Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 198, Hammond, Lake County, 13 February 1922 — Page 4

Pajre Four

ixie ii JtrjAC N0n'CnSnOrC buceeM 1329 4"maoa rautiy a maQ''" 6ald FranUn.j J.AXW i V i ; JCt I J Wii J -vod unaccustomed prosperity has ruined the children! liOL:?-:A'lAN BELIE, CHUM-OF QUEEN. NOW FF.KS JOB TO tspend Ictir or 8v norm a day areraragr p:iUaca tiVT there ItsB't. 'i'iTB . JBeV wr vMrtaTy .JaJtrrtt eabtb-'t woaldnt car to tnrr ?T7T the piia wVi oe err wtCs the iM3V tl'JW 3 What pitcher holds the record for Pitch :cs th fenrest aarabw of balls la & baseball sr.nr:-? i Hew lonp has kerosene beT5 nsed tor lig-htin? purposss? I Are there ar.y motion picture Btudlcs in Japan? C Is it p-ssiblb to teitphona from A moving train? 7 What i th populat'oa c-f DnIlr Iraland? . $rT Genera! vr..r4 a TTrt Pcir.t erafluats? t V.hnt are ths love- wu? 3 What doe ,Ms JIlseraMaft" the title of Victor Hug-h's great novel toean? Ans. "The "W'retchea One?." 4Who tvaa tle first chiftf Justice cf the United State ? Ans. Johr. Jay. 0 What does A. F. and A. ii. rcean? Ans. Ancient fre aad acceptod Mason?. , Vrno !? Preeidcnt Harding' -Biclin? Ar.s. Erisr. Gx.n. Ct&rl 13. t?a'w"cr. 7 Where U Howard atilversrtyf Aaa. la Washington, IX C. g What is the rtilleniam? Awr. r iaku wif-vii ihi tiiAi. . kuu.-a.a co. -f nioro. There ia no royal path to gaomeUr now any ?v. XUU than there wM la Euclid', day. And while it may y ,t t'je true that abundance is the nurtur r -vTrtVt ? T?e East Ch;co.lnJisna Harbor, daily , . ... . , , Ubtr i T"trd &l m iBi ciuca .no-; arts aud o. learning la th brolly Th9 iJa'o.,,,. B rt,.:ouly too often steeps the senses of iue true tn&t aDundance is the nurturing patron of the national eenfo, It the individual in .i8l6iLat,ife1 at taa iwstoiacj ia iiatiajoaa. fce&ruary j soul deadening inertia, The Princeton president disclaims any Intentlcn to tared &t h. .IV .t'.-T. ,txr .-L-"-' ! . ,T" v--wtuto is ijiri, April in. ISii. :-:, t. . . . -v - uaaer the act t ixarcii a 13Vy. aa -cou-c!3 '; -?-' ".u iuwia uuaergrauuaiB miunea ilb uic lautomobiie from -college life, but drastic action to en1 O. IXKiAN 1'ATNg & CO CHH "chxcago iforrc a fair measure of simple liriaf among the etudeat HOW MUCH av ..nj. uio :nm star cc i . At . i . -. -..v tutce ; Teienua i. youth vcuid bo fully Justinad i.aasau& riicmpooii. Kant. Chicago. Telephca 1 f141 "-aicago. t lh raes Telepfaono 8S I tmvts'ed by rnv.' af.S r-.arir.a t !r 1 le.nl yt r ? ov L.nrssi:n sprr aioi.Ty ji j me penoa rf 1,000 yeart preceding' tha final jTiSrrrer.t durirtl which ttme Chrltt ano Hi atnt vrlll rule the earth. 1 5 O? what material wi th f.r?t fire hoe maae? Ar.t. Leather. 3.0 ro fnroiffn horn ch!idrflT4 a-.i-'--fnfcUca:;y N?rjr. citizb.n whan thct BONUS MONEY SOUSCES. This rich country should have no difficulty In raising 1425,000,000, annually in the next two years to defray the cost of the proposed soldierB bonus. The trouble is to select the source or sources from wnica the DO YOU KNOW? v s t Spotter Telephone si-JS '&itla (News dealer ar3 Class. Ai'-.) . .Toiei-tioae 1SW MTnif-11, ,iv tr-y trout.la csvthiff Tim Ti.HKo ciaka ,,Zr la iJnir,ediatiy t.j the Clrcuiation Uepaximect. -iffKao . private oxcliaris-) Siuy. siei. S1CJ (Call for ih3fpvr ("vartrri.t wanted.! ,m . XyilCil TO FUKseUiiSKRi": ANsvnsns to s attteb a ys U I 1 Whn Ur.d t's te Japan I rehip-';co 5U. rirU. of Jflrjwn? Ar. .".-1.J 1 What ia th c-f.r i'.-r i ' ' T011 ran to roceive your copy nt TH3 TI5'?T3 what is it for (Tir--? j S-Wiin wP.J t'ne S Whe-n loes if s.t ttflgi! ytr? !P ' tx jjivor? Ans. tt "raawten '.fathwr. ber-p;a nataraliisd? Ana. )f ;. ycter, ' hr" -ir u!le l?yrJ ftT. v. p-otcptiy M y0U in 'the -jn.pt, pi.n do n?t thi'r'a tt ! nioney feha.il be taken. It tfieaed' VL" 'tZ"? Mt sent ca t',n.a- laK " h retary of the Treasury M, having been put up to Secellon to make a recorcmenda-

