Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 91, Hammond, Lake County, 4 October 1906 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES THURSDAY, OCT. 4. J 906."
i i Communication pertaining to thi department may be addressed to Miss Daisy L. Emery, Society Editor The Lake County Times. Telephone 111. t Mrs. George Piecher visiter in Chicago today. Mrs. George- Dobbins visited her ister, Mrs. Ray Held in Chicago today. Mrs. A. I., gpohn and her out-of-town guests visin-d in Chicago today. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Voy and two children of Btjuavon, Pittsburg, Pa., are the KU..SU; of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Huff for two wciks. MesJames P. U. Mott and Charles Kasson f,i'.l entertain fifty guests at a dinner pirty, Hiturday ev.-r.ing-, at 6:30, at tin- home of Mrs. Mott, 530 South Iloh.nan at; tel. o Th primary department of the Methodist Sunday school are giving a reception to tti'di' p-irtTits at 7:3 3 tills eveninjf in the church parlors. 1 The V.'orrmn'a Foretn Missionary Ficlety fi.' the Mi'tliodi.t church will hold a ir.tetinjc tomorrow afternoon at 2:30, at the li3mo of Mrs. W. C. Dolman, 130 Og Ion .street. Mr. an 1 Mrs. Brt MlHor returned to th;.-!r homo In Traverpo City, Mich., yesterday after spending n few doya with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Frank, 33 4 South llo'.: i:in :ir-ot. Hupt. C. M. McUnntoP called a mee. pit tV.'-l ;! t'ter'-'lOU ft . the presidents of the various Mothers clubs throughout the city. They met in Mr, "McDanit l's i)fi":Ci jit 3 o'clock and arranged work for the cnnilnf? year. fc o The Ijpworth Ihri' has issued invltJUkntii ta all th"ir former mcunl.". fs asking tliom to tie present at a rally meeting next Sunday evening', when tlu- l-apue will he reorganized and new officers inetallod. The mcmbots of the Colonial club were entertained yesterday afternoon by Mrs. TV. II. Spellman at her home In South Ilihman street. Mrs. .Scott Oaler will be hostess to the club in two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hammond will entertain Monday evening at a dinner party at 6:30, in honor of the coming r.uptials of Miss Kdlth Hammond and Dr. O. Ij. Smith. Only the bridal party and the friends who have entertained for Miss Hammond will be present. Miss Mary Wieland, who has been th guest of Mrs. Leonard Klster, 4 4 Sbb?y street, for .the past week, retained to hv home In Irving park yes- . terrtay. "Mis Elster Will leavo this month ta spend the winter in San Francisco, Cal. The Neighborhood 'Whist club met last evening at Ihe home of Mrs. M. Itothschild, 307 South Hohman street. Tho prizes were won by Mrs. Rothschild and Mm. T. E. Wll. The club will meet again next Thursday even ing- at the home of Mrs. C. G Ho li man, 384 South Hohman street. Miss Etta Gastell entertained fudsfu party and marshmallow last evenlnsr at her home, 120 Hams slicet. Iter truest a were Mr st a toast nnd Mrs. Fred Gastcl, Jr., Misses Nora Reilley, Louise Stafford, Flora and Cora Fuller, Bella Stevens, Grace Crawford, Hazel "Williams and Mabel Scheldt of Chicago. Messrs. Paul Sturm. Percy Smith, Ualph Tenant, Edward Smith, Williutn Edwards and William Ilarils. Xiovul Crawford and Harry Williams of Chicago. Miss Jessie Epker left today for Los AnijeU's, Cal., where she will spend the winter with relatives. She will meet Miss Alma Fedder in Kansas City tomorrow and they will travel together to Ias Angeles, where Miss Fedder will spend a few days before groins to Washington," where she wilt spend the winter with her brother, Oscar Fedder. .o - M UtKIAUE, I ICENSES. Lawrence I OrumhelJor, Chicago. Mrytlo S. AtMdnsrton. Chlcagro Ernil Kowalke. Chicago Sophia Smith. Chicago Clarence S, Kelly. Chicago........ Viola Pajre. Chicago Jtay P.. Mertz, Oakland, Cal i. Edna rur.dy. Hock Island, Ill..... tJeorue Winter. Ch!cn-r; .......... . Clara Bock, St. Louis, M) Charles Johnson. Chicairo . . . . , Mary Peterson. Chleato Gun Peterson. Chicago. Katie Tobias. Chicago Herbert I. Cavell. Chicaaro Emily Fyfe. Chicago .............. . .24 .1$ .34 .32 .27 .ID .55 .24 .23 . 2 .32 .27 .22 .1? .31 ,2S "I.AMvV nttt" riTTSIMIIOXS AIUUVES TO FILL F.NGAGEMEXT. FiixIUnHe Idol tf n Fe Years Ago Mill Star Tonlstht In K FlKht For Lave," Which Is tin at Towle's. "Lanky Bob'' FiSzsimnvons, the hero of many a prize ring: and the one time champion heavy. welsrnt prize fighter of the world, arrived in the city this afternoon at about 3 o'clock and proceeded at once to Towlo's Opera House, where he stars In "A Fight For Love" tonight. i Fitfcsimroons was interview by a Lake Cor xtt Times reporter and said that he had not quit tha rlnsr for good by any means and that he would soon be after some of the big fellows again. Affked to- give his opinion of tha Ctans-Nelson right FiUsimmons said: "I was dlssappointed In the result. I thought Gans should have put Kelson out In about four rounds. The negro Is a thrifty fighter and I do not think Nelson is his equal." Fitislrnmens looked a little along in years to be talking of meeting the big fellows but he Is the sam long-legged long-armed Bob that was tha pugilistic MSI Ol a lew er uiu, y
