Hammond Times, Volume 5, Number 280, Hammond, Lake County, 16 May 1911 — Page 4
4
THE TIMES. Tuesday, Mav 16, 1911.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING THUS GARY EVENING TIMES KDITION. THE UKB COCWTY TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK KDITION. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES EVENING EDITION AND THE TIMES SPORTING EXTRA, ALL. DAILY 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 (dally except Saturday and Sunday) Entered as second class matter February 3, 1911. at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress, Maroh 3, 1879." The Gary Evening Times EntereJ as second class matter October 6, 1909. at the postofflce at Hammond, Injiana, under the act of Congress, March 8. 1879." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as second class matter January 30, 1911. at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 3, 1179. "
CERTAINLY
grand juries.
FIRST call
warning.
HAIN OFFICE HAMMOND, KD., TELEPHONE. Ill "l EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR TKLEPHOJiE 90S. GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BLOG, TELEPHONE 137. BRANCHES EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WHITING, CROWN POINT, TO LLES TO N AND LOWELL.
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COMMUNICATIONS.
THE TIMES will prist all eaaaataaleatlraa aa aabeeta af gvaeral imfnmt
tae peaIa, when suck eamaaaaieatlaaa are alarved ay tae writer, bat will reject all aaaamaalcatlaaa aat atgaad, ma matter what their merits. Thta pre-
raatlaa la takea to avoid tatarereaea.taH a.
THE TIMES la pnfclUhed la the heat lateraat af the aeeale. ltd fta Iter
ances always lateaded ta pramata the general welfare of the public at large.
THE STANDARD OIL DECISION.
The government through the supreme court of the, land has put the
Standard Oil company In restraint and the long-awaited decision so mo
mentous to the giant octopus is the topic of the hour in industrial circles The prosecution against the Standard Oil trust was begun in Roosevelt's ad
ministration and business has awaited its outcome ever since with a great
Jeal of anticipation. The higher court has merely affirmed the decision
of the lower court, averring that the trust has used extraordinary instead
of normal methods in Its industrial development. The Standard Oil com
jpany has now six months to dissolve. There is no reason to doubt but what the great company anticipated the decision and the change may be
effected even sooner than that. The decision of the courts cause little sur
prise. Monopoly has reached its high water mark. It will ebb from now
on. Other great trusts, against which prosecutions are pending, may reason
ably expect like treatment from the courts. There should not be any more
illegal combinations in big business than there i3 in the little businesses,
The effect vof the Standard Oil decision Is problematical. If you have any interest in Standard Oil outside of the few gallons of gasoline left in your
tank it will not lessen in value. The country will move on just the same
and you will have to dig Just as hard for a living.
SOME MORE GOOD NEWS.
f The report that contracts have been awarded for the construction of the 51,000,000 plant of the Gary, Bolt & Screw company is more good news for
Gary. If it is true that the plant will be completed by fall this means that
nearly 1,000 ,men will be employed. Thi3 is the first company independent of the United States Steel corporation that has been permitted to .come to Gary and locate on territory adjacent to the steel trust's mills. Gary wel
comes this new plant not so much that it will employ a large number of men
but because a number of smaller factories of this kind win mean much to
the city during any period of depression in the steel trade.
RANDOM THINGS 6 FLINGS
having a wave of
for the
dog muzzle
ARKANSAS man ate a bowl of
yeast on a wager. Swell stunt, eh?
i A
AN umpire is a man who likes trou
ble so well that he just hunts It all the time.
MR. O'Connor's excuses have about
as much reason to them as a bucket
of slop.
SOME people play bridge whist for
fun, because it is so much fun play
ing for money.
"THIS DATE IN HISTORY" May 18.
1760 The French retired from Quebec.
1799 Honors de Balzac, celebrated novelist, born In Tours. Died tn
Harts, Aug. 18, 1850.
1832 Philip D. Armour, pioneer In the
meat packing Industry, born In
htockfcridgre, N. Y. Died in Chicago,
J 6, 1901.
1853 First steam train run in L'nntr
Canada left Toronto for Aurora over the old Ontario, Slmcoe and
Huron Railroad.
1S64 banta Anna made a triumphal
entry Into the City of Mexico.
i8to .National Republican convention
in Chicago nominated Abraham
Lincoln for resident.
1871 The Vendome Column, erected In I
Taris by Napoleon I. to commemorate his victories, pulled down
by the Communists.
lS9a Peter H. Burnett, first srovernor
of California, died in San Francisco.
1910 Ex -President Roosevelt arrived
lnXondon. : THIS IS MY 6STH BIRTHDAY" Earl Cartnton.
Earl Carington, president of the
British Board of Agriculture, was born
May 16, 1843, and received his education at Kton and Cambridge. His father. It
REMARKABLE PHOTOGRAPH OP THE FILTHY
FLY'S HEAD MAGNIFIED THOUSANDS OF TIMES.