.-"Qt -"".LL I OorUtee of the bouse. New we shall fee how coaDAWES WAYES THE SIIIETS. and the people rea-t to the prorxsale. A Tgry pretty language Una muu Pawes n?e?. He! Mr. Mellon is firmly of the opinion there should waa a Fhirt,-aad sc-effs at oflTi'-or? who no reliance on payments by the allies cu account of T"iSh out their decorations and tret, puffed up when their Indebtedness to the United States, an opinion

corrected or advised; and lamps the hide off rhose who are trying, through ptupidity, Indifference, or j-eit-. -..itoraBt, to obstruct the course r f national eccmorr. '

which is shared by practically all competent to Judge in the matter. Jic is opposed to levying a ge 11 real rales t.ix on the ground of cost and difficulty cf admin istra-

Ta t?e matter of the broon-.r. The navy felt tion. Not so many Americans will Agree with him on h'Sftuliated when asked to sweep with army brooms, of j tate. But special tases should be levied to meet boau3 wbich there wu a lar?e aarplas. result of the war. j payments, the secretary sys. and be suggests an laIioiatlDS to its fcecorable record it demanded the right c.re&sra of first and second class postage rates, Increase o purchase its own brooms. Take tho matter of tha;cn cigarette and tobacco taxes, increase of documentary shirts. The marine corpj fe't its prestige wae iio peril- 8tatap taxes, a tat of two cents on each bank check.

d wfitn threatened w;tn army shirts out of stock. Tha and a 50 cent levy on each horsepower of automobiles.

From these sources be. estimates 3300,000,000 a year might be eecured, which would !?ave a shortage of $125,000,000 in the amcunt he believes must be avail -abl3 to meet bonus demand?. Likely this will bring congress back to a consideration of a rencral sales tax. if it does not resort to it for all the money needed for the scldiers. We imagine there will be less popular objection to that form, of taxation th.au to an i;.crease of

director of the budrpt expT-es these little domestic tiffs raasnlQciently a!id. by putting tis argument lata terms uf brooms and shirts, has tha happy Vcsult of girios a 'Ivid view of government business to every citizen. Mr. Dawes Las tho idci that 10 broom is very 'uie another broom, and that when the govrenment owns J2 any brooms in idleness any department needing a broom cliould get one from (his common eouree, and

ant go oat In a spirit of perverted departmental pride, j postage rates aad tho nulcanca of pasting stamps on .nd buy a rn'onal and individual broom. The idea is 'thecta. und. The beauty of it is that it is not the only idea j r ,s imnortat that, the bonus bi.'l being enacted,

