Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 149, Hammond, Lake County, 14 December 1922 — Page 4

Pncre Four.

THE TTMKS Thursday Boo. 14. 1922.

I he Times Newspapers ana tounday. Estsra At t jMtataJXtc in iUmmoua, Indiana., Juae 21, IS0&, itio Tirade East Chicago, Indian Harbor, daUy except Sunday.. Kttterai at ib poaxoKioa la Ku: Ciucjc, Indiana, November 18. isia. The LrfLktt County Ti-ne -'.r-"i n1 Weekly Edition. r.tr4 at, lh p. ctoffle la Hammond, iaa, February , lei. Ths Gary Evwrinj Tim.& Iany oaeftpt Sunday, fcntwtd at tfaa pctoffls La Gaj AprU IS, IMS. i - All under tint act of MartA . 1ST. as second-class matter;

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NOTICH TO SUBSCRIBERS: Z"'111 to rclT. your copy of THB TIMVBS aa is naa Deen lost or was not ot on Umt. THE TLaUCd STniSfYvf u "fsT equipment and la trivial T to ?tch ,ta Pfona on tima. Ba prompt mm mlVnK When you Jo QOt set your PP" Titt01 yromt'tiv

CHRIS TM ASWINDO WS ' Store window dressing become an art attains its climax in the prc-holiday period. What vould the main street of any village or the shopping centers of the great cities be without the decorations and illuminations of the store fronts? The streets without store windows fcem dull and dead in contrast. Where the windows are the throngs pass and repass, pausing, attracted by the display, to see the latest novelty, to admire the beauty of the exhibit or he artistic effect produced by the skill and taste ci the decorator. Many of the windows, too, are simply expressions of the beautiful in which merchandising is eclipsed by the spell of art, but the inspiration thus provided finds reflection in countless homes and in mutual benefit.

AN EXAMPLE OF GOOD FAITH Almost a year from the day when the subject was introduced at the Washington conference tks Japanese are departing from Shantung. The fertilities of transference to the Chinese are

The proposed relinquishment by Japan was never construed as a gift, nor as an act of expediency. It was set tark on the plain ground of justice. The conference declined to admit the specious reasoning of tha Old World relating to such occupied territory and it refused to perceive anywhere in the issue anything of equal consideration to the absolute rights of the Chinese people. Gradually the fruits of the conference make themselves manifest. Not least among them is

who, by his conduct, admirably exemplifies ex- J

actly the spirit of mutual understanding and good faith which was one of the prime purposes of the conference.

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HAPPY PEOPLE

TOO MUCH POLITICS Whatever merits may have been possessed by the so-called Dyer anti-lyaching bill, its death in the senate was no surprise. From the aay of its introduction, the measure was doomed and it is doubtful if its proponents, although they were in a position always to expect a majority, ever expected it to become a law. Many of those who voted for the proposal in the house expressed grave doubts as to its constitutionality, and graver doubts as to whether it was practicable. Yet they were willing to pass the buck to the senate, the president, the supreme court, or the law enforcement agencies rather than chance the loss of votes which might come from voting their convictions. The bill met its death through the agency of a Democratic filibuster, and an agreement among Republican leaders who found their views of the legal and political advisability of the bill in conflict, were more than willing to let it die rather than face a record vote on it.

The landlord who collects my rent, He's happy. Last time he whistled as he went, He's happy. The bird who brings my dily Ice, Which every month goes up in price, Seemi to be sitting very nice, He's happy. The butcher who cuts off the meat, He's joyous. The grocer, with his bill so neat. He's hilarious.

My barber is a Jolly knave, Who cannot make his face behave. Seventy cents, haircut and shave. He's carefree. My coalman is a merry buck, He's tickled. He sends two tons on a en; -ton truck. lie's elated. Tis well for them, but what of me? Somehow I do not share their glee. Just take a peek and you will see I'm a WTeck.

YOUR GHOST Make the most of your ghost, and let him be your guide before you die. That's the idc3 of the people who have just opened a laboratory at Leeds, England, for the study of the spirit entity of man. The recent tour of America by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle set the country borzing once more over the old question of survival after death, and the return to earth of ghostly visitors. Cer-

cosr-te ; only the railroad remains to be de

fine its relationship to the two powers. That ' tairJy the qstwn is yet far from solution, but iv . r " r , t a .

