Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 103, Hammond, Lake County, 19 October 1922 — Page 6

THE TMES

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NOVA SCOTIA, SCENE OF BASEBALL WRITERS' MOOSE HUNT

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S-.fi, y - v." - V. 'i-. The guide turned loose A call for moose ,'' Above the ball scribe's head. :. "Which did you call A STRIKE, or BALL?" :nr r.The baseball writer said. THIS hasn't happened -et, but is liable to happen if the power of habit asserts itself when scribes of the Baseball Writers' Association of America arj hunting moose in Nova .Scotia. This year, after the worlds series, five of their most pop . members, chosen by ballot, invade the vast moose country of Evangeline Land in quest of the head and the big, bread spread of a Nova Scotia moose. When one hears an umpire calling strikes and balls for months and then gets switched to a hunter guide calling moose, he's apt to get his "dope" mixed. The five, Frederick G. Lieb, New York Evening Telegram; Ed. Bang, Cleveland News-Leader; Sid Mercer. New York Evening Journal; Denman Thompson, Washington Star, and Ed. F. Balinger, Pittsburg Post, will be guests of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Mr. Lieb is president of the Baseball Writers' Association . of America. Although there is a vast area of beautiful country in Nova Scotia along the western and southern hores particularly, including the ULGAR1AN BQRDE TO REFUGEES PJight of Hordes of Greeks Fleeing Before Turks Terrible to Contemplate By JOHN HADLET CONSTANTINOPLE. Oct. 19. The Bulgarian frontier was closed today to prevent the panic-stricken hordes of Greek Christian refugees from swarming into that country from Thrace. Nearly half a million Greek and Arrnentan fugitives have taken refuse in Macedonia. All are without food, clothing, shelter or funds. They are dependent upon the bounty of the Greek government and outside charity". A quarter of a million refugees aft'still to be deported from Eastern Thrace. They are being rounded up and "herded" by Greek cavalry. The scenes remind one of a rattle roundup in . Texas or some other American western state. Owing to the cold weather and the shortage of railway cars and steamships, the work, of evacuating tHf Christians Is proceeding more

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GRANDMOTHER OF YESTERDAY

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4 1 -, V " CALLING A MC?OSE IN NOVA SCOTA famous Land of Evangeline, the interior is the moose hunter's paradise. There are miles upon miles of lakes, rivers and forests well populated by moose, deer, bear and smaller animals. A favorite approach to this region is through slowly than the allies wish. Some of the concentration camps have been turned into mudholes by the rain and the brilliant clothing of the Thracian peasants Is being stained to a muddy trown. The allied commanders are still refusing to allow the Turkish gendarmerie to inter this city. A boat Joad of .Turkish military policemen that was crossing to European soil turned back ..for some reason or bther.t'It is ( understood that the allies fear a nationalist uprising here if Turkish troops appear. The flight of the Greeks from their farms in Eastern ' Thrace presents a tragic picture. For twenty miles the fugitives are spread over the country side. The roads are cluttered with carts drawn by bullocks, donkeys and horses. Even cows have been utilized to assist in carrying off what household effects could be saved.. The roads have been turned Into quagmires by the ri'.n, which has been falling continuously for three days and three nights. The mud is being- churned into swamps by the thousands of feet plodding over it.' Stretching south and west of Adrlanople for many miles are long lines of fugitives men, women and children. Many of the residents of the northern part of Thrace were headed for the Bulgarian boundary when they learned that the border had been closed. Then began a mad race for the Maritza river the western frontier of that part of Thrace to b taken over by Turkey. At times the shout would go up: "The Turks are coming!" Cries of panic would fill the air. The oxen and horses drawing the ancient and heavy carts would be whipped up. Women would clasp their children into their arms. The men would struggle forward with

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A LB South Milford easily reached via Annapolis Royal, N. S. by way of Boston and Yarmouth, IT. S. or S.' John N. B. and Digby N. S. The ride from Digby and Annapolis Royal on the Dominion Atlantic Railway to Sou.h Milford is by automobile, and from South Milford the hunter or fisherman, with a few portages, can paddle in a canoe three quarters of the wry across Nova Scotia to the Atlantic Ocean. The moose season lasts from Oct. 1 to Nov. 15, starting with moose calling and ending with still hunting. A dozen guides, among them such celebrities as Louie Harlow and Sam Glode, both Micmac Indians, work under tha direction of A. D. Thomas along the shores of the Liverpool chain of lakes, Kedgemakoogee and beyond. Nova Scotia is conserving its moose a hunter is limited to one bull a year and the moose country will always be good moose country because that's about all it is good for except t'out fishir.-. The annual kill of moose in Nova Seotia is about 1,200 bul'.j cows are protected and as the annual increase equals the kill, there's no reason why a baseball scribe or anyone else who can shoot straight should not make a home run with a big moose head in the express car. what speed they could make against the thick- glue-like mud. The "Turks" would prove to be a detachment of Greek cavalry. The Greek horsemen would urge the fugitives forward with the unceasing demand for "speed, speed." The Greek commanders warned the Christian fugitives that there was no time to be lost. The plight of those refugees is terrible to contemplate. They are without homes, without funds and most of th'.-m have only what they could carry in their arms. Greece, especially Macedonia, is already overrun with hundreds of thousands of refugees. The country is suffering for lack of food and the Athens government Is without funds to care for the homeless. The only remedy seems to be an appeal to the League of Nations and public charity in foreign countries. Most of the peasants fl"d at the first alarm. They left the tall, ripened grain waving in the fields, to be harvested by the Tuiks when they enter Thrace. Will Take Off All Excess Fat Do you know that there Is a simple, harmless, effective remedy for overfatness that may be used safely and secretly by any man or woman who is losing the slimness of youth? There is; and it is none other than the tablet form of the now famou: Marmola Prescription, known as Marmola Prescription Tablets. Tou can well expect to reduce steadily and easily without going through long sieges of tiresome exercise and starvation diet. Marmola, Prescription Tablets are sold by all druggists the world over at one dollar for a case, or yon can secure them direct from the Marmola Co., 4612 "Woodward Avenue, recroit, Mich., on receipt of price. Adv.

