Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 275, Hammond, Lake County, 10 May 1911 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Wednesday, May 10, 1911.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING TKK GARY EVENING TIMES KDITION. THE LAKE) COUWTT TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THE LAKE COINTY TIMES EVENING EDITION AND THE TIMES SPORTING EXTRA ALL. DAILT NEWSPAPERS. AND THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES SATURDAY AND WEEKLY EDITION, PUBLISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY. The Lake County Times Evening: Edition (daily except' Saturday and Sunday) "Entered as second class , matter February 3. 1911. at the postofflce At Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 3, 1S79." The Gary Evening Times Entered as second class matter October 5, 1909, at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 8, 1879." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as econd class matter January 30, 1911, at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 3, 1879." 1 i 1 1 MAIN OFFICE HAMMOND, 1XD., TELEPHONE. Ill 112. EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR TELEPHONE S. GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BI.1IG, TELEPHONE 13T.

BRANCHES EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WHITING," CROWN POINT,

TOLLESTON AND LOWELL.

WW Oflle York. Offlc

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YEARLY" , 93.09

HALF YEARLY : -80 SINGLE COPIES ONE CENT

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

CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL

TIMES. TO SUBSCRIBERS Reader of THE TIMES are revented to favor the

Cement by report I aay Irregularities in delivering. Conimtialcate with the

Circulation Department. COMMUNICATIONS.

THE TIMES will print nil com mi unloads a on subjects tot general Interest to the people, Svhem sncat commaalcattons nre signed by the writer, but will

reject all eoaaaaanleatlons aot algmed, no matter what their merits. This pre

caution Is takes ta avoid misrepresentations.

THE TIMES la published la the best Interest of the people, nnd fts titter-

neea always latsaded to promote the general welfare of the public at large. THE BEST NEWS EVER.

When the news was carried In this paper yesterday that union bricklayers and carpenters were returning to work in Gary, it was the one best

bit of news that the cities of the Calumet region have heard in months.

RANDOM

THINGS & FLINGS

THE political game in these parts

Is about as dead as a Bait mackerel.

o

NEW story to be used for D. T.

cases at the Hammond police station.

' 1 09 "

GIVE a discredited labor leader

rope enough and he will hang himself.

WHEN you are in doubt you might

put an ad in THE TIMES and find out!

OH girlie, when he says that you

are the light of his life, just tell him that is all gas.

IP they do hold a new election in

Mexico, we believe that Padre Diaz

can put it across again.

- CASTLEMAN doesn't care how

much money Gary spends as long as

he has the spending of it.

YES, and we are also saving a cut

of a sensational bathing suit which

we shall spring when it hits Gary.

WHY is Carl Heins still tearing his

hair when he was "caught with the

goods." Oh bat us a few easy ones.

-e

HEARD of a society woman the

other day who was neglecting her

bridge sadly to look after her children.

IF Kern wants to kill off his presi

dential boom, just let him say that he

wants the job and he won't have to

worry any more

GOV. Wilson is trying to eliminate

all the party factions. Well, Mr. Wil

Buildings, which have been held back on account of 'the uncertainty of son kindly put the Indiana republic

labor conditions, will soon be rushed to completion and money will be ans next to 1116 remedy'

TJOnred into flarv as of vrtrv Thft hnllrHnz- nf th Htv has hcon ht1H hnrlr I

D . WOULDN'T it be a good thing to 1 i J A J .1 I

. yeir auu us ueveiopmem. sauiy reuirueu. 8md out a train of raTm(r rpir,n

The passing of the Finneran-Carmody-O'Conrior regime of graft, which booster once In a while. Look at the

was undoubtedly the cause of the first trouble, is hailed with joy. Gary can llve ones we could start out

breathe a slsh of relief as also can Hammond.

.... , . , ltit. larmers are too blamed busy Building work can now go on uninterruptedly. Craftsmen are getting ul th, , gh for

high wages and they will be able to command them indefinitely. What this bumper crops to worry in the least

means to business men and industry in general is incalculable. I about the reciprocity business.

THE JURIES' RESPONSIBILITY. mucn gossip aDout some peo I nlf that vnn hnrrHv Tinnw irtint tr. Via.

