Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 99, Hammond, Lake County, 13 October 1911 — Page 10
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THE TIMES. Friday, Oct. 13, 1911.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDINO THB GARY ETBIHIXO TIMES KDITIOJf. THB UM COCHTT TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THB UKG COUItTT TIM BS EVENING EDITION AND THB TIMES SPOIITIHO KXTRA. ALL. DAILT NEWSPAPBHS. AND THE LAKH COCJTTT TIMES SATURDAY AND WEEKLY EDITION, PUBLISHED BT THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTINO AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.
The Lake County Timea Evening Edition (dally except Saturday And Sunday) "Entered as ascend class matter February 3. It 11. at th poatofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress. March , 1ST." The Gary Evening- Times Entered as second class matter October 5. It0, at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under tbe act of Congress, March I. 1179." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as second claas matter January 80, 1111, at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 3. 1S7." MAIN' OFFICE HAMMOJfD, INTO., TELEPHONE. Ill 11. EAST CHICAGO AND INDIANA HARBOR TELEPHONE 3. GARY OFFICE REYNOLDS BLDO, TELEPHONE 1ST. BRANCHES BAST CHICAGO, INDIANA HARBOR, WHITING, CROWN POINT, TLLESTON AND LOWELL.
RANDOM THINGS AND FLINGS
Might be well to get the geraniums out of the frost anyway. OF all the news that Is news, that from Tripoli absolutely causes the least worriment.
HAVE you any objection to ; the
beautiful Hoosier weather showered on us these days?
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DOWN state somebody is denounc
ing tne primary law. Always de
nouncing somebody, eh?
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THE, day has passed when it Is
either wise or expedient to fool away
any of life's Irving time.
THERE seems to be a question as
to whether certain proceedings at
East Chicago are even defensible.
Lu. T pus up before you make
good and after you do make good
LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWS- why you won t want to be puffed up
PAYNE A YOUNG, T 47 -748 Hirtnettt Bids.
New Yark Offf.ee PAYNE YOUNG, 34 West Tklrty-Tklrd St.
TKAKT.T-- 3 W HALF YEARLY -S
8INOLB COPIES ONE
CENT
PAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION,
CIRCULATION BOOKS
OPEN TO THE PCBL1C FOR INSPECTION TIMES.
AT ALL
TO SUBSCRIBERS Readers ef THE TIMES are repeated fare the ( by reportiaa; uy Irregularities la dell-rerlas;. CemssMteate with thm Carcolattem DesMartmeat.
COMMUNICATIONS. THE TIMES will prist all essmaraBleatiess as safcjrets of ceaerai Interest the aeaalet warn such ewsuamleatteas are slsraed by the writer, bat will reject all easaamaalcattaaa aet ala-aed, a natter what their merits. This preeaatlaa la tafcsa ta areld uslaieai eseatatleaus. THB TIMES Is asbltshed la tbe best laterest of the people, aad Its attersuasas almyi trntcaaW ta praasate the aaeral welfare af the public at larsje.
"WELL, we suppose you are hooked
up with a pair of seats and a pair of
pop bottles for the Cub-Sox games?
HAMOXY will come in republican
ranks when a few tin cans are tied to some of these self-constituted
leaders.
GUESS Lake county farmers aren't
getting stylish or nothing. Here's one down in Ross township who pages his
cows at milking time.
A TRIBUTE TO THE LIVING.
READ of a New York mule that
drank a gallon of whiskey and kicked
The tributes paid to Dr. W. F. Howat, president of the Indiana State the barn to pieces. Some animals are
Medical society at the banquet given in his honor in Gary last night, must certainly almost human.
