Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 49, Hammond, Lake County, 6 January 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
January 6, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Ur b Lake Coualy Prlsting mmd Pib. llshtas Coraaaaf.
Gary Evening Times; Lake County Times (Country); Lake County Time (Evening;); Times Sporting; Extra, and Lake County Times (Weekly).
Entered at the Postornee. Hammond. Ind.. as second-clajs matter.
Main o'ffice Hammond. Ind Tel. Ill Private Exchange. Call Dept. Wanted.
for new business, in this locality J aeeday.. vacation., till things lighten.
Where a public utility corporation has I up. Just give ine a chance and I'll
treated its patrons as well as the Chi- let you see what my strong right arm
cago Telephone company has treated looks like with sleeves rolled up to the people of the Calumet region it tha elbow. One man who will act should be protected from unwarrant- promptly and courageously In a pinch ed competition. is worth a half acre field ot emergency If the average persoa just stops to shirkers ;and what is more it will think that the invasion of the local nt be long before the employer will
field by the independent meanB ,m nay him enough money to prove it
complete duplication of the telephone He is the man who in a dozen years
plant that is now in existence andw" stand with his hand on tho
that the people will have to pay for throttle of vast enterprises and be that duplication in the end they will abl to siS" hi" name on the business
see that but little would be rained bv end of big cheeks. He is the man
Gary Office .Tel. 137 Esst Chicago Office Tel. XI Indiana Harbor Tel S50R Whiting Tel. SOU Crown Point ....Tel. (I LARGER PAID IP CIRCULATION THAW ANY OTHER TWO NUWSPAPERS IX THE CALIMET REGION. New York Representatives Payne & Young. 30-14 West 33d St.. and 2-3s West 82nd St.. New York. N. T. Chicago Representative Payne A Young, 747-748 . Marquette Building. Chicago. 11L ANONYMOUS communications will not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should b addressed to The Editor, Times. Ham' trend. Ind.
a temporary reduction In the rates. Any. one who has visited Grand Rapids, Mich, and has noted that every merchant and a large proportion of the householders of the city are compelled to pay rent on two telephones will see that the duplication
of telephone plants is economic waste.
The telephone business should a
who will some day be called lucky because he rose with the sun. and i
favorite of fortune because he did an
other man's work after he had finished his own.
Stand in the, breach! Let it be
known that you are the man who can be counted on whenever trouble arise3 or calamity impends. Make it certain
a monoply. The advantages of uni-l1-" " propose io ue me versal service are so apparent that J anchor in time of storm, strong In
the subscriber to a system that cov- ume or doubt and struggle, depend
ers the local and long distance fieldlal,le ln misfortune, a fighter against
as the Chicago Telephone Co. doea adversity and the rotten unreliability
has a hundred times more for his of tne deserter and the irresponsible
money than the one who is simply
THE SLEEPING GALLEON. (In tht Ray of Tobermory, in the Isle of Mu'.l, Scotland, one of the' lost ships of the Spanish Armada llos to this day.) old gnlleoa. gold italleoB, fmk low tu Tohe.-inory liny, Irhf! inhake off the aurgrs dun, Ttiwn oukru hitsii, to m-ret the day. Krandlsh thy polinhed mat ngaia I.Ike InucfK In tb- aaleM blast Let fly thy annfalu of Spain, Trample the floe d.t that held thee fat. I aloose thy blazoned -aavai weigh Thy mated anchor from Ha bed! Let all they silver, rlarlona bray, Calling, alliag up thy dead. Let the nlida amite thy earven poop
Wher-? atalked thy hlack-tirovrned ad
miral
TIo arrrea and rrllhlntc kelp may loop
i Thy cannon n here the starfinh ipranl Terrible, terrible was the light That from thy battle-laaterwa bled
O'er nord and hnrne, xpnrkllni;
bright I.Ike ruiI-? la an Idol'n head.
