Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 178, Hammond, Lake County, 16 January 1909 — Page 4
Saturdav, Jan. 10- Is..-
THE TRIES.
The Lake County Times
IXCLUDING THE GARY EVENING TIMES EDITION, THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. AND THE LAKE COCTY TIMES EDITION, ALL DAILY NEWSPAPERS POLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINT- -ING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.
-Entered as second claes matter June 18, 1906, at th portofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the Act of Congress, March 3. 1S79." '
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eart to Heart
Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye.
UP A D DO
m -in. liioi
AilA
Well Known New York Woman Pleads at Meeting for Woman Suffrage.
CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES.
1 TO SUBSCRIBERS Reader, 0f TU TIMES are revested fr -ase-e.t by reportln, -T trreularltle. la delivering. CoUt. w- the Circulation Department.
COMMUNICATIONS. THE TIMES will print all cnximmlctios en subjects of Reeral Interest to. m e.lo, when sue- communication are .lamed by the writer, but will reject all communication, not -o matter what their merit. This Pre caution la taken to avoid misrepresentation. THE TIMES U published In the beat Interest of the people and It. utterance, alway. Intended tm promote the ceneral welfare of the public at large.
THE WOMEN OF PRAGUE. If you have ever been in the city of Prague you -will have seen the women of that city doing the rough work of men. In Bohemia women mix mortar.
' They carry hods up long ladders.
They Bhovel sand and coal. Our consul to Prague tells about the
employment of these women In the
trades and says it Is "unusual."
It Is unusual to American eyes, and
the tourist is apt to pity the lot of
these hard worked women. It Is arduous toil and to us unseemly, but
There are American women who deserve full as much sympathy. The women of Prague get 32 to 40 cents a day. How do keep soul and and body together? Well, in most instances the husbands also labor, and the children. What of our sweatshop women who are paid a paltry G cents per dozen for making trousers? The women of Prague work from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m.. with an hour off at noon. Our sweatshop slaves toll not only from sun to
n.., V,., fa- intl ha TWll T flf rlf?hf.
t. I SUM, UUl Lai. aulv 0 . .. . .v. f tu r.omnprs and the other I ., .. . ,
It is to be hoped mat iue sbuicuwo - - - jsesiaes, tne xueimu uu
i.w lenders may be smoothed over in some way. If the attitude of the ln the open air. They are strong and labor leaders may De smooui cTrictvliTlfr i done to lusty, and when you note how easily laboring en of this region is any indication, unless something is done to Y. mitigate the sentence, the country bids fair to be thrown into the bitterest gayety you caQ gee that your ptty ls x. . Vr.n-am Union labor resents the sentence and wasted. They are happy and hopeful, labor fight we have ever known. Imon labor resen nAMm to The sweatshop workers live ln cheap there will be ample ground for a fight. The country is in no condition to m tenement9, where the air,
business 'and settle such an important question. The issupes involve egpeclally in winter, is foul, the surthTi nreanized labor In fact it is worked up to a point where it roundings noisome and the sanitary more than organized lanor. in i a t f the UnIted condltions are bad. must interest every man Mho has an interest in tae IuturJ 0r compare the women of Prague States. It is an issue which will have to be fought to with tQe ives of the common laborbut for the good of capital and labor, both of which ere beginning the new vear on better terms and on a sounder financial footing than they were m Forty centa & day lg $24g a week let us shelve the trouble for awhile. The other side has so far pre- That seemg a pitiful sura for the hard x ' ! . QHnn and sound business judgment, but if you go labor of a woman for a whole week.
senea ia ui. uv f . tw k Mr Gompers and his assort- but how many wives of workingmen and ask any wise business man if He tmnKs Mr. y
SPENDTHRIFT ARRESTED. James Jones, of Crawfordsville, the man who squandered ' a fortune of
$150,000 In ten years and who on Saturday last, forged a check for $5 on J.
F. Stevenson, a local cigar dealer, and was later arrested, was taken before
Judge Weit on a charge of obtaining money under false pretense. He pleaded
guilty to the charge, but Judge AVest did not pass sentence on him, but took the case under advisement. FILE OPTION PETITION.
A petition signed by 4,097 voters of Montgomery county will be filed at
at the Commercial club. The invited'
guests were the members of the In
diana Sanitary and Water Supply association, which also ls holding a ses
sion In Indianapolis.
