Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 267, Hammond, Lake County, 30 April 1909 — Page 4

THE TIIIE3.

Friday, April 30, 1909

The Lake County Timed ra,s DArix30HI9TORY-

INCLUDING THE GARY EVENING TIMES EDITION, TBB LAKE .COUNT j 1607 Newport landed and named Old

TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION, AND THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES EDITION, ALL DAILY NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING iAND PUBLISHING COMPANY.

3

Virginia

"Entered as second class matter June IS, 1906, at the postofflce at Hamttond, Indiana, under the Act of Conrrcaa, March S, 1879."

WITH THE PORT

STANDING OF CLUBS

MAIN OFFICE HAMMOND, IND., TELEPHONES, 111 118. BRANCHES GARY, EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARHOR, WHITING, CROWTf POINT, TOLLKSTON AND LOWEU.

YEARLY HALF YEARLY 1-50 SINGLE COPIES . ONE CENT

LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION.

CIRCULATION BOOKS OPES

TO THE PUBLIC ALL TIMES.

FOR INSPECTION AT

TO SUBSCRIBERS Readers of THBJTIMES are requested to favor the ijcemeat br reporting air lrrejcularttlea In delivering. Communicate wtta tka Stkcolatloai Departmeat. COMMUNICATIONS.

Point Comfort, Virginia,

1652 Governor Berkeley of

deposed. 1717 Robert Johnaoa became governor of South Carolina. 178J Washinrton inaugurated first president of the United States. 1798 Navy department of the United States established by act of congress. in the North-

west Territory north of the Ohio Philadelphia o

river were authorized to organize themselves into a state. 1803 Purchase of Louisiana from France concluded. 1812 Louisiana admitted to the Union. 1858 Congress passed an act to conditionally admit Kansas to the Union. 1863 Federals repulsed by the Confed.ntm ot P1rmnnnt. "W. Va.

i ot4 ti,. ,f o roomptit to fix rail- I Chieaaro

a es In the east made at Philadelphia

New York.

1884 Iowa republican convention de

clared for James G. Blaine

1891-The new Dominion parliament RESULTS YESTERDAY

opened by Lord Stanley after the American League

general election. Chicago-Cleveland (wet grounds).

National Leogme. "W.

Chicago 8

Boston 6

Cincinnati 8

Pittsburg 6

New York 4

Brooklyn 4

St. Louis 5

American League. W.

Detroit 9

Boston 7 New York 7

.0 .5

St. Louis 4

j Cleveland 4

for I Washington 3

L. 5 4 4 7 6 5 6 9 L. 3 5 5 5 5 7 8 7

Pet. .615 .600 .556 .533 .500 .444 .400 .357 Pet. .750 .583 .583

.545 .500

.364

.333 .300

STARTS TRIP TODAY Notre Dame, Ind.. April 30. The Dame-Arkansas baseball game scheduled to be played here yesterday afternoon was called off on account of rain. The varsity nine leaves tomorrow afternoon -for a two-game trip, playing Michigan at Ann Arbor Saturday and Wabash at Crawfordsville Monday.

WESTON RESUMES HIKE TO COAST Leaves St. Louis and Will Call on Gov. Hadley. St. Louis, April 30. Edward Payson Weston, the pedestrian, left St. Louis at 5 o'clock yesterday morning for the west. His route to Kansas City will take him through Jefferson City, where he plans to call on Governor Hadley.

