Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 258, Hammond, Lake County, 20 April 1911 — Page 4

4

THE TI1IE3. Thursday, April 20, 1911.

THE . mOES . NEWSPAPER!

INCLUDINQ TBS OIRY EVEMXO TIMES EDITION. TBI LAKB COVRTt TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THE LAK.U OOVItTT TIMES

BYEKINO EDITION AND TUB TIMES SPOUTING EXTRA ALL DAILY NEWSPAPERS. AND THE LAKE COUNTY , TIMES SATURDAY AND WEEKLY EDITION, PUBLI SHED BY THtt LAKE COUNTY PRINTING) AND PUBLISHING COMPANY. The' Lae County Times Evening Edition (dally exeept Saturaay mad Sunday) "Eniered as second claaa matter February S. 1911. at the postoffica at Hammond. Indiana, under tha act ( Congress. March I. 1179." The Gary Evening Times -Entered aa second clam matter October Be 1109, at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress, March I. 1879." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered a second class matter January SO, 1911. at the postoface at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress. March S. 1179."

orai PAYNE at YOUNG, 74T-74S Mareoctte Bids.

MAIN OFFICaV HAMMOND, IND., TELEPHONE 111 EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR TRLEPHONB1 MS. GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BLDG TELEPHONE 137. RANCHESEAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WIOTniO, CROWN POINT, TOLLESTON AND LOWELL. T EARLY , 3.0 HALF YEARLY , $1.8 SINGLE COPIES .- UONE CENT LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWS PAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION. CIRCULATION BOOKS . OPEN TO THE ' PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES. TO SUBSCRIBERS Raaaere af THE TIMES are raa.aete4 t favar the aaaceaaeat ay reaortlar aay Irresralarltlee la dellverta. Crauaaalartt wttk lUm ClreulaUea Deportneat. COMMUNICATIONS.

THE TIMES will pHa all eaatBsaaleattaaa.esi aaajeeta at awaeral taxaraai the aaaple, wku saea cwuanmlcalUu mrm alsae ay tha writer, aat nill ejeat all eoaaasaalcattaaa mat algmed. to matter what their saertta. Tata areeaatlaa U takem te avaia lalareareaeatattaae. THE TIMES la aakliahed la the beat latere af the peaade, aad Ita attestBaaa alway latcaaW ita araamata the areaeral welfare af the aaalla at larg CHEER UP. There is a good deal of pessimism hither and thither about stagnation in business and industrial circles. Some of it is entirely unwarranted. Don't make it any worse than it is. In other wards, cheer up. - Upon the most dependable information we learn that the ' Standard Oil and Tobacco decisions may be expected early next week. Hopeful business interests look forward to a decided improvement in conditions with the announcement of that decision, whatever It may be. Of course, stagnation la not wholly, caused by either Standard Oil or tobacco, but they are factors that go to make up the whole. The fear that Congress is apt to do things that will hurt business is not such an alarming one after all. The chances are that the present session will hurt no one. . Clouds are clearing, cheer, up.

SOME MORE GARY PRODUCTS.

It almost takes one's breath away things that the Gary by-products coke coke, gas and ammonia, they will give ' catsup, chocolate and- calico aprons.

balls, ill-smelling carbon bisulphide. Prussian blue and chemicals for color- , ing, ingredients of carbolic acid, chile con came and shaving cream. t Not only this, but there are 450 more chemical assets which such names

as ethane, methane, acetylene, psudobutzlene, napthalene, xylene, hexahy-

droisoxylene, dimethlylnathpthalene and To look at a piece of soft coal many virtues in it. Heat was all that

science has shown that we were mistaken and that he Creator Is very, very generous. ' i i - gg

A UPLIFTING THE SALOON. Two events at Hammond will tend to assist Indiana saloon knpnrn ma.

