Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 102, Hammond, Lake County, 17 October 1911 — Page 4
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THE TIMEfl. Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1911-
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS INCLUDING TUB GARY EVENING TIMES EDITIO& T3B LAKJB COUJIYf TIMES FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION. THE LiKB COt'HTY TIXBI EVENING EDITION AND TBB TIMES SPOItTISIG EXTRA, ALL DAILY NEW8PAFBRS. AND THE LAKE COlTSrVT TIMES SATURDAY AND WEEKLY KDITIIf, PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTINGS AND PUBLISHING. COMPANY.'
The Lake County Time Evening Edition (dally except Saturday and Sunday) "Entered as second class matter February 8. 1911, at the postofnce at Hammond. Indiana. under the act mt Congress. March 8, 187. " The Gary Evening; Times Entered aa second class matter October i. H08, at the postofnce at Hammoed, Indiana, under the act of Congress, March 8. 1879." The Lake County Times (Saturday and weekly edition) "Entered as second class matter January 89. 1911. at the postofnce at Hammond, Indiana, under the act of Congress. March 3. 1879."
YEXRLT HALF IBAJRLT ' ' " " ' Z SINGLE! COPIES 1111---LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION. CIRCULATION BOOKS OPKN TO THE PUBLIC FOB INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES.
TO SUBSCRIBERS Readers mt THE TIMES are runaested fvr the aouagemeat by reaertlas; any Irregularities I dellvrrto. Communicate with the ClrcvlaUesi Department.
COMMUNICATIONS. THE TIMES will print all cowuulcatlou em hjets sTeneral IMereat to the mmlm, wbeai sueh eoaunanlcattoM are to1 hy the writer, bat will reject all eammuaicatloas ot slaraed, matter what their merits. Thla preraatlon Is tahem te ao mlareprewextatloas. THE TIMES Is anhUshed la the heat latewat of the people, aad its utteraaces always tateaded to premate the sreaeral welfare the public at large.
" : fTHE KIND OF MAN WE WANT.
A South Bend newspaper recently
papers of Indiana with a view of obtaining their choice of a gubernatorial
candidate for the. state republican ticket gested in the canvass will never even the hands of the republican party in they have been wallowing too long in
lossible cliques, cabals and combinations, for which the people of this
; great commonwealth refuse to stand
There are scores of high-minded business men in the state of Indiana tor day upon which the members of the republican party can and would unite as a candidate for the executive head of the state government. With one
of these men leading the ticket the cliquer or a gangster at the head, sure The next republican candidate for fmni the northern oart of the state. business, manufacturing and farming
is a republican without being a politician. ' He must have a higher duty
( than politics.
He should be a man on whom the party to a man can enthusiastically unite. Though not invited to do so, this paper takes the liberty of putting its finger on such a man. He is Colonel Charles Arthur Carlisle of South
Bend. If there is a better republican in
. less of a politician than he is, we should like to know him. Colonel Car
lisle is a business man of integrity.
of the greatest manufacturing institutions in the world. He is a close stu
dent of natural and political economy; many sided. He is a man of presence
- he be induced, to become a candidate for governor the republicans of In- ; diana would flock to his banner with enthusiasm.
We propose the name of Colonel candidate for governor of Indiana in
INTER-COMMUNITY INTEREST-
We, the people of North, Calumet broader sense, citizens of the Calumet communities and so many things are any neighborhood jealousy is foolish. shirt wavers. The people of Indiana Harbor and
Hammond to aid them in the promotion of their deep waterway project.
Such support is given gladly, for, while Hammond will not benefit to the extent that these other cities will, it will indeed benefit to an extent that
makes its support of the project enthusiastic.
Among the contributors to the fund to equip the Gary Y. M. C. A. were Hammond bankers; Gary in turn helped to elect e. Hammond man to the
. presidency of the Indiana State Medecal The Buffington Cement works is ; work there live in Indiana Harbor, Hobart are both due to the stimulating
This community of interest is shown in interurban rrojects and in a score of other smaller matters until the day . is not far distant when the average citi.en will see boundery lines gradually obliterated and the whole
community will rejoice stupendous gion in the west.
