Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 355, Hammond, Lake County, 3 May 1922 — Page 4
The Times Newspapers UV THE UJJE COU.NTY PRT0 PUB'SJO CO. The Lake County Tim-Daily except Saturday "'a iuuuM.y. Entered at lb poatoAoe in Hammond. The Times East Chicago ladiaaa Harbor, dally ---pi iunuay. Entered at tha poatoillca in ii.aat ia.fcO. .Sbvcu.btr IX, ISIS. The Lair.a County Tlmea Saturday and Weakly t-aiuon.. KnterU at the poatu&icw in iiaxumond. "--iy 4. 1S15. Tbe Gary Evening Time Dally except Sunday, 'icrea at the poetjiUce in Uary, April la, HU All under tbe act of Saarcn . 1879. as secondcias matter.
FOUttlGN ADVERTISING REPRESENTATION: lAiAN PAXNE & CO CHICAGO
ijary Office Telephone 131 f Thompaon, East Chicago. .. .Telephone 3l it Chicago. (The Times) Telephone 23 lnaiana Harbor (News IXiler) Telephone 113S-J niiin- (Reporter) Telephone 0-M wmtintc (News Dealer and Class. AdT.) Telephone las-W. Uammond (private exchange) 3100. S101. 810J (Call for whatevar department wanted.)
If you have any trouble getting THE TI&LE3 make compjaint Immediately to the Circulation paxtment.
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS: If you fall to receive your copy of THE TIMES as promptly as you have in the past, please do not think tt has been lest or was not sent on time. THE TIMES has increased its mailing equipment and is striving earnestly to reach its patrons on time. Be prompt ui auvising when you do not get your paper and we will act promptly.
THE BANKER AND ADVERTISING The banker furnishes, in one way or another, a large part of the money with which business is conducted. Having lent money to be used in a business 'venture, he keeps a keen eye on the progress of that venture and on the growing or decreasing value of its assets. A man who advances the money for the plow and the fertilizer and the seed and the live-stock, to be repaid from the proceeds of the crops, is naturally interested in the growth of the corn and the wheat. What does the banker think of advertising as a force tending to insure repayment of the money he lends to usiness? Guy Emerson, vice president of the National Bank of Commerce in New York, says: "It is becoming more and more common ' for bankers to regard a radical cutting down of an advertising expenditure with close attention. The sharp reduction in the advertising of nationally distributed articles, the reputations of which were apparently so firmly established that nothing could effect them adversely, has been followed so regularly by a heavy falling off in sales that the need for caution in such cases is widely recognized. The banker is coming to realize that public interest is not necessarily a permanent possession. Not even the greatest corporation or the most popular product can hope to build up a reputation which will of its own force endure." Mr. Emmerson is a little guarded in his language, but you get what he means. The banker does not like to see his client's business choked by advertisng curtailment.
the reign of terror 1,200 persons were taken to the guillotine in a single month. The civilized world is only now beginning to realize the cost of the Russian revolution in human lives. The slaughter of the French revolution was not to be compared to that perpetrated by the bolshevik tyrants over a space of four years. The figures indeed areso terrible in their magnitude as to be almost incredible were they not derived from official bolshevik sources. The Paris Gaulois recently published this list of executions taken from the bolshevik reports: Since October, 1917, bishops of the Russo-Greek church, 28; priests, 1,215; schoolmasters and professors, 6,775; physicians, 8,800; army officers, 54,650; soldiers, 200,000; officers of constabulary and police forces, 10,500; privates of the same forces, 48,500; land owners, 12,950; members of the "intelligent" classes, the so-called "intelligentsia," 355,250; workmen, 193,350; peasants, 815,100. And the chief executioner is the man who asks the leading statesmen of Europe to take
his hand in friendship as an equal at the coming Geona conference. . This ghastly record, as
has been
BULGARIAN RULER PLANS U. S. VISIT
X .r"
YEARS
Abu CI1 TODAY
said, is admitted by the DolsneviK United States. Boris is attempt-
Czar Boris. Czar Boris, who inherited the Bulgarian throne and trouble galore when his father, former Czar Ferdinand, was forced to flee the
is planning a tour ol jne
THE representative of railway workers who says the railroads need $4,000,000,000 thought it unnecessay to add where he thinks it should go.