Merially in the efforts they have been recently making to be good. One Is the application of the Proctor law's provision that the owner of a license must

i be an American citizen, and the other

that conviction for violation of the liquor laws is a bar to full naturalization. There are two theories of the saloon. One is that the worse it is, the "better for society. Let it be run only by the depraved andabandoned, let

; It be visited, only by the criminal and

closely to the traditional description of It as a hellhole and sink of iniquity. . Then it will lend itself more readily to the vocation of professional and political reformers. f The other theory of the saloon is that whatever tends to elevate its morals will tend also to abate its evils and lessen the burden It places on the maintenance of law and order. What ails the saloon Is not BO much, perhaps, the fact that It houses the retail distribution of alcoholic liquors as the fact that In Irresponsible and reckless hands it has become" too often, &

disorderly place and a breeding spot

HIS IDEAS ARE PRACTICAL. Gary is fortunate in securing the services of Judge Willis Brown. Judge-Brown's ideas are for the most part practical and when put Into

practice in the way his new office will them, will doubtless prove beneficial

sent to the reform school, would likely turn out a crook If not worse : Judge Brown has the right idea of the boy. He understands his temptav tlons, and sympathizes with his weaknesses. Sympathy frequently goes

further in working reform, than does The trouble with a whole lot of

tha they lack the sympathy of their parents. Their impulses are mis- ' ...'..v , . . ' A, . , ...understood and they are punished oft-times without knowing why. The resuit is that they gradually become hardened and embittered. They feel that the world Is against them and they might just as well please themselves, as to' try to lease others. Pleasing themselves generally leads to misr-hie.f and

mischiefs to crime. i- ...-

; ASKING FOR INFORMATION. i ; In an Indianapolis dispatch to this paper last night, Governor Marshall

was said to have sent an order to,

the pharmacy state license of any druggist found peraiatently violating the

liquor laws. Me should like to ask in a quiet aforesaid druggist should have to be W"hy not take away his license, ' We Just ask.

New Yerk Offlss PAYNE A YOTJWO, S Wctl Talrty-TaJr St.

to think of the five nundred and odd I ovens can and will' produce. Besides forth stuff that is used in making Then there is material : for camphor the remaining 442 kindred extracts, j one would hardly think that it had so we thought it had. But latter dav in the decision of Judge Anderson vicious. Then it will correspond more I for vice and crime. Indianapolis Star. make it possible for him to exercise to many a lad, who, were he simply a term In jail or In the reform school, boys, and girls too for that matter. Is the state board of pharmacy revoking unobstrusive sort of waj?,-just why the a oersistent law violator ; 'governor, if he violates the law at all?