Idr. Dawes has ca the subject cf official economies and Jttcre be ao unnecessary delay in beginning payments I

ia uiai tTtsi anack as i"o.s ci putting tilings icto fri fv x-trvi men Tbe adTant&ff cf the levies i

sJaat, homely language it looks as if tbe American public fc going to b on the inside of this government, siending business before !oxi. So far the budget system hac tieCed its critics, -ot merely by the strength of the Dawes Tocacul ry, tut oa Us performances. Win. a the baffled deapoiler of tho public treasury steer, Mr. Daws produces his brooms; when a department acta indignant cad har i.e waves the shirts. Taero Js no gainsaying ir.o fact that tie taxpayers .t.-e beginning to feci a great deal of confidence that their national business methods fire being improved, :.ad if Sir. Dawes cares to add to his details he may be sire of ca attentive and appreciative audience from I'ortlaDd to Portland.

roraimended by Secretary Mellon is that they would be- j gin to yisld ccsh almost immediately their collection ! was authorized, hile if another plga wero adopted ;

complicated machinery would have to be set up aud this would take time. It is not an enviable duty that

was put on the secretary cf tho treasury, but it is a J matter of general satisfaction that Mr. Mellon has eo J

promptly laid before tho ways and means committee recommendations practical if cot proper.

SlUe. fleariett Sb-Gmh. Three months ' ajro HenrU ette Sava-Giou came to America with every promise of having a brilliant career in thia country. She brought plays and poems for U. S. producers and publishers. She had the friendship cf Queen Mane of Rourr.acia and other notables of Europe. Hut her plays and poems were not warmly rsceied Efforts to star 03 tha stapre xajled and cc7 eba sesta a real "job."

I he

THE AUTO IN COLLEGETha president of Trineetoa University has written iii tha pareats and guardians of all undergraduates suggesting that the automobile Is a "positive detriment .- tho rfia';h tcr knowledge within scholastic walls. Dr.

Hibbea believes that "it would bo desirable if students 1 meat.

.-.t. Priaceion. daring the formative periods of tl.eirlThe average man ia content to dress neatly and not lives, would realize tho value to themselves and thai? j conspicuously and let it go at that. His first garment lows of simplicity in living and of the elimination of j la white, his last black aad in the intermediate years

2EN ALWAYS IN FASHION. Trousers will be fuller this year, the merchant tailors .eay. The merchant tailors ought to know; they J mafce them. The chest and shoulders will be more ! roomy too. The ccats will be logger. Tho waistcoat j will reveal rather tsore of bloomir. shirt. Cuffs or. j trousers will mt only frowns. Checks, plodi and j tweeda, in grays aud browns, will have the call. i The average raaa will read and yawn. lie knows j

that the tailors know that he will cot stand for any !

changes sensational encugh to be worth causing esclte-

n lower reclms lit ths mal-j bedeck himself.

Pas

Show

tianecesary lusuritts." A great many ccllege presidents iid a multitude of parents will say "Amen."

there is a limited range of modest blues and browns and grays. Ages that produce gaudy dress for nca,

The col leg 8 generations of today livs a life of cas 1 produce little worth while. -.tit. comfort ondreamzd of a few decades ego in ths j John D. Rockefeller, Jr.. walked paiit a battery of .verage university. Any tlurnnus who has been away; camera men the other day who were waiting fcr him ..vea o brief a spaa as one cr two decades is likely to land they didn't know him. "1 don't know why it is," be amazed by the more expensive standards of living be admitted, "but probably I don't dress well enough, established since his graduation. In the last quarter j After I've worn a suit 10 to 35 years 1 get rather fond century colleges generally have been forced to unit! of it. My wife's aSoetlon fcr it of course, wanes." There economy to pleas for greater endowments to keep up you have the clothes philosophy of a busy man ia a rath tha legitimate demands for broadening scope cf, nutshell. instruction, including costly laboratories and ether) Of course, Mr. Rockefeller exaggerated. Had his equipment.' At the same time, paradoxically enough, jsnit been obviously old he would have been conspicuous tany students, having been given mora to spend by a ;-and the photographers could not have mlaeed him. Conwave of sensational prosperity, have spent it ever more ' spicuousness is something to avoid. Neatness avcids rrJy; and other students have been driven to greater i it, :..nd greater sacrifices in endeavor to cope with the ad- j Neatness and modesty are the fashion for men, and . vaaciog cost of tuition, books and ordinary expenses of! while women sometimes flaunt fashion and convention," iving. 'the average man never does.