- " r tmj crystal ra-ieam ciiiu. (
' Armsdlia nldoir, draped vrlth vreeds. W ith funeral moaa and weed that Told Thy deck a for unaceompllKhed deed. Dark wcrr the ulerms that houaded three,' ! With jtcld and thunder In thy wml, And drove tlte to a stranger sea. njI.jn-roBKbt for tbee a aandy tomb, baarllnar the alien water drank , Thee down, bronte-glrdled Amazon. And with thee and thy alater aank , S pain like a Mar whose day la done. A star foredoomed to full eellpse In realm that Spanish ehnlaa had hound . By Santiago's sheltered ships And the red Manlllna slaughtrr(troand. Aon fiercer meteors glare and trail Their Iroa bottle-hulks a foam ; spread each tattered flag and sail; Steer for Hiapanla, ateer for bom! Hearst thou no wealth save golden baraf 4 N armament save moldered frnnsf Canst thou not home by wiser stars. With one greet message 'or thy sons? Lost Is thine ancient ocean-realm ; Then dl thy grief like Philip's rage Return In peace and at thy helm The Spirit of the Vanward Age. Herman SchefTauer in Harper's.
connected with a thousand local
phones. The advantages that have accrued to the publlo as a result of the amalgamation of the Bell Telephone
Company with the Western Union
A GOOD SHOWING. Gary's postal savings banl now ha3
$20,000 in it which an average of one
dollar for every person in the city That thjs is a fine showing may be
DAAii f ' 1 f I .
Teleeranh Pnmnanv tr frrm ih luau " suuwlu8 m propor
nun iu us population is nve times
American Telephone & Telegraph Co.
are appaint every day.
Should the telegraph office ' in
Hammond. East Chicago or Gary be closed at night and a patron of the telephone company should desire to send a telegraph message it is possible to have the long distance connect you with Chicago f ree of charge 'and
have the message sent out from there.
The advantages of this reciprocal
arrangement are apparent. There
are other advantages that come from
the concentration of the management
of such public utilities and the tele
phone and the telegraph and it must!
be apparent to the person ""with eve h
a little business experience that com
petition in the local telephone field
is not wanted.
greater than that of Chicago. Proportionately speaking it is also nine times greater than th'at of New York.
HE A RD BY RUB E
FAMOUS DIXIE CHEFS PKEPAKE MEALS IN ANCIENT CAPITOL KITCHEN TO TEMPT PALATES OF STATESMEN .VHO MAKE OUR NATION'S HISTORY
LOTS TO CONSIDER. Chairman J. L. Hoviier of the Lafollette committee at Chicago says he has word from Terr Haute that four out of six pallbearers at a funeral recently held in that city drelared themselves for Lafoliette. It is encouraging to know that the Lafoliette boom is already assured
of the services of a corps of experi--..enced pallbearers. Marion Chronicle. And yet it will be absolutely impossible to sense the importance of the so-called Lafoliette bpom until we hear from the undertakers, association, the floral nouses and the monumental manufacturers organization. You see there is a great deal to h considered In t-stimatlng the strength of a political boom . v
AUTOMATIC FINES. The automatic system of fines against the inmates of resorts, which has been the custom here, will be discontinued by Prosecutor x John W. Sappenfleld. A system of automatic trials and fines amounting to licensing of vice, has been in practice here for several years. The present prosecutor says the social evil Is a menace to the community, and he proposes to make the trials real ones, and to take criminal action against violators of the social code. lie will confer with Chief of Police George L. Covey in the matter, and the two will work together to wipe out vicious practices. Evansville Dispatch. '
If Evansville regards the auto
matic system of fines as an official li
censing of vice it has been well 11
censed in certain localities in thia
neighborhood. The automatic system
is a device Invented and used not so
much for replenishing the public
treasury as it is for distribution of fees to certain officials and police
A FUSSY SCHOOLMA'AM.
It certainly is remarkable how
eager some servants of the people
are to get their names ln the public
prints. Some of the poor soula feel
that if they go on simply doing their duty that they are not earning their wages hence they endeavor to rush
into print on every fool occasion.
A teacher in the southern part of
Ohio says that the Declaration of
Independence is devoid of literary
style. We wonder if the board of education pays her for teaching the
precepts laid down in that immortal document or did the members hire her to act as a literary critic and
tear the prose and poetry of the
world to pieces?
We feel rather sorry for the chil
dren who are compelled to sit at the feet of a girl whose sensitive cerebellum ta&es unbrage at the literary
style of the noble Declaration Independence. . 1
Sometimes we wonder whether all
peopel "are" free and equal. '
"MR. and Mrs. Jacob Crossman of
.-aperviue were outsme guests at a
reunion dinner last Sunday at the
home of their mother, Mrs. J. Brossman." Joliet News.
Perhaps they'd rather be on the
outside looking in. Wonder what
the menn .was anyway?