GARY was the scene of mnsidor
by both sincerity and spontaneity and to be honored by ones fellows as abIe act,on Jast nJght wheQ that was Dr. Howat last night is something unusual in this day and generation, bunch of doctors got to sliding their
It is usually after a man's death that people gather to pay testimonial to feet around under the table.
to his worth. Death has touched his eyes with chill finger and they are
closed forever. He knows naught of the eulogies, the kind words and the
MAN was arrested recently for pay
ing for the expenses of his hnnsv
nowers. Last nigni Kina woras were saia oi me living. Appreciation oi mnnn with n h. ht its.
ren then
the guinea stamp of the man was given unstintedly and deservedly. How he may have got the worst of it
much belter a world it would be if there were more living than dead
eulogies.
ONE WHO GOT HIS DESERTS.
Justice sometimes does get into full possession of her own. You who
have dodged scorching automobiles at the risk of jour life will appre Ciate the following dispatch which came over the wires yesterday: Toronto, Ont., Oct. 12. Alex Tracey, a contractor from Port Huron, Mich, who was convicted n general sesaiona here of criminal negligence in running an automobile into a crowd at Sunnyside a few months ago, was sentenced today to pay a fine of $1,000. Six persons were injured in the accident.
UNCLE Joe Cannon said he waa for
Taft at Rushville but we'll bet
cpky ne had his fingers crossed
under the table when he said It.
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PINCHOT asks If it would be wise
to re-nominate President Taft. Any
way, you know how "Pinch" wants
you to answer the question, don't
you?
ROCHESTER man was robbed of a
quantity of chamgapne out of his re
frigerator. In most other Indiana ci-
The automobile is a great gift, but there is a growing tendency to be ties they are content to have a little
careless in its use. It is true that is but human that the man behind the beer on ice.
wheel likes to "throw open the throttle" and let the speed register show 25
to 35 miles an hour. But this is dangerous both to the autoist and the pe
destrian.
Of late the Hammond and East Chicago police have been active in
BOOTH Tarkington, who loves to
wander far from his own fireside, is sued for divorce. These troubles come
every once in a while for men who
checking the speed fiends and the Gary police recently conducted a good were in the Indiana legislature, crusade in this connection. Once it becomes known that local authorities - ,
A PICTURE of those Arab horse
are anti-speed men a great deal of "joy riding" will stop.
THE BLACK DIAMOND USES DRILL.
Gary gets a thorough grilling in the "Black Diamond" the representa
tive organ of the coal trade in America. The great coal Journal sent a
man to investigate conditions at Gary. He summarizes his story as fol
lows :
linen doing stunts around Tripoli look
something like the Hammond rough
riders who rod out to HIehland
when Teddy Roosevelt was runnin
for president.
46
THAT sound like a hired man
The Day in HISTO RY
THIS DATE IN HISTORY. October 13. 635 Roger "Williams banished from Boston for heresy.
1703 The parliament of Scotland con
vened for the last time.
1777 Ksopus, on the Hudson river.
burnt by the British under General Vaughan.
1797 Benjamin Hammett was heavily
fined for refusing the office of lord mayor of London.
1815 Napoleon Bonaparte landed at
Helena, a perpetual exile.
1S70 President Grant issued a procla
mation against Feenianism.
1884 Adoption of the Meridian of
Greenwich.
1905 Sir Henry Irving, famous Eng
lish actor, died. Born Feb. 6, 1838.
1910 W. E. Stanley, former governor
of Kansas, died in Wichita. Born
In Ohio in 1818.
THIS IS MY 78TII BIRTHDAY. Edward Blake.
Mwara Blake, for many years a
leader In public life in Canada and in
the empire-, was born in Adelaide, Ont
Oct. 13. 1833, the son of Hon. AVilllam Hume Blake, who was chancellor of urper Canada. He was educated at up
per Canada College and the University
of Toronto and followed the profession
of law before he entered public life as
a member of the Ontario legislative as
Bembly In 1867. Four years later he
became prime minister of Ontario. He
then became leader of the liberal party
in the Dominion and on the defeat of
the Sandfield-Macdonald governmeent Mr. Blake became premier. He retained the leadership of his party until 18S7, when ha resigned and was
succeeded by Sir Wilfrid, then Mr,
Laurler. In 1892 Mr. Blake accepted an election by the Irish parliamentary
party to a seat In the British house of commons, where he won great re
nown as a leader among the home rul
ers. After his retirement from public
life he returned to Canada to spend his
remaining days. ,
Up and Down in INDIANA
WOMAN BREAKS JAIL.