JLSTICE IS TEMPERED. ' Justice was tempered with mercy in
the case of Edward Morgan, alleged j
bank robber, in the Tippecanoe county circuit court at Lafayette. The accused man who is suffering with an
Incurable disease, which will not allow j
him to live more than a year, was permitted to plead guilty to a charge of larceny and take a sentence of one to fourteen years in the Michigan City
Crawfordsville. with the county audi
tor, asking that the . county commis- 1 prison.
missioners order an election under the STOP GOVERNOR'S HUNTING.
county local option law. USED MAILS FRAUDULENTLY. Edward M. Shell was arrested in Fort
Wayne on a charge of using the malls
Believing that it is little short of a disgrace that each succeeding governor of Indiana should be forced to suffer the embarassment of going house
NO TROUBLE IS WANTED.
to defraud, following an Investigation '. hunting when he establishes himself in
of several months conducted by In-j Indianapolis, Senator l A. lox oi ;viarepector A. R. Burr of this city, and Is ion county yesterday drafted a bill for
now out under $500 bond pending a
preliminary hearing before Commissioner Logan, Saturday morning. CARRIED EXPLOSIVES.
their household labors, the most nerve
racking and trying of all employ
ments?
Or
ates should go to jail, ha will tell you no.
9 W LAWYERS CALL IT ANARCHY.
. . . nmiTitru nn anxiouslv awaiting to seel .. i,
Lawyers and judges an u m j - .ven compare me yay uuu uumo .. 1.. -,n t,v .tit action in the case of Chief Justice Mitchell or - labors of the Bohemian women
o lxrnria who a few nights ago in a banquet speech in New York wlth th0S6 of the aTerage busy wife Pennsylvania., reT)eatea criticisms of the bench of the and mother. Does she get an hour at scored President RooseyiM "'J hIs hands M1 vith congress noon? Does she quit work at 6 p. .1 country It is P?? nlB term of office may have Many wives do not get as much as
and beiore ne seta oiuu
. , i. 4v nr,a tlmfl a TllimDer OI lawyers uuiu 1" I Cf,-(n
him enter into this little affair which he stated and they would fight him Qf courge the rQugh employment of
finish on it" tne r11"6 women seems io u nu arernment by law is one thing and government by an autocratic pres. and unnecessary, but there are women ,aJI nuul another, lhere is no question in the minds of lawyers at least bx America who do more and receive
1Vi ctnto u-nniH stand bv. desDite tneiieaa.
as to which the people oi me -----, ':.. "a - '
Charging the Big Four with conveying high explosives in a negligent mannner, Henry F. McDonald began suit In the superior court in Terre Haute for $1,400 damages for two houses and
three barns which he says were wrecked in the Sanford disaster two years ago.
FINDS GIRL ON STEPS. Answering a knock at the front door, Mrs. W. F. Silvers of Marion, found a baby girl apparently about two weeks old, lying on the porch. The person leaving the foundling had disappeared. Mr. and Mrs. Silvers are childless and they will adopt the infant.
I. S. S. A. INCORPORATED. j The Indiana Sunday School association, one of the oldest organizations in the state, was Incorporated at the office of the secretary of state. The articles show that the organization is "to promote the growth and efficiency of all protestant denominations In Indiana."
ENGINEERS ARE BANUL K'ri'KU. The Indiana Engineering society, which is holding a session in Indianapolis was the host at a banquet given
the provision of a Governor's mansion,
and will introduce It in the senate. SOl'TH BEND IS HAPPY.
The return of B. F. Shlvely to South
Bend tonight will be marked by a most elaborate demonstration ever known in the political history of northern Indiana. Party lines will be for-E-ntten "and citizens. Irrespective of
party, will take part In a torchlight parade from the Vandalia depot to the Shively home.
KOKOMO IS ANGRY.
The more, outspoken democrats of
Kokomo anJ Howard county are eav
age in their denunciation of the democratic caucus in defeating John W.
Kern, which they denounce as a bit of
party ingratitude. The defeat of Mr. Kern is felt by his old neighbors and friends not so much because It de
prived a Howard county man or. tne coveted honor, but because of the seeming Ingratitude of his party. TRV TO FORCE CONFESSION. ' Superintendent of Police Bert White of Marlon and Sheriff Tony George will today make a final effort to try and obtain a - final confession from F.
Brown, the mulatto who Is suspected of the murder of Mrs. Rose Ricks, white, whose body was found in the ruins of a barn early last Sunday morning.