SOME of those Russian statesmen seem determined to negotiate a treaty with the Russian Reds if it takes every dollar in the Unted States treasury. '
SPEAKING of men who are born optimistic, Hamilton Holt is today's best example. He thinks the Democrats can win on the League of Nations issue in 1924.
RUSSIA'S ORGY OF BLOOD. Contemporary observers did not realize the full horror of the French revolution. Time was acquired to put it into the proper perspective. In
JUDGING from his silence, Tom Watson may have concluded that there are others in the senate who are doing more talking than is good for them. t
. ZffX&IA ' R
Gkarm of MotKerkoo
rpHERE are many homes once childless that now are blessed with healthy, happy childen, because Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restored the mother to a healthy, normal physical condition.
The following letters give the experience of two young women and prove the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in such cases.
Dark Rapids, Minn. "I hare taken your medicine Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound -when I was a girl for pains, and before and after my marriage. I now have a eweet little baby boy, and will 6end you his picture. My sisters also take your medicine and find it a great help, and I recommend it to those who suffer before their babies are born." Mrs. Wit. JoHysojr, Box 155, Park Rapids, Minn.
Tntztown, Pa. "I m&h. every woman who wants children would try Lydi E. PinkhanrB Vegetable Compound. It has done so much for me. My baby is almost a rear old now ana is the picture of health. She walked at eleren months and is trying to use her little tongue. She can eay some words real nice. I am sending you her picture. I shall be thankful as long as I live that I found men a wonderful medicine for my troubles." Mrs. Chables A. Mehtz, Kutztown, Pa.
Lydia
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a
2k Passing
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officials themselves, but there is plenty cf cor-1 g; .to t fne guiupor
roborative evidence. American Kea cross , feited.
workers and other reliable witnesses testify to the wholesale executions that have taken place in every part of Russia in order to terrify the people with the power of the dictators . We are too near the event to grasp its complete significance. Impartial historians will redord the horrible story for future generations and they will wonder that civilized nations allowed such crimes to be perpetrated or gave them condonation. Secretary Hughes has told the European powers that America can have no dealings with Russia so long as these monsters remain in control. To join in the renewal of commercial relations might be beneficial to American pocketbooks. We are keenly interested in Russia's economic revival. But America self-respect Js worth more than any money.
1 What kind of wood ia used to make toothpicks? 2 when vu the great famine in Ireland
. 3 What are two natural enemies
of fish? 4 What is & syllogism?
5 What word for a form of killing: human beings cornea from the Latin word crux? 6 Who waa Booker T. Washington? 7 How many ex-service men are receiving vocational training from the government? S Why does an ostrich have flat
feet? 9 what kind of vegetation ibare
coal deposits largely formed?
10 What channel has famous
chalk cliffs?
AXSWKRS TO YESTERDAY'S QUESTIONS 1 How many barrels of oil did
United States produce in 1921? Ans.
443,402,000 barrels.
2 When was the Parthenon at
Athens completed? Ana. In 43S
B. C.
3 Who Is the new TJ. S. ambassa
dor to Spain? Ans. Cyrus E. Woods.
4 What Is the name given to
Holland and Belgium? Ana. Low countries. 5 What is St. Martin.' summer? Ana. Indian summer. 6 What la a child called that is born after Its father's deatbT Ans. Posthumous. 7 What is the original meaning of the word pedagogue? Ans. A child's attendant. 8 How far on either aide of the Nile river is land cultivated? Ans. Only a comparative short distance. 9 In Catsklll what does the ending "kill" mean? Ans. Creek (Dutch). 10 On what day of the week was Lincoln shot? Ans. Friday.
AVEL.L. the neighbor's cat HASN'T given us a litter of kit
tens
FOB a present In some time jBIT it is prettty liard to keep SECRETS from an old hand like
us
AAD we guess aho'a going to. WILSON'S health may not be COSLPXETElr restored BIT there axe Indications that THE veteran typewriter is FUNCTIONING normally. A woman can always keep a THING going especially IF it Is & secret. THE only thing we worry about when listening to a classical RADIO concert Is that the PRIMA dona soprano will alng SO high that she will PIT the two stage amplifier OCT of commission or burst a BLOOD vessel. SO long as America sits ON the world' gold IT declines the Genoa Invitation TO crawl under the bed AND have a war panlo. AN eminent French scientist
IS perfecting a process by which
person's eyea got out of
IF a
whack HE will be able to sea skin
rlth his
AND we guess that the girls
THE way they dress now and all
WILX be able to see about every, thing THAT goes on, fore and aft. WOMEN in Turkey now SHOW their faces but IT is hard to tell whether THE reform is an IMPROVEMENT or not. SOME people never like TO listen because they have to KEEP tbeir own mouths shut IN order to hear anything.
