Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 193, Hammond, Lake County, 7 February 1922 — Page 4

Va.se Four -

THE TIMES Tuesday, February 7, 1922.

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. The Times Newspapers jB U5 AKJS tOl.MY PH1TI.C li CO.,

i-uuniy -i iio-;s uaiiy except Miurmy mi TlC V i;ntr4 al th poatof&c In Utmmsnil, June Si. Jm Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor. dally except Sunday. Entered at Uo pcatofAoa la East CUicago. Novamlter li. iu. .. 'Xh tke County Tlmea Saturday and Weekly KJi"oil Entered at the postofflca la Hammond. February V If rrae Gary Evening Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofnee In Oary. April 18. 11. I All under Iho act of March S. IS It, aa second-claai lit fWT

i'?014 ADVERTISING REPRESENTATION' O. LOO AN PATN'E & CO CHICAGO

rate in competition in naval armaments. And yet,.aa Mr. Hoghea pclnte out, it leaves unimpaired the relative security of the srreat naval powers. Is not this an achievement ushering in a naw epoch i? world affairs? To whom does the credit belong? All the nations concerned are to be congratulated on the spirit they have shown, on their eagerness to co-operate in the plan for the world's peace, but the gratifying rebult was tlue to the initiative of the head of our government. President Harding. Tha successful outcome of the deliberations at Washington should be a source of pride to every good citizen irrespective of party.

vary tKflce Telephone 13 1 Nassau & Thompson, Ett Chicago Telephone S3! Kaat Chicago. (The Times) Telephone J83 152 fin "rx' New Dealer) Telephone I13S-J XlMn (Hepotter) Telephone SO-M Wfcltfng (News Dealer and Claca Adv.). .Telephone 13IW . f ou have aay trouble getUug TUB T1ME3 make aoiplaint immediately to tho Circulation Department. Kamajood ( Drl vat exchange) 810. 1101, S101 , (Call tor whatever department wanted.) A LONG STEP FORWARD. The difference between the record of the league of nations to date and tliat of the Washington conference on the limitation of armament is the difference between apn theory and practical action. Articles 3 of the league covenant pro ride for plana looking to the reduction of national armaments. Other articles provide for the amicable adjustment of disputes between na-

ticaia, such as the Shantung matter, for instance. The authors of the covenant also contemplated the abolition of barbarous methods of warfare through international agreement. It is easy enough to put such hopes and wishes down on paper. Itls a very different proposition to translate them into action. The ink was scarcely dry on the signatures to the covenant before practical men perceived that the league scheme would never work because it was based on wrong principles. The United 1 Htates was blamed for wrecking the league by staying out of it, but the fact was that the other powers, which entered the league to please Mr. Wilson and to use their acquiescence for trading puYposes in thexmfereneo, had o more confidence In the idea. The Washington conference assembled at the call of President Harding on November 12. That same day Secretary Hughes laid before it our government's start- ' HDg proposal for reducing arfd limiting naval armaments. On February 1 the conference formally approved this arrangement and also one restricting the ,"use of submarines and prohibiting poison gas in warfare. As Mr. (Hughes says, no more extraordinary or significant treaty was ever entered into than that approved yesterday, because "we no longer merely talk of the desirability of diminishing the burdens of naval armaments, but we actually limit them." And this , limitation is effected in that field "in which nations have been most jealous of their power and in which they "have hitherto been disposed to resent any interference with their power." This treaty absolutely ends the

The

UNCONVINCING MR. McADOO-

William G. McAdoo defends his management of j the railroads under government control with the assertion that when the lines were turned back to their owners they had 2,000 more locomotives and 26,815 freight cars more than they possessed at the beginning of federal control. This proves nothing, however, but that the experiment of government management failed to improve the condition of the carrying companies. Statistics presented at the Interstate Commerce Commission hearing indicate that in the eight years,

!l?14 to 1921 inclusive, the number of locomotives built 'for all the lines equalled about one-half of the numI ber that previously had been built in like periods of

time. Mr. McAdco's statement that the credit of the railroads was destroyed before the war is in a degree correct, but this does not exculpate the federal administration from the charge of leaving the transportation systems in worse state than it found them. Federal control in war time was but the culmination of gov

ernment regulations which had been progressively bampering the carriers for years. The hands of private nanagers were tied tighter than ever before when the

railroad properties were restored to their owners. The results of federal interference, including fed

eral control, are unmistakable. Walter D. Hines, who

administration, told the commission the other day that "in the public interest it is probably necessary for the

railroads to spend on betterments and facilities at least

111,000,000,000 a year for some time to come." If fed

eral control had been so beneficial would this be nec

essary? Federal control did no remedy the conditions

from which the railroads were suffering before the war.

