Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 232, Hammond, Lake County, 16 June 1922 — Page 4
The Times Newspapers
- 1.A Ivl COUNT PK'T'ti A t'til'L'U CO. Ilia J-aku Comity Tiuifcs Uaiiy except SaturuaJ ana sunuay. i-ulcred ai j LioaUiiliue iu iiuiui oud. Jauu U l.iuti. Ilia Times East Chicago Indiana Harbor, dally except Ssunday. filtered ti th postouueo iu ai Ciiiufco, i-o;ber AS. Tha Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly ui.tun nieru ill the puatoaiuu In iiaaiuuau. estuary 4, ll,li. Tho Gary Evening Time Dally except Sunday. ttttred at tU posuiiioe n Cry, vpru is. All uudr the act of March 3. x7!, a socoadcirtM iuaur.
G . lijua.N i-A 1 .s W cu. CiUCAUO Uaiy Oiiiue Xeiopnoao 133 iwaitu o Thompson. JLiaat Ciiicao. . . .'ieieyuoua mil i-s. Chicago, vino Tiiuce) 'it-ivptiwii i!4 Hiai.ii.il liaroor Cw Jjdaler... Teiepuuua UJo-J viiiiuii; tiiepurter ,.'it)uy&ua o-Ja """'I'o (..New a jjwaior and Claaa. AUv.i xeiepltuud liau.uic.iid (private exchanges) 3100, 3101, S10S tCall tor whatever uep&rtmont wanted.) IX you h&ve any trouble getting Til hi TIMES irako cuuipiamt immediate.!. to lun circulation irfel.iriinfnit.
KOTlCfai lO iUilaCKXiJliiia: If you fall to receive your copy or THE TIMES a promptly aa you have In Uie paai. pleas do not tninK K Liia been lost or was not aeut on Unie. 'ill Tl.il. 3 baa increased iia mailing eciuipnienl and la striving earnet.y ;o reach its patrons on Lime, lie prompt la aUviiici when you do not feet your paper and we w act promptly. DEMOCRATIC INSINCERITY. The solicitude of Democratic senators for the future welfare of the Republcan party is heart-rending. The majority in the senate is
trying to agree on a new tariff bill, and the Democratic minority is so certain that a new
tariff will bring ruin upon the Republcan party
that it is valiantly talking on in a desperate attemept to avert the impending catastrophe. The Democrats charge that the Republican . majority has the design of inflicting additional burdens upon the people of the country for the benefit of certain classes. But if the minority is sincere in the belief that the country will .repudiate the measure, why, instead cf delaying enaction of the bill, does it not let the effects work now and thereby reap the reward from the disgruntled voters in November? The Democraets charge that the Republican leaders are bluffing and have no intention of passing a tariff . bill before the eve of election. Then why don't they call the bluff? The truth is there is no sincerity in the Dernocrctic charges, which have filled the Congressiosal Record for days, to be franked out at the government's expense for home consumption. A new tariff to protect American industry is one of the things most sorely need to give commerce and industry the acceleration needed to top the hill to normalcy. The minority knows that the party in power is going to enact a tariff law. If it has any regard whatever for the interests of the country it will quit playing politics and end its senseless and costly spiking of the legislative wheels.
FORESTALLING CENSORSHIP. Will H. Hays, accredited monitor for the leading motion picture producers of the United States, is quoted as telling the picture makers that censorship could be avoided by eliminating all necessity for putting a ban on their product. That is such a simple plan for getting rid of censors, it is a bit strange that the producers
did not think of it themselves. Some producers appear to have the idea that the public will stand for anything. It is true that there is an element of the public that is looking for the salacious in motion pictures, just as it does in its reading or on the speaking stage. Most persons, however, have a moral sense which can be offended, and they will insist on reasonable adherence to conservative principles. When Mr. Hays exercises his authority to exclude from motion picture production individuals whose lives have been made offensive by their own acts he performs a genuine public service, and he makes a contribution to the motion picture industry that should be appreciated by the producers. Children are among the most' regular attendants at the motion picture shows, and they must be protected against receiving false ideas of life which may be created by seeing men and women of questionable character appearing on the screen. It is not puritanical, but plain common sense. Let the motion picture producers get away from the idea that they must cater to the smaller number who seek the things that are degrading and make their contribution to the much larger number who desire to be entertained without any influneces that will make for low ideals. Censors will be out of jobs just as soon as motion picture producers adopt the only method that will put them out.