XO sympathy should be wasted ON the gullible ones who TRADED their Liberty bonds for GET-rich-quick stocks THE newspapers can say now; "WE told you so. WE don't know much but we do KNOW that the older a man gets THE more he la convinced of his foolishness IN thinking that he knew it all WHEN he was only 18.
HOW MUCH 0 DO 7 YOU KNOW i
for that city by Prosecutor Charles E. Greenwald. Harlan Anderson, son of Rev. C A. Smith of Hammond, has been elected to the editorial staff of the school paper published by How - Military Academy.
Hammond Baptists will meet tonight to consider the plans for a new church which have been prepared by Architects Bump & Berry. The building Is to seat 1,000 and will cost albout $35,000.
The Woman's Club at East Chicago elected the following office yesterday: President, Mrs. William Meade; vice president. Mrs. George Fisher; secretary. Mrs. T. S. Fisher; treasurer. Mrs. Ed. Jones.
Seventy Gary saloons closed this morning for a week owing to a squabble with the county commissioners ever issuance of licenses. The licenses of the seventy saloons expired yesterday.
Judge W. A. Jordan of Indiana Harbor has been appointed deputy prosecuting attorney
Crown Point is fairly crowded with a motley . jam of laborers since construction work has started on the poor farm, the Gary' & Southern electrio line and the Erie double track project
ployed as clerk in Scheldt A Kellman's plact at Hobart for six pears has resigned and Is In Business for himself. He has purchased the old Hohman buffet.
Thomas Connors, for twenty years operator at the St. John station has been transferred to Gi'bson and his place has been taken by Harry Montony.
Whiting high achool pupils yesterday voted to have school open at 8:30 and dismiss at 8:10 for the balance of the term This arrangement was tried out while preparing for the pratolcal contest and the pupils liked it so well that they decided to adopt the earlier school hours.
Rohertsdala had a coffee hower yesterday when the horse of the Standard Coffee Co., wagon ran away, on Indiana boulevard and upset the wagon.
Lee Roper who ha been era-
c
BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH Substantial Choice Dishes 55c MEE HOTEL
James Coagle t
Rtttarmst
Don t Baby Corns Use "Gets-ItV Thousands of people have Only themselves to blame for corn aony, Diood-polson, etc. Trimming and
ms-m i. i u. vJ?S -r f OWNS I -i. mtCiAats V
"trJating," cutting and paring merely makes a bad matter worse. Millions of others are wtser. They know how easily and qjilckly "GetsIt" shrivels and peels corns and calluses ofC In one piece. Get your money back if it falls. Wear new shoes with comfort. Get a bottle today. E. Lawrence & Co., Mf r., Chicago. Costs but a trifle Sold in Hammond by Wels Drug & Stationrev Co., and Kaufmann & Wolf, and
ax
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A little good management will enable you to have a SIMPLEX IRONER witE absolutely no burdensome obligations. Figure' it out for yourself. First you save each month on your light bill by using a SIMPLEX IRONER instead of an electric flat iron. Second, you save on your present laundry expense. Third, your linen will last longer. Total saving at the very least of $8 to $30 per month, regardless of how your ironing is done. More important than all that is that when you rid yourself of such heavy work as hand ironing ytra preserve your health and charm for yourself and those about you. Why then delay acquiring a reliable SIMPLEX IRONER? Every day's delay is costly to you, not only in health and happiness but money as well. We invite you to come in and see a demonstration. You will then quickly appreciate its true value. . What the "Simplex" Will Iron
CURTAINS LINGERIE APRONS MEN'S SHIRTS SOFT COLLARS CHILDREN'S DRESSES
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Summers Pharmacy PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Phones 14201421355028 Hohman near State St., Hammond, Ind.
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