Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 97, Hammond, Lake County, 12 October 1922 — Page 3
Thursdav. Oct. 12. 1922.
THE TIMES P.icre Thre
V
K V
OFFICIALS DENY STORY
OF
NONHELP
By HARRY U ROGERS. STAFF CORRESPONDENT I. N. SERVICE WASHINGTON, Oct. 12. Widespread criticism to the effect that the United Statea Is "doinsr nothing" to alleviate Europe's great distress, roused the l-e of administration officials today. "Billions of good American dollars hare b'jen poured Into Europe alnce the armistice and it is tommy rot to state that America is doing nothing to rehabilitate Europe." it was stated by a spokesman for the administration. Administration oflcials, among them cabinet members, ascribed the talk of "America'" aloofness" today to "partisan sources" and "foreign propaganda." With moat of the worlds gold
supply on this side of the water j
and the United States unable to accept Europe's goods In payment of her debts, the most feasible channel of aid is American investment abroad, it was said. Fullv arpreciative of this fact, the
administration is trying to encourage such foreign Investments In every possible way. and has co-operated freely with American bankers in their effort to secure legitimate sources of investment abroad. It is also necessary that the American government should be able to exert the greatest possible Influence for the political and economic reconstruction for the countries ravished by the war. In general, American bankers have shown a disposition to work hand in hand with the state department In placing lans only where they will be of constructive benefit.
UNDERTAKER HEADS
G.O.P.
COMMITTEE
STOPS ITCHING
SKIN
Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief.) There is one aafe, dependable treatment that relieves Itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Ask any druggist for a 35c or $1 bottle of Zemo and apply it as directed. Soon you will find that Irritations .Pimples, Blackheads, Eczema. Blotchos. Ringworm and similar akin troubles will disappear. Zemo, the penetrating, satisfying liquid. Is all that Is needed, for It banishes most rkiri eruptions, makes :h skin srft. smooth and healthy.
Nevadans Exchange Partisan Pleasantries as to "Who Will Be Buried INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE RENO. Oct. Boy, page Mr. Charon, superintendent of the Styx ferry: An undertaker ia chairman of the republican state central committee of Nevada nd, between funerals, Is actively engaged in prosecuting the campaign for the G. O. P. ticket. His name is Silas E. Ross. He is a member of the city council, but there his professional classification does not stand out so prominently.
a printr. an Insurance
MOTHER LOVE CAUSES THESE MOTHERS HEARTACHES
, ;
t
it
as 'y
COUGH
FOR THE RELIEF OP Coughs, Colds, Croup WHOOPING COUGH. HOARSENESS BRONCHITIS -SOLO EVERYWHERE
AboTe at Itft, Mrs. Minnie Voth: center, Mr. Doris Wilcox and her babies. At right, Sirs. Ida M. Locke.
she came out the babe was gone. Now she believes a woman who admired the babe a few minutes before it was left j-lono stole the infant to cheer her home. Mrs. Ida M. Locke of Brighton. L. I., is now on bail charged with kidnapping her own daughter, Anna Claire Titus, separated f rem. h-CX-
Mother love, that Ttates of emotions, has caused che world to take an interest in what these women are doing. Mrs. Doris Wilcox, deserted in her North Carolina home by her husband, did not ask police to find him. She set out herself to nnJ the father of her babes not to pun
ish him, but to forgive im. She walked, carrying her two ba'jea in her arms much of the way, to Chelsea, Mass. She found him. Mrs. Minnie Voth of New York left her three months' old babe in front of a store "for just a minute" while she entered th. store to make a purchase. When
Macaroni, Spaghetti, Noodles
LARGE PACKAGES
TOILET PAPER
6 Large Pacific . OC O Large Rolls Rolls A.&P
f 3
4 TOMATOES
1 RED STAR
Saturday
'Specials99
POTATOES 19c
SWEET POTATOES 25c FANCY BLUE ROSE
3 lbs. for 17c
A. & P. PANCAKE and BUCKWHEAT
mBsBBDaoaa Our Friday and I
23c f
1
25c 21c A 31c Y
No. 2 size, 2 cans No. 3 large size, 2 cans
man, a cirll ena-lneer and members of other pursuits worklns; with him. . But aa chairman of the grand old party's state central committee he Is declared to be the oaly "mortician" the word which appears on his neat s;old-and-black sign In the United States to be the active head of a political campaign. The democrats aay that it ia quite proper that an undertaker have charge of republican affairs in Nevada.' The republicans retort that "SI" Ross will officiate at the funeral of the Nevada democracy In November. Mr. Ross does not wear white gloves when presiding at meetings of the state central committee.