SHERMAN LAW OBSOLETE. - Albert J. Beveridge, former United States senator and again the Republican nominess in Indiana, is one of those individauls who believe that a law which has outlived its usefulness and applicableness to conditions as they exist, regardless of its merits when it was enacted, should be stricken from the statutes. If business is to function with full vigor the Sherman anti-trust law must be reyealed or subjected to fundamental changes, Mr. Beveridge told a convention of credit men in Indianapolis. An up-to-date and practical business statute, in the form of a national incorporation act, was advocated by the senatorial nominee to replace it. ' "Frequent events have made such action indispensable," Mr. Beveridge said, "for instance, the interstate commerce commission recommended a railway merger a measure which many thoughtful persons had long seen to be advisable. Yet under the Sherman law the supreme court was forced to declare this consolidation illegal." The Sherman act may have filled a need of the times in which it was enacted, but it is today an inquisition upon business that holds back the country's industrial development and serves no useful or beneficial purpose. The sooner it is repealed and legislation passed that will aid instead of retard industry and business, the better off will the country be.
: app bid and
j
'tern
etiteVof
little folks
Lien, you Herbii, yoix, let go of thoto Kellogg's Corn Flake or you'll bo late for school: and won't wait for you an other minute I'
TOASTED CORN FLAKES
SSr.
Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked
ad krumbled
Pu'f" it 'right up to Kellogg's Cora Flakes f6 do" a master job sharpening breakfast appetites ! And, they'll repeat at lunch and supper for Kellogg's are irresistible in goodness! Kellogg's win every one because their flavor is deli- ' cious and because their crunchy crispness is unfailing ! You'll prove that! Such a cereal you never ate before! You'll say Kellogg's are a revelation and they will be, in particular, to any one who has eaten imitation corn flakes! Kellogg's are as distinctive in flavor as they are in crispness. And, Kellogg's are never tough or leathery! Start eating Kellogg's Corn Flakes tomorrow morning! You can't afford to miss such happiness as Kellogg's hand out to young and old alike! But please De sure you get KELLOGG'S, the delicious Corn Flakes in the RED and GREEN package. Look for the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn Flakes. .None are genuine without itl
. 9?
1VISCOUNT MARRIES WIDOW OF BARON
t
mm
v -r V:
Mi
c & 'i r its'
1
I S. -t
1
Viacount Urty of Fallodon and hia brida, formerly Lady Gleaconser.
Passing
S-h-o-w
AT times but derlv a great DEALi of comfort from reading: ABOUT Just deceased fellow cltl sens WHO grot rrwLrled TUB year w -wero born la. THAT old-fashioned GERJL who used to sit at ONE end of the sofa -with HER beau at the other end A5D a pile of cushions between NOWADATS is asking THE said beau for & match. A.VOTHER female point of (view Wiucil the mala rU.
JTE TVER encroach upon Is the Idea
"WHICH stems to (be rather PREVALEXT In female circles
THAT the (hospital is a nice place
TO go for a good rest A scientist announces that THE) silver wood plant
cnowa only on the high slopes of
THE Himalayas and we hope he has
LOOKED caref uly In our .backyard
AS .ost everything- else seems to
GROW there except what's plant, ed. WE don't know much hut
WE do know, that there axe sev
eral rVTEHESTI-VG matters in the
WORLD besides sex and perhaps
THE movies would do ell
TO ring in a few innovations. 5CAXT are graduated in June SOME are married
AXD others have unripe canta
loupes thrust upon them.
XOTHIVO i more improbable
man .THAT the sun won't rise' torn or row rXLESS it Is an ireless Ireland. PRIDE it what impels a female MEM-ER of the class between 41 and 6 to adjust her ADJUSTABLE dress form haclc FROM 44 to 36 or at most 38
WHEX she's through trying some-
tlilng ON it in casevsome friend SHOULD happen to dTop in. TO be really popular YOU must allow people to tell YOU things you already KXOW, as if you HAD never heard of them.