NOTICE that hellish smile on the face
ot your coal dealer?
COMING to think about it Alderman
Itaukus and "Mona Lisa" disappeared about the same time.
OCR idea of having everything you want is to be able to pay jour Christmas bills before the end of January. BUCK OAK is still uncontaminated from the "turkey trot" and the "grizzly
bear" waltz. IT is a wise housewife who puts the sheets ln cold storagthis time of the year and substitutes wjly blankets instead. ,t ' Hennery's Little Itase Reacts. HENNERY COLD BOTT LE had both feet frosted last night and its alt his own fault. This Is the way it came about: Last night about half past twelve Hennery suddenly got out of bed. He told his wife that he believed that the- beer kegrs down in the cellar were freezing: up and that he wanted to wrap them up. Two hours later Mrs. Coldbottle. becoming alarmed, went downstairs and found Hennery fast asleep. It appears that he had to tesf each keg- separately, and when he got through he didn"t mind the cold atall and tell asleep right on the cellar floor. 'As it is Hennery cannot go out, Hy Ball and the proofreader are not allowed inside the house, and Mrs Coldbottle has placed the key to the cellar down her stocking. TH" feller what says quails fer quail seems C go out o' his way t' git on th subject. When Tell Binkley has got a drink er two in him he don't think th' pedestrian has any right. ABE MARTIN. SOME of the saving , banks are letting you get in on the January interest on all deposits made before the 1th of the month. Nice way to Invest that $200 that you didn't spend around Christmas. THE brewery trust has dissolved voluntarily, but you'll see no volunteer reductions in the current price of schooners.
NOW that Gary's only millionaire is
figuring as one of the principals in a
divorce case, Pittsburg will have to open her eyes.
Kactal Alfalfa for Awhile.
(Highlands Correspondence to Times.)
"THE barber is leaving town and that
means another chance for a good barber."
JUST now a lot ot the plumbers are
getting theirs now:
WITH butter flirting with the 42-cent
mark again, you can figure It out for yourself why a man getting a $1.45 a day and having a large family refuses
to be for Teddy.
COLD as it is It doesn't seem to be as
cold as it used to.
YOU probably have noticed that the
persons who boast about leaving their
bedroom windows up at night, who take cold plunges' in the morning and who seldom wear overcoats have been strangely silent for the past few days.
A GARY real estate man who wrote
a treatise on the remedy for financial stringencies has killed himself because of the stringency.
CANDIDATES for the postmastership
are -quite secretive as to whom they
would like to see get the presidential nomination.
if 1 '-V rn " ,-jJ ;
?&s- U. S. SENATE: KITCHEN
cUnipdinst
Here is where neak are prep ared for the nation's statesmen, the men who make history, the members of the United States Senate. The kitchen is located in the old part of the capitol building. Its cornerstone waa laid In 1793. The three negro chefs shown in the picture were brought from tha south by senators whosa constituencies lie below the Mason and Dixon's line, and they surely know how to serve up tho delicious and avory dishes that have made southern cookerv famous the world ovar.
proclaimed their inde- ,
WHY is it that the man whose
snoring has disturbed the household for long nocturnal hours is always
the chap to have a grouch in the
court shysters and you can easily findmorninK while he announces that he
out the names of these fellows if you hasn't slept a wink all night.
care
ARE YOU READY?
MR. J. E. Morgan should hesitat
about bringing that rare collection of
jewels to this country as perhaps Mr.
There comes a time ln every busii-jE. H. Gary has not got through buy
ness when misfortunes pile them- lag five hundred dollar necklaces yet
selves up heap upon heap, mountain
IT will take five months to com
plete the meat trust trial now on at
Chicago and you will recall that it
took T. Roosevelt seven years to bust
that trust, euphonically speaking.
ECONOMIC WASTE. It is understood that the Calumet region is to be invaded by the Automatic Telephone Company. If this company is able to make any head-
upon mountain. Troubles seldom come singly .and one accident 13 nearly sure to be followed by a series ot distresses. The ill-fortune that calls the owner from his business is nearly certain to occur in the hot season when the
head clerk is sitting up day and MISS Virginia Brooks always
night with sick wife and the steno- manages to keep the temperature in
grapher has quit. These are the the West Hammond resorts away from "times that try men's souls," and the zero point, but whether any less
yours is under examination. If you coal is burned we don't know
are of small caliber .with a brain liks
a canary and an ambition minus, vou
step up to the temnorarv manaeer Xl 18 sigmncant. mai u Mr. xwobe
with a rat-cunnine- riMm in , velt has half-heartedly stated that he
formerly fishy eye and deliver one of doesn't want to be the next president
the foilowine- he isn"t suggesting any names for
"The boss promised me a vacation the men wh? ml&at be
and I'm going tomorrow."