TVT-i fn n Attr o 4 v-irl Mas a va V-. o n Vi tstl-t r Via Inn a . f nV ! 1 ,1 t )n I

- -..o "".v. 'u'icii.c uV mnuitu lieve(" sald a woman on the streetcar.

lated, it does well to point to the juries in Lake county which have ac-why believe any of it, madam?

quitted men charged with this crime, when the evidence against them was pre- J

nonderatine. It has come to be accpnted as a fnrt that nil that la nooH DOCTOR says tonsils should be re-

. - 1 - - -- -" . i .

they cause

THIS DATE IN HISTORY" Mm in

1774 Louis XV. of France died. Bom

Fen. 15. 1710.

1775 Fort Ticonderoga surrendered to

Allen and Arnold.

781 Gen. Sumter captured the British

force at Orangeburg, S. C

7S4 Great jubilee In Philadelphia to

commemorate . the conclusion of peace with England.

813 First steam ferrv used between

New York and Brooklyn.

823 John Sherman statesman, born

In Lancaster, O. Died In Washington. D. C. Oct. 22. 190.

838 James Bryce, British ambassador

to the United States, born In Belfast, Ireland.

849 Astor Place- riots. started bv

friends of Edwin Forrest to break up Macready's acting at the Astor Place Opera House.

860 Theodore Parker, famous preach

er and Abolitionist, died in Rorao, Italy. Born in Lextlngton. Mass.. Aug. 24, 1810.

865 Jefferson Davis captured at

Irwinville, Ga.

876 Opening of the Centennial Ex

hibition at Philadelphia.

878 The "Scott Act" to regulate the

liquor traffic by local option passed by the Dominion Parliament and received the royal assent.

1902 Attorney General Knox filed a pe

tition at Chicago to dissolve the "beef trust"

1903 Two hundred houses in Ottawa,

Ont., destroyed by fire.

910 Emperor William received CoL

Roosevelt and family at Potsdam. "THIS IS MY ND BIRTHDAY" Dtohop Hngan. Rt. Rev. John L. Hogan, the veneral

bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of

Kansas City, was born in Limerick.

reland. May 10, 1829. When he was

ighteen years old he came to America

nd son after was graduated from the

theological seminary in St. Louis and

rdained to the priesthood. His first

fforts were directed toward colonizing

the northern part of Missouri, because

he found it difficult for men and women

o get employment with negro slave

labor at hand. In this work he. was

ery successful and during the civil

war period and the years that im

mediately followed he bunt many

hurches. He continued his missionary

work in Missouri until 186S. in which

ear he wa sappointed and consecrated

as bishop of St. oseph. In 1S80 he was

ransferred to the new se of Kansas

City.

moved because

rheuma

tism. Yes, and red noses should be

ana a lenient jury, ine lenient jury nas been the easiest thing to find In trimmed as they also cause warts.

Chis locality.

The list of these crimes that have gone unpunished is such that the

finger of shame would be pointed at a community that would tolerate such conduct. Janko Tomas was alleged to have ruined Mary Popescu. This

little girl was put through the torture of a long trial and then the jury ac

quitted Tomas when those who heard the evidence were convinced of his

guilt

Joseph Kusine is a free man today, although he is generally believed to

have violated the chastity of little Anna Miller. William J. Hall is a free

man through the intercession of a liberal jury. Edward Winter was acquitted by "twelve good men and true," although he was nearly mobbed by the women of the neighborhood in which Edna Hoin, his alleged victim,

lived.

A BISHOP says that newspapers

need the same sort of ethics that the

doctors and lawyers do. Wonder how

long a newspaper would last if it had?

g-

FAMILY named Dam, numbering

six Dam girls and six Dam boys left

New York last week to settle in Iowa-

They are going to buy a Dam farm

there.

GOVERNOR. Marshall hands one of

his justly celebrated knocks to the pat

ent medicines in Chicago when he

spoke there. Does the Gov. include

And now James Finneran and companions are charged with the seduc- bitters?

ee

COUPLE of soulmates in St. Louis

have contracted a mental marriage

Will they pay the bills with "mental

money" and feed the baby with "ment

tion and ruin of two little girls whom they took from under the protecting

influences of the church. An Illinois jury will handle the case of Finneran.