Mrs. Minnie Farina, in the county jail
at Knox awaiting trial on a charge of
assault with Intet to kill, brought by
two neighbor women, escaped last night
by removing the radiator from the floor
and lowering herself to the basement
by a rope made from bedclothes. She
has not been recaptured. Mrs. Farina
made herself known to state officials .
year ago In her efforts to obtain a par
don for her husband. Carl Farina, who
was serving a life sentence for murde BOY KILLED BY AUTO TRICK.
While Mrs. Charles Bunger of South
Bend, lay at the point of death with
typhoid fever she was informed her
son Roy, age eleven, had been killed
by an automobile, the second fatal acel
dent In the family In a month. Th
boy was run down by a delivery truck
MILLIONS OF FOLKS i
USE ONLY CASGARETS
to bed.
currying a wooly horse on a cold win
ter morning is the heavy breathing
1M3 is the story of a city which went on an orgy, got a headache done by Colonel Tim Engleheart when
S A -I 9 9 . m It. 1.J II. V
ana now wants to join me cnurcn; tne story or a town which suffered ue neara tnai HanecK seaman was
from crowing nains and at th nreRpnt minnto la nufforino- fr o given another extension.
ordinate fnlrefmpnt nf hnn' thn otnrv nf a trn.-n VWVi I
WOMAN asks for divorce because thrust on it and could not stand it; the story of a town which, in size and her husband hasn't spoken to her in
business, has all the aspects of a rural community, but wants to make the six years, and charges cruelty. What
world believe it is a second New York. I we call cruelty Is where a woman
"Instability, observes the Black Diamond correspondent, has run riot 1talks 80 mnch t0 a man that he has to
(rnm hnlMino ,.lo -r.;r V,lh v. k t , .. f"1- c ' """" "cij-.mBui uc gueu
even to , tbe foreigner who has just come in with a number tag on his coat
lapel and in care of a railroad man. Adventurers have turned from inflated
business to worse politics and have given the city a government that has
been so bad that money hesitates to take risks there." Editorially the coal organ says:
"Among all the American cities there is no more Important or slgnlfl
cant lesson to be learned than in the little town of Gary, Indiana
ine iact mat grait was in tne uary air, decided astute politicians to quit other well-worked fields and to go into this new one which promised "rich
piniung.- mere was gran in real estate; there came, to be graft in
politics; and finally graft came to permeate coal.
'After only a few years this siege of greed has produced a nauseating
result. There Is scandal in plenty and now the little town Is trying to
etablish itself In decency. As a result a few will probably find themselves
In the penetentiary. We care nothing for what becomes of these radlvid
uals; our principal and only Interest is the resultant lesson."
There is nothing new in these accusations. The only notable feature
of the hammering is that it comes from an outside and an entirely un
expected source. t
They never have Headache, Bilious
ness, Sluggish. Liver or Bowels or a Sick, Sour Stomach.
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head aches,
how miserable and uncomfortable you
are from constipation. Indigestion, bl!
lousness and sluggish Intestines you always get the desired results with
Cascarets and quickly too. Don't let your tomach, liver an
bowels make you miserable anothe
moment; put an end to the headache,
biliousness, dizziness, 'nervousness,
sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache
and all other duress; cleanse your In
side organs of all the poison and effete
matter which Is producing the misery,
Take a Cascaret now; don't wait un
til bedtime. In all the world there 1
no remedy like this. A 10-cent box
means health, happiness and a cle'
head Tor .months. No more days o
gloom and distress if you will take
Cascaret now and then. All druggist
sel Cascarets. ' Don't forget the chll
dren their little lnsldes need a good.
gentle cleansing, too.
