Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 33, Hammond, Lake County, 16 September 1911 — Page 4
THE TUXES.
September 16, 1911.
THE . TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING TB.33 GARY EVE VIVO TIMES EDITION, TUB UKS OOVVTT TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION, TII3B LIKE COUHTY TtMBSS KVENINQ EDITION JtND TUB TIMES JPORTI.NG EXT1U, Ali. DAILY NKWSPAPBRS. AND THE LAKB COUHTT TIMES SATURDAY AJJTD WEEKLY KDITfON, PUBLISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTY PRXNTINO AND PUBLISHING COMPA28T.
The Lake County Times Evening Edition (dally except Saturday and ' Sunday) "Entered as second class matter February I, 1111, at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress. March S, l7t." The Gary Evening Timed Entered aa second class matter October S. l. at the postofnee at Hammond, Indiana, under the act oi Congress. March t. 17." 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. 1879."
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always lateaded to promote the areaeral welfare at the public at large
We shall do much in the years to come; But what have we done today? 'We shall give our gold in a princely sum; But what did we give today? rv7e shall lift the heart and dry the tear, We shall plant a hope in the face of fear, We shall speak the words of love and cheer; But what did we speak today? Author Unknown.
The Day in HISTORY
THE ROAD QUESTION. The only way the county authorities may be made to feel their responsibility to the public and forget their responsibility to the material men is to keep them daily aware of the fact that the public disapproves of some of their recent acts of road building. ' Indiana boulevard, built of the much-tooted cobble pebbles is a -wreck today and the job was only completed last spring. If the county would do the right thing it would forget that it built this road only a year ago and make "preparations to rebuild it again this fall. , Instead of having a smooth surface the road is full of holes, these holes fill with water, the automobiles splash out the water and make the holes bigger and the process of road destruction is rapid. An asphalt road, or a road built with a combination of asphalt and stone, is the only road impervious to moisture. The county could build a great deal of this road If it wanted to, but for some reason or another, it doesn't want to.
MAKING GARY SUFFER FOR IT. If it served no other purpose the special meeting of the Gary Commercial club, called last night to consider graft charges affecting the city
officials, brings to light that the business men of the city are getting sick and tired of the constant bickerings going on in Gary. Good reason why. The constant turmoil is hurting their pocket books. And to all intents and purposes as long as the gang now in saddle stays, there will be jangling and rackets. Gary's past history shows that they are never so happy as when they are quarreling and stirring up a rumpus. The net result of graft charges, bad government and dust kicking is that the business interests of Gary are suffering visibly. Gary needs outside capital and outside capital is xH disposed to enter a city that has conditions like Gary. This is harsh, but it is the truth, and the sooner that it is realized the better it will be for all concerned. ; ' ALL IN THE DISCARD. The Logansport Commercial club Is feeling highly indignant and you can't blame it. Logansport, you know, always quite cockily claimed to be some city. Recently the Commercial club offered a prize for a city slogan. Here are some of the Slogans submitted: "Fifty thousand dollars for whiskey and beer, to one thousand for the
betterment of city and society."
"Nothing for the elevation of masses; thousands for their destruction."
"The gates of the city are wide open but it is for rapine and robbery. A slogan that is not based on right, sobriety and morality can not prosper." Probably not of the slogans will be accepted.
ARE you one of the fall guys? - IF you are. just the common "peepul," why you don't have any rights. LAPORTE is so shocked over Gary that it has forgotten to unearth Mona Lisa there. j THE menagerie is open again and one, Jay Frank Hanly, has broke
loose In Indiana.
MAN offers a $100 piano for 500
bushels of potatoes. Must be a Napoleon of farmers.
THE festive toadstool is laying for
you when you are looking for mushrooms, remember.
ALSO the old biblical expression
comes again into vogue "the way of the transgessor is hard."
ft THERE doesn't seem to be any official anxiety in West Hammond to
pull off any more raids. .
- OH certainly, lay it to politics. Politics has broad shoulders. The people are wise, however.