In Social Circles
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A
THE CITY
j J. a JDIackrr.ua was a' business visitor, I in Chicisco to'lav. - f i J. A. Gavit maV a business trip to Dyer tills mornir.g. Andrtw Fuzy of East e.sioag'o transacted business h-:e today. C. P. Rhodes, sptcial asrent for the Federal Surety Co., was a Hammond visitor yesterday. S. A. Culver, manager of the Lake County Title and Guaranty Cj., was here from Crown Point today. Frank Meyers wes fined 11 and costs in the city court this tuor:'.r.g on the charge of drunkeness. Julius LS rr.lt h of . Iiurnham r- ported to the local poUce authorities that his horse had been stolen. D. L. Gaskil! Ins returned from the southern part of the state where he has been looking after his contracting interests. The fire department was culled out on a false alarm to the packing house thifc rooming. The police were unable to fined the perron who played the all too practical joke. $ Tbe attention of Ihe bouseivIvch of ItaitJitH-ud Ij called to $ the "Uami:tf!Bd Market" wtilcli every Issue. Sly looking 'over tbce markets you wilt0 know I lie average prices of the, eOi.miocTKIf s In llnininoud, wiieh 4 as :;ar, butter, fl;t;r. fr;itts j aail iisesttM. Them prices are obfnised : hy ssveralns: t.'ie O prices nt a liulf iuen irndiu? O Mtcirc1 uuil they su e t aorou.-ibly rrtlnblp. o TO LATE TO CLASSIFY. FOR REXT Well furnished room on Doty street; all modern conveniences. A. K. Thompson, 7 Doty street. lo-4-3t XOTICK. . Fall opening of Millinery; Saturday, Oct. 6th. Everybody invited to call and examine our line of fail and winter hats. MISS H. WIK. ' J Olcott avenue, East Chicago, Ind. Pafnt About Tuning Fcrke. Tf two tuning forks of the same pitch are placed facing each other the one sounding, the other silent In a few seconds the silent one will be giving out a distinctly audible note. Mommsen and Bacon. Trinity college, Cambridge, posseses a famous portrait of Baton; Tie other day when a " party of visi ting German editors viewed it, they were told how Dr. Mommsen, when it was pointed out to him, stood with folded arms in front of it, and observed: "So. it is you who gave us Lady Macbeth and Falstaff." Government Elephants Dying. An outbreak of anthrax has spread death among the , government elephants in Katha district. Nearly 250 elephants, most of them highly trained and valuable, died within a few days of the outbreak, the loss being over 50,000. Rangoon Cor. London Express. A Snail's Pace. A snail's rate of travel wa3 ascer tained by experiments in Florence Half a dozen snails were permitted to crawl between two points ten fee! apart. Exact time was kept from the start to the finish, and thus the aver as;o pace learned. The figures were then put into tables of feet, yards and furlongs, and it was found that it would take a snai! exactly 14 days to travel a mile. Salt and Cpi'epsy. "Whenever we get a call to attend a case of epilepsy," said aa ambulance surgeon at fiellevue, "we always find the patient's neck and face covered with salt. The efficiency of salt 3 a cure for epilepsy Js evidently a relic of come old country superstition, thousrh just what It is we've never been able to find out." N. Y. Sun. England's Cold Snap, Sudden drops In temperature are not peculiar to this country or this century. England had a "cold snap" Miy 14. 1S06. The cold on that night was so severe that in the morning several hundred martins were found clinging in an absolutely torpid condition to the toll table against the turnpike house at YVhaHey, in Yorkshire, while upon them were crowded others, four or five deep in all. Teach Children Gardening. A course which is designed to fit teachers to conduct children's gardens is presented In the summer school of the New York university. There are several gardens laid out for the use of pupils In and around Xew York city, but the authorities are at a loss to find men and women trained to conduct them. The phenomenal growth and success of this work in Philadelphia has led to an extension of school gardening in many cities. Primitive Chinese Plows. In northern China a perambulating tillage blacksmith goes about In the early spring making Implements for the farmers. The plows differ in design in the yarious localities, and are only sufficient to; scratch the surface of the soil.