There are a few bloody-shirt wavers still left in some of the cities in
the Cafcimet region, but their influence, and everybody has them spotted.
A FAT INDUSTRY.
Lake county's cement production, increased to 25,000 barrels as a result cement plant No. 6, Buffington in ting force of 800 men there willjbe Ever since the steel corporation prairies back of Edgemoor in 1904 the stopped, save when repairs demanded
been increased four times. The cement business is now the most regular
and the most stable in the county. .
ness conditions, l Here is a reason for this. Gary is making cement cheaper than any of its competitors and with the largest cement mills in
the world within its limits, its facilities for producing It are unexcelled
The chief constituent of the Gary cement is blast furnace slag that was once thrown away. Now it is converted into a valuable product that brings the makers $35,000 to $40,000 every day. There is a widespread demand
for the Gary cement, its steady history the future foreshadow the investment
buildings. Additions just completed
expenditure of this size certainly means faith in the future.
JUDGE REFUSED to divorce a other for two years. Good boy, judge, don't youT '
canvassed some of the republican
in 1912. Many of the names sug. receive the smallest consideration at this state for the simple reason that politics and are identified with 1many longer. republican party can win. With a defeat impends and is inevitable. governor of Indiana should come He should be a man identified with interests and he should be a man who the state of Indiana and a republican He is actively connected with one a conservationist; broad-gauged and and a Christian gentleman and could Charles A. Carlisle as a republican 1912. and Hobart townships are, in a region. So closely related are these there that we hold in common that Down with the poor little bloody East Chicago look to the people of society. in Gary territory, but the men who Miller's growth and the expansion of influence of Gary.
progress of the greatest industrial re
what there is of it, Is practically nil which is 12,000 barrels a day will be of the lighting of fires In the kilns at northwest Gary. Instead of an opera 1,400. located its first cement plant in the cement making machinery has never it. Since that time the output has Apparently it Is unaffected by bus! in the past and the prospects for of more millions into new factory have cost six million dollars and an couple who have not spoken to each you hate to break up a quiet home
RANDOM
THINQS AND FUNGS A "AS UBual," hits the spot, And, 'peevish' is no name for it. - 'WE are all brothers(" says an eastern paper. Then, father is wrong. MIGHT as well save up all your pesos and pesetas. There's a lot of unofficial Tag Days coming. PERHAPS it would be as well to chalk a. line on the office floor and let T. E. and T. B. have it out. "UNDERSTAND that young Rocke feller had a close call. With his moa-j ey he can see any sort of a call. THRONE Of Spain is said to be tot-
tering. Do we understand by this thati91-JHa Ward Howe, noted author
Elizabeth is to have another tot? WRITER says that garbage cans are the best Indices to character. Now pipe your neighbor's garbage can. THE early bird may catch the worm, but you must not forget that the early worm gets caught by the worm, too. - FLASH We certainly said nothing about a country bumpkin. We did have a story about a country pumpkin. DON'T believe everything you read about Mr. Taft's trip either in a rabid democratic sheet or a standpat organ. ' THE pitcher that goes to the well too often has nothing on the pitchers who go to the box to rout those Sox. 1 MR. James J. Hill in speaking of ghost dancing must remember that the ghost has to dance when it can't walk. ISN'T it funny that a pure food in spector can always go out and find a dirty farmer who is putting out dirty milk? DON'T know who is in charge of the troops in China, but Thomas B. Dean hasn't been heard from in sev eral weeks. THE last of the Chippewas has died again, but there are a few negrfes left whose fathers were valets to George Washington. . .. WE are rejoicing that fringe is again coming in style. We can wear that old pair of 1908 unmentionables and be right in style. MAINE doesn't know yet whether she's "wet" or "dry." Probably the enumerators have been boozed up so long they don't know how tj count. e ALWAYS the same. People raise Ned because the aviators won't go up in a gale, yet they themselves scoot for the cyclone cellar when it gets too breezy. A UNDERTAKERS now want to be called morticians. All right as long as they change those rusty black suits they ? wear at a funeral, we will call them' anything they want. LAFOLLETTE is coming into In diana next month to promote his candidacy. As Indiana hasn't had very many circuses this year, here's a chance for us all to see a good show.