MR. Diegle, of Ohio, says his honor cannot be bought. Well, perhaps not, but maybe "hizzoner" can. . ft IN the meantime the troubles in Hayti seem to be passed up for the stew in the Calumet region. . FIVE show nights In Hammond's leading theater next wek. Great stuff for the caramel and fudge brigade.
THE prohibition returns in Maine seem to indicate that they are largely
of the "on again off again variety."
NOT only has the price of fancy
beef cuts gone up, but so has the com mon or garden variety of chuck steak
THE question is, were the aldermen measured by the Bertillion or the nose and ear cast system when they were
arrested? -
NO end to the variety of entertain
ment here, but if it all bores you, get
out in the country and walk on the dead leaves. - : SEEMS that men get battered up in a fall from a church scaffold just, as quickly as they would from a saloon scaffold. k Vft EXCHANGE says that Senator Lafollette is keeping on the background. If he is, somebody has been hobbled and chained down. MRS. JImmie Ward, (nee M auger) of Indiana Harbor, is'one of the mostly widely pictured young ladies before the -public today. THE next time Governor Marshall
wants information from Mr, Dean, he will probably ''have to send for him, says the Indianapolis Star. THERE seems to be no question
now but what Mr. Blodgett will be as
important a figure in the bribery scandal as on of Mr. Dean's dictagraphs. - . - HAVING settled the question of ex
pert testimony the lawyers and doc
tors might take up the question of the dictagraph and throw a little light on it. NOTICE that 1,400 cats were as
phyxiated in New York the other day. Now we understand where all these $9.98 fur lined overcoats come
from. sift FUN,NY world. Some men see an
other working from dawn till mid
night and still wonder how the lndustrous fellow can afford to main
tain a gasolene buggy.
"GIVE us the girls as they used to appear," yells a newspaper poet. Yes,
and they'll be screaming for you as
you used to appear, you old bald headed fat-paunched chap.
THIS DATE I' HISTORY. September t. 1S3S Louis XIV of France born. Died Sept. LITIS. 1675 Duchesneau appointed intendant of New France. 1722 Samuel Adams, the "Father of the American Revolution," born In Boston. Oied there, Oct. 2, 1803. 1SC3 Francis Parkman. author and historian, born in Boston. Died Nov. 8. 1893. 1833 The boundary line between New York and New Jersey was settled. 1858 First overland mail left St. Louis for Pan Francisco. 1862 Battle of Antietam ended. 187 Hon. Alfred Boyd became first premier of Manitoba. 1901 The body of the late President McKlnley was removed from Buf
falo to Washington, where It lay In
state the following; day. THIS 18 MY WH BIRTHDAY, tie. . W. C I.e.
Major General George Washington Custis Lee, son of the late Robert E.
Iee. was born at Fortress Monroe. Vt.
fcept. 16, 1832. After finishing his
academic education he went to West
Point and was graduated there In 1S54.
ror several years he was engaged In
important military engineering work in
t lortda and California, During the
civil war he was attached to the personal staff of. President Jefferson Davis,
Soon after the close of the war General Lee became professor of civil and
military engineering at the Virginia
Military Institute. In 1871 he succeed
ed his father as president of Washington and Lee university. He continued
In that position until 1897. Since then
he has been president ereritus of the
university.
THIS DATE IX HISTORY" September 17.
1.6Z The British retook St. Johns
Newfoundland, fro mthe French. 1776 Presidio of San Francisco found ed.
1787 New Constitution of the United
States was drafted.
1S51 Boston celebrated the completion of railroad lines connecting the
city with Canada and the grea
lakes.
1862 General Jackson crossed the
Potomac and joined Lee's army.
1877 The Jefferson Medical College
was opened In Philadelphia.
1880 The 250th anniversary of the set
tlement of Boston was celebrated
1894 Japanese defeated the Chinese In
battle of Yalu River.
it xne runerai or the Empress o
Australia too kplaoe at Vienna.
1901 President McKlnley'a state fun
eral at Washington, D. C. .