A KANSAS City magistrate fined a man for kissing his wife in the park. The cadi is evidently one of those severely methodical persons who reason
that they don't want ham sandwich after partaking of a cold bottle and a
squab. '
WASHINGTON JUDGE has prescribed candy in place of whiskey for
colds. Pretty soon it will be necessary for the barkeep to have a suppl-
t of. chocolate bon-bons on hand and cut down the rock and rye supply.
St
1 t'T
in 8 r
?s f
'JUUiiJUUIMMUSpWIH .
:?-.v.sw...
of the tleorge Cutter Company and received internal Injuries, which cause!
is death a short time later. The moth-
may not survive. SAYS HO.XEYMOOX IS BNOl'GII. ' Ten days of married life waa suffl-
ient for Mrs. Blanche H. Smith, who
filed suit for divorce yesterday from
Charles A. Smith of LogansDort. She
harges that her husband began cursing
er as they left tlu office of the Justlca
f the peace In which they were mar
ried, and continued it almost without
interruption for ten days. Unable to
tand the abuse any longer, she left
im.
SHERIFF'S ASAIt,A.T COSVICTED.
Ed James of Vernon, age twenty-four,
who attempted to kill Thomas Parks.
herift of Ripley county, and was shot
by the officer, was convicted by a jury
f attacking Mrs. Emma Covert, an ged woman, at her home near Holton
Sheriff Parks attempted to arrest James
and the latter fired a revolver at him,
James has almost recovered from the
ffects of three wounds. THREE HVX DOWN TRESTLE.
Rufus Shiner, age twelve; Walter
Shiner, age ten, and Ora Shiner, age six, of Goshen, sons of Gabriel Shiner, a
laborer, with a family of ten, were caught on a Big Four railroad trestle
by a through freight yesterday morn
ing. Rufus jumped, Ora crouched be-
wcen two ties, while the train passed
over him, but Walter was instantly killed. Enginer E. Frymeyer, of th
Wabash train, tried to avoid the sight of the accident, but horror so affected
him he could not leave the seat of his
cab.
SEEK CLEW TO LETTER WRITER.
The authorities are trying to tarce
the authorship of an anonymous letter
written by a Chicagoan to the mayor
of St. Joseph, Mich., near Laporte ad
vising him that the body of a man cou'J
be found hanging to a tree In the
woods near the town of New Buffalo. It is believed that If the writer can h
found, the idently of the man can be
determined. The authorities are puzzled to explain the method of eslf-de-
struction used by the suicide, whose body was found dangling at the end of a chain, which had ben securely fasten
ed to an upper limb of a tree whence it
had swayed In the wind for three
weeks.
STATE RESTS IX MOON CASE. After examining twenty-five witness
es the state closed its ealdence-taklng
in the case of Harvey Moon of Danville, charged with murder. The defense will continue Its efforts to showing that the
accused had been so harassed and annoyed by his relatives that he became temporarily Insane. The examination of Opal Baldock, 6 years old. daughter of the woman Moon is accused of murdering was on the stand yesterday. Asked if she knew the meaning of an oath, she replied: '"Yes to always tell
the truth." She told of the shooting
of her mother and her own efforts to
summon assistance In a way that brought tears to th -eyes of even the
jurymen. The case wll probably con.
sume the remainder of the week.
BRIDE SEEKS HISBASD. Mrs. Bert Courtney, of Muncle, a bride
of six weeks, has asked the police department of several cities to assist her
In looking for her young husband, a
member of a prominent Muncle family,
who has been mysteriously missing since a week ago last Saturday.
The two were married in the latter
part of August, over the objections of the young man's mother. The bride ha been living with her relatives anl Courtney continued to live with his mother.