FLOUR "! 10c
GRANDMOTHER'S
GEN. WOOD PAROLES . ISLAND PRISONERS
"Too Old to To Anyone Harm" Shame to Keep Them Captives INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE MANILA. Octobet Governor General Leonard Wood pardoned 200 age prisoners from Bilibld recently, and many of them, after wandering about town all day, showed up at the police station for something -to. cat and a plaoe to sleep. There, next morning, they identified belongings taken from them at the time of their arrest, more years ago than 'Rip Van' "Winkle slept. Then they found their way back to old homes in the provinces, where they will seek asylum with relatives for the short time they have to live. - Governor Wood, In pardoning them, said they were too old to do anyone any harm, and it was cruel to keep thJrn in prison longer. He is clearing out Bilibld, benefiting the men by doing so and saving the Government , much expense. Younger men serving long sentences are sent te prison colonies and farms. Chinese recidivists, chiefly offenders against the opium law, are being d "ported as undersirable enemy aliens. Other prisoners, having served from a fifth to a fourth of 'their sentences, are being paroltd on : pledges to be lawablding In future. ' ' -
American ready-to-wear trade demands has had a bad effect on the styles of many of the well-known shops," declares Charles Kurzman, head of the famous Fifth avenue establishment. "It has resulted in many cases in the cheapening If fabrics and of quality. "Prices are still too high to be beneficial either to the French or American trade. They do not appear to have stabilized prices on this side. We could do twentyflve times as much business if the prices were rirht that is, between twenty and thirty per cent, lower than at presenj." Buyers are many in Paris, but most of them are buying few lines The French firms have a habit of charging the designers' cost price for each gown, no matter how many are ordered, which is about 1200. . Kurzman, who has had experience In buying Parisian models and who Jis a fine appreciation of better for the whole world if more Fremch taste says that it would be French goods were spread abroad. "French designers are ths greatest artists," he says. "Nobody can m proach them. There is always something new in Paris, thanks to their creative genius."
Lester knew better. By Just loafing around Fifth avenue in the shopping district and taking an ocoa-slonal
bag or suitcase out of a waiting car, he has been able to accumulate
several thousand dollars worth of
saleable staff within the past eight
weeks. We loafed a little too long,
and the other day he was caught
at it.
letter v d
By LUCY JEANNE PKIC E. NEW TORK. Oct. Stealing bags out of automobiles doesn't sound like an exceedingly lucrative occupation. It would hardly give anyone more than a meagre living. I would have raid. But Frederick A.
READY-MADE TREND
BREAD "
oz. Loaf. 6c oz. Loaf 9c
o rmnni
iriLiyiyjim
0) Gold Medal, 242 lbi.89c
A.&P.Family 24 ll.85c
MILKr3TALicANs25c "COFFEES" BOKAR COFFEE SUPREME oq Per pound ... OVC RED CIRCLE Per oo pound OO C 8 O'CLOCK Per or pound OC
VISIT OUR NEW STORE 324 EAST STATE STREET MOVED FROM 247 EAST STATE STREET
THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO. THE LARGEST RETAIL GROCERS IN the WORLD
. EAST CHICAGO
HURTS PAR MODE
American ...Buyer ...Complains of Cheapeninf; of Fabrics and Qualities BY ALICE LAjfGELIER STAFF COBSESPONDEWT I. "n! SERVICEJ PARIS. October "A tendency of Paris conturlers to cater to the
DinnerStories mmmammmtammfmmmrmimmutcmmmmimmmwmrmmtmmk.
