Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 120, Hammond, Lake County, 8 November 1922 — Page 4
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The
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Newspapers
u,E couhtt ra-ro a wava co. The LaJca County llmu Daily except toaiurday and bunday. Entered, at the postofflce in Hammond. Aiiui&iia, June 21, 106. The Titnee East Chlcaro, Indiana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered at the poatottlce In Eat Chicago, Indiana, November 18, 1913. The Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond. Indiana, February 4, 1915. The Gary Eventngr Times Dally exeopt Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Gary, Indiana, April 13, All under the act of March 3, 1879, as eecond-claas matter. G. lAViAN rAIMI CO......... CHICAGO
Oary Offloe T.l.paon. Ill jf' ThPa. iat Cblca. . . .TtMyaun til j
tntttana Harbor (Mews laier) . . . .Tel.paone 1J-J
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Hamiaoa prtvat xchancaa; 1100. 1101. 3102 (CU fr whatever department wanted.) . xt 4t aay trouble tUis THki TIMES rA. cJUV'lat liaueaiauir t the Circulation le-yaru&eat.
NOTICS TO SUBSCRIBERS: It jom fail te receive your copy of THE TIMES aa promptly aa you have in the paeu plea do not think it naa bn loat or waa nai aent en time. THE TIMES aa increaae its mailins equipment and la atrivlns earneatly to reach lta patron, on time. Be prompt in auvlain whn you Jo iot aret roup paper and we will act AS THEY DO IT IN EUROPE Europe seems immune to the dangerous infection of idealism. Diplomacy in the world remains true to its cold standards. The immediate national advantage is the thing to be sought. No foolish adherence to principle, nor allegiance to the stern ultimatums of yesterday, are permitted to interfere with today's opportunism. With what fervor did European chancelleries declare a few short years ago that- the "unspeakable Turk" was to be banished forever from enlightened Europe ! And with what readiness did they agree to the Turk's return when the combination of his military power and their commercial needs demanded. It is easy to recall the terror which swept the Western "world in 1919 over the danger of bolshevism. The lowering countenance of the bearded Russian was that of the world's bogie man. Never, never, never, was a Russian to be permitted to tread the sacred corridors of diplomacy, so long as a soviet government bore rule and those old debts weren't paid. And among the nations who pronounced for pure anti-sov-ietism, the name of France was not the leastBut things are different now. From Paris and Moscow seep forth reports that events are so shaping themselves that a reapproachment
force for settlement of their constantly recurring differences. Bs-fore they can be conscious of any such will it. will be necessary for them to reform their entire political programs; to put Dehind them ambitions of aggrandizement, to quiet fears and suspicions and eradicate jealousies, and to determine to live and let live. There is not a sign in the world that those who exert powerful influence on events have any intention of changing conditions. At the moment they are resting on arms. War has for a time been averted. How long the truce will continue none may say with any degree of certainty. And the Near East is but a small section, and only one of a number of areas of the Old World, where hospitalities qpe ever in prospect. Clashing interests and conflicting ideals compel all concerned to be ready for defense, prepared to protect rights, actual or claimed. In order to have peace there must be surrender of principles and abandonment of claims on the part of some. Who over there will volunteer to make sacrifices? Governments might agree on a program, but would the peoples acquiesce?
REFUGEES AWAITING SHIPS AT STRAITS PQRTS
WHO ARE THE LABORERS? H. G. Wells has broadened the definition of the world "labor." Speaking to the students of Glasgo wuniversity as a candidate for the lord receivership on a "labor" ticket- the author said: "By labor we mean all creative effort, from the hewing miner nn the coal seam up through the ill paid, incessant labor of the village doctor and normal schoolmaster and school mistress, to the unsparing toil of the investigator in the research laboratory and the organizing of the industrial manager, by which our civilization is maintained and carried on." Mr. Wells might have gone a step further and added musicians, painters, sculptors, writers and other ' artists to the ranks of laborers. For these, too, work creatively. They add something to life, to the enjoyment of life, as the laborer in more tangible materials adds to its comfort or convenience. t The distinction between men that is based on whether or not they work with their hands has confused the world for thousands of years. Manual labor has seemed to be something apart from mental or artistic labor. The question, to
twwn Franrf and "Russia mav be exoected. ! ask, when considering work, is: Does it ex-
Mi. Herriott, back from Moscow, where he went unofficially, reports to M. Poincare that Russia is willing to be friendly . Voila, French opinion considers seriously an alliance with Russia. It is just another turn in the diplomatic wheel. The friends (beg pardon, the partners) of yesterday are the enemies of today. The things despised may be ignored in the light of new relationships. It's what you get, not how you get it that inspires the noblest efforts to Etatescraft.