AND TODAY

MORGAN MAY GET PLACE ON COMMISSION

INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE PAKia. Ocl. 1. l'tie presence In Europe of Ji 1. Morgan, added strength yesterday to report that a place will be offered to him upon the allied reparations commission if it Is reorganized along- tha lines proposed by Sir John Bradbury of Kngland. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan have been staying In Taris but at present are in Italy. '.Mr. Morgan is now upon a pleasure trip and will have nothing: to do with International finance while he is away," said Col. Harjes, partner of Mr. Morgan and head of the French branch of J. P. Morgan and company. Asked if Morgan expected the offer of a place on the reparations commission. Col. Harjes replied:. ( "I can say nothing." LIVES WITH WIFE INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE! SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Oct. 19. Prof.

HERMAN

AGAIN

John P. Tiernan, is today again living with his wife, Mrs. Augusta Tiernan, after having been rernsed permission to reside in the local Y. M. C. A. while teaching his law classes at Notre Dawe university. Mrs. Tiernan, who recently figured In a startling suit in which she accused Harry Poulin, wealthy South Bend haberdasher, of fatherhood of her infant daughter, "Billle," returned unexpectedly yesterday from her mother's home, whence she had gone following the conclusion of tha sensational suit. Mrs. Titrnan had filed suit for divorce foTTowing the paternity hearing. charging her professor husband with cruel and Inhuman treatment. Upon her return to this city, she was joined at the Tiernan residence by Tiernan. .Y. M. C. A. officials declined to comment upon the expulsion of Tiernan from the "Y" dormitory.

BAD BOYS CROP IS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICEl EOONVlUiK Mo., Oct. The crop of bad boys is on the decrease, accoriing to C M. Harrison, superintendent of the state reformatory. There are now one hundred boys less at the Institution than were rm

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there tlx months ago, he said. "Most of those we get come from Kansas City rnd St. Louis, he said. "The farm still is the best place to rear the boys." Sixty per cent of the bad boys are bad because of broken homes and divorces, he said. Motor cars are one of the greatest temptations to crime. Harrison is also editor of the Boonville Daily Republican. He runs his newspaper by telephone, giving most of his time to the reformatory work.

PASTOR'S LOVE LETTERS TO SINGER FOUND INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE NEW BKi;.fv 1CK, N. J., Out. 7. A number of love letters that passed between Rev. Dr. Edward "W. Hall, lector of the Protestant Episcopal church of St. John, the evangelist and his choir leader, Mrs. James Mills, before both were mysteriously murdered on tne night of September 14, have been located, ac. cording to a statement this afternoon by Julius J. Braun, a private detective at work on the case. Braun sai l these letters had been overlooked by the Sommerset and ATkldlesex county authorities which accounted for statements by the prosecutors of both counties that no love letters writter by Dr. Hall to Mrs. Mills had been found. "The county authorities have not

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seen these Utters and we do not intend to disclose them," said Braun.

Ohioans Split ' Over Woman's Legal Name INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE East j-iveupOol, omo. oct. The query as to what Is a woman's legal name has been answered by the Columbiana county election board. Some insisted that the legal name of the wife of Bill Jones is Mrs. Bill Jones. Others a-gued that it is Mrs. May Jones, or May Jones. Citation was made to a ruling of the Ohio supreme court, handed down In a damage suit, that the prefix is not necessary. The election board, however, held that the l-gal name of a married woman petitioner may be either "Mlrs. Mil Jones' or "MVs. May Jones." Alarm Clock in Pocket Goes Off; Pays $1 Fine INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE YOUNGS TOWN, Ohio, Oct. Charlie Perkins was walking through the railroad yards when an alarm clock In his pocket went off. The noise awakened a railroad detective. Perkins was fined $1 and costs by Justice Bailey. Before rroincr vhis way Perkins n

Opening

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Hammond, Indiana

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vowed that he would either carry no more alarm clocks or he would keep away from railroad yards.

Benjamin Franklin published the first chart of the Gulf Stream in 1770, and first suggested the name by which that great ocean current is now known. STOMACH SUFFERERS Why wait another dayf If DB. OETK'S CHEAT STOMACH PEE8C&XPTXOX doaan't cure yoa of Indigestion or any stomach, trouble, you can gat your money back, say all good druggists. The liberal Idea ts the right Idea nowadays and eo knowing the value of Dr. Orth'a Stomach Remedy we make this liberal offer which no sensible sufferer ought to turn down. Go to your druggist today and get a 75-cent box of Dr. Orth's Stomach Remedy and take it as directed for indigestion, dyspepsia. gastritis, belching gas, heaviness or any stomach distress or misery and then if you don't say it is the best stomach remedy you ever tried, take back the empty box and get your money. Dr. Orth's Stomach Remedy not only gives instant relief where stomach agony exists but it builds up the run down stomach and makes it so strong and vigorous that it will digest almost any kind of food without distress.