Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 92, Hammond, Lake County, 5 October 1911 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Thursday Oct 5, 1911.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING TAB CART EVBNI7CG TIMES EDITION, THE MKB ' COrWTT . TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THI LAKE COU5TY TIMBi 3VENINO EDITION AND THE TIM KB f PORTING EXTRA. ALL DAILY NEWSPAPERS. AND THE LAKE COCWTT TIJIES lATl'RDAY ASD WEEKLY EDITH)!, PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.

The Lake County Times Evening Edition (daily except Saturday and Punday) "Entered as second class matter February 3, 1911. at the postofftce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress. March S. 187." The Gary Evening Times Entered as second class matter October S. 1909. at the postoffice at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress. March t. 1ST." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as second class matter January 30. 1911. at th postofftce at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress. March s, ls79."

RANDOM THINGS AND FLINQS

ELINOR Glynn has -written another naughty book. Police! Police!! ,

The Day in HISTORY

THIS DATE IX HISTORY. October 5.

WE arft to hav the "revised" skirt" 1 -unusn man-or-war victory

Up and Down in INDIANA

ma ix office hammond. 1sd, telephone, 111 tt. east chicago afctj indiana harbor telefhohib 3. gary-offick Reynolds bldq, teikphosb ist. branches east chicago, indiana harbor. whiting, crow point, tol.lbston autd lowell.

this -winter. Wonder whether it will be revised up or down? THERE isJittle betting on the out

come of the Gary bribery trials. As

a rule people seldom bet on a pipe. IX the meantime, what1 does our own little Madeline Force think of marriage as far as she has" gone? SOMEBODY suggests, that" Italy at least Bhould have waited until Thanksgiving before beginning .war on Tur

key. PRESIDENT Taft had to shuck his silk hat while talking to the Kansas insurgents and that is how hot Kansas is. THERE are more little picayunish school boy threats banded about in the Gary graft cases than you can shake a stick at.

SUBSCRIBER asks us to rake the

Hammond s capacity for doing big things was never more splendidly boxing game fore and aft again. This

. , , 1 1 is the lana or me iree ana tne nome

uruiuiiirif u man in me i-uuiury eiuu project, it. is really remarKaoie - - , of the brave, isn t it bo?

mat inirty-six Hammond men could be Induced to subscribe $2,000 each to

wrecked off the Isle of Alderney,

with loss of 1,160 lives.

first governor of' the Northwest !,fl.c?f.,n housewives

A LONG FELT WANT. Yesterday this paper carried the news that there is to be built in Gary at a cost of $40,000 a twenty-apartment house, each apartment having four rooms each. Residential buildings of this character are much needed in Gary. This one will help to supply a want of long standing and owner and tenants will benefit from its erection. It is safe to say that the net income from this building will be very high, although the rents will be reasonable. The big apartment house with small apartments has been demonstrated a great success in Chicago and New York. Why can't it be made eo in Lake county. COUNTRY CLUB PLANS SUCCEED.

aid a scheme that is primarily a social project and secondarily an invest-i THE esteemed Indianapolis News ment. But Hammond has risen to the occasion and all of the broad acres is Bti11 running a . "wet" and "dry" across from, Homewood in Illinois will soon be converted into attractive ' column" Evldently tbere are some " , , .thirsts that cannot be quenched, country club grounds.

HAVING seen 'a picture of Miss

Blanche Scott in her aviation attire,

Gostlin. Teter W. Meyn, Fred Mott and a few others who first financed the we arc convinced more than ever that

Blanche is a regular little balloon her-

The fact should noy be overlooked that the project was made possible by the enterprise of John E. Fitzgerald, F. S. Betz, A. M. Turner, W. H.

purchase of the property and afterwards sold it to the country club at cost. Then as a result of the activity of those who have taken up the country club project the city of Hammond will soon be the only town in the middle west to have an intown country club.

BLACK DIRT AND SAND.

The Gary board of education is in the market for 400 or 300 car-loads of black soil, 12,000 yards in all, for which it is willing to pay about a dollar a yard. This black earth is needed a6 a top dressing for the sandy surroundings at the new Froebel school. We also note that Chicago is in the market for more sand. Gary will supply some of it, but when it comes to black dirt the outside will have to come to the rescue. AVe now witness the spectacle of black soil communities clamoring for sand and this sandy municipality buying black dirt at a high cost. Can't we trade a lot of sand for some black dirt?

self. ' GERMS in kisses and germs in hand-shakes. But a lot the present generation or the generation to come , care about the germs when they make love.

TALK about the Mona Lisa smile. It doesn't begin to compare with the

smile on the face of the man who stole the "power" of the champeen of the

"peepul."

TVE are bending strenuous efforts

to abolish war, but in modern times war kills its . thousands, while preventable accident kills its tens of

thousands.

Territory

ISIS First general assembly of Illi

nois met at Kaskaskla.