RANDOM THINGS AND FUNGS
Always doing something queer California. Man shot his brother the saloon.
ln ln
It ls u bis jump from Llule in the kitchen to Elisabeth
In the parlor.
ZXJSrm M, Roosevelt. It Is J
.u ut ottorV the iudiciarv. It becomes la- 1903
for one so strong as vne " . " ' s.v, i.
Hundreds of persons killed by
. ... i UniF
lor oue ou ""o " - , ,Uv. criir.nlmiq tidal wave tnai swepi uit-i uum inriiHarv is not guarded by the people -with scrupulous Tc!lo,,0
care so that it may be above and beyond an imputation or even an rnipro- 1906Marsnan Fleld, millionaire mer
wiPtr: Justice Mitchell said
must come from a court which has jurisdiction.
"ThR rmlv iust criticism of a judges law chant, died. Born 1835.
When it comes from an 1907 The Kt. llev. Annur eweatman,
bishop or Toronto, eiecieu prmiaic of all Canada.
js n-nA w chnrt Ktens to anarchy. It
executive or a hoodlum, it leaaa mienj - - - f ! ,.,llMta Q tter to criticize the courts without a deep knowledge
IS jusi u.- -ncH rnnv nf
I. !..,. tinT, . it nossibly could be. President Roosevelt may,
..." wmH assessed of that deep knowledge, but he sets a
bad example to people who are hasty in their conclusions of the judiciary.
THE TIME TO ACT IS NOW.
"Pleanure!"
Mike McDermott, Jack Healey, Tom
Faley, Will Conley, Frank McDermott,
Dan McDermott and James Murray
went to Chicago to spend a few days
taking in the sights of that big city
we hope they will enjoy the pleasure
they deserve after corn husking. Dy ersvllle (Iowa) Commercial.
It l hard to convince the youth who has just been kicked off the front toop that nil the world loves a lover.
-rr,rAa Iw Dr. J. IS. llurxv oi iub iuuiia - , nm r,ntlr anil he was trans
iUCUV - - il tt I " "
yesterday to the TIMES 13 true. Dr. Hurty explicitly says mac cue ferred t0 tne foreign office, where ne hasn't a rag of power to prevent the pollution of Lake Michigan water. He soon established a reputation. Frorr nasn t a rag oi V , onnoise manner and the 1393 to 1S93 h was vice consul at Zala
A new kind of flqa has been discov
ered. Perhaps that is what is biting
Mr. Roosevelt?
THE CREAM OF THE Morning News
III ' ' i - iK ,
he i u ' i
I I -i. JO . - , -t4. X . ' ji' i
If , 1$ x I I J
t v $ z, - i
'Ml o "V v - - - 111
IE! J -a . m ; i III
Si'-. i c ! J I- ' i' I f
I 'a f - ? ? I
Mrs. Clarence M. Mackay wins fresh
aurels by making a public speech In.
New York in favor of equal suffrage.
Adolf Fischer of 170 Jefferson street,
Chicago, arrives in New York after having beeh falsely Accused of murder
and held In a Kussian prison for a
year.
President-elect Taft gets enthusiastic
greeting at many towns on his
from Augusta to Atlanta; In
Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, wife of the president of the Commercial Cable .... o tUa nrinolnol unf-ukpr at a suffragist
company ana socially jiroiiimcni, - -
meeting in New York last night. .
With The Legislators
Hi
The Day In Congress
i .
THIS IS MY 44TII BIRTHDAY. Sir John Lane Harrington.
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir John Lane
Harrington, a distinguished officer of
the British army, was born Jan. 16,
1865 and was educated at Stonyhurst
college. In 1SS4 he entered tne army.
he enlisted
ckly
s-
m
, - tnnnner nnd the 1893 to 1S93 h was vice consul at aia,
nnints fliit the. remedies xo De, ianeu m a. , . , rir.u
city officials of Hammond can do just as they please about it. iney can potentiary at the court of the Emperor mnndatft the American Maize Products company and follow up the manda- Meneiik. On one occasion he induced
xiir. 5,hi o;nn Thfl nennle of Hammond and Roberts- the late Queen Victoria to speak a
SS aed ... - are (oTo to use is sincere and genuine.- What are the city officials of Hammond going agtonlghed Mene!ik in his own country. a 0vt Tin thev not think that it is time for them to act, before When the Abyssinian monarch hard
pr)ldemic sweeps over the city, leaving death in its wake? There is the voice of the great white queen his poses to gently retaUate because Mr, St the Slightest use in beating about the bush. The sewage from the en"-or. Mm as Shlvely. friends yanked his beard sc
GfluCOSe works IS pouring mio me lane, ui.iu1juub iu tiy na, little short of a magician
supply. It can be stopped. The law provides a remedy. It is up to the officials- of Hammond. " ALL HASTE THE DAY.