"THIS IS MY 4KTH BIRTHDAY Taonaa E. Cramblet.
Dr. Thomas Cramblct. president ol
Bethany (West Virginia) College, was
born at Tappan. Ohio. Settember 17
1862. His education was received at
Scio College and Ohio State University
Later he took a theological course at Kentucky University. After graduating
from the last-named Institution In 1887
he entered the ministry of the Chris
tlan church. His first pastorate wa
mat or iresiaent aarneld s church a
Mentor, Ohio. Later he occupied pul
pits In Omaha and Pittsburgh. He re
signed the pastorate of the Kast End
Christian Church In Pittsburgh In 1901
and spent the following year In trave
In Kurope, Egypt and the Holy Land
Upon his. return home he was appointed
to his present position as president o'
Bethany College.
CALLS IT NASTY MESS. The democratic papers have little to say about the Knotts case. The only democratic paper in the state, In which we have seen an editorial on it, is the Fort Wayne Sentinel, which says: "Mayor Tom Knotts at Gary may not have been 'caught with the goods." but it looks a lot as though he had been. It does not mitigate his situation greatly that he was trapped by a sleuth posing as a promoter seeking a franchise, nor is it likely to avail much to have the "phony' promoter arrested as a briber. Altogether it is a nasty mess that has developed in Gary and in the name of civic decency it is to be hoped Mayor Knotts and the city servants and others Involved with him can make out a clear case of innocence." , '
WE HAVE th?: farmers word for it, that there wjll be plenty of pasturagt this faH. This, certainly is delightful news. Last year, about this time.
you will remember It was so dry around Crown Point that a spark from a Panhandle engine set fire to a pond and burned up a lot of bull frogs before
the fire could be extinguished.
"IT takes a lawyer to make a tech
nicality look like the second cousin of a constitutional safeguard," says the
Toledo Blade.
Yes, he's a poor lawyer If he can't
do that much. v ft-
THE couple stood beneath a canopy
of ferns while the table was tastily decorated in pink and white carnations. Elko (Nev.) Free Press. Probably an operation for appendicitis or something.
"PEOPLE don't understand that in July and August there is always a
shortage or nign-ciass beer, says a packer. Pardon us, we understand perfectly, and after using the ajTon a piece of porterhouse, brought in by
the maid last night, we understand smoke.
Up and Down in INDIANA
RIVAL CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENCY WON'T POSE TOGETHER FOR PICTURE; PHOTOGRAPHER GETS 'EM IN GROUP AT GOVERNOR'S MEET
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(O Underwood A TTaderwood. Photographers at the meeting of the House of Governors at Spring Lake, N. J., attended by governor of twenty-nine 6tates. had a lot of trouble trying to induce Harmon, of Ohio, and Wilson of New Jersey, rival candidates for the Democratic nomination for president, to pos together. It wasn't until tha governors had their pictures taken In a group that the rivals were seated together. Th cross marks their position. Those in the picture are: , Front row, left to right Edwin L. Norris, Montana; Marlon E. Hay, Washington; Wm. W. Kitchin, North Carolina; Lee Cruce, Oklahoma; Edwin F. Noel. Mississippi; Judson Harmon. Ohio; Woodrow Wilson. tNew Jersey; John K. Tener, Pennsylvania; Abram J. Potbier, Rhode Island; William E. Glasscock, West Va. 8econd row, left to right Jos. M. Carey, Wyoming; Albert W. Gilchrist, Florida; Frederick W. Plaisted, Maine; Cheeter H. Aldrich, Nebraska; Augustus E. Willson, Kentucky; Herbert S. Hadley, Missouri; August L. Crotaers, Maryland; William H. Mann, Virginia; Hoke Smith, Georgia; John E. Shafroth, Colorado. Third row. left to right William Spry, Utah; Francis E. McGovern, Wisconsin. Eugene M. Fobs, Mass.; John Burke, North Dakota; James H. Hawfoy, Idaho; Walter R. Stubbs, Kansas; Robert S. Vessey, South Dakota. Fourth row, left to right W. F. Saddler, Jr., George Jordon, Secretary of Conference, Ex-Got. Quimbley, of Vermont; Ex-Got. Fort, of N. J.
pile of rails in the orchards waiting to watch the house burn. She probably
win be taken to an insane hospital. CROSS-EYED MAX WITH RED HAIR.