RANDOM

THINGS & IXIKGS YOU can't have weather to suit you every day, you know. JUDGE Anderson is not very pas sionate about the saloonmen either. WINTER is certainly doing an awful lot of lingering in Miss Spring's lap. HESSVILLE Is the latest cute addition to Hammond's nifty little flock. - ; BUSINESS seems to be either suffering from mal-de-mer or else xailroaditis. LATEST reports Indicate that the revolution in Mexico is about over. Over what? NOTE that the cost of living is dropped In Chicago. Well, moving time is nigh. WON'T Mr. Lorimer please have a hair cut before having any more pic tures taken? r PERHAPS Murpnyand Conrmy forget to send a season pass to the. weather man. ' THE country is safe now that Che Indiana patronage question has beenj I amicably settled. IF you hear some big yarn going the rounds you can depend upon it that the opposite is more nearly the truth. ec ; ESTHER Mercy has sued the president of the University of Chicago. Now all together, will he have mercy;? i SEE that Oyster Bay voted to go "wet" by 1,200 majority. Where have we beard that name Oyster Bay be fore. ANOTHER report out that Kathefine Elkins is to wed Mr. Hitt. Hope she will get married soon and be done with it. I 4 ' WHILE away, Mr. Morgan is to vis it the kaiser. Believe it would be weQ for Wilhelm to sew up all of his art treasures. WE can fancy the expression o Governor Wilson's face when he was, informed that Mr. Bryan thinks ver$well of him making an awful fuss in soma .parts because New York girl married. tan Indian. rsnaw: Most women claim they did. THE city of Rochester is eettinx after the Erie In great shape, but Crown Point seems to have done all BDe possibly can . ... AN eastern preacher says a woman ought not to be required to wait until - 0 some man asks her to marry mm. Plenty of them never did. n W ! learn,ng kreat eal about Canada these days, but not nearly as much as we will when Mr. Beveridge gets started about his trip. MAN who killed himself was found to have had both appendicitis and tu merculosls. This is certainly robbing the doctors of a promising case "WHY pay Billy Sunday $8,000 to come to Lorgansport?" asks the Logansport Reporter. Echo answers "Why?" -. , : WOMAN made a will that children should not inherit her property until they were 65 years old. They will have to plaf with their dolla for long time. FINE advice Mrs. Bob Burdette is handing out "find a style of dress that fits your beauty and order a doz en of them." Then husbands would Ihave a dozen fits MIGHT be a good plan for the J'inT hlBtRnfTa''J 8taway from the boundary line. If you heard shooting in the street you wouldn't hurry toward it, would you? IT 'Uld be 8orry 3ustice for the senate to oust Lorimer and retain Shlve!v and a few otner8 wno are tarred with: the same stick. Fort Wayne News. ' Ye but we have to put up with an awful lot of things In this world. r : SOME of our subscribers who live at distance may be at a loss to know why they have not been receive) their Record for some time. The reason is f not aa I Vaa a " aioffA rf Lcarlet fever and he nad no train. ed office force, he was compelled to I suspend, publication until released from quarantine. Rolling Pratne (Ind.) Record. And still some people think they would like to run a newspaper, i

"1 ' "THIS DATE IN HISTORY " v ...... .AimfM M. - . 1534 Jacques Cartier sailed from St. Malo on his first voyage to the New

World. 1653 Cromwell Parliament. dissolved the Rump 1662 Connecticut was given a charter. 17TT New York adopted a State Constitution. 1S08 Napoleon III born.- Died an. 9, 1873. 1S24 Albert G. Porter. 19th governor of Indiana, born in Lawreneeburg, Idn. Died in Indianapolis, May 3, 1897. 1861 Confederates seised the United States arsenal at Liberty. Mo. 1882 Dominion parliament passed the Canadian Pacific Railroad bill. 1904 Fire in Toronto destroyed property worth $10,000,000. 1910 The New York Assembly defeated the Federal Income taxe amendment. 'THIS IS "MY TOTH BIRTHDAY" aha A. Mead. John A. Mead, governor of Vermont, was born in Rairhaven, Vt., April 10, 1S41, and In early childhood became an orphan. As a youth he worked at odd jobs and saved money enough to enable him to enter Franklin Academy. Later he entered Middlebury College and was graduated in 1864. In 1868 he graduated from the Columbia Medical Cqilege and for three years following Vas a physician at the Brooklyn City Hospital. In ,1870 Gov. Mead resigned tils position with the hospital and re turned to Rutland, where he started the practice- of medicine. Later he em barked in business as a scale manufacturer in Rutland and in the course of years accumulated a large fortune. His public career dates from 1892, in which he was elected a member of the Vermont senate. Four years later he returned to the legislature as a rep resentative and in 1908 he was elected lieutenant governor of Vermont on the Republican ticket. Last year he was the choice of his party for governor of the State and was elected for the term ending In ctober of next year. Times Pattern Department DAILY FASHION HINT. LADY'S KITCHEN APRON. . This apron offers sufficient protection t the gown when the wearer is doing any ordinary work, in cook In the main dan. er la to the front of the skirt, which can be spattered, and somewhat to the bib. ' The front of the apron is so cut that it holds in clorely to ihe figure, and there are a few. gathers 'around the waist at the sHes. to make the skirts sufficiently full. The large pockets form part of the traps which go ever the shoulders. , This apron always looks neat, it takei It will generally answer all purposes quit mora Duixy garment. The. pattern j, it cut la gIl t0 44 inches bust measure. Medlvm else rqu'res 4i yards of 27 Inch material. , The above pattern can be obtained by fending ten cents to the ofTlce of this UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A MOTHER- DIES OF GRIEF. ! Mrs. Frank Crandall. age forty, is dead at her home near Vawter Park, at -"Warsaw the' victim of grief and teorry, followed by insanity, 4ver the loss of a sixteen-year-old son, who was drowned in Lake Wawasee two weeks ago. Mrs. Crandall was In good health up to the day her son started across the lake to join a party of duck hunters. The boy's boat was found the next