LADIES. HIPS ARE COMING IN AGAIN HIPS. WASP WAISTS. AND MAYBE HOOPS A r I R
Thn hnbhlA akirt hasn't srone not really. It has only descended to the ankle, where it, is pulled in with a band of sable and warranted to trip up its wearer with the greatest ease imaginable. It was prominent at a big gown show Just held in New York, and came In company with the oddest echoes from feminine pasts that Fashion has permitted herself these many years. 1 There was the quaintest little polonaise a dawning bint of a Dolly Varden in French blue over a white satn skirt and bodice. The narrow black velvet that bordered It was tremendously demure, and it was as flat at the back as it could manago consistently. But there is no doubt of it, ladies you'll have hips again before the season's over. It did not need a ttlescope to discover that the wasp waist may yet return to discountenance the straight-fronted Venus de Milo brigade who have been concealing their avoirdupois. There was even a glimpse of the old basque veritably, my sisters. Imagine yourselves in cloudy skirts with a sky blue or green or link silk
The Day in HISTORY
THIS DATE IX HISTORY" October 17. !777 The British army under Gen. Burgoyne surrendered to the Americans under Ge,n. Gates at Saratoga. 1806 Assassination of Jacques I., em-per-ar of Haytl. 1817 jifhaddeus Kosciusko, Polish patriot and a commander In the American Revolutionary army, died In Switzerland. Born In roland in 1746. 849 Frederic Francois Cbopln. famous composer, died. Born March i, 1809. 1863 -President Lincoln called for 300,000 volunteers. 1866 The Austrians evacuated Lombard y. 1896 The dispute over the Cathralif schools in Manitoba was settled by compromise. 1902-Lord Kitchener annolnted In oai. mand the British forces In India and reformer, died in Newport, R. I. Born in New York. Mav 27. 1819. THIS IS MY TH BIRTHDAY James R. Day. James R. Lay, Chancellor of Syracuse University, was born in Washington County, Maine, October 17, 1845. and received his education at Bowdoin College. He entered the Methodist ministry in 1872 and filled various pastorates In New England cities before he was called to the pulpit of Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church in New York city. Whlls he was pastor of this church. In 1893, he was elected chancellor of Syracuse University which now has faculties numberng 250 and an enrollment of nearly 3,500 students. Dr. Day is reognlzed as one of the foremost educators in the country, and as a preacher he Is said to have few equals in the Methodist communion. He was elected a biahop of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1904, but resigned in order to continue his work at the university. Up and Down in INDIANA" LITTLE BOY SHOOTS BROTHER. Roy Bradford, the fifteen-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bradford, of Winchester, was perhaps fatally wounded last night when he was acci dentally shot by his four-year-ol i brother. A 22-caliber rifle was standind In the corner. The younger child attempted to carry the rifle, but allowed It to drag on the floor and it was dis charged. The bullet penetrated the ab domen of the older brother. It Is bo lleved be will die. EXPIRES WHILE ON TRAIN. en xvocuy oi v-nicago was round a mile south ot Mitchell Saturday after noon in a demented condition. He was brought to Mitchell and given medical attention. Today he was ordered taken to Bedford and while on the train In the station died. The coroner rendered a verdict that death was due to alcohol ism. Reedy came to Mitchell from French Lick. DRIVES OFF ROAD IS KILLED. Mrs. Charles Martin of Henryville, was instantly killed while driving down a steep hill near her home about three miles east of Henryville. last night. She was accompanied by her husband, and drove off the side of a bridge, overturning the buggy. The accident wis due to the darkness making it Impossible for the occupants to see the bridge. The husband and two children survive. VICTIM WILL RECOVER. Ralph Hunter, of Newcastle, who was shot last Friday night by Jesse Freel. at the same time the latter killed his wife, Is recovering, and will survive the ordeal despite the fact that he has four bullets In his body. The funeral of Mrs Freel will be held today at the home, and burial will be at South Mound Cemetery. Prosecutor Evans spent Saturday and Monday gathering evidence, and learn ed of letters and threats by Frel to kill his young wife as far back as July 1 baaque pointed front and back. Get the effect? There's to be no more linelessness ef human terms. Even hoops are threatened. For the rest, everything must reach the ground; it may even aspire to a train, eut the train must never be straight. To be truly chic you have to have a little sidewise tail follow you about with a sort of intoxicated