The police department at Columbus
has been asked to search for a crosseyed man with red hair and freckles. A Shelbyvllle woman, who does not know
the man's nam, has wrltteii to Colom-
bus that the man swtndled her out of a board bill and that she wants $2.50 or Justice or both. She has started the police at Columbus t. looking for cross
eyes- red hair and freckles combined, but thus far they have failed to locate
the combination. ' ROSS ACQUITTED OF MCRDEH,
xne unwritten law was uphelq by a
Jury In the Circuit Court at Princeton
Thursday afternoon, when In less than
fifteen minutes a verdict of acquittal was returned In the . case against Everett Ross, a railroad man. charged with shooting Charles Blllingsly with Intent to kill. On the first ballot the Jury stood eleven for acquittal and one for conviction and on the second vote all were agreed. , During the trial no effort was made by the defense to show that an attempt was not made ort Blllingsly s life, the unwritten law being put forward aa the only defense. ,The evidence showed that Ross had repeatedly asked Blllingsly to stay away from his wife and his home, but the warning was not
This Week's News Forecal
Washington, D. C, Sept. 16. President Taft plans to spend the first four
days of the week in Michigan, speaking in Detroit, Pontiac, Bay City, Sault Ste. Mary, Marquette, Grand Rapids. Battle Creek and Kalamazoo. He will fill an engagement Friday at Peoria and from that city will go to St. Louis,
where he will remain over Sunday.
In Canada the forces for and against the proposed reciprocity pact with the United States will enter on the closing week of the campaign Monday. Activity on both sides will be at the high-water mark for the remainder of the strugglei which will end with the election on Thursday. Of Interest to society on both slde3 of the Atlantic will be the wedding of Miss Margaret Rutherford, daughter of Mrs. William K. Vanderbllt. and Ogden L. Mills, son of Ogden Mills of New York, and nephew of Ambassador and Mrs. Whltelow Reid. The wedding Is to take place Wednesday at the chateua of the bride's mother In Normandy. The football season of 1911, which Is expected to be one of the most Important In the history of the gridiron game, will be ushered In Saturday. Among the prominent elevens which will be seen In action on that day are Pennsylvania and Carlisle Indians, Virginia, Lafayette, Holy Cross. Bates, Western Reserve, University of Maine and Ohio Wesleyan. Representatives of southern exchanges, commercial organizations, bankers and others interested In the handling of cotton will meet in conference In New Orleans Monday to consider phases of the Liverpool bill of lading plan and to devise measures for the protection of the mutual interests of those engaged in handling and financing the southern cotton crop. jMuch interest is being manifested In the International municipal congress and exposition, which Is to open In Chicago Monday and continue until W: end of September. It is believed that through this municipal exposition. nifcV Ing comparisons between various communities with reference to their syltema of government, their notable accomplishments of the past and , their plans for the future, there will be created a spirit of rivalry and civic, pride that will do much for the advancement of municipal betterment in America. Other important gatherings of the-week will Include the annual cam.
heeded. Ross carried a revolver to us j munication of the sovereign grand lodfce of the Independent Order of Odd It. it Is said. The closing arguments in i Fellows, at Indianapolis; the annual convention of the American .Association the case were glvn in the morning ani of General Passenger and Ticket Agents, at St. Paul, and the annual meeting the courts instructions followed the! of the International Association of Fire Engineers, at Milwaukee.
noon adjournment. A D,S crowd was In the court room in waiting for the verdict. DIES FROM INJURIES. Daniel Doggetss, of Wabash, 68 years old. a farmer, was found dead by the side of his wagon near his home at Wabash yesterday. Doggetts evidently had been thrown from the conveyance when it struck a stone and overturned. His neck was broken by the fall, a;d
The Evening Chit-Chat By RUTH CAMERON
FALLS UNDER CAR. Harry Rhodes, 28 years old, of Rich
mond, a brakeman on the Panhandle railroad, was Instantly killed by falling under the wheels of a freight train at
Eaton, O., yesterday afternoon. Rhodes was attempting was attempting to cut off the air from the train, and It is
thought the train started before he had oportunlty to get from between the cars. His body was brought to Richmond for burial.
