 0. OSTROWSKI, M. D,
C. E. Bauer. Vice President
P. H. FEDDER C. E. BAUER
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