lilt- Nobody knows why the tail of a brocade, say- for brocades are quite the proper caper should descend only at the left except that it disposes of the end of the material without resorting to the scissors and pulls' back the frock sufficiently to show your right silk stocking some third or so of its length if you are in a hurry. There are the Empiro waists up under the arm-pits the so-called natural waists and no waists at all in the modish gowns. It is an affair of choice. As no skirt is wide enough of itself to reach the floor in safety, a back-breadth much like an elongated coat tail in contrasting color or material is added. This is often "fitted up" into the bodice which is helped out with net or chiffon in fichu at the neck with a haphazard sleeve annexed.
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HERE'S CLOCK OF DEATH BY WHICH ORTIE McMANlGAL DECLARES IOS ANGELES DYNAMITERS SOUGHT TO DO THEIR WORK IN SAFETY
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In the meantirtvo Freel is taking things easy at the County Jail. Evidently he does not realize trie seriousness of his position. He was' visited yesterday by his father, W. S. Freel, former city engineer, also by his mother, who left the Jail and went to the VanZandt home to gaze upon the features of her son's victim. Freel asked for his mandolin and guitar and yesterday play an accompaniment to the songs sung by other prisoners. AKRKSTS WOMAN FORGER. Accussed of committing a series of forgeries. In which every bank in New Albany, together with a score of business houses, were victimized a year ago for amounts ranging from $5 to $25, Mrs. Vida Crabb, wife of W. M. Crabb, a locomotive engineer, is in jail at New Albany. The direct charge is that she passed a forged check for $20 on Charles E. Crecelius, a druggist. Oct, 19, 1910. She admitted to Capt-T nomas Cannon, night chief of police, that she was guilty of this charge. MA'! LED BY FREIGHT EXGIXE. Jorin Farrell, age forty-five, was instantly killed by a freight train on the Cambridge City branch of the Pennsylvania lines at Shelbyville. lasf night. He was struck by the engine and his body mangled. He was on his way home In the southern part of the city. It is thought the light from the engine, which rounded a curve, confused the man. The train was in charge of conductor W. E. LeClare and engineer James Culp. Farrell is survived by a widow and three children. LIGHTNING DOES HEAVY DAMAGE. A loss of $10,000 was caused earlv yesterday morning " when lightning struck a stock barn on the farm fo Milton Cook, northwest of Newcastle auJ it was destroyed, together with 300 hogs, 160 tons of hay, a cow, a horse and hundreds of bushels of wheat, corn and oats. A private water service In the Cook home saved it from total destruction. One hundred head of cattle and sixteen horses were saved. Insurance was carried to the amount of $6,000. THREE Hl'SRT IS Al'TO WRECK. Walter Barnett, Miss Kate Bultman and Harry Marmaduke. of Washington, were hurt when an automobile skidded at a band in the Washington-PIainville road, three miles north of the city, last night, and struck a telephone pole. Barnett, the driver, was pinned in the wrecked machine and received severe Injuries. Miss Bultman and Marmaduke escaped with slight Injuries. All three were rendered unconscious ad were revived by physicians. , The car was traveling forty miles an hour when the accident occurred. BULLET STRUCK THEIR BED. While Mr. and Mrs. John Sandleweck of Jasper were in their bed asleep, some unknown person driving past their home fired a pistol shot through one of the windows of the room in which they were sleeping, and the bullet entered the bedstead. Mr. Sandleweck, his son and neighbors followed the buggy and they say they ascertained who was in it. The matter has been referred to the grand Jury, which Is now in session. VOICS OF P E O R L E ABOUT MUSHROOMS. Dyer, Ind., Oct. 17. Editor Times: How much longer will mushrooms last and how may I tell them from todstools? SUBSCRIBER. The mushroom season is practically over, now. The safest and simplest rule to' tell mushrooms from toadstools is to never eat anything which you are at all doubtful about. The common edlblo mushroom (Agarlryus campestris) is so easy to identify and Its characteristics so easily memorized that there is no excuse for making a mistake. Its stalk is always free from a bulb, or swelling at base; there Is always a ring or color around the stem near the cap; the gills on the under surface ot the cap are either pink or brown. It is never found in woods or shady situations but always in open fields or meadows. Poisonous mushrooms and toadstools are numerous and variable in many respects but if you never eat any that grow in woods or have wliite gills you will be on the safe side.