This morning word was received that a foreigner in the Standard Steel Car

settlement had assaulted a mere child. If Immunity from punishment is re

sponsible for the wave of crimes of this character, the responsiblity of the al milk"?

juries that free such men is a grave one. I

'THE railroads in Indiana are said

I 1 1 i A . Jill 1 1 n

" road report. Does this include the

It is reported officially that a man can support a family of five decently Erie for if it does, we have our idea

on $600 a year, which is considerably less than $2 a day. We do not believe of the report

it It is true there may be places In this country where, with the strictest

economy, a man with a family of five could subsist on less than $2 per diem, but In the manufacturing centers and city it is an impossibility. An

exchange In commenting on this, says It is, also, nonsense to say that an increase of earning power brings economic waste. ' It is true that some men are so constituted that whatever they get they largely squander. This is exactly as true of the well-to-do and rich as it is of the poor; there is no class distinction in human nature. But, while some waste, the majority use any added income with fairly good sense. They may save it all or they may use a part to ; better their grade of living and save the rest It is a fact that the savings deposits are the first to respond to good times and bad times, to increases of earning power and to decreases. With the rich it is the luxuries that j.re the barometer of prosperity; with the poor it is the savings banks. An English authority, after thorough investigation in this country and his own, has' reported that the wage scale here i3 135 per cent above that of England, and the living cost is 50 per cent greater.

PENNSYLVANIA snake story sea

son has opened. Farmer near Union

town, after cleaning out his cellar,

Btretched 117 feet of snakes along hi

fence. Persons who had no snakes of

their own came miles to see them.

V

HE'S ONE OF STARS

OF PIRATE STAFF

WHOSE FAULT IS IT? A gadding girl bespeaks, nine times out of ten, an indifferent or ignorant mother, says an exchange. Vanity and desire to get into the social swim Is also largely to blame. Mothers become imbued with the idea that the main thing to get the girl into society and the grade of society does not alwajB count. She is started to a dancing school before she has reached her teens, taught that dress is the chief end of her existence, permitted to spoon and lally-gag half the night with some spindle-shanked man-cub and brought up to believe that housework is beneath her dignity. After school Ehe straddles around down town, stuffing her system with chocolate sundaes at the expense of some male with cuffs on his pants and a fried-egg cap, whose father hasn't had a vacation in sixteen years and is wearing year before last's hand-me-down pants. And whose fault is it?

-:-...;. ..-.i.-i '

earttolle&ft

Talks. By EDWIN A.IVYE.

HIS SEAT THE PRICE OF PEACE; PRESIDENT DIAZ WITH HIS WIFE AND DAUGHTER; THEY MAY HEREAFTER LIVE IN PARIS

THE WHEEL OF FORTUNE. Lack? There is no such thing.

That is to say, in this well ordered

universe what . is known as luck is merely an accident. And even as to

accidents the rule holds good that

Nothing happens without cause.

To rely upou chance or luck is to

rely upon something that may never

happen.

Events in this world are governed

by the Inflexible rule of fixed laws.

There is no fate.

The primitive man believed in a pow

er he could feel, but whose laws he could not understand. Exhibition of

this power he traced to self willed no

tions of some erratic divinity.

Therefor superstition.

Therefore the consulting of sibyls

and oracles by the ancients and, by

the same token, the patronage of palm

ists and fortune tellers by the moderns.

If yon merely hope for "something to turn up" yon are Indulging in the vagaries of dreamland. If you rest on the hazard of mere chance you risk

ruin. Facts rule events.

If you fall do not rail at your luck

Blame yourself.

If you, the captain on the deck of

Destiny, run your vessel on the rocks.

either it Is the fault of your charts or

your lack of seamanship. If you go adrift and without

knowledge of navigation your bark

must become a derelict. Belief iu luck ruins men.

Belief in God. iu self, in just and

righteous laws, makes men.

If you persist in depending upon "signs" and peril your future on the Jeopardy of speculation what may you

expect ? And note this: The man who risks his fortune on the turn of a wheel can have no reverent or trusting mind and no proper self respect, because he believes only In "luck." and the god of luck will betray him. He Is ignorant. The wise mna believes In natural causes and effects, natural laws and penalties.

