Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 235, Hammond, Lake County, 20 June 1922 — Page 8

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THE TIMjSS Tuesday, June 20, 1922.

SHOWDOWN FIGHT NOW PROMISED

Organized Labor Marshals Battalions for Coming Industrial Conflict

(BT WARREN W. TVHEATON) STAFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE CI.VCIN-XATI. Ohio. June 20 The greatest combine eiver known to organized labor in the United States stand assured today ready to wa?e a "showdown" figrht in the existing coal strike and the now 'believed inevitable railroad tleup. Leaders of the miners and railway unions have approved the coalition of forces and nothing now but possible go-vernment intervention stands in the way of marshalling their battalions for the coming great industrial conflict. With the assurance of the fighting alliance, came a move today by prominent labor leaders to see that forming the combination is within the law. Ostensibly here to advise labor on how it can coirnbat the United States s-upreme court' recent adverse decisions in the child labor and the Coronada coal cases, prominent legal minds of the country will be called upon to pass upon the legality of the coalition. Ten lawyers, drafted from amone outstanding legal lights from ell sections of the country, are expect-

SIGN OF THE HORNS DEATH SEW YORK, June 19. Because 14-rear-old Ruben Harriton unwlttlBKly made the "Sinn of the Horns," i-onaldered by the Latins as a dire in.ult, the boy la dead today in Bellevne hospital. The "Sign of the Horns" Is made by patting the two first Angers of the band near the nose. Reaben. who did not kooir that, prondly nnnoanced that be could whistle with two Angers. Hhe placed the two first fingers In his mouth to demonstrate. An older boy, of Latin descent, thinking It was the "sign of the Horns.' rushed up to hint and fired fired a blank cartridge at Renben's jaw. The wound was superficial, but despite reeeiTlng an injection of tetanions. lockjaw developed and the boy died.

JUST ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER!

in the ertrema eastern blocks of the Forties and Fifties. Here, In what was the Island's aristocratic regions long ago and then, fcecame given aver to alums, a new Bofcemianlsm faa taken hold. It is franker than the Latin Quarter atmosphere of Greenwich Village; but as varied in its interests and as experimental in its attitude toward life. The model tenements of the neighborhood, built for the worthy workingmen's families have been taken as the homes of these intruders. At last this district has been used as the principal setting for a novel, "The Love Chase" iby Felix Cirendon. It is the story of rebellion from the hypocrisies and pettiness that obtain many of the marriages of today; the failure and fallacies of free-love as tried by some of the model -tenement dwellers In their reactions, honest or otherwise, from the conventional bonds; and the solution in a marriage of comradeship and equality, Mr. Grenden has succeeded in making his "love chajse" a serious search for answers to several problems and has achieved that unusmal thing a sympathetic and gripping story of a purpose without obtrusive propaganda. The book is beinar discussed among feminist circles more than any novel since Anne Veronica, by H. G. Wells. It holds and added interest here in New York 'because of the fact that the Characters are drawn pretty closely from life and those who are well acquainted with the more radical group have been able to recognize, several of them. In fact, one of the "twelve greatest women in America" is found in Its pages.

AMERICAN HEADS i NEAR EAST SCHOOL

SECOND

HAND

MATERIAL S

DEALT THEM

r INTER NATIONAL NEWS SERVICE J CHICAGO. June 20. Xinety-nine per cent of the teachers of the world whether in home or school, deal in second 'hand material, former Governor Charles S. Osborn of Michigan told Northwestern University students in a commencement address.

"Knowledge i around us as diffusedly as hea.t and atmosphere an nourishment," aaW Mr. Osborn. "I Is now and then registered . by aj attuned mind and passed on to th massea. Some of It becomes threadbare and shopworn, which distinguishes truth from, error. N mind ver created an atom of what is called knowledge. The mint sometime captures, but It nevel i creates." Former Governor Ofborn aW there has 'been, created a distlnd college caste. Toung people an afraid to say they have not attend, de a university, lie added, "too oftea a cbiploma is & social certiflcati rafher than an indication of equipment to lead In life.''

Miss Emma Cuahraaa. Mis Emma Cushman of New York, one of the best known woman educators, has been put in charge of the new industrial training: school which has been pened by the near east relief commission in America. She will have charge jf about 1,300 Armenian orphan.

ed here tonight, beckoned by the leaders of the American Federation of Labor in convention. If t'jy comvince labor leaders that there is no conspiracy in the contemplated combination, the coalition will be effected tomorrow night. Definite assurances that the union coal miners, now In their third month of a strike, will join forces with the railroad employes, represented in the shop crafts, has been given 'by John L. Lewi3, president of the United Mine Workers of America. Recent wage cut decision of the railroad labor board leave the employes with no alternative but to otherwise than fight, according to fight, in Lewis' opinion. To do the miners head, would be "to

recognize a condition that would

continue for ever to haunt them." Labor as a whole, according to' Lewis, has come to believe that it can't get a fair judicial decision on wages. In the proposed alliance, labor leaders attending the federation convention here, saw today the long promised fight to a finish between the contending forces of labor and capital.