THE TIMES will print all communications on subjects of general Interest to the people, when such commnnlcatlons are slsned by the writer, but will reject all communications not signed, no matter what their merits. This precaution is taken to avoid misrepresentation. THE TIMES Is published In the best Interest of the people and its fterancea always intended ta promote the general welfare of the public at largo. ... s - A FARCIAL PROCEEDING. ' "This man Pattee of South Bend, this little ready-subpoenaer, Is in the limelight alb right If that is what he -wanted, but it is a fierce old light. In speaking of his action the South Bead-News says: The impression is that the whole proceeding is farcial and that if not impertinent the action of the prosecuting attorney is at least in exceedingly bad taste. Subsequent developments may dispel this impression, but it is not probable. Summoning the governor to testify to what the prosecutor ought to know and what lie ought to be able to convey to the grand jury without examining anybody outside of the city limits of "South Bend has the semblance of a grandstand play or of questioning the governor's sincerity in his announced inte.ition to enforce the laws. The governor says he knows nothing about prize fighting in South Bend except what he has read in the papers and that I:lnd of testimony will of course not be accepted by the grand jury. We cannot foresee any good results to be obtained from insisting upon the governor coming here. The prosecutor is the local representative of the executive' .office at Indianapolis. It is within, his province as the state's attorney io take the initiative and carry out the governor's instructions to investigate the reports that prize fighting is being carried on here.

1894 The new Vaughn library build

ing at Ashland, Wis., destroyed by

fire. 1904 The Louisiana Purchase exposition opened at St. Louis.

1906 James E. Boyd, ex-governor of

Nebraska, died. Born Sept. 9,

1834.

Detroit-St. Louis (rain). Boston, 10; New York, 4. National League. Cincinnati, 5 3; Chicago, 4 2. New York-Boston (rain). Philadelphia-Brooklyn (wet grounds)

MORAN READY

FOR ATTELL

New York. April 30. Owen Moran,

the English featherweight, has agreed

o Champion Abe Attell's weight de

mands for a ten-round go before a

ocal club. The Briton, who has fought

Attell two draws, says he will make

4 pounds at 6 o'clock and the go

robably will be arranged soon.

KEEPS THE SOX DOWN

THIS IS MY 64TII BIRTHDAY. William II. Crane.

William H. Crane, the well-known

actor, was born April 30, 1845, at Lei

tion in the 'public schools. He made force of workmen on the south side his first appearance on the stage at" ground had the field almost in s

Utica. N. Y.. July 13, 1863. For eight P"31 conamon iaie yeruay an

Damp grounds kept the Sox from

beating Cleveland 1 to 0 yesterday

and the chances are today's scheduled

battle also will have to be postponed.

years thereafter he was with Mrs. Har

rlet Holrnan's company, and next he

became the comedian in the Alice Oatea

company. In 18T5 he became the lead

ing comedian with the stock company

at Tloolev'a theater in Chicago. His

first experience as a star was in part

nership with the late Stuart Robson

ernoon and Dr. Comiskey had just pro

nounced a cure when a fresh deluge

from above caused a dangerous relapse.

CUBS TWO RUNS SHORT

Cincinnati, O., April 30. The Cubs fell two runs short of making a clean

In 1877 the two appeared in a comedy sweep of the Cincinnati series when

entitled "Our Boarding House," at the they broke even in a double header Park theater in New York. This was here yesterday, beating Griff's humbled followed by numerous successes, the Reds in the first game, 5 to 4, and

most notable of which was "The Hen- dropping the second one. 3 to 2, after

rietta," with which play the two co- securing a temporary lead.

medians achieved an unusual degree of

fame Robson and Crane parted in

1899. since hlch time Mr. Crane has de

voted himself exclusively to the pro

duction of American plays.

RANDOM THINGS AND FUNGS

Probably Manager Chance could

have copped both encounters if he had

cared to overwork his pitching staff

He did not, however, and so let Floyd Kroh work in the afterpart, not that

Kroh is not a perfectly good hurier,

but portsiders seldom can accomplish

much against this Cincinnati club.