AS Senator Gavit is to give Gary a
league ball park. It is up to Senator is interesting to note, was the first man
Geist to at least Elve a catcher's mitt, connected with a trade who was per
mitted to sit In the House of Lords.
The nresent hnlrtor nt the title Ik I
OUR friends, the Blackhand, seem many-sided man who has seen a great
to be taking a few hints from the,jdoal of life. He entered parliament In
Pommorlsts 1 1865 ar.d since that time he has been
successively a captain of the Royal
Bodyguard, governor of New South
IF you can't get all the greens you wales, a member of the London County
want this year it is because you are j Council, and Lord Chamberlain of the too lazy to dig them up. Household for, the late Queen Vlctria.
a I in iud ne Decame presiaeni oi the . I Board of Agriculture, and is Joint
WLLL tne rarmer nas an tne time Hereditary Lord Great Chamberlain of
he wants now to work in the fields I England.
without having to complain of bad
weather.
7,
HAMMOND woman has received a
legacy of $10,000 and is congratulating herself because the lawyers won't get
any of it.
CHICAGO woman physician eays
that tobacco takes the fine edge off
the user's taste. Wonder how she
knew? 1
WE can't understand why the price of ice is so high when all you have
earttoiieart
Talks. By EDWIN A. NYB.
MAN AND WOMAN.
In a public discussion on equal suf
frage recently an Iowa orator ex
claimed:
'Woman Is Inherently weaker in
to do is to pull it out of the lakes or body and Intellect than man!"
lay for a May frost.
ANOTHER curious writer Is asking, "Why beautiful women marry ugly men?" Ever get a B. W. to admit that
the brute she married was ugly?
YOU can always bank on a Ham
mond, high school speaker masing a
good showing when he gets in a con
test no matter where it is. -
THE tariff Is up on lemons this year, and they are already yelling boil
the water. WTon't somebody please see
whether the price of beer la running it was great. Who organized Babylon.
Is she? Let us call the roll of history.
When Israel was at its lowest ebb a
woman the patriotic Deborah restor
ed the nation. Sbe not only led the
armies, but also wrote the battle
hymns.
From her throne in Egypt Cleopatra
ruled her own country and ruled also the world's greatest rulers Caesar and
Mark Antony.
The "golden age" of Greece was the
age of Pericles. But a woman ruled
Pericles and Athens and was able to answer Socrates according to his logic
Aspasia.
Babylon bas long since fallen. Once
low'
Who bat
, WHILE they are probing the shoe
machinery trust we would like to have
them asked why the old needle toe succumbed to the present bunion point
affair.
ruled it and led its armies?
Semiramls, a woman.
Wrho shook Rome when even Hanni
bal, the great son of Hamllcar, was
unable? Zenobla. a woman.
What sovereign of Russia can be
compared to Peter the Great? Only
one the great Catherine.
In the aanals of England what two
i : . ..UMU uVv- ' fi I t&rfktr ' , $ ?r V " 2 1 1 Pjk$ ' ' iA I y.
PAVE STATE LINE STREET. State Line street has been opened through to Plummer avenue at great expense to the property owners on both sides of the line. While the street is actually open for traffic, it practically i3 of no use to the community for the reason It Is not paved. It is necessary for the city of Hammond and the city of West Hammond to agree on the specifications for the paving before the work can go forward. This should be done at once so that the street may be thrown open to trafficFurthermore the street should be paved as far south as Glendale park so that it may be used to help carry the heavy traffic which comes into the city from the south. The people who have been compelled to pay their share of the cost of opening this street should regard that as a preliminary investment which must be followed up by the payment of the cost of paving the street before the benefits of the project will be received.
This Is the time of the year when the efforts of every one should be used to destroy the pestilential fly.
The above picture taken by the National Geographical Society of London and a cut of which was made for THE TIMES shows better than any story how the dreadful head of the common house fly can carry disease, dirt
and death in a thousand forms. Note the prehensile filth probe and the hundreds of filamentary appendages
surrounding the entrance to the mouth. Note on each side of the top of the head the thousands of, eyes or
HOW your illusions do vanish. The reigns stand out above all others? Any facets as they are called that the fly has to see all the filth. Study this picture well and if you have ever
sweet pitcher who made such a hit schoolboy will tell you the reigns of seen aught more hideous, tell us what It is. Think of the fly swarming In the alley among the rotten garbage.
with the Bloomer Girls at Hammond iiizabetn ana victoria. putrescent filth and decaying animal matter loading up those marvelous n laments wun nun ana aise.ases ana
Can Austria In all its troubled his- then flying into your house alighting on your baby's mouth or its eyes or on the fcod you have put on the
tory point with pride to a more eml- table! Remember that everything the fly touches in any way sticks to It for it exudes a sticky viscid
matter in every one of those appendages. Do you wonder why the fly is a deadly enemy. Swat the fly!
and the Harbor Eltynge stunt.