Joseph Jacobson, a former service man of the United States army, since fallingin an army airplane at Towers. France, in May, 1918, has been in ten hospitals, four since the first of this year. Seven Jacobson brothers served in the world war. and were contenders for t'ae championship for the largest number of a single family in the service.

I vUmaf Bill IV V

7 JLL V X

i Lko; Jeanne Price Y )

NEW YORK. Jjne 20. It was international day in our Yorkville court one day this week when a Japanese, two Norwegians, a Russian, an Italian, a Pole,-an Englishman, a Filipino and a Slovak were arraigned together. Their crime was only that of sleeping in summer houses in Central park, but they made an impressive and intriguing lne txfore the magistrate's desk just the game. One of the interesting districts of Manhattan is the Kips Bay region,

There is balm for the decriers of "the modern girl" In this Incident. The daughter of a wealthy up-state business man left home recently, "bored with doing nothing." as she explained. She wandered into New York and made a comfortable living for a while by painting flowers and decorations on candy boxes. Meanwhile all the neighbors at home were sighing over the thought that girls Just would not ibe domestic any longer and stay at home and do woman's work. One day, this

I girl visited the manager of a well 1 known hotel here and begged him 1 to allow her to experiment in the

hotel's capacious kitchens, baking

j a cnocoiate case wnicn naa oeen 1 the delight of her friends at home.

"Go ahead,'' the hotel magnate replied at last. After a week of experimenting the cake was such a success that she has giiven it her own first name and is advertising it on posters thusly: "Mary Evelyn found the cake the angels bake." Talk about the domestic arts being left behind.

then overgrown with ' trees and shruibbery. He was born here in 1837 and has been almost continually on the stage since he made his debut in 1857. He played with Edwin Forrest, Edwin Booth, Lawrence Barret, John McCullough, Charlotte Oushman, Mary Anderson and other stars of that past generation. Mr. Lewis has a determination never to leaive the stage but to die in harness. One remarkable thing about him is that he doesn't gild "the good old days." but insists that the modern stage shows a big Improvement over the old, both in stage craft and acting.

Eleven million : gallons of ice rreara axe manufactured In New York City eivery year.

James H. Lewis, the oldest actor on the American stage, is now playing in town, and enriching the memories of other old New Yorkers with his reminiscences. On the ite of the present Astor theater, at Broadway at Forty-fifth street, where he Is now playing. Mr. Lewis once shot rabbits. It was a field

Is the world growing more setty? There have been times wben one

may have an impulse to murder over comparatively minor matters of conduct ibut one didn't do it. The other day, though. Dominick de Raffellle, 186 Forsyth street, was drenched with water three times by Saltvadore Ph-one, who lived above him and insisted upon watering his;

window box thoroughly, regardless of the fact that this downstairs neighbor was sitting on the stoop below. - Dominick is 70 years old and objects to such treatment. Twice he remonstrated. The third time, he left the etoop, procured a revolver and sftot Sallvadore dead. LUCY JEANNE PRICE.

FOR GOODNESS SAKE

BAKE-RITE

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40 American Bird Pictures Wrapped With Each Loaf of RIEWE'S BAKE-RITE BREAD

A different bird each day, but Riewe's Bake-Rite Bread every day from your -grocer and get a full collection of 46 Native Birds -with description and habits of each bird, j LEARN ALL ABOUT OUR NATIVE BIRDS

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REMNANTS 7c. Yard. Odds and ends of high quality yard goods including ginghams, percales and voiles. Values up to 50c a yard.

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State and Sohl St.

"THE PEOPLE'S STORE"

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Hammond. Indiana

MEN'S KNIT UNION SUITS v 75c Fine texture short sleeves, ankle length light weight All sizes.

PRE4NVENT0RY

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Hammond's Yard Goods Center has cut loose; launching one of the greatest selling events ever staged in Lake County. Thousands of yards of new summer ifaEricS a3 well as new lines of Underwear, Corsets, Hosiery and accessories will be sold regardless of former cost We are clearing the decks for inventory and will do it in & Hays; It would be impossible to hold this sale longer than four days at these prices. Be here one of these great days. av' ' ' " " " ' ' '

YARD GOODS PRICES ARE

UNBLEACHED SHEETING 10c Yd. 36 inches wide, fine weave, reduced from 18c a yard.