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According to the confession of Ortle McManlgaL held with the MeNamara brothers upon murder charges growing out of the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times plant, John J. MeNamara planned that and other attacks on property, and arranged for the safety of the man who placed l-e explosive by using, an infernal machine such as shown in the above picture. The clock alarm, setting off the charge, was generally set to go off hours afterward, when the perpetrator would be miles away engaged In establishing aa alibi. James B. MeNamara. the first of the brothers to be tried. Is charged with actually placing the "clock of death" under the walls of the Times building.
The Evening Chft-Chat By RUTH OAJVIEROIV
"It matters little where I was born Whether my parents were rich er poor. Whether they shrank from the cold world's acorn Or walked fin the pride of wealth secure; But whether I live an honest man. And hold my Integrity In my clutch I tell you brother, plain as I am. It matters much. From the Swedish in The Optimist's Good Morning. Refinement is a most desirable quality. No one can deny that. But over-refinement is just as much a vice as the other is a virtue. No one who has ever met a person who Is suffering and making others suffer from a ease of super-refinement can possibly deny that. A woman has Just moved Into our neighborhood who belongs to this class. She is a scion of a splendid stock. She has been finely bred. She has been splendidly educated. But she has neither inherited nor acquired one inestimable thing a sense of values. She has but one criterion of worth. It is refinement. If she might assist In the final separation of the sheep, from the goats I believe that the people who possessed refinement of taste and manner, no matter what their other qualifications or lack of them, would be courteously directed co Elysium while those who lacked reflement no matter what trifling recommendations, such aa sterling character or spiritual worth they possessed, would be firmly steered off in the other direction. This woman, since her coming into the neighborhood, has naturally met many new people, I have chanced to be with her a great deal and have been astonished and saddened by her treatment of some of them. If she decides that anew acquaint PLAYS AKD PLAYERS. I I Charles Klein's new play is called "The Outsider." The new play of Henry Arthur Jones is called The Ogre." . "Baron Trenck" will be produced In New York In October.Mrs. Thomas Whlffin is to appear In a vaudeville sketch this season. . Anna" Held will appear in a new musical play In New York early nex month. ' Sidney Drew ajid TJonel Barrymore are to appear in Philadelphia In "Bob Acres."' Hall Calne Is to have a play called "The Quality of Mercy" produced in London. Emma Trentlnl will begin her second tour In "Naughty Marietta" October 2, In Brooklyn. Katherine Emmet will be leading lady with Lawrence D'Orsay In his re. vlval of "The Earl of PawtacKo-. Guy Bates Post will star In a new drama of Amerlca'n life by Edward Chllds Carpenter, called "The Great De sire." Josephine Cohan is now playing the heroine in "The Fortune Hunter." the play of which her husband, Fred Niblo, Is the star. There Is to be a dramatization of "He Fell In Love With His Wife," to be call ed "Patrners." May Buckley and Frederick Burton are to appear In It. Mabel and Edith Taliaferro have returned from a vacation trip to Europe. The younger sister will resume hetour in "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" this monti. George Parsons, . the husband of Georgia Drew Mendum, has written a musical comedy, which has been accepted by the Shuberts for production early this season. Fritz Leiber, who was leading mar with Ben Greet for many years, following this by appearing as leading man with Julia Marlowe, has been reengaged by Robert Mantell as leading man. "Baa! Baa! Black Sheep!" is the title the late O. Henry's story, "Cabbages and Kings," will bear in dramatic form. The dramatization is the joint work f Joseph Medill Patterson and Hugh Ford. J. Hartley Manners, author of "The