t h ra&Mad is the most important thing in Shan- ine Pursuit or scienunc metnoas m attempting

o solve it seems much more reasonable than categorical acceptance or categorical denial. It is the aura that is to be studied at Leeds. A dim outline of light is to be seen about the human frame under certain lighting conditions. Whether this is an optical illusion remains to be proved. According to those who think it is a spiritual emanation, the aura should be pink for one in good health. Varying colors reflect varying moods and states of spiritual being, and these in turn are said to have their effect upon physical health and mental habits. If the Leeds experimenters find out anything new about us, body and soul, their addition to onr knowledge will be welcome. The world waits with suspended judgment.

tvino: n?ed no emphasis ; the more important that its exci status be satisfactorily arranged, so thru a-!, liter "reservations" or implications may be ciiCxTered and set forth as an excuse for Kv-YiT withdrawn already from Siberia,

sz pledges to tho conference have

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fbs t-' 6 cci, and incidentally it marks the literal iw ' i'"xxzr.t of his own pledge when he took tl-e :iv.:x, I: ir.-'sy mean much or little. It is a more diffi-it process to withdraw from territory than :t 'it to er.tsr it, .What has been held once may b-e held ajrain. Nevertheless, certain principles, eminciascii -3t Washington, now become precedents, and substantial precedents based on morality cr-? precisely what the world has lacked. It is perhaps strange and ignificant that the most promr-- endorsement of American principles should ccrr,-; from the suspected orient rather than tto Europe which shares the civilization,

Clemenceau, our distinguished guest, says he is in favor of a law prohibiting long skirts. Thought somebody said he was an old man. Many men hate money so they can't bear to think of anybody else getting hold of any of it. Marc Antony strode haughtily into the forum and gared npon th cold, stark form of Caesat. All present rose in expectancy to he.r the speech that had been advertised on the billboards and in the cars of the Rome Rapid Transit lines. "I cannot make my speech today," he said. "Countless generations will never read it in its true form as composed by me. Schoolbooks will never contain it within its covers." A murmur of disappointment ran through the audience. "Today only I met the representative of a motion picture concern and signed a contract giving this company the exclusive right to use tho speech I had intended to make here. It will be made into scenario form by an expert scenario writer and produced under the title of: 'Antony Mark's Confession' and acted by Cecil de Automat and a splendid supporting company. "It is not," continued Antony, "it is not that I lova Ceasar less but thac I love royalties more." Well, anyhow, you can be thankful this year that It has turned out to be a much better year than it looked like when it started. "She rode upon a trolley car, and she was passing fair; She wore big, owly glasses with a quite dis-tang-gu air. She wore a nrfty, big fur coat upon her hat, a rose -A coat of red paint on her cheeks, much powder on her nose. Her jaws they champed and champed and champed you bet she made 'em hum. With her giggles, and her gosrglwi And her GUM, GUM, GUM With her giggies and her goggles and her GUM!" M. I. TTollizoff. From tha Jefferson (O.) Gazette, an unsigned contrib clips this notice: , "Mrs. Laura Hitchcock Is trying to get a distinguished service medal for her brother who served in th Philippines and through the recent World War. He had charge of the Marine Guard at the main gate at the League Islands navy yard." If he can get a D. 3. M. for guard duty (observes our correspondent), we who stayed out of the army altogether ought to be at least eligible for a eroix de guerre.

Z2i Passing

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IT IS reckoned that the average man uses about 2,000 words. He says them all to himself when an automobile spatters him with mud.

STTLL, no matter how tough the situation

and ??csasaajly the aspirations, of the Western looks, someone is going to refer to it 50 years

woi.M. I3ut so it it is. from now as the good, old pays.

WU bar heard aaret-aa orcnoifs on cia pu WHICH mljrht originally hare BEHX framed fcjr BIUG A IIKa-Oen err aJ Dawn VJTLESS yon feel rood It la PTtrrrrr hAPd to tu th DOCTOR Juat how you do feal AJfO If you feel aood IT laa't n.ecesaxy to ten the doctor. wsxnr a l4r In Orc LOSES a war nowadays 1U7I onlr Juat eommancad . TO loo thing. OCR own position on national FWATTCB 1 vmt thla. XOTHHO rauat bo don to defeat THE administration's pros ram OK ocotiomy If any. TTTE nelstibor womn are very KITTJ to anyone who has BEEV sick, but w thinV wo

DETECT la their conversation a rather D39CTD3SD note of DlSATPtrJfTME?rT ta.t an operation was not deemed necessary. AVE don't understand how XT Is that nobody seems to be AWAJUS of the justice not TO aay the crying; need otr a bonne for the heroio olass BBTWEB5 41 and 4.