VOGUE POINTS.
tlish Buckles and Velvet Ribbon Trim Pall Gown. Even upon street frocks and apparently more appropriately bo than upon the house gowns do velvet ribbons obtain as chief trimming adjuncts this fall. They appear in single rows in very wide widths or else in groupings of narrow ribbons, three to nine rows in eac h group. A high buckle upon one broadcloth gown of royal blue color is the piece de resistance of the costume. It is diamond shaped, fully sis inches wide and made of large blue brilliants set In silver rims placed in turn upon a dull black jetted band. Trimmings of blue velvet ribbon in groups of three rows each were very attractively arranged on skirt and jacket, but the feature of this costume which caught and held tho eye was the buckle that, placed upon the front, reached nearly to the bust line. Another novelty seen in a bronze green cloth costume was the mandolin shaped jacket. The skirt was modeled in overskirted effect obtained by four wefl cut pored flounces arranged to give a plaited effect in front. A tan crepe de chine blouse of the washable variety was covered by mandolin shaped crossed fronts held in place by black jet btittons set upon Insets of white MUSHBOOM SAILOit HAT. broadcloth. Three little curved sections of cloth barely covering the top of the arm passed for sleeves, illustrating again and even more forcibly tbe continuation of this fashion of short feexg'C Dressy waists as well as entire costumes for autumn show short sleeves. Even those srj.'irt tailored flaunel waists for autumn outing and sporting wear are shown with the short cuffed sleeve which characterized the summer "shirt." A dainty wlte tlanuel model is built with Gibson plaits and fullness opening over a tucked and shirred chemisette of white chiffon, a touch of dressiness afforded by tie.? of gold colored ribbon. Tho ends are weighted with two round greeu imitation jade balls, which fall from underneath a nr.rrow squft re collar edged with gold soutache braid .mil embroidered with gold Ftars. The sleeves are quite simply designed and have natty little cuffs decorated to match the collar. A greater elaboration than we have scon for several seasons past will prevail, it is prophe?;?il, upon the silk and crepe de ch'.ne waists that are to come later in the season; but, like the lone fishcmau, we will wait with patience to see "what shnll we see." The hat illustrated is one of the smartest models for all round serviceable wear. It is n mushroom sailor carried out in short haired navy blue beaver. A cboit of blue velvet and two stiff wings shwin.cr beautiful blendings of oft colors shading from blue to rosy pinks are placed at one side of the model. The Ideal Hostess. She must make you feel individually that you are the favored guest. She must make you feel perfectly at home. She must ee everything, and yet possess the art to see nothing. She must never look bored. She must know how to get congenial people together. She must know how to keep conversation always going. She must never let any one be slighti ed or overlooked. " I She must know when to ask the aroa- . . . . tour musician to display rus or ner talents. She must be perfectly unselfish about ! her own talents. She must remember that nothing is so tiresome, so surely death to all enjoyment, as the feeling that one is being entertained. flow to Clean Rlngrs. A sharp pointed implement should never be employed to clean rings, ts it loosens the stones. Soak them In liquid ammonia a whole day, and the dirt will float out. Afterward they should be polished with a soft cloth. It is a good plan to keep rings in sawdust, as It enables the gems to retain their brilliancy. Warm water and a little prepared chalk are all that are required to clean plain or chased rings. Tit For Tat. "If nature Lad made me an ostrich," said old Crouch, "I suppose I emiM eat your eo?kiug." "Wouldn't that be nice!" answered his imperturbable spouse. "Then I could get some feathers for nxr hat,"
Hfe:i 1
. he
Will open a factory branch at 272 East State street, Ham mond, near the postoffice, where a full line of
pi n
t These instruments will be sold from factory to consumer direct, thereby avoiding all middlemen's profits. JUST FOR A STARTER The first car load of pianos will be sold at COST for advertising purposes. 1 Prospective Piano Purchasers Should wait and investigate our stock before buying elsewhere. 1 The gentleman who has charge of this store is well known in Hammond and vicinity; J. M. WILCOCKSON, Representative,.