SUFFERS FROM TEMPERATURE. With the temperature at 92 degrees
and Intense humidity, suffering from
the heat yesterday aproached that of the prolonged heat wave In July.
Joseph Schlver, of Evansvllle, 43 years old, a teamster, was overcome while on
his wagon and toppled on the street. In
juring his skull and spine. His condi
tion is serious. MAKES FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS. After notifying his music teacher that he would be unabel to take his lesson yesterday, Walter Clevenger, 25 years old, of South Bend, went to the home of his parents at Buchanan, Mich., nesr South Bend, and committed suicide by taking choloroform. When found by his mother he was dying. Before taking the chloroform the young man wrote a note In which he gave directions for his funeral. Family troubles are said to have been the cause for the suicide. TAKES THE ROPE ROUTE. Despondent because of HI health, Frank W. Nordyke, of Richmond, S3 years old, took his life by hanging yesterday. The body was found at the en1
of a clotheslines when his wife entered the woodshed In the rear of their home to feed their .chickens. The deceased
was the son of Mlcajah Nordyke, one
of Richmond's best-konwn residents.
TRIES TO BURN FATHER'S HOME. AVorried because she thought her
father married too quickly after the
death of her mother, who was burled
ten months ago, Mrs. Lizzie Leap of
Noblesvllle, yesterday attempted to
burn the farm residence of her father.
Josiah Harvey, northwest of that city
She piled carpets, chairs, bedelothing
and tables in the center of the living room and aplied a retell. The fire waj
put out with no damsge except u
Mrs. Leap was found behind
To have to wait on a sick person, in addition to doing one's regular work,
he had been dead for some time when is hard, no matter how well beloved found. Becoming alarmed at the de-the Invalid. layed arrival of the father, one of his j Everyone who has ever tried amachlldren started in search of him, when teur nursing knows that.
the lifeless body was ound.
VETERANS OF 36TH TO MEET. One hundred members of the Thirty-
sixth Indiana Infantry are expected to
attend the twenty-fifth annual reunion
of the regiment at Richmond today. Most of the veteras live I Wayne,
Henry. Fayette, Delaware, Randolph
and Union Counties. Judge Daniel W.
Comstock will make the principal address.
THE VOICE
But there Is one thing even more trying. And that is to be obliged to be waited on by someone who has other work to do, no matter how well lntentloned and affectionate the nurse. Everyone who has ever been amateur nursed must emphatically admit that. For the sake both of the amateur nurse and the amateur nursee, may I siiggest a few simple rules gained from experience on both sides of the fence? Before bringing up the tray-stand to the patient Imagine yourself eating the meal spread upon it. Bv doine
OF A C0XJGHtnIs yu may recall to mind any lmple-
-, j raent or accessory such as spoon or To some extent the less one thinks of ork r " r sugar, which you have his health the better; for one can worry forgotten. These things seem, small to
himself Into his grave. But It Isn't wise I 'ou' DUt 10 me patient iney mean
to disregard altogether the warnings , much. He does not like to ask you to
nature may give that something has K downstairs for the salt, and yet the mm wronir with its machinery- for ln'bsence of It may spoil his egg lor
this case a disease may become fast-' n,m-
ened upon one so hard and fast that It I It y r obliged to be absent for
Is serious work and expense to shake some time, give your Invalid a piece of
tt 0ff paper and a pencil that he may writs
him
danger signals that dow" any th cu is a cough. In a re- durlngr your benc nd nt has
carry tnem in nis neaa. Tidy up the room and especially the bed frequently. We all know how oitered with magazines and books and
One of nature's
should be heeded Is a cough
cent table of statistics of the causes of death throughout the country tuberculosis led. One person In every eleven of our population died of this dread disease. This is getting rather close.