WKICJK iXPlOBZ
kvux ja ance is sufficiently refined, her manner is exquisite in its cordiality and evidence of breeding. She is every inch a beautiful gentlewoman. But If she decides that a new acquaintance Is somewhat lacking In refinement, she becomes so eager to draw a line of distinction between this creature and herself, that she loses all her own refinement. Politeness so cold that It is scarcely politeness at all, and even positive dueness, charac-. terize her manner. And the worst of it Is that many of the people who are thus treated are people of great mental and moral worth. One Is a woman with great brains and ability, who, besides managing her home to perfection, has so much helped her husband ' in his business, that, thuogb people of moderate circumstances, they have been able to send their four children to college. She herself lacked an early education and has never been able to quite overcome some little roughness of speech. Consequently she is anathema. Another Is a man whose innumerable charities are as beautiful as they are unostentious, and whose family life Is one continual ' lesson In ' ' "the fine art of being good to live with." But ,Jie will wear colored shirts and ties that do not always harmonize and he hasn't mastered a few of the minor details of good manners, although in all that rests on unselfishness and true courtesy, he is most perfectly versed. Another Is but why tell you more? You know them all the simple, kindly, crude, efficient, splendid folks whom such a woman as she cannot possibly understand. If the loss were not so decidedly hers who deserves It, one might feel much more sorry. As it is, we can only sigh and think, "refinement is a desirable quality, but over-refinement " well let's add it to our collection of vices to be preserved from. RUTH CAMERON. House Next Door," has Just finished another play for J. E. Dodson. W. L Griffith, author of "The Dominion of Canada," is chief secretary of the high commissioner of Canada. Wallace Irwin bas written the book and Walter Damrosch the musftc of & new comic opera entitled "The Dove of Peace." Hasel Klrke has been engaged by , Lew Fields for the role of the prima donna in his forthcoming production of "The Bigamist." Annette Kellerman Is ambitious to go on the legitimate stage. She Is looking for a play in which she can Introduce her diving act. Henry B. Harris will soon produce "The Talker," a new play by Miss Marion Fairfax, In which her husband. Tully Marshall, will have the leading role. Tim Murphy has begun his season in "The New Code," which he will use until the new year, when he will produce a modern comedy by Paul Wilstach. May Irwin has chosen her play for the present season. It Is a new comedy railed "Mrs. Tompkins," by Agnes L Crimmins, a new and unknown playwright. William Faversham and Mrs. Faversham, who was Miss Julia Opp, will appear in a new play this season by Edward Knoblauch, called "The Discovery of America." Joe Welch, the well-known character comedian, is at present considering a proposition from H. H. Frazee, to star in a new musical comedy by Herbert Hall WJnslow. "The Hope," a sporting melodrama In four acts and sixteen scenes, In which there is a fire and an earthquake, had its first performance at the Dury Lane theatre, London, recently. Forbes-Robertson and his company will depart for this country from England on Oct. 14, again to present "The Passing of the Third Floor Back." A niece of the star. Miss Maud Buchanan, will have the role of Stacla. Anna Cleveland Is at present negotiating for the dramatic rights of "Dull Jim," by Luther Long, the story of which appeared several months ago In a magazine. Miss Cleveland sees great dramatic possibilities In the story. Henry Mortimer ihas written a new swash-buckler play, entitled "His Knightly Honor," in which he . expects to play the leading role, himself. At the end of the New York run of "A Million", one of the dramatic firms will produce the play.