"Give me a raise or I'll quit my
1874. 1S22 Greeks
pendence. 1S32 T. Do Witt Talmage, noted Presbyterian preacher, born in Bound Brook, N. J. Died ln Washington. T. C, April 12, 1902. 1S32 Laval University at Quebec opened. 1862 British naval and French military expeditin reached Mexico. THIS IS MV 49TII BIRTHDAY" Charles A. Richmond. Charles A. Richmond, president of Union College Schenectady, N. T., was born of Scotch parents on January 7, 1863, in New Ycyrk city. After preparing for college at Orange, N. J., he entered the College of the City of New York. After one year there he entered the sophomore class at Princeton, where he graduated In 1883. He became
principal of the Ingleslde Academy of
Palmyra, Mo., and after that was professor of mathematics at the Cayuga Lake Military Academy. In, 1S85 he entered Princeton Theological Seminary, from which he was graduated in 1888. At the time of his election to the
This Week's News Forecast
Washington, D. C, Jan. 6. The week promises to be prolific Of Interesting news relating to politics and public affairs. The Democratic national committee will meet In Washington Monday to fix the time and place for the national convention. Coincident with the meeting of the committee will be the Jackson Day banquet to be given Monday night at the Hotel Raliegh ani which will have among its speakers all of the leaders whose names are mentioned in connection with the Democratic presidential nomination. The eub-committee on arrangements for the Republican national convention, of which Harry S. New of Indiana is chairman, will hold Its first meeting in Chicago Saturday The senate committee which is investigating the election of Senator Lorimer will resume its sessions in Washington Monday, when Mr. Lorimer will take the witness chair and testify in his own defense. Attorney General Wickersham Is expected back from Panama early in the week. His first work, it is expected, will be directed towards reaching a
basis of settlement of the Government's two Digest pending "trust" cases those of the International Harvester Company and the United Shoe Machinery Company. Important decisions are expected from the Supremo Court of the United States when it reconvenes Monday after the holiday recess. A special election will be held Tuesday in the Seventh congressional district of Kansas to select the successor to the late Representative E. H. Madison. ' Georgia will hold a special election to confirm the results of the recent
presidency of Union College two years J primary election for governor. The legislature- will meet January 24 to reago Dr. Richmond was pastor of thejeeivo the returns and Joseph M. Brown, the new governor, probably will b
Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church of Albany, N. T. Congratulations to: ' James B. Angel!, president emeritus of the University of Michigan, 83 year? old today. " . Wiscount Gladstone, governor-general -of the Unien of South Afrtca, '5S years old today. Charles Klein, the noted playwright, 45 years old today. Sir Sandford Fleming, Canadian capitalist and publicist, S3 years old today.
The Day in HISTORY
way with ttus city councils on the "job."
various cities of the region it will mean that every merchant in thj region will be compelled to pay a double telephone rental. There may be complaint about telephone rates or poor service and in some instances these complaints may be justified but on the whole the service given by the Chicago (Bell) Telephone Company has been satisfactory. In the past few years this .company has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in the laying of conduits, the purchase of switchboards, the construction of new plants and in the general improvement of the service. It is safe to say that these expenditures are not warranted by the business that is now being done but have
JOLIET man whose first name is
Sauat was married recently. Somo-
"This is too hot to work hard and times we believe that it is the men
my health Is poor." and not the women wno ought to hav.e
don t propose to do Henry's their names changed
woric; let ueorge do it." "My grandmother died yesterday
and the score 2 to 1 in favor of the INCIDENTALLY the people of MilSox." - waukee who put the Socialists in What the acting manager ought to office with great eclat are kicking like do would be to hit you over the head steers because their taxes are nearly
with a crow bar. snrinkle vou with 1 doubled
embalming fluid .throw you in the street and report the matter to the
street cleaning department; but he can't; so he smiles feebly and keeps you on the pay roll till the boss gets
back.