Actually it made them worse for following upon it, has

come additional restrictions on management which

make it impossible for the companies to balance lesses

of lean periods out of gains in prosperous times.

THE old saw about figures will be disputed by

soma on reading the treasury's statement that they

have only $6.09 lels than a year ago.

THOSE who mourn the "failure" of the Washington confesence would rejoice if it were really a failure.

Passing Show THE great chanje that THE years have brought about WAS never letter exemplified THA.V by noting how easy it is TO see whether or ot Til Ky really wear the old-ashioned ROt'VD garter. WE have often wondered AT the elasticity cf the wurd "lovely" BUT we never knew how WOWOERKUl. it was until we HEARD It applied to ealted codfish.. IT took more than the League of Nations TO settle the Shantung question. A O'ni KR day we never KXPRCTEO to live to aee but

DID was the one when PETTTBOCKKn tcim a norsEnor.i .word. IT is not always easy nowadays TO distinguish a photograph of a dirigible from a SNAPSHOT of a drop kick. JAPAN and China . WTL.L. now have to find SOMETHING else to quarrel about. AND the world's r. a veil race ends with America the winner. ANOTHKR thing we notice ABOUT equal suffrage and the PRO(lF.iS ft is makinsr IS t?at when a man begins to get THE better of the argument IN the domestic circle the wife . IS prone to aay: on let's not talk politics. EVEN Oae wan who Is disappointed TEAR are year by lettuce lice, tomato worms AND so forth In his garden TAKHS on new fcoe about this TIME of i2io rear when he sees the AI.I,rilR reed rk,-iytj(w,

- AFTER reading about tho latest MOVIB ocaadaJa It la not Star to FTGVRE out why some of the nCTCTisn are no better than they are. WASHINGTON correspondents are AXWATs in Imminent danger Oir absent-mindedly referring- to THK "farm bloc .heads."

la ao narrow In places that It !s possible to step over the stream, ' B How many caea signed the Declaration of Independence? Ana. Fif-ty-stx. "Chat. is toe longest natural bridge In tie world? Ana. Rainf&ow Arch, Dtah. It has a epan of 271 feet. 10 Are government railroads in Alaska operated the year around? Ans. They are.

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1 What city in th.'a country had the first union depot? Z What is a capital ship? 4 Wha,t trees axe used for puipT 5 In what year did the Twentieth Century limited make its llrat trip? 6 What is the smallest county in the United States? 7 What state has the greatest nurater of manufacturing establishments? 8 Whiit four countries are the far

ther advanced in the aeroplane business)? 5 How many states has Brazil? 10 What state has the mistletoe for its state flower? ANSWERS TO TESTER OA VS QtKSTION. 1 What Is Che best wood to use In making a log cabin? Ana. Oak, pine or awpen. i What doea "Klwanls" mean? Ana It is a coined word from the Cherokee language rncaning "we trade." 3 What can be put in paste to keep mice from knawing the aabestos fron furnace pipes? Ans. A few drops of cartoolic acid. Who was the first Englishman to S-o around the world? Ans: Sir Francis Drake. . 5 Arc raw oysters easier digested than cooked oysters? Ana. Yea. 6 What is the diameter of the smallest drop of ra4n? Ans. Onetwentieth of an inch. 7 How wide is the Rrver Jordan? Ans. It varies with the seasons of the year. turing the rainy ppason it H a rajring torrejit and at other times it

'ANNOUNCEMENT. To rh dttsans of St. Jobja Towfci. I hereby announce to you that I will be a candidate for tho nomination at the coming primaries for the office of TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE. Tour support will be highly appreciated. 2-6- liOn.S M. JTATtTMAX.

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Woodrow Wilson's Secret Records of the Paris Peace Conference

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When Mr. Wilson decided not to write the story himself he appointed RayStannard Baker to write it from the private documents collected at Paris in the famous Steel Box. These papers include the secret minutes of the Big Four and the Council of Tennever before published and hitherto seen only by the heads of governments and a few confidential advisers. This first complete inside story of the treaty negotiations begins Tuesday, February 14, in THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS

Note: Subscriptions to The Chicago Daily News may be ordered through your local newsdealer or mail your subscription to The Daily News, 15 N. Wells St., Chicago, 111.

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