WE see aome grlrla going around WHO we Imagine must aay WHEN the tired clerk HAS shown them all the georgette WAISTS In stock: "H1VBT you something a little thinner?" 1IAVTJ jou ever noticed how quickly TIIK early-in-the-day ahoppor gets waited on? OOI Harvey has done WEIJ, to Inform Europe that THE U. 3. is not a land flowing AM Til milk and honey and AT.Tj that he reeded to have proved it WAS to quote the MILK and honey prices. Oin dally unmitigated falsehood: OH yes, we Just love cold weather." THB revised slogan of tha OLD world seerna to be: "MILLIONS for defenas but not ONE cent for interest."

Plnger have transferred to the Oogfblc Fteel Co., the 400 acres of Industrial property purchased laat rpr'.ng In the north part of Hammond.

Hammond night schools now have an attendance of nearly 1.000.

Since the cold snap came ponds have frozen over and there Is plenty of erood akatlnff.

John Wheeler post of the G. A. R. at Crown Folnt hId election of officers last night and made William Kjimblll commander.

Tha tug "William H." -went aground on the sandbar at tho foot of 113th Street, at Whiting last nlg-ht. The cretv of nine nipn had a desperate battle wtlb the waves during the blizzard, and when rescued were covered Willi I't.

Two textiles owe their names to France. These ar cretonne and cambric, the first of which came from the Normandy town of Creton, while the second is etlH manufacture dat Camb'la.

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Cll TODAY

"Undo" John Baxge has announced himself a candidate for tha Job of alderman when Henry Whitaker resigns from the Hammond Council to become Sheriff.

CongTessmaa Crump acktr has seat to the Senate the name of G. U. lEToland as his nomination for postmaster of East Chl-vag-o-

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Schle-

F.dward German, 62. Superintendnt of the construction of a south stder sswer in Gary was pnioTl.pyed to death last evening when ti e server aved in. burying him beneath tons of sand. Thomas T. Snell announces that he will erect a six-story office building at the southwest corner of lxth Avenue and Broadway. Gary.

ASKS $46,000

DAMAGES

r I NTERN TI0N AL NEWS 5FFVICE1 LaPOHTI;. Ind., De,-. 1 i Hearing of tho ciil action brought by Clyde Johnson. Boon Grove, against the Lake Krle and Western railroad for $4?, 000 damages for personal Injuries wiM s'.art next week It i-i announced. Johnson was seriously injured when the automobile he was driving was struck by a train. It was said he was unconscious for 4.. days.

LUSH KIDHEYS

Too much meat may form uric add. which excites the kidneys; they become overworked; get sluggish, ache and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomee cloudv; the bladder !, irritated, and yi i may be obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you urj' help them tlueh off the body's u inous waste or you'll b a real s;, ': peison short;;.-. At first you feel a (Jul, misery, in the kidney region, you suffer fr.ui backache, si headache, dizziness, stomach g -s sour, tongue coated and you ! rheumatic twinges when tha wca? -er Is Lad Ir!nk lots of water; a'so gat t : o;.s any pharmacist four ouncea of it 1 Salts, tak8 a taolespoocf ul la glass of water beforo breakfast f -x few days and your kidneys rsav then act fine. Thia fumoui salts imade from tha acid of grapea an 1 lemon Juice, combined with llthly. and has been used for generation to clean clcg-gei kidneys and stimulate them f- r.crmal activity, also t" help neutralize the aclda In urirr eo It no lo.nprer Is a source of U i tation, thus often ending b'an j. r atakncBt. Jal Salts Is incxper.siTe. cann t Injure; makes a delightful efferv-'j. cent l'thia waier drink which ev. rr fine should take now and then ' help keep 'ho kidnys cian ar.l active. DrvJSgiits here say they b-.: lots of J ad fcalte to folks wl o ! lievq in correcting kidney troui ' ' vh!V it is only trouble -Adv.

Here's Relief For Neuritis

JTsver mind where, when er how those awfuL stabbing patns of nsurltis got their start you want relief from the torture right now! Ftop at any first-class drug sore and eet a Hupply of TysmoL Apply

a small quantity of this soothing 1 preparation over the spot that hurta, . and in a short time you should be . free from pain. Tysmol is taken up through the

pores of the skin, going flireoi to th throbbing. aching peripheral nerves, which quickly respond to its henllnc influence. Thpre is no "done' In Tysmol no dangerous drug of any kind. Guaranteed to b absojutely harmless. People everywhere fay that nothing ever gave them f-ucl wonderful relief. Price $1 at Weie Drug and Stationery Co., CR Stat street. Tysmol Company, Mfg. Chemists, 400 Fn'Ter street. San ?Yanfirn.

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CORN TOMATOES LIMA BEANS

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