Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 183, Hammond, Lake County, 24 January 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Wednesday, Jan. 24, 1912.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br Tne Lake CoaalT Printing sad Pub.

labia- Company. Gary Evening Times, "The Times,'

(Daily), application for entry as sec

ond-class mail at the postoffice at

Hammond, Ind., pending." (East Chi

cago and Indiana Harbor). Uku

County Time (Country): Like County Times (Evenlrg); Tlmn Sporting: Extra, and Lake County Times (Weekly). Six editions. Entered at the Postoffice. Hammond, Ind., as second -class matter.

young woman at h Hammond hotel.

All three of the young men were habitual loafers in one of the shady poolrooms about the city.

No t man who values his reputation

would be seen loafing in certain poolrooms in the city, no man with even

the remnant of self respect would throw himself away for the sake of a

common prostitute, no man who valued his name would, spend his time in idleness even though he was temporarily out of work.

Idleness, immorality, intemper-

ence spelled ruin in the case of three

Hamtnond young mon who today might

be an honor to the fathers who reared

them and the community which sup

ported them.

riTBl.iCATiox offices, I Others are following in the same

Hammond Building:. Hammond. Ind. footstens The lea,

whole community, by the careers of

FOREIGN AUVF.HTISIa 81! Hector Building

OFFICES,

Chicago

TELEPHONE,

Hammond (private exchange) ill

(Call for department wanted.)

tbese young men, will soon be forgotten-and doubtless others, faced by

similar circumstances, will take the

'easiest" way out. which is alwavs

THE SAME TROUBLE. It seems that other cities have just

the same troubles that the cities hereabouts have. They all have their pessimistic croakers, their undesirable

barnacles and their snivelling Uriah Ileeps. The Huntington Herald says:

There is no reasonable excuse for a man to live In a town if he don't like" it. . Tf you have no word of commeriilatlon to say -for your town. Its institutions or itf people, emigrate. You don't stop the court house by going away. The church bells will have the same musical ring, the little dogs will play Just as well and the pfre air and bright sunshine will have the same health-giving proportions. Speak a good word for your neighbor, it you can; If you cannot, don't everlastingly enlarge on his faults. If yqu have ' become thoroughly disgruntled, move away; go somewhere where things will suit you.

HEARD BY -

RUBE

THAT new book on Gary which the

Wabash railway is Issuing is quite complete in its Incompleteness.

Ofary Office ...Tel. 137

Kst Chicago Office.... Tel. 478-R

Indiana Harbor Tel. 550-R the hardest in the end.

Whiting . .. Tel. 80-M

fmirn tnlnt Tl K1

ruiai control, so tne problem becomes

Advertising solicitors will be sent. orl011 of closer supervising shady pool-

These young men were beyond par-

rates given on application.

If you have any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest office and

hare it promptly remedied.

rooms and questionable hotels

When Blanch Adair decided there

were easier ways of earning a living

than clerking in a store, she probably

did not realize that she was a'poten

larger paid IP circulation tlal criminal and that the rrr. t

XtlA Ul-HKK TWO SEWS I thrdA men n,A

1

course.

A

ruined by her

i - J - - 1 .

AXONTMOU3 communications will A mau 13 juagea Dy nis associates.

not be noticed, but others will be "ls concuct is largely determined bv

printed a,t discretion, and should be theirs. It reauires but llttlo in r.hn

" . . u v. his point of view. A course of action that is impossible today becomes pos

sible tomorrow and probable the next.

addressed to The Editor, Times, Ham

mond, Ind. v

Political Announcements

day. The moral is plain.

FOR SHERIFF. Editor, Time:

Please announce that I will be a can dldate for sheriff of Lake county, sub

ject to the decision of the republican

county convention. WM, KUNERT, Tolleston, Ind.

ROOSEVELT MANIA. Modest people who hate to have

their tympanic membranes shattered

by loud dins and explosions of huge quantities of wind had better retire to the cyclone cellar for the next few months.

The hysteric hurrahers who see red

and become candidates for the

Bditor. Times: I am a candidate for asykims whenever T. Rnnuvoit'.

the Republican nomination for the (of- j nam'o ia man t a , i

fice of Prosecuting Attorney of the wu c urg.uumg in Thirty-first Judical Circuit of the set fussv-

State of Indiana, comprised of Lake I Down In Oklahoma at the republi-

na r-orer uounwes. suojec.io me wu. oan convention yesterdav a balloon of the nominating convention. I

A RIVAL TO GARY. Gary, the made-to-order city. Is to

find a rival In Port Mann, in the Ca

nadian northwest, on the Canadian Northern's new line from Edmonton

to tidewater. G. Todd of Montreal, the

landscape artist intrusted with the

laying out of the town, found the site

absolutely primeval. From the point

where the steamer landed grew gigan

tic firs pholanx upon phalanx up the

steep hillside, and the ground waa cushioned deep with needles. He took

advantage of these great natural re-

coures, very different from the barren

sand dunes of Gary, and if his taste

has been equal to his opportunity Port

Bann should be an attractive city from the outset. It is to have a central

square and a civic group and fine

quays, and a wide boulevard that

winds along a slope and crosses

deep ravine. Three big industrial

concerns have promised to erect plants

that will cost over $2,000,000. The new city is the outlet of a country with

a future, and it is fortunate in not having to start in the usual squalid

frontrier fashion. Springfield Repub

lican.

FOR PROSECirTIXG ATTORNEY.