But if you belong to the class that can always be counted on to stand in
the breach, when the emergency
arises, you will say to your superior,
"Let me do it. I can put in a few
OF course you have shown little
Willie how to use that new pair of Christmas skates and told him how
you used to cut figure 8's long years
ago? ,
been ma.de because ol th.prospectslextra hours every day, anr I don't I
"THE three best bets: The. coal bin. The coal shovel. The coal scuttle,
Up and Down in INDIAN A
HOSEY, COOX ASD QUAILS. William Everroad, a farmer, who
lives near Hope, Bartholomew county.
inaugurated the next day.
A convention will assemble at Columbus to frame a new constitution for the State of Ohio. Many important questions will.be brought up, lnctuding the initiative, the referendum, the recall and liquor-icenses. . , , During the week the legislatures of Xew Jersey, Virginia, South Carolina and several other States will begin their regular seslons. The Dominion parliament, which adjourned early in December; for , th holiday recess, will resume its sessions Tuesday. . ., ..... . ;, The important event. of the week in Europe will be the general elections for members of the German Reichstag. The elections are regarded as the most important since the formation of the present German Empire. The main electoral issues are Morocco and the foreign policy of the Government, the high cost of living, a demand for a revision of the tariff, reform of taxation with the introduction of an Inheritance tax, and a curtailment of the power of the Catholic Centrum. '
terest from September 1, 1906, for 303,000 units of antitoxin which he administered to Charles Tolan. age two. a county charge. Former commissioners have refused to pay the claim because the boy died. I The boy was taken ill August 22, 1906, and died September 1, 1906. At
the request of II. G. Cushman, township
decided to fell a "bee tree," and invited trustee. Dr. Little took charge of the
Frank Spotts, a neighbor, to help him. case and administered antitoxin. Ths
They c't down a big sugar tree thought usual dose for a child of two y.ears Is
"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" January 8. 1698 Whitehall Palace, London, destroyed by fire. 1763 British ships made an unsuccessful attack on Buenos Ayres. 1S11 Charles Sumner, statesman, born ln Boston. Died in Washington, D. C, March 11, 1874. 1832 Gustave Dore, famous illustrator, born. Died Jan. 20, 1883. 1842 Massacre at Kyber Pass when the British army was retiring from Cabul. 1S97 Albany celebrated its. lpOth anniversary as the capital at New York. 1902 Nicholas Murray Butler elected president of Columbia University. "THIS IS MY BIST BIRTHDAY" Chart- B. Elliott.
Charles B. Elliott, associate justice
of the supreme court of the Philippines,
was born ln Morgan Countyf Ohio, January 6, 1861. He was educated at Marietta College, the State University
of Iowa of Minnesota. He practised law In Minneapolis from 18S to 1S90 He was. until 1894. municipal Judge in
Mlneapolls, and waS " appointed on January 4 of that year to be .1udge of
the district court. He was made associate Justice of the supreme court of
Minnesota by Governor Johnson in 190t
and continued in that position until appointed to the supreme court of tho
Philippines.
Congratulations to: John C. Ppooner. former United
States senator from Wisconsin, 69 years old today.
Duncan U. Fletcher, United States
senator from Florida, 63 years old today.
Henry E. Dixey, well known actor, 53
years old today.
Sir Henry Rundle, British governor
of the Island of Malta, 06 years old to
day. "THIS DATE IV HISTORY" January 7. 1669 Massachusetts tiolonlsts conclud
ed a treaty of peace with the
Indians. 171S Israel Putnam, Americah revolutionary hero, born. Died May 19 1790.
1789 First ' national election held in
the United States.
1800 Millard Fillmore. 13th President of the U. P., born in Cayuga County.
. Y. Died in Buffalo; ilarch 9,
to contain honey, and on investigation
they found so much that two large
dishpans were required to carry it away. While the men were engaged in
removing the honey Everroad's dog began to jump around the stump of the tree and bark. They looked in the stump and saw a coon there. The stump was cut open and the do and coon fought thirty minutes before thi coon was killed. The animal weighed 13 Vi pounds. On his way home Spotts found 120 dead quails beside' the road. The birds did not appear to be frozen, and he Is at a loss to account for their death. TO FICiHT SOCIAL EVIL. The automatic system of fines against the inmates of resorts, which has been the custom at Evansville, will be discontinued by Prosecutor John W. Sappenfleld. A system of automatic trials and fines amounting to licensing of vice, has been in practice at Evansville for several years. The present prosecutor
says the social evil is a menace to the community, and he proposes to make the trials real ones, and to take criminal action against the violator of the social code.