DRESS GINGHAM

13hc

Yard.

Guaranteed fast color, pretty patterns, fine quality. ST. GALL ORGANDIE

59

C Yard.

44 inches wide, permanent finish, pretty shades.

12

FRENCH VOILES 2C Yard. 40 inches wide in light or dark shades.

STANDARD PERCALES 12iC yard. 36 inch bookfold high quality light and dark patterns.

CURTAIN GOODS 15C yard. Including marquisettes, swiss and all wanted sash curtain materials.

SILK PONGEE All silk. 12 momie. fine quality, per 95 C yard BARONET SATIN 40 inches wide, including wanted summer flJ O A Q shades and white, yard. . GEORGETTE CREPE 40 inches wide, in 25 pretty shades, dou- (1 OQ ble thread quality, yard. P BLOOMER SATIN 36 inches wide, in black, brown or navy, per 03 C yard J.'

TWEED SUITING 54 inches wide, in light shades for suits and & O OQ knickers, all wool RATINE 36 inches wide, in pretty shades, excellent quality, per C yard JJ SUMMER VOILES 40 inches wide, in pretty dark shades, per yard fJ BEACH SUITING-36 inches wide, in pretty shades for summer 1 dresses, per yard

LINGERIE NAINCHECK 36 inches wide, in pink, blue, lavender CtQs or yellow, yard J ROMPER CLOTH 32 inches wide, heavy quality, pretty pat- 1 Q -terns, yard Xv RED SEAL GINGHAMS Guaranteed fast colors, all plain shades OOand big line of fancy patterns CRETON 36 inches wide, in a host of beautiful patterns, per J C

AM0SKEG CHAMBRAY 32 inches wide, in plain shades only, fast colors, yard FRENCH GINGHAMS 32 inches wide, finest quality, all wanted col- OQ. ors, in pretty checks, yard. . CHECKED CREPES 30 inches wide, in beautiful colored checks OQ - for sports wear, yard SHIRTING MADRAS 36 inches wide, including values to 49c yard in a pretty range of patterns, per OC yard

Look at these Prices! Only 4 More Days. All New Merchandise

Knit Underwear WOMEN'S ATHLETIC SUITS $1.39 Pink or white, in all sizes, lace and rib-, bon trimmed. Crepe or voile. KAYSER'S UNION SUITS $1.00 Band or bodice top fine quality. Sizes 34 to 44. WARNER'S UNIONETTES 98c For children, separate styles for boys. Made of fine quality nainsook. MEN'S SHIRTS AND DRAWERS

45

Eeach.

Balbriggan, all sizes, fine quality short sleeves ankle length style.

NOTIONS Ric Rac Braid 2c yd. Double Mesh Hair Nets 3 for 25c Shinola Shoe Polish 8c Lead Pencils 2 for 5c White Shoe Cleaner ..22c Leather Shopping Bags 39c Talcum Powder 9c Hair Pin Cabinets 8c Darning Cotton 2 for 5c Cloth Brushes .25c Shoe Strings 5c Corrunon Pins 2 for 5c

Corsets WARNER'S CORSETS $1.00

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Rust proof, washable, pink only. Made of fine batiste, in all sizes. WARNER'S C0RSELETTE

89

The hot weather garment for those who do not need to wear corsets .All sizes. WARNER'S BRASSIERES

59c.

Made of pretty material in all sizes. Three different styles. WARNER'S GIRDLES

$1.50

Elasjic, all sizes, well boned. Very special at this price.

Hosiery WOMEN'S HOSIERY 15c Pair Slightly imperfect, regular and out size. Black only. BOYS' STOCKINGS 19c,Paii. Buckskin quality, all sizes fast black. MEN'S HOSE 25cPair All sizes in black, brown, grey or white. INFANTS SOX 25c Pair Fine lisle quality, in all plain shades.

LADIES' APRONS 89c Dark percale trimmed with red of white ric-rac braid and unbleached muslin trimmed with cretonne. LADIES' GINGHAM DRESSES $1.98 Former values to $3.00, Inducing checks and plain colors. All sizes. LADIES' JERSEY BLOOMERS 19c Light weight pink only. Sizes 27 and 29. MEN'S HIGH GRADE SHIRTS

79c

Union made work shirts in wanted colors including navy, tan and blue stripes, INFANTS' FANCY SOX

15

C pa:w

Good quality white with fancy tops. All colors and sizes. WOMEN'S UNION SUITS 49c Bodice or band tops, tight or wide knee, white combed yarn.