SLAIN ATOP OF
CLUB CAR
TOLEDO, June 15. His body badly bruised and the top of Oil head
torn oft. inspectors here this morn
ing found the dead body of a well dressed man on top of the Twentieth Century Limited Cluh Car. Officials believe the death was caused by striking overhead 'bridges between Buffalo and Cleveland. A letter was found on the body addressed to Francis Bowman, Califon, X. J., the missive was slsrned "mothr" and postmarked at Omaha, Xebr.
Pesky Osviis Quiatus
P. D. Q.
P. D Q . Psky Devils Quietus, is the name of the new chemical that actually ends the bug family. Bed Buss, Roaches. Ants and Fleas, as P. D.Q. lulls the live one sand their eggs and stops future generations. Not an insect powder but a chemlcsl tinlike anything yon have ever used. A 85 cent package makes one luart and each package eontains a patent spout, to fret the f'esky Devils ia the cracks and crevices. Your d issrist has itor he can a-etitforyou. P. D. Q. can als j r. purchased in salad bottles, double strength, liquid form.
T
YEARS sV
Cll TODAY
Directors of the First National Bank, of Dyer held a meeting last evening and increased the bank's surplus from 12 50'), to 115,000.
Peter O'Toole and John Pass of Chicago are missing and are ibelieved to have drowned in Lake Michigan at Indiana Har'bor. They were last seen fishing from the pier at the Harbor.
William Becker, a farmer living Just acrosa the Illinois line west of Dyer, awoke at midnight last night and found his wife dead in bed beside him. Heart trouble Is said to have teen the cause.
Cok Tim E nglehart Is a candidate for the position on the Gary council made vacant by the ousting- of "Battleaxe'' Cas-tleman.
The Lincoln-Jefferson College of Law at Hammond granted diplomas to eight graduates who were admitted to practice in In-' diana. They were R. Eugene Beaoh, Frank B. Doherty, Karl V. Flschler, Clarence J. Hanner, Christ Okeson, A. Wallace Purdy, William C. Smith and Harry O. Strum.
John R. Farovld of Indiana Harbor is attending the meeting of representatives of Mississippi Valley states in Chicago where they are considering methods of flood prevention and drainage of swamps. Mr. Farovld went as Governor Marshall's personal representative.
Famous engineers from all oiver the world who have ibeen attending the Navigation Congress at Phila-delphia are lookingover the Calumet region today.
The East Chicago (high school comimencement exercises were
held last evening. The-graduates are: Edith Berglund, Leroy Bland, Earl Bunting. Edwin Carlson, Ralph Canine, William Collins, Lillian Dixon. Qrctchen Dupes. Mary Filson, Will Gardner, Walter Jaraz, Ruth Jernbers, Dollie Mansell, Anna JIoShane, Thorrvas O'Connor, Lester Ottenheimer, Leroy Petersen, Carrie Ross, Daivid Rosenthal, Mabel Silverman, Alta Specter, Gwendolyn Williams, Hubert Williams.
HOWMUCH DO WAIT T1TAIIT
1UU ivnuvY
1 6 What is meant (by the word "The-saur. Amer. Septent Slgll." found on all our paper money? Ans. The words are an abbreviation for Latin words which mean "Of the treasury of America North, Seal." 7 Who lighted the lights in Old North Church the night Paul Revere made his famous ride? Ans. Historians give credit to Robert Newman, sexton of the church. 8 How many West Point graduates were killed during the World War? Ans. Thirty-three. ft Wlhen were headstones first furnished for oldlers' graves by the govern lent? Ans. After the act of
March 3, 1873. g 10 Was Secretary of War Weeks"
ever in the Wmy or na-vy? Ana He was In the kavy.