d4y. Mrs. Crandall became insane after two daya of worrying. MAILS SPREAD TCBERCl"LOIS. When Henry Mueller of Terre Haute a tnall distributer at the postofflce, was top 111 to come to work, a physician sad his lungs were affected, and this word being earrled to the office caused the clerks to count the dead from the distributing department In the last five yeaxa and whose death was caused by tuberculosis. It has averaged one clerk a year and there is no longer doubt thad the germs of the disease come into the office with the mail. When a sack of mall is thrown upside down, with the mouth open, on a table there arises a, fine dust. A consumptive sealing an envelope and affixing the stamp on a letter in New York may easily infect a ma!) clerk in Terre Haute. 37 TEARS OLD. HAS 14 CHILDREN. The wife of Abraham' Rutt, ' a1- well

HOW THE MOST MAGNIFICENT CATHEDRAL

t ' v - ' : i 1 ' J , j

The magnificent new cathedral of St. John the Divine will be dedicated this week in the presence of clerical dignitaries of this country and abroad, and of many prominent Americans, Including Mrs. Taft. wifa of the President. Aside from the impressive architectural beauty of the cathedral. It has been so built that It will practically defy tbe efforts of time t deface or destroy It In this latter respect, it is said that It. will rat" pass all other structures erected by man.

known German farmer living three ' miles below Evansville, is thirty-six J years old and is the mother of fourteen robust children. During the last two years she has given birth to two sets of twins. Mrs. Rutt is in gooa health. TEACHES MUSIC 44 YEARS. Having served for 44 years as super visor of music in the schools of Evans ville and believed to be the oldest liv ing music teacher in point of service, Milton Z, Tinker, 77 years old, left today to attend the convention of the association of school music super visors of America at Detroit, Mien., at the expense of the association. Mr. Tinker was born in KlngsdaH O., in 1834. AITO INJURES POLICEMAN. Knocked down while at his corner post of duty, D. L. Hilliard. of Soutn Bend, traffic policeman, was seriously injured yesterday by an auto driven by Samuel Lee per, president of the Ameri can Trust Company. Leeper carried the injured policeman to a hospital in the auto. HELD FOR MANSLAtrUHTBR. Arraigned on a charge of involuntary manslaughter In having brought about the death of his step-daughter, Ethel Stewart, on March 31 last. Squire Thomas of BlQomington, pleaded not guilty and was remanded to Jail. Thomas was brought here from St. Joseph, Mo., where he was1 arrested by the chief of police, who thereby galnel a reward of 1100. Before her death. Miss Stewart made' a statement A to Prosecutor Regester, in which she i alleged to have said that Thomas had mistreated her since she was 13 years old. MOTORCYCLIST HAS ADVENTURES. Bert Moorman, of Rushville, his new motorcycle and his morning plan for a day of serene enjoyment of resh air and a quest for mild adventure, led to events, yesterday. the whirl started with a puncture, Moorman laughed; 'twas nothing. A boy threw a rock at him. Moorman spoke to the boy's father, who chased Moorman with a knife. B-r-r-rl from the new motorcyc-l, and Moorman was out of reach. He laughed. Then things really began to happen. Moorman bumped into a traction car and was thrown far. Later he was forced to jump from his machine to avoid death under a C, H. A D. train. The motorcycle was struck. Moorman was bruised, but he just laughed. Moorman then continued on his explosive way. until he hit Prosecutor Dennis O'Xiel. Both hit the street. . Moormann did not dare to laugh be cause O'Neil did not seo the humor of the situation. SCRATCH MAY CAUSE DEATH. A. L Yants, a farmer, living., west of Princeton, received a scratch on the hand from a chicken's claw while wringing the fowl's neck. He paid no attention to the scratch at the time, but blood poisoning has developed, and Yants is said to be dying. A similar case is that of Mrs. W. L. Christy, a neighbor, who scratched a hand on a pin. ' The hand is swollen to double the natural size. FATALLY BURNED WITH GASOLINE. Melvln Warner, age twenty-four, was fatally burned at John Deerlng s garag. five miles west of New Paris, today. He was brazing a gasoline pipe, when the gasoline caught fire. Sporting Briefs Manager Tenney of the Boston Nationals has traded Pitcher Burke for Catcher Bridges of the Montreal club. John Selgel, the old Cincinnati outfielder, has signed to---manage the Clarkesville club of the Kitty league. The St. Louis Browns will grab First Baseman Holmhurst if the Cleveland club should turn the youngster adrift, Steve Philbin of Yale. "Dizxy" Wadsworth of Williams, and John Simons of Harvard will play with the Pilgrim allstar college team. The new Union Association will open ita season April 25. play 142 games, and close on Sept. 10. John MeCloskey. Dick Cooly. Bill Joyce and Cliff Blankenship- are the promoters of the organization.