The young woman met her husband
in the city September 30 and together
they did some shopping. He made an
engagemet to meet her later in a Muncle department store and has not since
ben seen by his wife.
ENGINE RUNS WILD.
"Hold train No. 3 and clear main
track. Wild enine going east," was the sustance of a message flashed to operators between Washington and Legootee early yesterday morning, when a driverless , engine left Washington at a
speed estimated at seventy-five miles
an hour. Charles A. Jones, 29 years old. a fireman, was killed. The engine
met head on with a freight. The engineer reversed and the others of the crew jumped. RURGLAR ELUDES CAPTURE. - A holdup and three attempted burglaries are the latest developments 'n the wave of crime that for six weeks has been sweeping over South Bend and which the police appear unable to bring to an end. One of the most puzzling cases Is that of a "gentleman burglar", who has invaded a half dozen homes and although seen on several occasions, has always evaded capture. The man held up early yesterday morning was John Shea of Nlles, Mich. He was robbed of his cash and valuables by three men, one of whom held a revolver In his face while the others went through his pockets.
m L
9138-40 Erie Avenue, South Chicago, HL THE HOME OF Schlossers Oak Grove Butter ALWAYS FRESH AND GOOD YOUB GROCER AND BUTCHER CAN SUPPLY YOU.
COURTESY IS DECLINING. Small eonrteales of life aeen to be entirely lout in the roak for bis thing. This leaving off of the littie thlngtt that go to make living Worth' the -white la a well known
and recognised fart to w omen who grave those graceful attention so ranT in the giving when tbe thought la right. Many men no longer consider It neeeuary to rise when n lady entern the room. If they proffer n chair, It la aeldom done with the old-time alacrity, and n few trips d on n city car will be sufficient to convince the verlent nkeptle of the truth of courtesy's decadence. 4 Be It aald In favor of man, con- d
d tlnually on the rack regarding d theae eralaftiona, that he la by no d 4 meana the greatest offender. We- 4 4 men who entertain will tell yon of 4 the.acorea of Invitation to which they have never even received the d
courtesy of an acknowledgment.
R, S. V. r." at the end of n card d or note meana nothing to woman d d too 111 bred to take five ml no ten d for a reply. Suck treatment of a d 4 social courtesy Is an offense garish 4 enough to cause tbe offender's name to be a I ruck from the social 4 list of the hostess. d
The small courtesies of woman to woman are fully ns Important d na those from man to woman, or d woman to man.
Uneeda Biscuit never disappoint! You have never heard anyone say The Uneeda Biscuit in that last package were not as good as usual." jTou have never said it yourself. It is one thing to make soda crackers that are occasibnally good. It is quite another thing to make them so that they are not only always better than all other soda crackers, but always of unvarying goodness. The name "Uneeda" stamped on every one of them means that if a million packages of Uneeda Biscuit were placed before you, you could choose any one of them, confident that every soda cracker in that package would be as good as the best Uneeda Biscuit ever baked. 5c a package never sold in bulk. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
MnSL J
No Cure No Pay NO MATTER bow long you nave been flick, wbat is tbe matter or bow many bare failed to cure you, come to me. IF I CANNOT cure you, I will not take your money. I HAVE HAD 32 years' experience curing tbe sick. Don't neglect to get my opinion and advice free. I make no promises to break. Get my agreement In writing. I will tell you juat what It will cost to cure you.
MODESTY If you have any disease or ailments that you don't want tbe world to know, call in and tell me about It Tou can always depend on getting the BEST POSSIBLE ADVICE AND TREATMENT AND EVERYTHING WILL. BE STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.. ADVICE ALWAYS FREE. " J. F. RUCKEL, M. D. 8207 Commercial, Ave, Gaiety Theater Bldg, South Chicago. Office Phone 6023. Hours: 8 to 12, 1:30 to S and 7 to 8:30. Sundays 9 to 11.
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