Always Speak Directly Into the Mouthpiece Holding the lips away from the transmitter has the same effect as lengthening the telephone line as follows: Two inches away lengthens the line 128 miles. Three inches away lengthens the line 174 miles. Four inches away lengthens the line 218 miles. Always speak with the lips about one inch away from the telephone transmitter and talk directly into it. Telephone users will imprbve their own service and that of other users by following this simple practice.

ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY

K fear the r..'xh";o? yoKt:; I I WILL uevir very charitstts j TOWAJID a Hoi: y-wet.fi girl WHO sends loiters to a tr.oli C.rac- ; tor , i:mbkmjsiu:d -xiv.i X's two teches : AUD laaiiLtr love la os : I 1 Ol the t:-r.. th&t dornt 1 AS leas- iM C1 in tins old Car. i A lot ;tli Zuzia crc? OP 'brides bs?e dlsr-J BT this t'.tna tiwwt tt PAJiAGOl thej' married .r aoth-! i BCT Juet common orllnary piiieais. ! WTJ Jutd uo brief tie wo aIwayB SAV wbea t&rtlnar a rlag-ioa; if r.: : TO aay clarl-'yirje" cJilorlal la ! I'AVOU cr etnsebody for a kxI',?- ,

rr..-.n who stabs a.r:oti.r gcti-Jemac. or a lady In the abdotsea or elfcv. hr. ill T when ft ii cTe-iriy esstat'debsi

i S

THAT H tras in a ASSXrel o' r ' i wirrr relative w always Seal j UK It tenxporlng. iuati-e .'wisii roercy. Ztits&rn. Irf-nt-ae and Trotziy j iiavk fixed the F-uselaa frost ; so that tt doem't re4 a eakin. iVT a mas Is so given ; TO tlowSns a'ut cinew i i TTIAT hi hearers arij aooc oon-; vir.ee i ! Til IT Is vraa bera witi a silver j hern j HATH Eft than a tilvtr crec:: 1 his r.o stli. '. that meet ;.-. of th republican (Ol XTl" Ca-.tral Commlttea at: tia i ho-jat must have beta J A perfect reveUticn U tha 38' s. i THE price cf tombstone. ' 19 coJT.lnj d.:nT. "but avea ' THAT doesn't till ths orilr.try , MAX vrttU much. gle ati sJiaatlna-. j A fis'dori writer says a J TERX of IS wV 1 fiva tt't ta.: j yaw -wear t.tr sfelrt t j SHOtl tt5 b'Jt who:-. '

j A fftrelftner wlKht twiajit: '. THAT there id a '.nr.' ti .

; RED PEPPER HEAT Ii ! STOPS BMKAGHi: 1

Tho heat of red peppers t&cs ' -i "cm h" from a e'to, ia haok, 1! vfast hurt you, iti.1 it certain;" enda t: -i . toTt jra envc VNi.oa yea are eisfrc r-.r. 3 ta yv car, 'ui;ritr get. ijOTin-rt, just try Kcd I'e; -ps.r fiv.o, asd j-ci wH havo the quicl:-concfcntra-'eii, :rK.t$i5 icv.l hm red yeppepsi, Xtt Bijb yey will feel tho tlnjin.r 3ct, ia t,rea minatea it w&rwr the re Fpat tfeiwagb Bd thB?wii Psi and : .7- "r.r. P. . iv?i Vevisir.p has, Bfo ir: vu ft th sen WitU tha ar--j " ?'. w-r.