ARB YOU HEADING THE TIMES!

IN THE WORLD WILL

The Evening Chit-Chat By RUTH CAMERON

Christ, the Lord, is risen, and therefore I must get me a new hat and gown with which to celebrate this great anniversary. Sounds terrible, ' doesn't it? Makes you positively shudder at its bald irreverence. And yet that is substantially what thousands of American women are saying by their manner of celebrating Easter day. j . "What are you going to have new for Easter?" Nearly everywhere in the last few weeks of Lent you bear that question. And In the dressmaker's little back room, at the tailor's shop, in the sweat shops and In the millinery work rooms, overwrought nerves, tired fingers,- and throbbing eyes are kept at their tasks 12 and IS-hours a day to answer that question. - J Truley we are doing almost: as well with Easter as we have with Christmas. I know a- girl who stayed home" from church last Easter because "I didn't have' a Single new thing to wear and and I felt too shabby." I know two other girls who went to church on Easter for the first time in two or three months to wear their Easter suits and hats. Just think for a moment of what

American Commander at Critical Point.

I ? : v. -.A V I . v JvS!k -v ! - " : tvk f " ; ' v - U-f V v-,- , -, i, vT; " - N . ' ' " 5ta i v i v' . x ' . s -. i - s ' ' ' ; f , ? 'i. - i k' i .. ..... - mzim r- -' ;? v -;f T ' t :

Lieut. Col. Shunk Is In command of the American troops at Douglas, Ariz., where the rain of Mexican bullets from the fighters across the border at Agua Prieta threatens to cause complications between Mexico and tbe United

States, i

LOOK ON COMPLETION

Easter means. Easter is the day above all Christian holy days even above Christmas, it seems to me which should hold the fullest significance for Christian. It celebrates the greatest belief of mankind, the belief in Immortality. Easter is the day which gives its magnlf leant chant of St. Paul's which sums up the greatest outcome of the great man's' life' "O, death, where is thy sting? "'O, Grave, where Is thy victory?" And we are making this wonderful oi wonaeriui aays, a aay aeaicaiea to clothes, a day when we ttay at home from worship because we are shabby, or go because we have new garments to show off, a day to prepare for whichC we let our less fortunate sisters suffer ' the agonies of overwork. '' No, there Is nothing- wrong in liking beautiful things. ! There Is nothing unseemlngly in discarding ones dark winterNgarments and trying to make oneself more In harmony with the beautiful spring things about one. But It seems to me there Is great harm In allowing the clothes interest to obscure the. meaning of . Easter as much as we 'American women are in danger of doing. ; Don't you agree with me? ,