ORA WHITENECK PAROl.feD. It was learned at AYabash. Wednes
day evening that Ora Whiteneck, former surveyor of Wabash county and later the city's civil engineer, had been
paroled from Michigan City prison where he had served fifteen months for embezzlement. Whlteneck was sentenced to from one to seven years ln prison
for embezzling ditch funds while county surveyor.
CULTIVATE LARGE FARM. Agriculture on the scale of the great
ranches in the northwest will be attempted on a farm of 2,800 acres near South Bend, which was recently sold to Chlcas-o canitailsts for $113,00. The
tract is to be placed under cultivation for the first tim. The owners hav?
brought experienced farm superintendents from the west and plans for next
season's work are well advanced. A Ruraely oil pull tractor and an Oliver fifty-gang plow have been purchased and will be delivered soon. A siding is being laid from the Chicago, Indiana & Southern Indiana railroad and a freight depot will be built on the farm. The crops will be onions, peppermint, celery and corn. T!i tract is the largest farm in northern Indiana and was purchased from the Christian Holler estate. ASKS 4S7 FOR ANTITOXIN. Dr. J. A. Little of Logansport. wishes the board of Cass county commissioners to pay him 1187.40 with 6 per cent, in-
from two thousand to five thousand units, but Dr. Little used 303,000 unit3. He says that he broke up the dlptherla and that death was caused by other complications. . STRUCK BY FAST, TRAIN. When the fast Florida flyer on thn Evansville & Terre Haute railroad struck the buggy in which Mrs. MInni? B. Allen of Terre Haute was riding yesterday, bystanders expected to see her body ground to pieces beneath the wheels of the train. Instead, although the horse was killed and the buggy demolished. Mars. Allen was hurled into the air and alighted on ; the engine pilot, escaping with onlya severe shaking up and bruises. Mrs. Allen had tried to heed the warning of the flagman, but the horse became frightened, and bolted, running in front of the train. KILL MAI) COW. A valuable cow belonging to a farmer named Henry, living In Jackson township near Brazil, was shot yesterday.
The cow was bitten by & mad dog sev
eral days ago and had been watched closely for some time. The animal showed signs of rabies yesterday and was shot at once. Several other case.! of rabies have been reported from Jackson, townhsip.
LABOR NEWS
: 1
Chicago has six thousand union bricklayers. Thirty-five states have established bureaus of labor statistics. Constantinople masons and house v carpenters have formed a union. Illinois has authorised the appointment of a woman Investigator ot domestic employment agencies. The Tokyo municipality has decided to open labor exchanges throughout the city whereemployer s can find help when reeded. An effort to have the union label on all school textbooks is to be made by the Boston Allied Printing Trades' Council. , ' The following daily wages are paid in Jerusalem: Unskilled labor. 24 to 40 cents; carpenters. 52 cents to 81.05; masons, as high as $1.60; stonecutters, 42 to 94 cents. . England's National Union of Boot and Shoe Operatives, having adopted a label to be placed upon the product of its members, has instituted an active labil campaign throughout tit country. --. ' ft, . DAILY FASHIO- HINT.
THE DAY IN CONGRESS
Senate. Not in session. Meets Monday. Interstate commerce committee resumed hearings on trust problems. Monetary commission met to put final touch on report to congress on national reservation association plan. House. Met at noon. Andrew Carnegie, re
quested ii' steel investigating committee to tetlfy Jan. 10, has agreed to do so. Foreign affairs committee concluded hearings on bill for international protection of seals and otter in north Pacific. Fitzgerald (X. Y.), chairman of appropriations, acted as parliamentarian to the speaker in the forced absence of Parliamentarian Crisp in Georgia. Adjourned at 12:46 p. m. until noon Sunday (for eulogies).
ill "
If you are a judge of quality try a La Vendor Cigar.;
509a
Lady's Three Piece Skirt. The many striped serges and cheviots and also the wider kinds of linen and pongee silk need patterns which do not sacrifice the material by cutting it into many . gores. The skirt Illustrated is one of these, having only three gores and small darts to fit it on the hips. This skirt is a . good model for decortaing with hand eiabroidery. The pattern, .1002. is cnt in sixes 22 to 32 inches waist measure. Medium"; tize requires 4 yards of 36 inch material.'? The above pattern can be obtained by sending 10 cents to the office of this paper.