Count eleven of the people around you,
including your own family, and the circle is not very large. One f these eleven, statistically speaking, will become a tuberculosis victim. Not every cough means consumption. But undoubtedly every case of consumption begins with a cough. So a
trYt its tint to lc dftsnlitfd And ,
w,tw th roarl from r oueh to ron-! nd f easily assimilated a
eo forth a sick bed can become. We don't realize how much such confusion tires. A student of labor conditions says that a bricklayer can't do hi work half so well when standing en a cluttered floor. The patient himseli may not fully realize the bad effect
but he suffers from it just the same. Acquire if you can the fine art of arranging pillows. Most people when called upon to arrange pillows simply plump down a couple at your back and let It go at that. I don't think one can sit up comfortably in bed with less than three pillows. And they should be sclentiflcaly aranged to support the middle of the blk, the shoulders and the head. v Have your patient sit up In a bi easy ohalr Instead of In bed, when possible, as sitting up in bed is very tiring. Never forget how much longer time seems to the Invalid reckoning in terms of pain and ennui than It does to you reckoning in terms of activity. Do not Insist upon doing things for., the invalid when he feels that yeu are overtaxing yourself. Fretting ever this may do him more harm than yeur service would do good. And above all things, remember thst
.unless you give in love and forbear-
have to-ance and cheerfulness, the value of
your service is nil. For grudging service to the sick is quite as cruel as neglect. ' RUTH CAMERON.
sumption is to be traveled or not depends to a large extent upon the victim, i When a cough lifts Its warning voice. J it should be listened to . "It is only a cold," most people say, and give no further heed to It. It may be only a cold, and. In the course of a few weeks, cure itself and disappear. If It does, well and good: the danger Is over and done with. ' i But If It lingers, If ever so slightly. It I should not be neglected. This Is the time when Its warning voice should be most heeded. It need not he necessary to take medicine to cure it. Fresh air Is one of the best fighters of a cough ; that ran bp engaged. If the person whose cough hangs on will give five minutes a day to deep breathing of j fresh, pure air. he will probably vanoulsh the cough In no time. He should
take the deep, abdominal breaths that reach the bottom of the lungs, not merely the kind that only reach the collar bone or a little below. This treatment of a cough at Its very Inception will probably cure It. If not, more rigorous measures should be taken. The diet should be looked to, and it should be made as nurtitious
nature
as possible. An open-air sleeping room should be provided. The matter is entirely too serious not to go go seriously into the campaign of fighting It. But the chief thing to do is to begin early. Take the cough while It Is yet a weakling. It Is an enemy to health. It Is ari Invader. .It doesn't belong to the physical system. Oust It then, before It has secured a foothprd. And the season is ahead when coughs and colds are prevalent. So one needs to be on his guard, and capture and evict the Invader at his very first appearance.
NEGRO SLAYER OF POLICEMAN TO DIE New York, Sept. 16. Early in the
coming week John W. Collins, a negro, will be put to death In the electric chair at Sing Sing prison for the killing of Policeman Michael J. Lynch In this city on July 1 last. The policeman was killed ljust as lie was entering the negro's rooms In Thirty-seventh street to learn the cause of two revolver shots which the negro had fired from a window. Collins had been drinking heavily, and on the night of the murder entered the house and f.red two shots at the Janitor. Later on he left the house and returned with a bottle of gin. After drinking most of the gin he tired' two shots Into the air, and told a woman who was with him to lock the door. Instead she ran into the street, shouting for help. Policeman Lynch appeared and Collins shot him through the head. The negro made his escape across the roofs of the houses, but was captured ( within an hour. His trial, conviction and sentence to death followed within less than sixty days. If you are a judge of quality try a 'aVendor Cigar.
WHT ARE READER! '
TOU NOT A TIME?
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