One of the sweetest ways of going Into domestic bankruptcy Is to establish a Credit with The Tradesman.
Billy Blodgett, who is the special
way friend of Dr. T. E. Bell, of liammona.
a speech is always kidding the ex-Senator about
at a banquet in the latter city he says j being the best dressed man in tne that instead of trying to win the south state capital whenever he comes down
thn smith lias won him I n,oro F?lrrt srpt t now wants to maKe
Senatorial situation at SDrinirneld be- ex-Senator Bell a committee of habef
comes badly tangled and Mr. Hopkins dashery In the state senate.
Is hastening- from Washlnarton.
- - , ...
, , .. . ,, , I The fact that the republican caucus
statement showing how he was beaten was able to give James A. Hemenway for the senatorshlp in Indiana demo- nly a complimentary vote for ted
cratic caucus. States senator, aoes noc nwn.u c-c
. ... . Boonvllle man will retire lrum
Insurance agents and crtdit men seek T Thnr1,hll., th principal
Improvement of the agency standard, k - nate. has already
i uiji iv:cuti v - w '
Business in Wall street decreases Btnrted a boom for Mr. Hemenway as
slightly, but prices generally are congressman, and In his work Mr,
steady. Timmbure- has the assistance of his en-
Local stocks still higher. Sears-Roe- tire force of deputies. "The only man
buck advancing to 58V6. iwho can redeem the First district.
TrnstPPii nf Chlena-o Art Tnatitut bniri said Thornburg, "is Mr. Hemenway. e
i oi i cs i nnminata him for congress, and
, ULFUI1.1& Ul CLL VII CUyClllI" I J . . ..v. -
tondont Coolev's chareres and President we wil lelect him by a great, ois m
Hutchinson of the Institute appears be- iorlty. He is a man or tne peopie sua
fore a special committee of the school! has never lost a fight.
board as their representative.
The meek and mild Mr. Kern pro-
TIIIS DATE IX HISTORY. January 17.
hard.
ONE OF THE PROCLIVITIES
THE DYSPEPTIC IS THAT
OF HE
1706 Benjamin Franklin born in Bos- KNOWS MORE THAN THE DOCTOR
The failure of the East Chicago company to properly dedicate ifs
streets to the city of East Chicago is the reason given for the delay In granting a franchise to the interurban railroad company which is seeking to build a line between East Chicago direct to Gary. The line cannot be
completed now for a year and possibly longer. This is a matter of regret for quick and direct interurban connection between the two places is most' desirable and will be a great thing for both Gary and East Chicago. Minute train service between the cities of the Calumet region will link them
together closer than anything else and make them all one city, so that any 1S62 John Tyler, tenth president or . .. iu. i'.ii.j ittos dipd Born
Llie t.miu ji.fc,
March 30. 1790.
!S84 New state capitol building at Des Moines, Iowa, dedicated. 1899 William A. Stone Inaugurated governor of Pennsylvania. 1906 Senator Tillman, In virulence, denounced President Roosevelt for the Santo Domingo treaty.
ton. Died in Philadelphia, April ABOtT jus 0VN SYMPTOMS.
17, 1790. 1781 Americans defeated the British at battle of the Cowpens in South Carolina. 1800 Caleb Cushing, Massachusetts statesman, born. Died Jan. 2, 1879. 1813 British frigate Narcissus captured the U. S. schooner Viper.
1S54 Competion of the Great Western I
railroad of Canada
How badly withered is the new leaf you turned over on the first? The tube lady. Oh, ho! Seen her yet?
Annual electric show opens this aft
ernoon in the Coliseum in Chicago
Progress of the conflict between con
gress and the president is told, the
One of the members of the legisla
ture, who is a bitter opponent of the
three-mile road law, is Senator John r. Strange, of Grant county, who will probably introduce a bill to repeal the
latest moves being one to order the ,m lntroduce an amendment executive to restore the marines to the which will greatly change naval vessels and the Inquiry into the , , .