-- ""li .1 II JV i St -mk , -At

p fp if

mm

w r -i&tt

Presideni Diaz at laat acceded to the demands of Francisco I. Madero, the rebel leader, and announced his Intention to resign as President of Mexico. His wife anu daughter have long pleaded with him to retire. The family may to to Paris to make their home

The Evening Chit-Chat By RUTH CAMBRON

Did you ever have the experience of

finding yourself suddenly thinking of

some person or s"tme place which you

hadn't thought of for months, and of which there was apparently nothing In the landscape, the conversation or your own trend of thought to suggest

to you?

I'll answer for you. Tes. If you are

my old friend, '"The average person, of course, you have.

And now another question. Do you ever attempt to seek out

what has been the train of thought or the aeroplane of suggestion that has oenveyed this place or person to your mind?

Again. I'll answer for you. You have not. But you really ought to try, for truly it Is a most Interesting experiment. Some one suggested it to me and the other evening I tried It. I was awkling down the street alone, after a visit to the dressmaker's. I was thinking of a new spring gown and of nothing else when suddenly, quite to my own surprise, I realized that the thought of a man I

hadn't seen for a year or thought of

for the same length of time had popped Into my head. At first It seemed to me that the coming of this thought at Just that moment was absolutely unaccountable, and then I

searched about In my mind and found that I had Just passed the house where his first wife's people had once lived. My eye had undoubtedly lit upon the house and far below the surface of my conscious mind the train of thought had started that brought that man's

image to me. The process of suggestion had been so swift that I had been entirely unaware of It, but It was there Just the same, and I suppose it always is even when we utterly fail to Identify it In a somewhat similar fashion, often during a conversation, after a moment's silence, you or your companion will suddenly speak out on a subject quite alien to what you had been talking about Now you will find it a most interesting experiment to trace, or ask him to trace, the train of thought that carried you or him so far away from the previous topic And not only are such experiments Interesting, but they are also excellent mental training. After you have traced a train of thought a few times you will be surprised how much easier the process comes and how much knowledge you are acquiring of one of the most fascinating of studies, the psychology of your own mind. RUTH CAMERON.

UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A

GAIVS F1SH 0' WATER DIET. "Plenty of water, a starved man's rations," said John Pellum of Eagle Creek near Evansville yesterday when asked his prescription of gaining seven pounds of flesh in three days to come within the weight limit for army recruits. Tellum went into "training

to get additional weight immediately

fy the other eight, but Deputy Prosecutor Regester yesterday came Into possession of some Information that will later result in the arrest of another and possibly two more citizens of Bloomlngton. These arrests are to be made within a day or so, but the men's names will not be given out until the officers get their hands on them. CONFESSES MAJTV FORGERIES. Dispatches received this evening told of the arrest at Waterloo, la., of G. W. Reynolds, a Port Wayne traveling man, and his confession to the commission of

forgeries In various parts of the country aggregating $1.1! 00. Letters from Reyn- . old's wife, found on his person, pleaded with him to abandon his criminal life. He traveled for a St. Paul concern. GIVEX LIFE IMPRISONMENT. Frank Huff. Janitor ot the First Methodist Church, at Terre Haute, whi was arrested late Saturday, charged with attacking four little girls, pleaded guilty In Circuit Court yesterday afternon and was sentenced to life imprison ment in the Michigan City prison. Huff, who is 54 years old, is a married man with a family.

IF THE WORKER. TOU'RHl LOOKING! FOR DOESN'T ADVERTISE TODAY. YOU ADVERTISP5 FOR HTM IN THE TIMES TOMORROW! AND THE SAME DOUBLE CAPACITY FOR SERVICE HOLDS TRUE OF ALL TH3 WANT AD CLASSIFICATIONS.

"Babe" Adams is expected to shtne j In the box for the Pittsburg Natloni al3 this year, as of old. He's a star.