AT OPPORTUNE EIME J If an opportune time appear during his term of office, President Harding can be depended on to take the lead in the formulation of international agreements for limitation of armaments. Such a course would be in keeping with the administration's policies and in line with American desires. :z But whatever degree of disarmament may
pand life? Does it help people, either in a practical way, or by giving them thoughts and emotions which life them above themselves? Bear in mind that there are two necessities the necessity of the outer man for clothing, food, transportation and the like, and the necessity of the inner for intellectual and moral aid in adjusting himself to the universe. We are then ready to ask the supreme question: Is this work necessary? Once that question is asked all over the world a great many men are going to change from unprofitable labor- and be happier thereby. Then men will be ashamed of making huge fortunes by juggling prices of securities, by manipulating a nation's food or coal or power supplies, by fomenting wars that they may sell munitions, by building up mammoth organizations for profiting by human good, credulity and desire to get along without workingThere are really only two brands of humans the thinker need consider: Laborers and para-
be possible in the most peaceful era of the
world, the beginning of reductions will have to sites, makers and jugglers. And it doesn't much
be made in Europe. That is to say, preliminary to the serious consideration of a limitation proposal, it is indispensible that European states develop the will to rely on reason rather than
matter if the thing made is a poem that lifts the mind, music which helps one to live, a serviceable saucepan, or a car wrich will hit regularly
on all its cylinders.
Important Announcement
We have just received a good assortment of the famous line of Beautiful Gruen Guild Watches There is a splendid assorfment of strap and pocket watches for men, including the original and genuine Gruen Veri-Thin. Also Wristlet watches for women in all shapes, and the new Gruen Cartauche. A line of beautiful designs, the last word in distinction and style for the practical woman or the lady of fashion.
Porto Rico Shipping Rates Decline 25 P. C.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE NKw liiviv, Nov. iut.es boiv;en Atlantic and Guif ports arid Porto Rico have faTIn an average of 25 per cent as a roMuIt of .he vithdravtal cf the New York & the I'orto Rico Steamship company from the ratfc agreement cf the lines in :he trade. Oppn competition prcflil.s. uni" s '" i "'t " r' a0"
Urfugcea at docks in Kodosto. on the Sea of Marmora, waiting for ships to carry them to safety.
Fifty thousand refugees are crowding the ritte of Kodoito,
waiting for ahips to carry tLtm to Greece or other -oittt of afpty Hut the ' ri qr few
and far between and aa - result there ia terrible gutTering among the women and children.
fi IN cm m MOMENTA
A WASTE OF WIND
it.
There's a young entlemar. In our b!o..k learn'n., To play the bugle. I have Never been able to figure wby Anybody would wart tw play A bugle. It certainly Has been a very pair.frl Experience for all ronwerncd. lie has goi so now that h Can give a rousrh 5kec' Of most of the bugle calls And he attempts to egul 'o The life of our neigbohcod On the regular army t.l .... At 7 in the mornir g He sounds the reveille.
Or something that approximates
But it doesn't do any good. Nobody gets up at 7 o'clock. That's the middle of the ni-;' At noon he sounds the rr.jss call, But nobody eats at noon. At 9 o'clock at night He sounds what we suppose Is taps. He gets one or two Notes correctly, but nobody Fver goes to bed at 9 o'clock. So this yrng g-ntlenntn Is wasting a lot of tima And wasting enojgh wind To run all the windmill;. In Holland twenty-four Hours a day. Or to 1j , Congress steadily For years.
In some apartment houses there are so many screaming sopranos that it would be impossible to recognize a call for help if ptrson were being murdered. The ex-Constantine will live In Holland. AH the Dntch need now to compete their happiness Is to receire the deposed Sultan of Turkey and the bandit Raisuli. "I have nothing to say against my opponent," said the candidate ar he rose nnd cleared his throat, "only this: He is a liar and the truth isn't in him He may not be dishonest, but he thinks dishonestly. I don't want to prejudice this audience against him at all, but he is a blackleg, a second-story man. a burglar, a bootlegger and a bum.