ON BUILDING HOMES. No one can be found who has a bigger interest in Gary than Capt. H. S. Norton. No one better than he realizes the need of homes in Gary and

homes in their true sense, so that if his splendid words spoken at the corner !

ctnna lavlntr nf th tipw r.itv hnll rm Wpilnfiadav hnvA nnv frfpAPt it will ho! No, no, gentle reader. Governor Mar-

for the benefit of the city in an untold degree. Without homes a city is as -hall is not coming to Gary to see lZTtll naught. It may have all the industries, the business houses, civic buildings about prlzs fisntIns- He is eins t0 the cancellation of the Clabby-Morgan imaginable, but if it is lacking in homes it is sadly and irreparably wanting head ln at Studebakervllle. In other flgnt Wednesday night. Acording to

It has been pointed out repeatedly by the newspapers of Gary that ; words South Bend,

homes are badly needed. The newspapers have tried to impress upon the

people, the real estate dealers and the business men, that proper housing for '

those who work ln Gary Is a necessity. They need not maasions. Elegant residences do not go to make up homes. Happiness Is not always found in them. Money does not make a home. It is the aggregate of the well-kept neat, though humble home that is requisite in the upbuilding of a city

There is still itlme for the fruit crop failure to materialize if you are patient.

BLAMES CLUB FOR

CALLING- OFF BOUT Fred Mulkern, manager of Jimmy

Mulkern, who passed through Chicago

yesterday, there was no real danger o

Interference.

DEMING ELECTED

TRACK CAPTAIN

If there is any other kind of weath

er that you would like to see, Just ask

where toilers dwell. If you can build a home even at a sacrifice to some f0r jt.

of your personal comforts and conveniences, you should do so

who has an interest in the city wherein he dwells Is the man who has a little ' gion

home therein and which he can honestly call his. Indeed every well-wisher of Gary will long for the time to come when It can be called a city of homes I it is Here now. as well as a city of industry. j The outdoor season is here

Crawfordsville, Ind., April 30 Shir

Ipv Tpminp fif Tn rt in n a rnl 1 a hfts hppn

The weather man has It, all -nrhoh

iiic nght, for any one ln tho Calumet re- track and field team in place of George

Bands hundreds of thousands this

A STARTLING STORY. Lafayette which today is in the throes of a county option election, is having scads of excitement. Seldom has anything like it ever been experienced in old Tippecanoe. Some ludlcious incidents have been related, the Journal the other night said: The prize option story of the campaign comes from one of the out townships from which a flght is reported between two brothers. They are not speaking now but it is believed that when harvest time comes and co-operation is needed they will be friends again. The "wet" brother drinks nothing stronger than package coffee- He has no use for the saloons, nevertheless he is "wet." The "dry" brother Is fond if his "hops" and although he never drinks to excess he thoroughly enjoys 'a social gathering about a barrel of "suds." But the brother who doesn't drink is very, very "wet" and the one who does drink is very, very "dry" 'and in the hope of proving something they wrestled each other about the barnyard and finally came to blows. The situation Indicates why it is so difficult to forecast a local option election.

means baseball. To other thousands it means golf. To multitudes of others it means autolng, motor boating, fishing, hunting, tennis, camping, gardening, gardening, rambling ln the woods and fields. To all these it means pure air and sunlight. To the majority of the devotees of the out of doors it means redder blood, stronger muscles, clearer brains, stronger hearts and generally better health and a lengthening of the lease of life.

Emanuel or iagrange, who has re

signed. Deming is a quarter and half-mile runner and was formerly

Manual Tratnlnir hfs-h Ri-hnnl nthlt

He is a sophomore ln Wabash and

member of the Phi Delta Theta fra

ternity.

M'GOORTY MAY

GET BOUT

WE FIXI THEV HECOl)lED WHALE'S MILK 'OW FOR BABIES.

THIS BEING A FATHER ISN'T WHAT Tony Ceoonl may

Milwaukee, Wis., April 30. Eddi

McGoorty may get his long sough

match with Billy Papke, the Illinois

Thunderbolt, in Calumet, Mich.,

June. Calumet promoters are after th

match and have offered a good-sized

purse for the battle between the pair,

McGoorty is a promising boxer an

might slip one over on the great Ke

wanee fighter. Stanley Ketchel an

be matched at th

.IT IS CRACKED UP TO BE WHEN A same time for a purse of J5.000.