1S30 Chester A. Arthur, twenty-first

president of the United States, born in Fairfield, Vt. Died in JKew York City November 17. 1886. 1S31 A free trade convention met Jn Philadelphia. 1854 Abraham Lincoln challeerned

Stephen A. Douglas to a Joint dehate in the campaign for the senate. 1878 Marquis of Lome appointed governor-general of Canada. 1S95 Major-Genera! Miles assumed command of the United States army, succeeding Lieutenant - General Schofleld, retired. 1910 Dedication of St. Patrick's cathedral. New York City.' THIS IS MY 63RD BIRTHDAY. T. P. O'Connor. Thomas Power O'Connor, the noted journalist and Irish parliamentary leader, was born in Athlone, October 5, 1848. His education was obtained at

the College of the Immaculate Concep- ' tion, Athlone, and Queen's College, Galway, from which he was graduated in his eighteenth year. He entered journalism as a reporter on & Dublin newspaper In 1867, and migrated to London in search of a situation in 1870. Sub

sequently Mr. O'Connor was employed In the London office Of the New York

Herald. He entered the British house

of commons for Galway in 1880, and In

1885 was returned for both Galway and

Liverpool. He chose the latter constituency, which he continued to repre

sent for many years. As a journalist he is known throughout the Englishspeaking world. He was the founder of no fewer than eight daily and week

ly journals that now exist in the British metropolis. Mr. O'Connor was married in 1885 to Miss Bessy Pascall of Austin, Texas. Both he and his wife have paid frequent visits to America,

white spots appeared on his hands. The skin became tender and the white spots grew larger. At the same time Arnold Improved In health until he Is now in

I excellent physical condition. His body is covered with large white spots which are so tender he is compelled to protect

his hands and face from the sun. Members of the factulty of Indiana university have tested his blood and are now observing the various stages of his transfiguration. Their blood testa show nothing out of the normal condition. CRI SHED BY FALLING TREE.

While cutting timber on his farm near Degonia, Warrick county, Frank

ARREST FAKE SALESWOMAN. A woman giving the name of Mrs. Alia Chrlsman and saying she was BO

years old was arested at Michigan City 'yesterday on charges of a wholesale

by a fake so

liciting scheme. It la alleged she took

orders for silk skirts and other articles of wearing apparel, collecting advance

payments in any amount she could geCiI,arton was crushed to death by a falland promising to have the goods ship- j lnS tree- Just before starting to his ped from New York. Scores of women work. Barton told his friends of hav. reported to the. police that tUey had ln had &Tm that he was going to been duped. The woman admitted to belllUed- His death came half an hour the police that she had been taking later.

firing through a window of Conover's house when he says he saw Conover abusing his wife and Ralph Conover, Jr., returned a verdict of manslaughter, after six hours' deliberation. Indictments against Mrs. Conover and young Conover as accessories have been quashed. IX CRITICAL CONDITION. Edwin Venis, street car conductor at Lafayette, was struck by an automobile driven by Frank Yundt of Mulberry Tuesday evening and probably fatally injured. , Venis was guarding his c-

agalnst a Monon train when the auto struck and dragged him ten feet. He

was taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital, and his condition was critical; One of his legs was broken and he is injured internally. Mr. Yundt, the owner of the auto. Is one of .the largest land owners in Clinton County.

Obadiah Gardner, the new senator

from Maine, is a practical farmer.

A meeting of progressive Republicans of Minnesota is to be held In- St. Paul on October 30 to promote the La Fol-

lette presidential candidacy.

pARlNfStopS

Headaches

and then removes the cause. In capsules, 10 or 25c at all druggists, DaKatb Drug Cham. Co DsKalb, IP.

fake orders and that se had operatca j in the state of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan and South Bend and Laporte before she came to Michigan City ARRESTED FOR GIVING DRINK. Ernest Weber, 17 years old, is dea.l from the supposed effects of alcoholic poisoning. Frank Burns, William Casey and Charles Codrington have been arrested, and at police headquarters at Richmond It is Baid they will likely be charged with Involuntary manslaughter. It is reported that the men admit having given the W?ber lad whisky. Weber and two companions were driving south of Richmond, when they me the three men now under arrest. The men desired to ride and the bov?

accommodated them, in return for

which the men gave them a whisky bot

tle from which they drank. Weber became unconscious from the effects of

what he drank, and was found dead

during the night.

WAIVES PRELIMINARY TRHL. William Lee. of Boonville, who has confessed to killing his father, mother and brother while they were sleep'ng.

has waived preliminary hearing and will not be brought to Boonville until Oct. 12, when his trial will begin. The

preliminary was to have been held yesterday. The grand jury which will Inquire Into the case was to have convned yesterday, but Prosecutor Ora Davis caused a postponement until Oct. 9th. ENDANGER LIFE AND PROPERTY. Floods in Lawrence country are endangering life and property. All the streams have spread their waters over the bottom lands and swept away

standing corn. Several persons have narrowly escaped drowning. High water washed out part of the bridge of the Southeastern railroad, and

an engine attacked to a freight train went down into the muddy water. The engineer and fireman barely reached shore alive. They jumped when the bridge gave way and swam to land after a struggle against the strong current. NEGRO BECOMING WHITE. William Arnold, of Bloomlngton, age sixty, a colored drayman, is gradually turning white. Following an illness which was believed to be tuberculosis,

GREEN LEAK POIND GlILTY. The jury in the trial of George Greenleaf, of Terre Haute, who shot Ralph Conover, Sr., two years ago this week.

THIS NEWSPAPER IS THE TRADES PAPER OF THE CONSUMERS OF THIS CITY OF THE PEOPLE WHO Bl'V THE HOME SVPPLIES.

Ifll

.fl

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V-!-;;. v; i s V f (' 1 A ," I .;.:.; ;.vfM Tiir-iT"y i v -. .

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titclhi ta

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is always a saving. By taking it many regrets are prevented. Actual stitching is hard on the eyes. It requires a strong light, yet one which will not strain. This means tne light from v ; . - ' -.'IncaJidesceinit. Gas Lamps

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enables you to Hake a stitch in time. Taken now it will save your eyes and the low consumption of Gas will help you save your money: Both are stitches it would be wise to take. LAMPS ON DISPLAY AT ALL OF OUR OFFICES.

Send for our representative and let him explain.

Northern Indiana 'Gas & Electric Company x Hammond Whiting East Chicago Indiana Harbor