(Friday, January 15, 1909.) Senate. The amendment- to the legislative.
executive and judicial appropriation
bill, increasing the salary of the presi
dent to $100,000, of the vice president
and speaker of the house to $20,000
with $5,000 allowance for carriages and coachmen for the vice president and
speaker and Increases for the Judiciary aggregating $328,500 precipitated a lively discussion In the senate today.
Senator Borah of Idaho made a point of order against these Increases on
the ground that they involve general
legislation. Without concluding the
debate, further consideration of tha amendments was postponed until next Monday, and at 4:05 the senate adjourned. House. Private bills had their Inning ln the house of representatives today, almost the whole session being given up to their consideration. Many were passed. Under a resolution offered by Mr. Gaines of Tennessee the judiciary committee was directed to report within ten days upon the question of the right
of George L. Lllley, governor of Connecticut, to retain his seat as a member of the house. The subject occasioned a good deal of debate, which at Urns waxed warm. At 5:08 p. m. the house adjourned.
devoutly to. be wished for. The people of the Calumet region want to
grow together as fast as they can. They know that this movement of
consolidation is coming and it can't come any too soon.
It does not follow that because
you rannot pronounce tne name of the highbrow who
sans the sons, that it Is really music.
status and services of Mr. Roosevelt's
barber.
President Roosevelt, vetoing a bill
for construction of a private dam across a navigable river, says the nation Is
threatened with a huge hydro-electric
power monopoly that will prove more
oppressive than th oil combine.
Attempt to secure control of the re
tail grocery business of the country by the Staiidard Oil company Is reported
ln New York, but Is denied by the head of one corporation said to be Involved.
Twenty-five thousand hatmalters in New England and the North Atlantic states go out on strike when the Associated Hat Manufacturers decide to discontinue using the union label.
o WE HOPE THE BOOSTER club of Indiana Harbor has not laid down. The organization did such splendid work in the past, but of late little has been heard from it. The Boosters have done a lot for Indiana Harbor in particular and for the Calumet region in general. We will be glad to hear, trentlemen. about some of those splendid meetings you used to have in
which so much energy was displayed THE REPULICANS WILL look for the Kern expose with much satisfaction. In the slang of the street Mr. Kern was "handed a large package." It only proves what has often been said that the democrats cannot stand power. Here, at the. very beginning, no less n estimable person than J. W. Kern, the foremost democrat in Indiana, is double-crossed by a gang of ward heelers.
"Untoward Accident.
That was an untoward accident by which one of our village beaux, last
Sunday, was prevented from carrying
one of our most charming young ladies
to church. We know he was sadly
9 disappointed, but we do not know what
the festive
shop. If Lina looks anything like she did when we saw her, all she will have to do is to stand out in front of her shop window and she will surely In out.
Its provisions,
In case he sees fit fo "submit an amendment, Senator Strange will provide that a committee be appointed to make the assessment of land owners
directly benefited by a , three-mile stretch of road ordered built by the
commissioners, and if these assessments do not pay in full for the construction of the road, provision shall be made by which the township as a whole shall assist. Township payn h hiarhwav. however, will
be rated in proportion to the public
benefit.
It didn't take long for the republic
an legislators, in joint caucus yesterday afternoon, to nominate a candi
date for United States senator. United
ctot Spnalnr James A. Hemenway, of
Boonville. was chosen and he will re
celve the complimentary vote of the
republicans when the democrats elect
of-natr The caucus was neia
Room
duty of the trustee to take the same action as the truant officer does now to get them back in school. -
THIS IS MY 27TH BIRTHDAY. Princess Nicholas of Greece.
Princess Nicholas, wife of the third penalty he meted out to
son of King George of Greece, was J mule tnat gnawed the back of his bug-
THE HAMMOND BUSINESS Mens Association now have the chance
of a lifetime in taking the pure water initiative f or JIammond. tf they can bring the American Maize Products company to tme
TniS DATE IX HISTORY. January 18. 17S0 Rodney defeated the Spanish fleet off Cape St. Vincent. 1809 Sir John Moore killed at battle of Corunna. Born Nov. 13, 1761. 1817 Alexander J. Dallas, father of
"United States Bank,- died. Born,
1759. 1850 Divorce court Instituted in England. 1871 United States supreme court declared the legal tender act of 1862 unconstitutional. 1SS3 Robert E. Pattison Inaugurated governor of Pennsylvania.