COAT DRESS USES STANDING COLLAR OF ODD PATTERN
l Sam, an old negro, -was always poor, bat be managed to support a bony horse and keep it alive. He rarely worked, and as a result often came to beg a little food am! money from other people. "Sam." I remarked, "how's imes?"
Next to the physician there Is
probably no one In whom people confide as freely and voluably as
the artist who is doing: their por
trait. Partly as a result of this.
the best book of "Inside stories
which I have corns across in a
long-, long time Is "A World Worth While." by William A. Rogers, dean
of American cartoonists. Maybe
I'm prejudiced because Mr. Rogers
is a newspaper artist, and has the 'inside newspaper slant on men and affairs; but I don't believe that's
it. It's such . human, discerning
book that anyone will enjoy It who
never saw iho inside of a news
paper office. Mr. Rogers was head
cartoonist on the New York Herald
for seventeen years, and charter member of the Life staff. So his
analytical powers had plenty of op
portunlty for development, and he
showa them In "A World Worth
While." Such figures appear In the
book as Roosevelt, Garfield, Mark
Hanna. McKtnley, Abbey, Frost. Pyle, Nast, P. T. Barnum and Mark Twain. There are stories there which those men told Mr. Rogers
of themselves while he drew them
and stories which they told him of
other people. And it Is an Interesting bit of human psychology that great men say things to an artist which they wouldn't think of saying to a reporter.
It would be good-by to the day of the bachelor girl, if Mme. Sushila Devi. Hiniu lecturer and writer, had her way. Mme. Devi, who is here lecturlns, explains that she believes marriage should be compulsory, and that no young woman should be allowed by law to reach the age of thirty, withirut matrimonial ties. As for unhappy marriages come to the Orient, she tells us. and learn contentment. It is only a matter of attaining the proper frame of mind.
New York's churches may show a considerable falling off in summer attendance, but nevr before have we had so much out-of-door religious expression as during the summer Just past. The street corner services amounted almost to the revivals of former times. The Brook, lyn Federation of Churches sent out a gospel wagon which held street meetings six rights a week; Sunday morning services were held in Central park; and a number of the city churches held open-air services throughout the season. The crowds gathered, too, and listened as attentively as rver did a congregation in the church pew3.
Henry Miller and Rutli Chatterton do amazingly good work in "Ia Tendresse." which opened at the Empire theatre the ether night. Not that one is amazed at splendid work by either of them, but Just that they are cast in roles which would be impossible for less capable and finished actors. Th? play Is from the French and is the story of a great writer and his Irregular loVe affair, with a girl who. according to the peculiar Ioktic of the play "loved him so much that she was untrue to him." Prieflv told, 't
HAMMOND 674 Hohman St 249 N. Hohman St 324 STATE ST. 359 Calumet Ave. 835 Calumet Aye. WHITING 308-119th St 758 Indiana Boulerard
706 Chicago Aye. . 4918 Magoun St. 4751 Alexander Ave. INDIANA HARBOR 3447 Mich. Ave. 3716 Cedar St
"No good, no ways,, marster j That theah hoss ob mine, seemi ) like ah has to buy so much hay fo' .
him that ah nevah has no money j
let to boy maself an thine: to eat, sah." "Bat, Sam, why do yon need tkeep the horse, then?" "To haul the hay, sah." -Washington and Jefferson Wag Jg.
This coat dress of navy poiret twill js made on the simplest cf lines followir.-g the Russian Coscack style with its side fastening. Oriental embroidery in rich colorings trims the wide slashed sleeves and the odd little standing collar which distinguish the dress.
