Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 121, Hammond, Lake County, 9 November 1922 — Page 4

The Times Newspapers B1Tp,'rKE LA2E COTTKTY SETS A. PtraL'O CO. ,, 4 ,Lali County Tixnen Uaily exotyt baturday na bunday. Entered at tbo pontofnce iu llaujimmU, AnUmiui, June 21, lyus.

. 1 , uc caicaso, Indiana Harbor, daily ptT'f,n dy- tttercU at the po.toffice In Kust Chicago, Indiana, November 18, 1913. i-Mirfl1" 1?ako County Time aSaturday and Weekly fcnJ v r i'Hterd the poatofflce la Hammond, Indiana, February 4, i'Jlo. t J1"? 0au7 Evening: Times Dally exoept Sunday. 191' PotoOico la Gary. Indiana. April is. All under the act of March 8, 1879, aa econd-class matter. O. SS??AyE-RTIslNa "JCPRESKNTATION: J-AJx fAJi.Na A OU,....,.,, CHICAGO "aaJLui0 t Telephone 1S7 rChfL2,a?5OIIV't TeUpoune il laaiaai v A-- Time.) U'eUyhou. 24,3 V2 UatTi,.! ier...... Telephone lUi-J MitF UNoW i1r Clala Adv. -leltphoaa Uaaiiaoftd (prlvata xola.ntaa) 1109. 3101. S10I vju rw hatevir oepartmeat wasted.) ?U,,V . any trttbla ttins THH TIME3 PmJiML U lan4itelr to the Clreulatloa lieNOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS: arril7SU.'U to rc've your copy or THE TIMES aa fc Dfin CkMt ni a. ... vn . mitin..

ea?niriVd lt" equipment and Is striving fa r(lviif t0 rv.aoh fc-o c time. Be prompt ! wben you do aot Set your paper aad we THE VERICT. The apathy and ominous silence on the part of the average voter preceding election day showed those with their fingers on the pulse of the nation that they could expect nothing else than just what happened on Tuesday. It was a foregone conclusion that the party in power was going to suffer, no matter how much more campaigning and spell-binding the republicans could have done nor how much less the democrats did the result would have been iust the same. The voters were dissatisfied with the political conditions- Their judgment was that the republican administration had not kept its promises, no matter how hard it had tried to do so.. It was fortunate for the republican party that the slump came just when it did. The party leaders now have an opportunity to redeem themselves within the next two years. They are now forced to take up the situation that faces them without any loss of time. They will

have to get a great deal closer to the people. It will take sagacious politicians a long time to properly analyze the causes for the great democratic landslide. It cannot be attributed to anything the democrats have done or promised; rather it is because of what the republicans

haven't done. The democratic party left the

republicans with a distressing heritage and some of the toughest problems imaginable have confronted the republican administration and they have made some mistakes. They have an opportunity now to correct them. In the meantime the next two years are going to be busy years for the politicians. The democrats have been greatly heartened by the way the pendulum swung back and may be trusted to work like nailers to get things shaped up for the next presidential election. We are very much interested in what they are going to do to carry out their campaign promises. Senator-elect Ralston says he is going to reduce taxes for one thing and that will be splendid. We will watch how he does it.

providing it was baKed by his mother. This item in the American credo was written with the building ot the tirst mince pie because the heart has always been more or less concerned with the business of proper digestion. That is, a man who feels an attachment for food is apt to encounter a reciprocal affection in his meals. To the ordinary standard commercial ftrunce pie no one writes sentimental verse and for it no one is willing to go to war. The pie must be built in the beginning by one who feels an attachment for her task. Like the garden truck of the Coast Chinese, who raises his plants with love while those about him fail, the mince pie flourishes only when the heart of the maker is in the making. It must not be an orphan makeshift of cracker crumbs, green tomatoes and kindred new-day fillers. It should be conceived, preferably, in the fall, in rural regions at hog-killing time. It much be rich in lean meat and white suet and moistened with cider. The cooked mess should be stored in a back shed for a time imtil its various juices have mingled freely with one another. Finally it must be sculptured into a pie by sympathetic hands. It must be eaten on a frosty morning. But in no case must it be approached unless the eater's heart is in the project. Preferably it should be consumed after a series of hard chores out of doors, and it "should never be met by any but a razor-edged appetite. If these directions are followed mince pie will lie easily in the old frame. However, the inquirer is correct in questioning the qualifications of a middle-aged man already full of food and of poor digestion. Under no circumstances should he tangle with a robust old-fashioned hot mince pie, save after an acknowledgement that he does so at his own risk.