In this instance the "wet" brother, although personally "dry," is influenced fellow has to go around eiilsby the tax argument; the "dry" brother who is personly "wet" doesn't like ,NO A Vhle the saloon keepers. Both brothers will be at the polls tomorrow working

for the respective sides in the controversy

EXTRA SPECIAL SALE Saturday, May 1st, '09

NO. 1 HAMS, GUARANTEED

NATIVE BEEF POT ROAST, choice cuts , NATIVE VEAL SHOULDER ROAST

NATIVE VEAL BREAST, with pocket

3-lbs. CHOICE HAMBURGER STEAK NO. 1 CALIFORNIA HAMS,

131c 101c 12ic 111c 25c 9ft

NO

1 BACON

SMALL STRIPS SMALL LEGS OF LAMB

NAVEL ORANGES Fancy large Sweet Navel Oranges, 50c size

FANCY PINEAPPLES ...

161c 171c 35c 10c

Headquarters for Strawberries and all kinds of fresh Vegetables.

cFoS. 3L. Phone 167

umpfer Sl Co. 280 State Street

BIG

ARNESS SAL

E

Carl Q. Faul has Decided to Continue His Harness Sale Another Week

You will still find here several hundred dollars worth of Harnesses, Lap Robes, and Blankets to the value of $300, a thousand Buggy Whips of various 'kinds and prices and three Buggies remain unsold out of twenty in the original lot.

Here is an honestsale and it has attracted:people from all sections. The goods are going at low prices, some less than cost. But don't delay, for the sale closes .next -Saturday without fail.

CARL O. FAUL, Manufacturer and Dealer in Harness, Saddles, Collars, Whips and General Horse Clothing. 77 State Street Phone 2014 j Hammond

u .. ..wu.p... tlll.il .11 wy?--jwi

uxurious

Terms:

WHERE IS THE Y. M. C. A? One thing appears to be lacking in the cities of the Calumet region and that is the Y. M. C. A. spirit Other cities in Indiana no larger, are conducting Y. M. C. A. campaigns that are wonders. Down at Laporte, the movement for a Y. M. C. A. building, though only a week old has brought promises of $33,000 already to go toward putting up such a structure. Some time ago the prospect for a Y. M. C. A. building in Hammond was taken up and favorably considered, but those behind it thought that the time was not fully ripe and the matter was dropped. Surely Hammond doesn't mean to take a back seat for other Indiana cities in the matter of Y. M. C A. spiritedness. If the city cannot support a Y. M. C. A. now, it never will be able to do so. Can't we hear a noise like a call for action on the part of Y. M. C A. friends?

Dr. Wiley can get a good Job editing a cookbook if he wants to, all right

enough.

When May wfdn December, April weeps all the year round.

PERHAPS IT IS rather unkind to keep rapping at the tariff bill, but it ' does rile a person to find that cloves have been put upon the free list. What ' good is that going to do. Here Indiana seems to be rapidly going dry. County after county to the tune of 45 have slipped into the dry column, yet in spite of it an cloves have been put on the free list. Isn't it rather adding insult to injury?

Every time a certain Whiting man,

who hates to see his name in print.

looks at his bandaged thumb, he takes

an oath never to put down another

carpet, no matter what his wife says. A girl In alwajn necrelly Disappointed it the Man she turns Down gets IP Too auickly.

Take our advice. Keep 'em on a week longer and the cherries will be ripe.

THE CHIEF OF POLICE of Hammond, has hit upon -a plan to discourage auto speeding. He intends to play a fire hose on the reckless. Don't take this lightly, Mr. Scorcher- Hammond water is a fearsome compound. ' H. E. K. in Chicago Tribune. Never knew, B'jorge, that Hek ever sampled it. I

Who the dickens started all this, way, Hicks?

JIAXY A THl'E WORD IS SPOKEN WHEX WE ARE TOO TIRED TO RE POLITE.

IF THE MOXOX gives candy to its women patrons, the officials will have to watch out or they will be accused of rebating. We await with interest a report from the interstate commerce bureau.