Oh Mercy
"How My Feet Burn and Callouses, Bunions and Corns Hurt, and I can't Get On My Shoes!"
"Waatoa carta laaO I do?
End Ynr Suffering With GYPSY FOOT RELIEF
L
a Ncnt from tba daaart
Applied In one minute, ure. quick relief cornea three minutes
liter theo you put on your shoes and walk, work or stay on your feet as long
as you pleasel K o soaking and no
platters. Ko fuss I
fey
GYPSY FOOT RELIEF is absolutely guaranteed to give successful results in every case, or your druccist will hand back the little you pay for It. Sold in this city by all good druggists Including : Publ!c Pharmacy, Summers' Pharmacy, Joseph "VVels, W. C. Is"orrls ana ofhor iriirni drua-arNfo ndv.
GREAT INDUSTRIAL BOOM IN ILLINOIS
WILL EXPEDITE COAL SHIPMENTS
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
Despite Strikes, Building Is Going Forward Rapidly in Prairie State
would sound like a cruda and unpleasant plot, but it is by Henry Bataille, and tliat means that it la written as well as It Is acted, so that It becomes something quite different from and better than synopsis could sound.
The duties of our policemen are as manifold as are their courtesies. Yesterday, a woman stopped to a3lc a traffic cop for instruction on how to find a certain street number. After he had given them carefully, he added, "Pardon me, madam, but there Is some egg: on your lips." The woman thanked him even more enthusiastically than 6he had for the street directions.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE SUKINOFIELP, 111., Oct. Building operations all over the state of Illinola are boomlnp, according to George B. Arnold, director of the state department of labor. Arnold bases his statement on a statistical survey of building, employment and general business conditions in tho Prairie stato. From Chicago down to the small towns a renewal of work baa boen shown in the last .tvo months, the director declared.
j "There Is plenty of work In Chli cago, and workers are anxious to . be employed there," Arnold said. ! ' n,, -i - .. v, t i i j
- wi.a i .v, biA.a j..txi ilAU l13 much building completed as was completed !r: ?21. I'.ockford rt ports activity in all lines. "Even wag-e increases havo been given at Decatur. At Bloomir.gton. Moline. Rock Island and East Moline morfl men could be placed than are available." At Auro-a large mills' have reopened after a shutdown. The Improvements leading to the Industrial revival in the state came In the face of strikes and other obstruct'.or.s. the director declared, but when settlement of such controver. sles arrives a record-breaking business era Is expected. "When Industrial dissension Is obviated among the workers Illinois la bound to take the lead over Industrial states in a prosperity that has never bofor been reached," the director forecast.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 11. To xriedlte the movement of coal Con-
ra.d E. Spens, ths federal fuel distributor made an urgent appeal to
to coal operators and shippers to confine their operations 4s far as nosenjle to their normal spheres of
distribution to reduce the amount
of transportation eervlce now re-
conflno their purchases to the
.grades of coal to which they have been acusstomed.
A pound of ambergris is worth about $500.
Rubber is polub'e in turpentine.
KIdnsy and Bladder Troubles Conquered or Money Back - For 4 0 years, said Dr. CareyJ I have been prescribing my prescription N'o. 777 (known for years as llarshroot) for kidney and bladder sickness . and now that I have retired from active practice I havo niaiio arrangements with leading druggists to ilispenso this wonderful prescription at a moderate prie. on the. money back if dissatisfied plan. Beware of kidney disease thousands die of it every year who ought to be enjoying the biesslng3 of l:fe and hcaltij. Watch the symptoms. If you have specks lloating before the- eyes, puffy eyes, clammy feet or moift palms, backache- or eldeache. you ought to get a bottle of Dr. Carey's famous prescrlptloa No. 777 right away. It has wonderfully benefited ten of thousands of cases of kidney and bladder troubles and Is the medicine you can always depend upon. Results are guaranteed. NOTE Dr. Daniel G. Carey was a practicing physician for many years and his great Prescription Xa 7 77 aided thousands of sufferers from kMney and bladder troubles. Hereafter you can always get this eftteotive prescription in both liquid and tablet form at Summers' Pharmacy and all reliable pharmacists tha ntintry over. adv.