MINCE PTE A humorous weekly querulously inquires who started the superstition that a hot mince pie may be eaten rapidly at the end of a heavy meal by a middle-aged dyspeptic without harm,

THEY NEED A BETTER ISSUEThe proportion of our population that worries over women who smoke has scanned the week's dispatches from Wellesley to learn the fate of two young insurrectos after their threat to connections with the seminary there because of an abridgement of their inalienable right to inhale cigarette smoke. Since details have proved meagre it is assumed they have departed or have been properly canned and that fags no longer constitute a solace in Wellesley life save where circumstances provides 'an adjacent air court to carry smoke away. Wellesley is not automatically purged of a plague by the performance and the two rebellious spirits do not miraculously become unshackled young women. The twin martyrs will continue to be bound by thousands of other and older conventions. Their judgment also is faulty in that they might have picked a more important reason for revolution, one not open to so many objections on the ground of taste. Most reviewers of their heroic struggle have a lot of difficulty visualizing the new woman arising, liberated and cleansed, from the ashes of a dead rose-tipped cigarette. The rids need a more important &vmbol.

Governor Allen of Kansas is seeking a law to drive out the Ku-Klux Klan. And the governor, has a habit of getting the kind of laws he wants.

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AOTHKR thing that letma IXCOm'imilEJVSIBLK to ua as we try PATIESTLY to set tome more of the I'JED product off our shoe IS that a big- turn company has been OBLIGED to defer action on THE dividend on Its preferred stock ASD we guers there roust be GROSS mismanage ment somewhere. IHUTISH parliamentary elections 1VII.Lt be held on Saturday AND this will probably GIVE the defeated candidates SUNDAY to recuperate in. 1VIIEX a neighbor woman DESCRiniXG her symptoms to our wife WHISPERS something: behind her hand ADOCT complications WE cough .embarrassedly and go away BUT we are always TO I J) about lt afterwarda THE modern widow's way of SETTING her cap Is TO put on a little more paint. 2VOW the long skirt Is being CRITICISED which may occasion THE Jibe that bo me women will go to AJfT length to be criticised. OCR daily Illustration OF the doctrine of relativity: WHAT would seem like hell In Tins garden spot of the world WOULD seem like peace in Ireland. JfOTTUJfO requires less EXECUTIVE ability than for A profiteer to be captain of his souL TO be perfectly frank ABOUT it we fall to see where THE democrats in Lake county HAVE a single thing to brag about ASD look what they MIGHT have done. ASOTHEB thing a mother 3VEVER learns la her SELF-SACRIFICING efforts to make THE little children happy Is that A little boy would much RATHER not be well dressed. THE Chinese have been farmers for THOUSANDS, yes we might SAY millions of years AXD about the only thlnff THEY seem to be able to RAISE Is famines. WAil'S farewell tours threaten TO rival the once divine Tattls.

John 11. Smith, seventy-eight. Krie crossing watchman at State street. Hammond, was run down by a Belt switch engine at noon today and instantly killed. The members of the train crew were placed under arreBt, charged With criminal negligence. The Whiting Owl club last night elected the following officers: President, A. I Carlson; vlce-presfident, J. M. Storer; secretary, A. I Meldahl. An epidemic of typhoid fever has hit the Twin Cities. East. Chicago has five cases and Indiana Harbor, sixty-four.

John Graban, chipper at the Green Engineering company plant in East Chicago, was killed last night when his clothes caught on a tumbling barrel and he was dragged under it.

Moving picture operators are taking pictures ot Hammond's principal places and persons of interest today.

GIRLS WHO WED AGE 1ST TAKE CHANCE JUDGE TELLS BRIDE

DETROIT. Mich., Nov. Young girls who marry old men "must take their chances," Judge Clayton C. Johnson, of Coldwater, declared in circuit cou.-t here, after listening to attorneys for Joseph A. Curtis, president of the Curts Candy company, and Mrs. Margaret Ave-ril Curts argue the latter's motion for 175 a week alimony. "This court is not going to lend Itself to any scheme to make a profit from marriage," said the judre.

Mrs. Curts" attorneys, referring to Curts as the "Candy King," declared his Income 118,000 a year. His counsel termed him a bankrupt and asked that the amount be

reduced materially. It was then that the court delivered his decision. The alimony was set at S15 a week. Mrs. Curts, In her coss bill, de

clared that Cvrts spanked her one day as she started to leave her home with a woman friend. Her age was plven as twenty-two and I i aslfty-four.

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HILARS AGO TODAY

The total vote In Iake county for president was as follows: Roosevelt. 6,659; Taft, 6,166; Wilson, 6,156; Debs, 1,134.

Jhn R. Peterson, progressive, defeated Congressman Crumpaclcer by a majority of 1,195 in the Tenth district.

Harry G. Moose, former Gary c'.erk, was given a hearing today before Justice Harry Nicholson at Crown Taint. He pleaded guilty to a charge of accepting a bribe of J, 000 and was held to the circuit court under $10,000 bonds.

Complete returns fcr Lakeaounty ticket show that the only democrats elected were Barney Carter for representative and K'i Simon for auditor. Roth are Hammond men.

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