Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 322, Hammond, Lake County, 5 June 1922 — Page 3
Monday. June 5, 1922. ' ,
THE TOIES "PAGE THHKK
LOCUSTS
KILKENNY CATS
AMCTIHG ATTENTION
CROWT POINT. Ind., June 3 -Lk countr baa been Invaded t. svnteen-ycar locusts. Rpori from nearly every part of the coun: bear out th fact that the locus hs made his regular visitation Many trees are covered with tin migratory species of the gra.ishop per family. Only a few days ago their prt-s ence was discovered throuph tlv. whirring; sounds emitted from t:-. top of trees and which could- l heard fully a half mile away. T " locusts are about an Inch lonsr wit' a longr slender antennae. The females lays cftgs on the leav"
which are destroyed and in many Instances the trees also die. It not believed the pests will prove of damage to the prowlng crops.
Lucy Jeanne Price
NEW YORK. Jane 3. There is one corner of New York, where all India meets some time or other. It la a little Hindoo restaurant around the corner from Times Square, and it Is the on true gathering- place of all East Indians In New York City. Laborers, bankers, students, whoa castes would keep them apart In any other place in this country, as In their own. make that restaurant a common meeting- place. East India men. of every shade of complexion from pale grold to deop women. That seems Deoallar at first brown, of every fcuild from the slender lines of the delicately reared aristocrat to the heavy. shouldered doclt worker hut no East Indian but the, answer is quite simple there are none here. None in New York, xcept an occasional "visitinglecturer, and only a few. In the whole country. A few intellectual American women who have some East Indian bent to their thoughts, dine at the little restaurant, a few who find the place romantic, and a few who really like the East Indian food. But most of the diners are men.
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From exploring the lofty, snowclad peaks of the Northern Canadian Rockies, and traveling- through the primitive settlements of th Gitksan and Carrier Indians, to establishing and conducting a girls' camp, seems like a drop In monotony. But Mary L. Jobe, A. 'M.. F., R. G. S.. member of the American Alpine club, Alpine Club of Canada, the Club Alpin Francaia and possessed many other such distinctions, insists that there is no lack of intense Interest about a girls' camp at any time. Knowing so Intimately the charm and grandeur of the natural world, iflsa Jobe longed to encourage the love of it in theoung people about tier, and Camp Mystic, near the "village of Mystic, on the Connecticut shore, is the result. Miss Jobe does hot expect to make Alpine climbers and explorers out of the girls but she is convinced that they will be strong, well and appreciative of out-door sports by
. the end of the season at Camp Mys
tic. About eighty girls will gather there from all parts of the country this summer. Miss Jobe mapped out and explored a hitherto unexplored, glaciated mountain which was known only as a predominant northermost peak in the Canadian Rockies one year, ,and 'has a whole series of such accomplishments to her credit. The girls at Camp Mystic are particularly proud of their swimming records, wjilch are all according to the official Red Cross tests and in which they have made remarkable showing. Miss Jobe is a graduate of Byrn Mawr college.
"William Tlefenworth declares that he cannot struggle along on the 73c cents a week, which his wife has been gi'vlng him as his allowance. For five years, he says, he has handed over his pay envelope each Saturday. Just as regularly, his wife handed him back 75 cents and
he was told "it had to do." For flvj years, Mr. Tlefenworth allowed the system to go .unprotested, but when she left him a month ago because he asked her to sew on a button, he decided he wasn't being treated right. So he has sued for a dKorce, across the river in Jersey.
Th8 new addition of the Ziegfel Follies will be presented at the New Amsterdam theater early in June.
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S. & H. Stamps With All Purchases
KAUFMAN H & WOLF - Hamkgho. Inq For Tuesday Very Unusual
IMPORTED GINGHAMS PRETTY RATINES COOL VOILES Beyond a doubt these Wash Frocks are the prettiest seen here this season. Every new Summery style is here in quaint checks, colorful plaids of gingham, serviceable ratine, sheer, voiles of beauty and serviceability in attractive color combinations. There's a style for every woman and miss at an exceptionally low price. Values to $12
There will certainly be a monument raised at some time to one John Swarson. Jersey City landlord. He ha3 bought and remodeled an apartment house, in which apartments can be taken ONTY by families with children. One child is a passport but more entitle the parents to greater consideration. Mr. Swanson has even gone so far as to offer 50 for the first girl baby born in the house, and $100 for the first boy. With 35 families having leased apartments in the Viilding, and with one child, at least, in each family, and in most of them several, the perambulator question was serious. The halls were packed withi them the first week. So. Mr. Swan- ' son took over the house next door
and made it into a perambulator garage and playroom.
"We are growing quite continental. At the races at Belmont park last week, a group of models paraded in the last word of American and Parisian designers, Just as they do in France. Our smartest society is crowding to Belmont this season In greater numbers and with more apparent enthusiasm than they have shown in several seasons, LUCY JEANNE PRICE.
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There were 6,448,366 farms in the United States at the time of the last census.
INNEI6toMES
"Daniel was a piker; he didn'1 have any nerve!" The thin, pale person, who mut tered thus, lifted his lip in a sneer.
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"He was a piker," he added scornfully. "He only went into s den of lions." A moment passed a moment oi tense contempt. "I," he continued, "I am a greatei man than Daniel was! For 1 am or. my way to interview the cashier al the bank where I am overdrawn!"