CONSERVATION OF DRINKING WATER. The chain of five lakes, of which Lake Michigan is one, comprise the largest bodies of fresh water on the globe. WThile they do not rival the Inland sea of Japan in natural beauty, the fact that the water is fresh makes
them of far greater utility. Outside of the purposes ot navigation, for which
all large bodies of water are used, the lakes are available as sources of drinking water for a number of large cities. The water Is also used for boiler purposes where it would be impossible to use salt water. But the
great lakes are the drinking cups for a score of cities which are already
watching carefully that the water which is sipped from their sandy rims, is
not polluted with sewage.
Speaking of conservation, the prevention of the vollution of the water
supply of so large a part of the people of the nation 13 a matter of the greatest importance.
Representative Sulzer of New York has introduced in the lower house of congress a resolution looking to the negotiating, of a treaty between the
United States and Canada for the protection and conservation of the fresh water supply of the great lakes. This is In line with the effort that is being made by cities all along the shores of the lakes to prevent the contamin
ation of the water with sewage. Congress has already acted to prevent the dumping of mud from the bottom of the Calumet river into Lake Michigan and the next step, the logical step, will be to enter into another reciprocity
with Canada by which we will agree not io throw slop into the common
drinking cup providing Canada will also abstain. That would be reciprocity
With a vengence.
is a lad doing an
"THIS is a good time of the year
nent ruler than strong Maria Theresa?
China with its centuries of govern
ment never bad an abler executive
to be active," says the editor of the than the late Empress Tsi An.
Richmond Palladium. Around here
editors have to be active all the time
or starve to death.
THERE are three classes of money
those ' who earn money, those who j burn money and the class between
those who are always trying to make
a touch.
And of peerless leaders la battle who
Is above the Orleans maid of seven
teen, Joan of Arc?
When gross tyranny oppressed the
people of South America the amazons
alone were able to free them.
And Margaret of Anlou leveled
thrones.
Time and space would fall us to tell
of those early American heroines who
fought, side by side -with their has-
UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A
MAN claims he was saved from I bands, beast and laraga, and of Moll
dpath hv hparimr thft voten nf his -itcner at aionmouin ana iiannan
sweetheart long gone hence- It won't
be wise to bank on this sort of thing,
however.
Winthrop of Lexington, of the heroic
nurses and spies of the Federal and
Confederate armies, to say nothing of
the brainy women who led philan
thropies and won reforms and who
READ a pathetic little thing about a distinguished our time.
wife donning her husband's clothes to Inferior to men!
look for work. Any woman who can't I I would undertake to show from h1s-
find work without getting into her torT that 'where woman bas been given
hubby's trousers is a dandy.
THE value of the farms in Kansas
is said to be $1,733,653,000.61. The
61 cents was probably for a bottle of
freckle lotion and a stick of chewing
gum.
SCIENTIST now holds that the men with the biggest feet are the most
sensioie. Ktm tnat gives tnem no
an equal chance she has proved her
superiority.
THE DAY IN CONGRESS
SENATE.
Two ballots taken in unsuccessful
effort to break the deadlock over the
right to tread on people s corns in a election of a president pro tem.
crowded car- I Borah called up direct election meas
ure. .
DOES the Carmody-Finneran trium- same lines as Sutherland amendment
virate claim that union men, fathers, I of last session.
SISTERS MEET AFTER 40 YEARS. When Mrs. Edward Golder, age fifty-
eight, of Devil" Lake, N. D., arrived In
Anderson yesterday afternoon to visit
her sister, Mrs. Anna Crawford, it was
the first time the sisters had met in forty years. Since her marriage at
Schenectady, N. T., forty years ago, Mrs. Golder had not seen any of her
relatives and will visit all of them In
Indiana, New York and also In eastern
Canada, before Bhe returns to North Dakota.