THE DAY IN CONGRESS

after the enlisting officers informed him

he was too llsrht. He was welghedibular.ee were summoned

twice daily at the station until he 'man is a student of Indiana University

dynamite, the city officials decided to

give the matter as wide publicity as possible. BL.OOMINGTON STUDENT SHOT. Allen Busklrk, one of the best known young men of Bloomington, and son of the late Lawrence V. Busklrk. president of the First National Bank, accidentally shot himself this evening at a fishing camp near Solsberry. In company with his cousin, rhillp Hill, he was fishing and hunting and In attempting to take a rifle, out from under a wheelbarrow at the camp, the gun was accidentally discharged, "the bullet passing through his right lung. Ho was placed in a buggy and taken t the office of Dr. Mosler at Stanford, and upon arrival there several physician and an am-

The young

reached the required limit. PAWNS HOES TO SEE SHOW. Love for the sights of the show grounds, according to the allegations of his wife, caused Charles Reese, of Indianaoolls. colored, to take a pair of

and member of the Phi Psl Fraternity.

KILLED IN FALL FROM CAR.

Falling from the top of a car of a southbound Lake Erie & Western freight train at Plymouth yesterday

afternoon, A. R. Bodlne of Peru,

Times Pattern Department

DAILY FASHION TIINT."

shoes purchased for his wife Saturday, ' ."" '"J""" im wmui .i ihm vosterdav With the : be died a few minutes later. He was

money obtained it is said a circus ticket

mansrled bv the car wheels.

and a buggy ride were paid for. When Reese returned home last night his wife is said to have attempted to

RABIIIES IN TWO HEADS. Heads of six animals suspected of rabies have been examined at the path-

SENATE. Free list bill received from the house and sent to the finance committee. Gore introduced joint resolution providing that indvpendcne.j ne crantcd viding that Independence be granted the Philippines. Stone, in speech, sharply criticised the president for not taking action to protect Americans on Mexican border. Adjournment taken until Thursday. HOISE. Hardwick resolution passed ordering

an investigation of the sugar trust. Hamill of New Jersey introduced a bill creating civil service pension list. All government employes over sixty to be retired afteo July next, with a graded percentage of their salaries.

chastise him. She Is alleged to have ( ologlcal laboratory of the state board cha.ed him out of the house. 610 West j of health this week, and two were found Vermont street, then driven out the to contain rabies germs. One of the landlady, using a large knife as an ( Infected heads was that of a dog, sent orsumfnt. Roth husband and wife were In by R. M Campbell, of Lafayette,

i arrested by Patrolmen Mosby and Helm. where the animal was reported to have

Ottle Bransford, colored, 320 Toledo ; bitten live stock. Another, also tha street reported that a man broke into ' head of a dog, was sent In by John T. her home, rifled her trunk and. when Willett, city sanitary officer, of South caught in the act, struck and beat her. Bend, where the dog was reported to

He also is said to have threatened her with a revolver.

other heads

DVN4MITE IS STOLEN. Clinton city officials have announced a reward of $100 for information leading to the arrest of thieves who stole twenty sticks of dynamite, six dynamite caps and some fuse from the tool house of the Clinton Paving Brick Company's plant at the north edge of

Clinton. There Is a great deal of dissatisfaction over the allotment of saloon licenses, one Italian and one Austrian having obtained licenses, and when it was suggested that this dissatisfaction

might be connected with the theft of

have bitten a boy. The

were of farm animals. WIHTECAPPERS ARRESTED. In custody of Deputy Sherlft Robinson and Constable Norman, William C. Chambers and Jack Grubb, farmers who live In the extreme southeast section of the county, were brought to Bloomington, late last evening charged with being among the number of the men who participated last Friday night In the whitecapping of Harvey McFarley. The

arrest of Chambers and Grubb makes a total of seven men already taken by the olllcers out of the gang of fifteen that

did the flogging. McFarley said that he did not identl

4966,

LADIES' PRINCESS DRESS. The princess style is one which Is sa becoming that woman will not abandon it. The dress illustrated Is one of the best examples for general use. There is a small square yoke and helow this the front of the dress has a Ion straight panel. The sides and back of th waist are fitted and the gores extend well below the hips. Here the skirt is attached, the material being laid In pleats all around The closing of the dress Is In the back. Lawn, with Insrtions. organdie, chains, etamines. voile, ponsree, sat'n and numbers of the noveltv wash materials ar suitable for mnking this style. The pattern. 4.P6B. is cut In sizes S2 te 42 Inches bust measure. Medium slxe requires 74 yard of SB Inch material. The above pattern can be obtained by sending ten cents to the oface of th4 paper.