PARIS, June 5 Jeorges Carpentier. French Apollo of the prize ring is going on tho stajre. He has already accepted an offer to go . Into Ihe movies, but that only Inspired an ambition for the legitimate so Oeorges Is going to grace the boards. Creorges is going to star In a play written exclusively for him by Yvs Mlrande. It is a eentimontal love story with the boxing game as a background. Georges is the hero. The identity of tho villain is not known. But it la revealed already that he will not have a look In. Mile Mlrande has questioned Georges and has seen him do a bit of amateur stuff and she declares he is good. Hej has an agreeable soft voice 'and the battering of the arena has not dislocated any of his features. In the meantime Georges is practicing up to register for the movies. He has accepted a big contract with an English picture concern and it is keeping him busy. These are some of the things Georges will have to do for the screen: Swim, dive from a lofty elevation.
run, drive an autonaoblle, box, run a locomotive and ride a galloping . horse. ' I Horseback riding proved the most j difficult part of the whole program for the pugilist. He had never been : on a horse before and when he made his first trial he began to realise ( that broncho busting is a gift. Now j Georges is taking riding lessons and j almost every pleasant afternoon he i can be seen cantering along the Bols j Boulogne, accompanied y IPearl ' White, the American moving picture actress, who is starring in a musical revue In Paris, I "I did not know that horseback riding was so difficult," exclaimed Carpontler, as he shifted around his mount for a strategic position far from the rear heels. "Another thing I did not know was the the ground is so hard." I Georges said he could easily quail- , fy for all the other demands upon
his physical prowess.
Notre Dame Grid Star . Now Baseball Player INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE DENVER, June Johnny Mohardt, former Notre Dame star athlete, has Joined the Dehver Bears of the Western League and will play one of the outfield positions for Manager Joe Dunn. Mohardt was purchased from the Detroit Americans, and Ty Cobb declares that he has displayed much brilliancy in the field while with the Tigers, but experienced much difficulty in hitting big league pitching.
SP QRT "SNAPH OT5i I
Now meek doth the mighty home run clouter look when he misses the third strike. A .250 hitter can retire jrracefully on such an occasion but a whiff puts an awful droop in the sluftfjer's head. . Talk of a battle between Georpes Carpentier and Harry Greb, the Windmill artist, has aroused con-i siderable interest in such a contest. There is at least one real excuse for such a bout. It would pive fandom in jreneral a chance to see what Georges Carpentier looks li!i : against a man in his class. Carpentier went out of his class to meet Jack Dempsey. His showing waa commendable under the Bituation. The Frenchman went out of his class the otber way to fight Lewis. Lewis was easy picking. Outweighed, out-generalled and outclassed generally, Lewis did .not even furnish a workout for Georges the debonair. Over on this side again Battling Levinsky was a sad excuse for a light-heavyweight champ when Carp met him. The Frenchman didn't even get a workout. Greb is at least Carpentier'- size, and rearer Carpentier's type as a fast, brainy fighter, than anyone the Frenchman has met since America has become interested in Carp. Greb. also, ought to give Carpentier a tougher problem to solve than Dempsey, Levinsky or Lewis did. All three of these men fight in the orthodox fashion. Dempsey is a slugger, pure and simple. Iiewis is a polished boxer.- who fights along the accepted lines of ring teachings, albeit cunningly, Levinsky is a ham fighter and his style needs no dissecting. Greb is a mystery always has been, and always will be to the men be meets. No American fighter has solved his mysterious capers. Char-
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ley Weinert, a clever heavy although never a star, was helpless before Greb's windmill style. Tommy Gibbons, packing a terrific punch and plenty of speed, was pie for the Pittsburger. Gene Tunney, rugged, game and fairly clever, was helpless before the nails Greb used. None of these boys could find Greb to hit him, let alone stop what punches he delivered. These punches, his opponents will tell you, come from all points of the compass. His weird tactics will givt Carpentier something to study as Carp tries to launch his deadly jumping punches. And just when he believes he has solved Greb's style and weakness Harry may break out in a new place. But the fact that Weinert, Tunney and Gibbons failed to solve the pigs-in-pen tactics of Greb doer not indicate that he will be tougl Dicking for Georges. For, no rinjj fan who has seen Carp in action will class him with any f the tri aforementioned as regards rinfl skill and mental ability. Carp mus be ranked as one of the brainiest fighters in the game today, bai none. He has the cunning that tht American heavies and light heaviei lack. He is the one man who oughl to be able to meet Greb at Lis own weird game. There is one thing you can bank on if such a bout takes place. The referee will need a nice padded cell in the third tier at the left if the fight goes over twenty seconds. Can you imagine a referee trying to keep out of the way of a windmill and a buzz saw which are turned loose in the ring with their words pledged to annihilate ,each other T Give me a ringside seat if these boys ever meet. It may not be real boxing bout but it ought to be a wonderful show.
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Uncle Josh was comfortably lighting his pipe in the living room one evening when Aunt Maria glanced up from her knitting. "Josh," she remarked, "do yot know that next Sunday will bw the twenty-fifth anniversary of oui wedding?" "You don't say so, Maria," responded Uncle Josh, pulling vigorously on his corncob pipe. "What about it?" "Nothing," answered Aunt Maria, "only I thought maybe wa ought to kill them two Rhode Island Red chickens." "But, Maria," demanded Jncle Josh, "how can you blame them two Rhode Island Reds for what happened twenty-five years ago?" The new maid was in many respects quite satisfactory, but the mistress had observed that Biddy in her dusting operations always missed a beautiful statue of Venus. "Biddy," she said one day. "why don't you dust this figure? She could stand a good dusting." "Be jabers," replied Biddy. "I have been thinking for a long time, ma'am, that she should be covered with something."
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