WAS MORMON PRISONER. Richard Milan, age elght -seven, who
was burled by the Carlisle iooge or
Odd Fellows at Carlisle this week, was
known as the oldest Odd Fellow In
Sullivan county. He joined the Carlisle
lodge in 1S52. A widow and three sou
survive. dlllan was the only survivor of a
party of pioneers who attempted to drive a large herd of cattle through to
California when gold was discoered there. "While crossing Montana they were set on by a large band of Indiana lost their cattle and narrowly escaped with their lives. At Salt Lke City he was arrested by the Mormons because
had swept refuse, when there was an
explosion. She says she felt a sharp pain In her leg, but It did not continue The wound bled profusely, but no missle
which could have caused it has been found. PAYS FINE TO GET BRIDE. Reuben Blystone, of Terre Haute, an
electrical engineer, paid a $200 fine toj obtain the release of Ruby Love from! the Indiana Woman's prison, and was '
married to her immediately on her arrival in Terre Haute. The two came to Terre Haute from Mattoon -In January and her husband followed and caused their arrest She was fined $200 and sentenced to 150 days Inprison, and
the option of accepting sentence or re-
turning home with her husband was given her. She went to prison Blystone was fined $50 and sent to Jail for thirty days. When he informed the city clerk he was ready to pay the woman's fine as soon as her term of imprisonment had expired, the prison authorities asked the court to let her serve out the fine In days, but Judge Batt said the state could not refuse payment of a fine. After the woman was sent to prison
her husband got a divorce, and as she could not remarry in Illinois within a year of divorce, the ceremony was performed in Terre Haute. ECK BROKEN BY HORSE. W. W. Bailey, of Peru, a brafceman, was killed and John DIedrich, a' farmer, and his daughter, living east of Michl-
they have never employed a hired hand, but have always done their own work. Mrs. Spradley Is as active as many women thirty years old and has never been sick a day.
Times Pattern Department
DAILY FASHION HINT,
K. .Tnrcuprl his sentiments aarainst
Mormonism. He was held about one; gan City, were seriously injurea yester-
snj n nrnmiinr tn 1mv t"tah dav afternoon, three mlJes south or
brothers and sons will sympathize
with the elect.rlans because of the fear
ful charges brought against them by
girls-
Stone made a statement explaining recent assertion that Canadian farm laborers' wages are higher than the wajres of American farm laborers. Newlands urged progressives to aid democrats in putting through constructive legislation demanded by the people. HOUSE.
The house was not in session. It
il,l.ih. wuiH was arrestea at Crown Point on Sunday. For flirting with the girls or chewing gum in church? Oh no! Not at all; for carrying a big dirk In his coat and a young cannon in his hip pocket, while he was loaded to the guards with fire water. Oh Willie, shame on you!
MR. O. P. Smith, second vice presi
dent of the Indiana Federation of La
bor, is saying that he will know more
whfira he stands toward MeNamara
. . . . . ... I against the admission of Arizona
mier no nima out wueuier ue is guiiiy I jjew Mexico
or not, sets a gooa example to those I committees.
unionists and manufacturers who have I -nairman enderwooa or tne ways
already tried the case and brought in a manS comUtf ? lssuef 8tateent . , I that the committee has not reached a
veraict, eays an exenange. i decision on the wool schedule.
he was released. SURPRISE WEDDIXG GUESTS. While arrangements for their wedding were In progress, Lowell Chapln. son of Charles A. Chapln, mllllonait head of the Indiana & Michigan Electric Company, of South Bend, eloped yesterday with Miss Elizabeth Chalifoux. of
Lowell. Mass.
Michigan City, when, a Lake Erie A Westisrn freight train, north-bound, struck the farmer's buggy. The accident occurred at a highway crossing. Brakeman Bailey was riding on the engine pilot and the farmers' horse was thrown on him. He was badly crushed, and his neck was broken. DIedrich and his daughter were rushed to a hos-
Guests were preparing to go to pltal at Michigan City.
Lowell to attend the wedding when a telegram was received by Mrs. John Chess Ellsworth, a sister of Miss Chali-
foux, saying that the couple were mar-
meets today and will take up the "fight 1 rle1 and touring New England In an
nd auto.
IXJURY CAUSE IS MYSTERY. ' X-ray examination has failed to show what a wound in the leg, suffered by Mrs. John Moore, of Letts near Greensburg. She was standing on a chair in front of an open fire into which she
WOMAN 83 PLA5TS CORN. Although eighty-three yet ord. Mrs. Martha Spradley, living in Warrick county near Evansvllle, has broken ground for her corn crop. She will plant a large acreage of corn this summer and will do her work without assistance. Mrs. Spradley remembers when most ot the county was one big forest and the Indians were nunerous. She and her daughter live on their farm and
GIRL'S DRESS. In this little frock we have something of a novelty. The waist is of one material and the rest of th dress of another, although It may be made entirely of one
If preferred
The
waist Is claln. with a rroun of tucks
la the front nesr the neck to provide a
uttle rulnest Over this copies the hlb. and to hold this up In front there are bretelles which extend over the shoulders and end at the belt In the bark. Te skirt Is a kilt model. The tautening of both waist and skirt Is In the back. Serge, cheviot, soft silk, ginuham, lawn, tte., may be used for skirt., bib and bre telles, while lawn or ballst forms the waist. Th pattern. 5,231. Is cut in elres J to 11 years. Medium size requires 1 yards ot ii Inch material for the waist and 1 yards ot 26 inch plaid for the dress, or 2 yards if only one material be used. The above pattern can be obtained by sending 10 cents to the office of this paper.