born Jan. 17, 1882. She was tha youngest child of the late Grand Duke Vladimir of Russia and as the Grand Duchess Helene, before her marriage to Prince Nicholas, she was famed as one of the prettiest princesses in Europe. She and her cousin, the Grand Duke Aitohnpi heir to the Russian throne,
were youthful sweethearts, but the late ! Czar Alexander declined to give his
Let's see consent to their marriage. In 1901
announcement was made of the engage
ment Of the Grand Duchess Helene t Prince Louis Napoleon, the "heir to the Imperial throne of France." But for reasons not made public the youthful grand duchess broke the engagement and the following year she was married to Prince Nicholas of Greece. The couple have two little daughters.
the eldest Princess Olga, now in her sixth year. - ,
gy. James Correspondent, to County (Ga.) News.
Jones
It would take a great deal of argument to convince a jackass that he is stupid. Don't waste your kreath. If you can't filter or boil the water,
saw it off in chunks and kill It with an axe before using.
Will Mr. McCutcheon. whose hopeful
cartoon in the Tribune this morning,
relating to a certain sleep-Inducing
device, kindly send further particulars to the father of a belligerent five-week-old, care of The Time3.
CROWN POINT ELOPERS
DON T WANT DISTUKJJANUJ.
Englewood Police Asked to Suppress
Warrant Issnrtl This AVeek. Crown Point, Ind., Jan. 16. Robert
Agnu and Ethel Grady were married
here early thi? week and when they got back to thf lr homos in Englewood
there was muoh ado. A warrant was sworn out for Agnu's arrest. This morning a Chi. ago paper says: "A young woman who did not give her name called up the Englewood police station yesterday and asked that the warrant issued for Robert Agnu.
who is 23 years old and assistant man-
South Side theater, was ac-
, . , ; iwno IS -o years uiu auu kator. The caucus was held in 85 and Senator Durre Joit o.u- IVot .lopln, to Indiana , ha.rman. presided Senator Hem -j q
with 16-
cus chairman, presiucu. " ,.a..rtM pth1 Gra.lv. whose sister
enway was nominated by Senator reiz- r . ... t b(.foru Munici
pal Judge Girif-n. Th-? mystemus voice
INTERURBAN RAILROAD TRIES OUT ITS SNOW PLOW TODAY
Special
Car Is Built to Trncks Clear.
Keep the
Tirwrmville. who declared that It
afforded him great pleasure to present the name of a man who had been
honored by his own district with judicial positions, election to congress and with the United States senatorshlp. No -seconding- speeches were made and the vote for Senator Hemenway was unanimous. It was agreed that Senator Hemenway shall be nominated by Senator Durre. of Boonville. and the nomination shall be seconded by Senator Mattingly. of Washington.
said: 'Please don t serve tne warrant because they are living happily and It wouldn't be right to disturb them.'"
BLUSTERLY SUNDAY IS PROMISED TO LAKE COUNTY
WE FIND THAT THERE ISNT SO MUCH DIFFERENCE IN BABIES AFTER ALL THE DIFFERENCE IS ALL IX THE MOTHER'S PERSONAL OPINION.
Cavalllerl is going to start a beauty able Interest,
The Gary & Interurban yesterday tried out is new electric snow plow on the streets of Gary. The snow plowis a small electric car used expressly for that purpose. The recent weather reports to the effect that a cold wave was coming, attendent with considerable snow, sufficed to bring the snow plow into action. The little square
t structure on wheels excited consider- . . . i . .
Truant officers of Indiana have rea
son to quake, for there is one senator
in
their jobs.
East Mind's Snow and .Medicine Hat Chili Espected to Meet.
A blustery Sunday is promised by the weather man from indications presented by the offiiial weather man last night. Heavy snow and strong easterly
the Indiana legislature that is after .winds are expect.-!. Meaicm
Senator Benz, of English, j into its own again "mUa,
is the man. He would abolish the oi- .aegrees nei.j e,u. v...
would make township trus- on me map. in mj,..,
was seasonable. i ne temperature
flee and
tees the "hookey officers" of,, the state. Senator Benz has prepared a bill abolishing the office. The bill would make it a duty of the school teacher to report to the trustee all scholars absent from the regular school session, and it would be the
The
ranged from 35 degrees in the morning to 29 jn the evening, the mean being 32 and the normal 21 degrees. Tn fifteen-miies-an-hour wind from th northeast was cutting and gave evidence of the coming snowstorm.