Effect of
i&her Educa-
tion Upon omen By MARGARET ANGLIN, E are told that the
W
capable of being swayed by the samo deep feelings as the child of nature who knows not the meaning of psychology and to whom ethics and tho subtleties of
philosophy aro reduced to the PRIMITIVE CONCEPTION of right and wrong. The porer to repress the emotions has no effect upon the ability to experience them. Convention and good breeding necessitate self re
straint, but the woman who can control her feelings and whose breeding and education have taught her that unnecessary display of feeling is vulgar EXPERIENCES THEM JUST THE SAME. It is this poise of the woman of culture and intellect, of business ability and professional standing, which gives rise to the complaint that she is not capable of human sympathy and emotion. Higher education, culture and the broader life that has been opened to women in the la-t quarter century have done more toward the development of REAL HUMAN SYMPATHY AND FEELING than all the "artificiality and affectation of the years before. When I speak of higher education I do not necessarily mean the accumulation of " a lot of college degrees in dead languages or mathematics. Even in the lives of these self restricted creatures the feelings which they have forced to lie dormant are liable to burst forth with the so called sincerity of the untutored child of nature. By the woman of higher education and culture I mean one whoso intellect has broadened by her life of training and whose mind has been ablo to COMPREHEND AND DIGEST the facts which education has placed before her. A woman with keen sensibilities and a well trained mind, a woman of strong intellectuality, despises the gushing display of feeling. Lack of feeling is so often hidden by the disguise of hysterical protestation and gushing emotionalism that women of culture and refinement shudder at the thought of being placed in tha earne category. The development of intellect and the influence of culture and experience in professional life teach woman the law of RELATIVE VALUES. Emotion is too valuable a thing to be trifled with, and, unlike the shallow creature who, under a cloak of hypocrisy, gives vent to riotous emotion, the woman of higher education places a true valua
upon expression. HIGHER EDUCATION CANNOT KILL REAL FEELING IN WOMAN. SYMPATHY, LOVE AND AFFECTION DO NOT NEED PRIMITIVE OR
ELEMENTAL EXPRESSIONS TO
I'
Strohber
Manufacturers of Chicago
WILL BE ON SALE MONDAY, OCTOBER - There you will find the elegant
20th Century E3TElLO:OI13 JE3E The Popular HOFFMAN The well known TirTTITTCrtrt
New Pianos From
And Up. Down and
At ttie Noted Actress supereducated college woman is in BE SINCEP-"
T s- 3
Plaeo
ORG A
$5
Sunday, October 7 Jules Murry's Own Company Headed by Mr. W. A. WHITECAR IN
Again Including HENRY CARL LEWIS as the Organ Grinder and the best supporting company this famous play has ever had. Prices! 25, 35, 50 and 75c,
Thursday,
THE NATURAL ACTOR
In HJs Great Comedy Drama Success
IF i
1
A Dramatic and Scientific Event See Fitzsimmons in a Sensational 3-Round Glove Contest. See Fitzsimmons in a Marvelous Bag Punching Exhibition. See Fitzsimmons Make a Horseshoe in Full View of the Audience. Prices: 25, 35, 50 and 75c.
Comoanv
It
per month.
October 4. 1 ffknd I, mk
a i e
! I! i i i