A CONFIDENTIAL man is short $25,000. It takes one of that kind to get next to anything around the office, except postage stamps and the little chink used for car fare.

Oh, well, when summer comes who cares what the blamed old tax on stockings is. Sereno will get the barefoot vote anyway.

A senius is a man who can't take a trick with an ner.

" ! A Hammond man who has it to rT-TnrvTT v o . j , T . . . m ,

" " c u"tuu scl a, yitiure uj. aduui namiQ in iursey looking over some of these franchise other than the one he had taken thirty years ago, as it is to get a different -jokers," says that the only excuse for picture of Mrs. Potter Palmer, other than the one she had taken before the them he can see is that they give some big fire. one a chance to laugh in their sleeve?.

The Modesty of Women

Naturally makes them shrink from tha Indelicato questions, the obnoxious examinations, and unpleasant local treatments, which some physicians consider essential in tho treatment of diseases of women. Yet, if help can bo had, it is better to submit to this ordeal than let the disease grow and spread. The trouble Is that so often the woman tmdergoes all the annoyance and shame for nothingThonsandsNjf women who have been ured l)v Dr. three's Favorite Prescription writh. ln ijVreeiatlon of the euro vhich dlspNTcVSHh the examinations and local treatment?Thore is no other

medicine so snre.anrl nf? for rjelic-n

women as "Favorite Prescription." It cures debilitating drains, irregularity and female weakness. It always helps. It

j almost always cures. It is strictly noni alcoholic, non - secret, all its ingredients

being' printed on its bottle-wrapper; contains no deleterious or habit-forming

drugs, and every native medicinal root entering Into its composition has the full endorsement of those most eminent in tho several schools of medical practice. Some of these numerous and strongest of professional endorsements of its ingredients, will be found in a pamphlet wrapped around the bottle, also In a booklet mailed free on request, by Dr. E. V. Fierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. These professional endorsements should havo far more weight than any amount of tho ordinary lay, or non-professional testimonials. The most Intelligent women now-a-days 4niton knowing what they take as medicine instead of opening their mouths like a lot of young birds and gulping down whatever Is offered them. "Favorite Prescription " is Of KXOWX COMPOSITION'. It makes weak women strong and sick

I women well. I Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free

I cn receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing onJu- Send to Dr. R. . Pierce, been Buffalo, N. Y 21 one-cent stamps for pa-

i per-coverea, or 6i stamps for cloth-bound.

II sick consun tne Doctor, free of chars?3 by letter. All such communications ara held sacredly confidential. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets Invigorate r.nd regulate stomacii, liver and boweU.

any-

' n

i i

L i

t a A -T -zli-4 '-r, -3,.Pt.

1 3$

-1 wJte -mmMi nits , bhJr

GENUINE FABRICORD LEATHER

ocker

This Genuine Fabricord Leather Turnish Rocker

s

17s5

i!:

1.50 Cash

50 Monthly

This Rocker is without question the handsomest article of Its kind, we have ever offered and cannot be appreciated unless seen.. The upholstering is first quality fabrlcord leather and the tufting Is exquisite, note the full ruffled effect around the back, arms, and front. The hand carved claw feet, finished in mahogany, add greatly to its general beauty. In offering this great bargain- to you, we do so knowing that it will lead to a lasting acquaintance, which will be of mutual benefit. While they last we will sell these $35.00 Turkish Rockers at the ridiculous low price of

17

.75

Open Monday, Thursday, and Saturday Evenings

HOME OUTFITS

$

on 30 days Free Trial Our leader

$5 Down 5 Monthly

Prompt Free Delivery to Gary, Hammond and Indiana Harbor

SOUTH CHICAGO'S LEADING-

.in ii i a. in of mit-u . hi im mwjiww a r-rn i.i.i ip n gwi j-mjt m m Jim. , ... ...... -j . . . r r j-m, rM1l

FURNITURE

STORE.

"TUBS'

J