Now. of course, you mustn t think that 1 neve anytning against ini ( man and I don't want to plant any false impressions In your taind, ; t i i- i . l . i : - 9 n Kl,i.LmiUr a rrivfr
of bribes, a wife-beater, an incendiary and a stick- ip man. All this, you may say, is not to his credit. Well, perhaps not exactly to his rredit, but do not judge him too harshly by what I have said. You may have thought well of him, but I am in a position to prove that he Is a crook, a dope, a booze-fighter, an embezzler, a tax dodger and a gunman. He would carry his grandmother up nine flights of stairs and throw her out the window for a quarter of a dollar. Outside of that he pobably is all right and. having proven to you the solution of the jreat problems that confront us and pointing the way to better things, I bid you one and all, good night." When the government comes to take the fingerprints of about 95
er cent, of the young gentlemen in this country, it will nave no irouoie "nding them on the backs oi their dancing partners. , The automatic telephone will be tried out in Now York in a few ; .ys. We have tried these automatic phones in other cities and they . ave the meanest and most vicious busy-buzzes you ever heard. M Gordon Selfridge. Jr., talked f rtm California to Londot by radio.' j I he wave-lengths seem to be cut longer than last year. J We are not naturally curious but we would like to see th; wedding
present the Crown Prince sends to the iiaiser.
STIFF they write ia considered. 0E of our esteemed bank ' ADVERTISEMENTS now points AN accusing finger at us AND asks sternly whether we are I'UOl'D or ashamed of the fact THAT we haven't done bettrr IX the matter of saving money A.D we really hadn't thought MICH about that phase of THE subject extreme mental DEPRESSION crowding out AI.X, other emotions. Mil. Carper.ticr thinks he will whip MR. SikI the next time, but that's what HE thought the first time.
YEARS I S iOTTi AGO I CI I TODAY -
!
Zg Passing
BB2I
S-h-o-w
or individuality. A headline reads: 'DEMPSEY did not forget
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AMONG the reasons for the ALAKMIVii increase in nervous disorders AMONG the noble womanhood OF our land are improper diet TIGHT clothing; French heels and MAKING their husbands CARRY out the garbage. THE one foot the Turk IIS in Europe seems to RE the one with a kick to it. AND what lias become of the old. fashioned , GIRL who was afraid her HAT wasn't on straight? Olll fashion note for the day: GEORGETTE blouses generally SHOW a preat ddal
I mother." ! rptllAPS not but it was a
SHAME the way ho treated HIS Uncle Sam. N ATT RE'S unequal distribution cf ' HEALTH I another fly in the socialistic OINTMENT of equalizing everything. ALTHOl'GH we strive not TO be vindicative in our MENTAL attitude IT does make us rather happy IX view of poignant memories TO learn from the highest SCIENTIFIC authority THAT when a bee stings you IT kills the bee. THIS in the golden age OF literature if what some present DAY authors pet out of the
Otto Helmschmidt. 191 Hoffman street, Hammond, committed suicide tills mornjng by shooting himself through the temple. Incomplete returns from yesterday's election indic.Tfe that democrats have won the state. Republicans are believed to have won In Lake county with the exception of three offces. The lucky democrats are Barney Carter for representative. K1 Simon for auditor and A. A. Young for coroner. St. Mary' a parochial school of Kast Chicago held an election yesterday afternoon among the pupils. the results v1iich coincide with the national returns gave Wilson. 131; Taft, 31, and Roosevelt, 15. Judge McGoorty at Chicago yesterday ruled against Ed Donnelly of West Hammond in his euit to force the city to re-issue his saloon license which the council revoked. The case also seals the fate of a number of other saloon keepers who '.cere considering similar action. Marion, the four-year-old son of John Atwood of Lowell, while coasting down the incline of the Klmmet elevator on his bicycle, collided with a wagnn and his left hand was badly crushed. ' Gust Bauer of Whiting Is held to the superior court under $2,000 bonds on a charge of committing a criminal assault upon a fourteen-year-old Whiting girl. It is reported that Meyer Hlmmelblau, the dictagraph stenographer of the Gary bribery cases, who later declared that his notes had been faked and then skipped, has repented and is willing to come back t.. Lake county, confess and stand trial for perjury.
Mrs. Mary McAllister of Indiana Harbpr attempted suicide this morning by swallowing carbolic acid. It Is thought site v-ill recover.
we win oc ucugmcu w mmmuimssjisn
Kovr them to you and you will be under no obligation to buy.
IE
See Our $2,000 Display of Gruen Watcbei
CARROLL &. NEW TO
Jewelers and Optometrists 186 State Street Ha .imond, Ind.
FAMOUS FANS
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ten companies, all operating American ships, as the Porto Rican trade comes under the coastwise laws of the United States.