SUNDAY DINNER 75c Substantial Choice Dishes MEE HOTEL jam es Congle Rebxrui I
r-
1 C AI
lis m I j ifTt-- rFL
mum
1 What proportion of the me
chanical devices that are patented comt into successful use? 2 Who was Peter Cartrlght? 3 Who composed the opera "The Magic Finite?" 4 What are two eynonyms of the word ability? B On Which side of the groom does the brde leave the altar? 6 Where did St. Patrick receive his religious training? 7 How many people in the Uniteti States work. 8 How long does it take a lilac bush to bloom which was started from a small sprout 9 Where are the largest railway track scales? 10 What is the largest gland in the body? ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S at'Esnoxs. 1 What is meant by tlhe flora of a country? Ans. The wild plant, that grow in the country. 2 What is the military salute t the nation? Ans. One sun for each state. 3 When is it fired? Ans. A noon on July 4 at all army post and naval bases. 4 Should artificial teeth -be wor: at night? Ana. Yes. 6 How many chauffeurs art.
there in the United States? Ans. I The 1920 census showed 285.045.
Three New Leader Models The Upright Piano The Baby Grand The Player Piano
Per Week
)U)1
15H5tae Sfr.r- H - I-Miani
-mm ... - rr
iJirmm, iia-jiia a irtrf srfat
Your Guarantee of Servico
GP mm ta
n &trz n r
U 1 W i I Ll II I I Hi i I I J I
Onn
(5lllfl
r7nnn nnnn
When you engage the clutch and gently "give 'er the 9J M 1fc 1 S ,i , '
gas , you go -witn jxea urown in me tanK. No sputtering or false starts just a quick, snappy response and this doesn't just happen. Red Crown is made to deliver power. Its perfect chain of boiling point fractions insures quick get-away. That's why Red Crown is so popular. Thaf s why millions of motorists use it daily. It performs all the time.
MyJli H lls vPlj lJiij, USD f&og0ffe daSJOdPUBUD
N. N.
HAMMOND, INDIANA E . Corner Hoan Ave. and Russell St. W. Corner State St. and Calumet Ave.
A t the Following Standard Oil Service Stations:
EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA 145th St. and Forsythe At. WHITING, INDIANA' INDIANA HARBOR, INDIANA J 19 St. and Indianapolis BouIsTmr"!' Michigan Ave. and Hemlock St. '
And at the Following Garages:
HAMMOND, INDIANA
Acorn Motor Car Co., 85 Williams St. Bohling Auto Sales, 707 Hohman St. Brown and Voorhies, 16S Fayette St. Wm. Gruppee, 778 Calumet Ave. Hammond Auto Sales, 43 State St.
Herrington Auto Sales, 822 Calumet Ave. H. Hickelberg, Standard and Calumet Ave. Eli Hodonus, Columbia Ave. Thos. Jordon, 183 Sibley St. Andrew Kowach, 368 Hohman St. Wm. F. Lawson, Jr., 574 State Line St. J. E. Leach, 671 Hohman St. H. F. Shreiber, 1012 Hohman St. Max Stone, 150th and Columbia Ave. Standard Oil Co.,
INDIANA HARBOR, IND. B. H. Briaey, 3524 Fir St. County Rd. Garage, 3536 Guthrie St. J. Galvin and Son, 3511 Michigan Ave, C. A. Leech, 3911 Guthrie St. National Garage, 2011 137th St. Joha Pakush, 3601 Parrish Ave Otto Seehase, 3502 Deador St. John A. Walsh, 3731 Grapevine St. Triangle Garage, 3480 Guthrie St.
Indiana)
SUBURBAN
Wm. Blair, Griffith, Ind. A. Coffman, Griffith, Ind. Griffith Garage and Sales Co., Griffith, In Mat. Miller, Griffith, Ind. Fitch Bros., Dyer, Ind. Mathias Hoffman, Dyer, Ind. Chas. Keilm an. Dyer, Ind. Grimmer Garage,' Highland, Ind. Highland Garage, Highland, In Burt McKee, Maynard, Ind. J. K. Roberts, 119th and Sheffield AveWhiting, Ind. John Ciesar, 517 Indianapolis Blvd. Whiting, Ind. Hammond, 2nd.
370?:
41
SUMMERS PHARMAC-v