122222
ft 11 1 1 A
LOOK! On Pages 4 and 5 Por Announcement of Our
ij tl
te
m
tj "WHERE ECONOMY RULES"
"Now," said the Colonel, looking along the line of recruits, "I waut a good, smart-looking bugler." At that, out stepped a dilapidated fellow with a thick stubble of black beard. ' . "What!" iaid the Colonel, eyaing him up and down, "are you a bugler?" "Oh," he answered, "I thought you said a burglar." Los Anreles
.Times.
' ivmm i
fS5i53S7 Not Rub
f a Others,
Stm Wad. Get a Can Today
Acute Indigestion For Over Two Years
"For over two years I suffered from acute indigestion." says Arthur L. Reeves, secretary of the Austinburg fuel & Ught Company,
4i Ohio, "frequently calling In a physieia.il but getting only temporary relief. Acting on the advice of a friend i I took Dr. Orth's Stomach Remedy i regularly until the first package was
t used up. I then procured another
package of which I have talicn only an occasional do-je for a real or fancied condition of acid stomach or heartburn. For seven months now I have been entirely free from any attack of acute tndlgestlon and can eat anything I want with no fear of bad results. In case of bout stomach which is sometimes quite annoying, one dose will be found worth the price of the package. If tho above statement of facts will help to call the attention of other sufferers to the merits of ,Dr. Orth's Stomach Remedy I shall be glad to have you use it.'' Signed Arthur I Reeves. Tiiey ail Bay the same. For 75 cents you can get a targe of Ir. Orth'H Stomach Remedy, a great physician's greatest stomach prescription, at all druggists. THE ORTII LABORATORY CO. Kast Liverpool, Ohio.
East Chicago Coffee and T
Store and Market 4610 Forsythe Avenue Next to Hartley Theatre Phones: East Chicago 24-85-825 Specials for Friday and Saturday October 13th and 14th
ea I
SPECIAL PRESERVE SALE Apple and Raspberry Preserve, 2 pound 9Q jars GRANULATED SUGAR 5 oq pounds J-C RUNKEL'S COCOA Vz lb. QCr can " -iCC 1 Bar Sweet Chocolate FREE FANCY QUEEN OLIVES j-o Quart jsis OIL SARDINES In Olive Oil OC 2 cans . OC CLUB HOUSE LITTLE KERNEL -I CORN Can OC FANCY EARLY JUNE PEAS -f A (New pack) 6 cans, 80c; can. . JC CORN (New pack) 6 cars, 1 An 80c; can I'TrC SHRIMPS 2 cans o for J O C AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP (With Coffee and Tea order) 6 bars O f for FRESH CORNMEAL 5 O f" pound bag &a3 C VAN CAMP'S TOMATO SOUP 9 3 cans for C
sur.AR in nnnnnt r r"
f ooc
With 3 LBS. M. R. COFFEE (j J 25
Or 1 LB. GUNPOWDER TEA for
69c 19c
COOKIES Assorted, per pound
PERSIAN BRAND TOILET SOAP f ? Regular 10c a bar 3 bars. . . 1 TOILET PAPER 4 large O C rcUs GRANDMA WASHING POWDER Of Large box ilC COFFEE
M. R. COFFEE 3 pounds for JO
35c
if
$1.25; pouad
OUR LEADER COFFEE 3 porr.de, 95c; pound
FANCY PEABERRY COFFEE OQ 3 lbs. for 80c; ; pound VJ.
FANCY GUNPOWDER TEA Per pound
BREAKFAST COCOA Vz lb. can -uC
69c