Sulphur fumes can be used in bleaching cherrlis, gelatine, fruits, s.rups, T.uts, potatoes and cereals, by a paten process in which hydrogen pe-oxide Is added io remove all traces of sulphur dioxide, which o"ld o! iiern ise b- !eft tn the food.
tl U ESCMD OPERATIONS
Doctor Advised Use of LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Happy Results in Both Cases
St. Joseph, Missouri. "Both of my sides swelled and hurt me so that I could not move or do any of my work. There was heavy pressure and pains through my lower organs and the doctor told me to try LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for these troubles. He said I had this one chance, and if the Vegetable Compound did not help me nothing but an operation would. After takipg several bottles I felt it was helping me and now I am able to do my own work. If my testimonial will help o'lhers I shall be glad for them to read it and hope your Vegetable Compound will do them as much good as it did me." Mrs. Wm. Lockman, 513 N. 4th St, St. Joseph, Mo. White Plains, N. Y. "I had such a pain that I could hardly walk and the doctor said that I nueded an operation. I was sick for a year before I started taking ycur medicine and I could not work. I saw your advertisement in a little book and that is how I came to take Lydia E- Pinkham's medicines. I havebeen taking the Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Medicine, also
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Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills and used Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and thecapsules and prescription recommended. I am doing all my work and have gained twenty pounds. I am taking the medicines still, but I feel fine. You have m permission to use this letterforthe good of others." Mrs. Mary Mark, 37 Hamilton Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Some female troubles may through reglectreach a stage when an operation is necessary. But most of the commoner ailments are not the surgical ones; they are not caused by serious displacements, tumors, or growths, although the symptoms may appear the same. When disturbing ailments first appear, take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve the present distress and prevent more serious troubles. Many letters have been received from women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after operations have been advised by attending physicians.
Lvdia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to "Women"" will bo sent you free upon request. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkhara Medicine Co., Lynn Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information.
Notice of Redemption To Holders of Vktery Ifote ani Others Concerned NOTICE B HEREBY GIVEN AS FOLLOWS f. Call for partial rotkirtptidn of 4 per cent Victory notes: per cent Victory notes, otherwise known as United States of America gold notes of 1922-23, which bear the distiirgaishirra! letters A, B. C. D, E. or F prefixed to tJioir serial numbers, having been designated for the purpose by Lot in the manner BrecribmJ bv tht Screfrv of th Tr.Am-r r mNI fnr
redemption on December 15, 1922. pursuant to the provision for k
redemption contained m the notes and Mi Treasury Department circular Number 138 dated April 21, 1919, under which the notes were originally ksuecL Intereit cn all the 454 Pf cent Victory notes thus called for redemption will ceate on said redemption date. December 15, 1922. Victory netes of the 44 Pr cent series bearing the distinguishing letters G, H I, J, K, or L, prefixed to their serial numbers are not in any maaner affected by this call for redemption, and will become due and payable as to principal on May 20, 1923, according to their terms, 2. Detailed information as to the presentation and surrender of 44 per cent Victory Note for redemption under this call is given in Treasury Department Circular Number 299,dated July 26, 1922. copies of which may be obtained from the Treasury Department, division of loans and currency, Washington. D, C, or any Federal Reserve BarJL A, MELLON, Juty 26, 1922 Secretary of the Treajurr,
Hammond, Whiting & East Chicago Railway Company FREQUENT STREET CAR' SERVICE TO AND FROM CHICAGO HAMMOND, WHITING Sc EAST CHICAGO RAILWAY CO.
Lin . m'.ii, ii ,v i j b f:m hjum jyjji n 11
The Maytag Aluminum Tub Yasher With the FAMOUS MAYTAG ALL METAL DIVIDED WRINGER It is the only absolutely new principle of washing in Past Ten Years Cast Aluminum Tub. It will not rot, rust, corrode, swell, warp or split. It is light self-cleaning, yet has life-time durability. Less machinery, and none exposed. Lid free cf mechanism. You can clean a tub full in half the time.
y No hand rubbing required. No water-line. Wash with lid
open or closed. Lift off wringer, replace with swinging
t- table top and use for kitchen table.
Call i?s for F.ee Da-onsfra'lon in Your Home. No Obligation SPECIAL FRICE, $139.00
iJI -
e & Ll.9 at.
Heating, Lightms and Plumbing 307 SIBLEY ST. PHONE 290 HAMMOND, IND.
1
IGRCJEH WATCHES!