NEW $600 PLAVER PIANO Special $345

NEW $225 PHONOGRAPHS Spcal SS5

NEW $5S0 PLAYER PIANO Special $295

NEW 5140 PHONOGRAPHS SpecUl SG5

Every Instrument in This Ware-room Must Be Sold at Once or Placed in a Reputable Home for Storage We have been served with a court order to surrender lease to tliese viurerootaa witKn ten days and as there positively is not a foot or storage to be had in Hammond, we are compelled to appeal to the public for storage accommodations or to sell this big stock of pianos, player pianos and phonographs at the best price thty will bring, Every PIANO and PLAYER PIANO in this stock is a 1922 instrument. Ixraght by us during the past six weeks, and consists of some of the most handsome and most reputable makes of pianos on the market (no stencils).- The phonographs, over 90 in number, include most all makes, such as COLUMBIA. STEGER VICTOR. WINDSOR, FULTON, BRUNSWICK, and many other new and slightly used instruments. You can a?e from $150.00 to $350.00 on acy PLAYER PIANO, and from $50.68 to $225.00 oa Phonographs. NO INTEREST OJl WAR TAX, which represent another string of fVoEB $60.00 to $100.00 on a Player Piano, etc. No reasonable offer will he refused on any instrument ia this stock. Fint cone, nt serred. A food home nd reliable customer "u oar chief consideration. EXC1 iANGES If you have a piano or phonograph to trade in on a new instrument and will allow it to remain in your home or in the home of a friend until we can use same, we wiJl accept it at full value in exchange for an y instrument ia this stock. Special Bargains in Hew Pianos and Phonographs

7 Hl'XAi VV'X Six Ik

n

2 new $1050 Solo Kayer Pianos at S40 4 new $900 Solo Piyrrs, most beaatlful imrwrted C wabrat casss obtainable, Leaches to tnatcli. at $8Z3 4 new $850 Players, benches to match, with full roll equipment, at ............... $550 Z new $750 Players, benches. $45d 5 new $650 Ravers, bcscbcs.$378

$345

n'tx c - yv '.v. juik.! ' . . i .... .i, ..i-v a.. j,.--..ti' tv..,.v.. -

i ilJ ; -v'-' - v ' 'i''' U and players frota. .20S to 2S5 '''' ''? , ' rS; PHONOGRAPHS A U ? ,. - .''Vi J I ! 3 new $375. art styles M&i ill lwtr k :":" -iVfgf :V ir i 1 4 $m wttrl $13S

i .r, ftv: tv-v-k r-'JI i 10 $300. tyi $125 hr;r! I new $225. art $120 ML'1 4 fe-f r 3-, r l- new $200. plain style $30

40 new $150. any nni:;h $45

Dozens of new and slightly used phonographs, all makes, price at $1S te $5&

DO NOT WAIT UNTIL SATURDAY COME IN AT ONCE TERMS TO SUIT ALL SPECIAL NOTICE Er?ry instramtnt that rasy be Iff m ibis tlere after Satarday mi'J eitier be scW at avchoa t the kigfcest bidder or placed ra the crme of rcspoasible pepte, the ie of saie t be jm free of ciarfe antil sach lime that we call for wait. Aey famirjr desaiog tbe ne cf Pao, PUyer-Pra rr pWeffgrapa wha will fill ia the foUowing 7plitkm Wank, be t;fieJ w&Mo a few jt fftea Ute mstremtut f t?rr choice will he deiirrtrtf. s

Wbetier vpttairs er downstairs wove.

How bag Iiore you tited in city'

In allying for the free nae f PIANO. PLAYER-PI NO er PHONOGRAPH, e atree ta iatre said mslroineBt with full recovery payable to J. M. WILCCCXSON MUSIC CO. as ileir iere.1 nzy and take e best Dossible rare of same ( reason bse wear excepted). ALL LiiARuh kLLmAKi 5 THE DELIVERY AND RETURN OF INSTRUMENT. INCLUDING ROLLS AND RECORDS (wktft tre accessaries thmtn), w?J be paid hy I M. WILCOCKSON MUSIC CO. CotOBfff rs Signatare

J. E WiLCOCISp

MTIQlr

IV

Ware-Rooms over Peoples Bank Building 627 HOHMAN STREET PHONE HAMMOND 322 Opes Evening:? Until 9:30

ill

If' 0 a 1 1