RALPH W. ROSS.

painted with Roosevelt's name was

sent up near the convention hall and

for auditor. lone or tne Abernathy notoriety seek-

Editor Times: I desire to announce Jers dressed up as a rough rider rods

. xnai i am a canaiaaie tor tne Kepubli- horse n tS ronlornf tho.ido..

can nomination for County Auditor, , . , subject to the decision of the F.epubli- ing his sombrero and yelling his fool

can primaries. The support and as- neaa on lor I eddy.

sistance of ..the Republican voters of

Lake country are respectfully solicited.

(Signed) JOHN A. BREN'NAN,

Gary, Ind.

I THE LOXG AGO, I ace knew all tne bird that rime And nestled la our orchard trees? Far every flower I and name

My friend were woodohuck, toads

and nees. I knew where thrived la yonder glen What planta would soothe, a atone brained toe " O, I waa very learned, then, Bat that waa very long ago! I kaew the apot upon the hill Where cnekerberrtes 4?ould be found I knew the raabea aenr the mill

Where pickerel lay that weighed a pound! I knew the wood the very ..tree Where Hired the poaching, aaucy crow, And all the woods and crow knew Bnt that waa very long ago! And pining- for the Joya of youth, I tread the old familiar apot. Only to leara tfale aolema truth I have forgotten, nm forgot. Yet here's thta youngster my knee Known nil the thing I need to knowj To think I one was wtae aa net Bat that waa very long ago;

I kaew It's folly to eomplaln Of whatsoe'er the fates doeereej Yet, were not wishes all In vain, I tell you what my wish would be; I'd wtah to be a boy ngaln, Baek with the friends I used knowt For I was, O! so happy thenHat that was very long ago! Eugene Field.

The stampede failed. , The delegation was instructed for faft. Many of these scenes are to occur.

May the good Lord soon deliver U-i

from this Roosevelt drivel and the

mouthings of his fool friends who

are doing the ex-president a lot of

hurt. The reason why so many people dislike Roosevelt, is not because of bint personally but because of the gang that is hanging on his coat tail all the time.

A WORD FOR THE HORSE.

Some how or other a lot of those

who own horses or whose business it

ls to drive them seem to be quite

obvious to the poor beast's comfort

A walk down the street will show

that not. every driver throws

blanket over his animal these cold

days. When the mercury gets below

the zerct mark a horse suffers when it

has to stand unblanketed. Many per

pie who fait In thlaVj-espect do it more

through thoughtlessness rather than

cruelty.

. tUR hogs had better be good and

stay at home. Mr. E. A. Farnell will be on the watch for stray porkers, and it will cost owner's of vagrants $1 a

head besides the board bill to get their

grunters turned loose. To an old

timer this looks like a tough proposi

tion, but if we are bound to become civilized we will have to pay for it.

Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel.

Yes, we can't keep ours at home

ither. They are always climbing on

the street cars.

to

THE VAMPIRE.

Yesterday three Hammond young men stood up before the Judge in the

Lake superior court and received indeterminate sentences to the reformatory

at Jeffersonville.

These young men did not have the

appearance of criminals, not one of

them had ever been arrested before

The antecedents of two of them were

good. The relatives are heart-broken

The third has a dissolute sister and

brother who is under parole to the

truant officer. The parents are reputed to be decent, law-abiding people and there is no accounting for the degeneracy of their progeny. The question naturally arises, "What combination of circumstances could transform respectable, lawabiding citizens into social outcasts self-confessed criminals?" The first step downward was evidently the loss of self-respect. In a short plea for the : clemency of the court one boy stated that he was intoxicated at the time the crime was committed. Though a married man, It la known that he wai living with -a

LIFE SEEMS CHEAP. Coroner Smith's annual report in

dicates that many lives are being

needlessly sacrificed in this county.

Of the 132 violent deaths in 1911 the

railroads and electric lines slaughter

ed 49. A similar number met their

deaths in other accidents and 26 end

ed thoir own lives.

The homicides numbered eleven.

This is an average of .103 to every one thousand population. In other

words Lakfli county has a greater

number of murders in proportion

than any other county in Indiana

New York, as big and bad as it is has

but 041 murders to every thousand

of its population.

Last year Gary had four murders.

Numerically speaking it is not many

but compared with other cities it is

quite large. This is how the murder

rates stands in this country the figures being for the number per thous

and people: .

Memphis 382 GARY 207 New Orleans .....159 Atlanta US St. Louis 147

Richmond 141

IN Chicago's schools they are teach

ing the boys how to sew and embroider doillos. Well, if the women gad about so much, somebody's got to do it, that's

a cinch, but heaven help the kid -that has to embroider a doily. , '

Louisville '. 129

Chicago ..104 LAKE CO V Si TV (all) 10.1 Indianapolis . 098 Denver 093 San Francisco 093 Louisville :..osr New York .......... , . ..041

It is to be noted that where racial

differences exist there are more homl

cldes. Of the four murdered in Gary

but one was white and for propor.

tions of convictions three were con

victed, one to hang, while the fourth murderer who committed his crime at Christmas is still at large. With

reference to convictions there has

been good work done In Gary.

: The coroner's report shows that life Is held too cheap here. When 98 are claimed in one year bytrailway and other accidents, 11 are murdered and 26 are shot there is much to think about. . .

DESPITE the fact that the Ice crop ls n usually big. six months hence you

will find us kidding you about another advance in prices. ,

Shave While Yon Bat. CMartlnsvllte Democrat.) MARSHALL HACK Ell, restaurant:

'This gentleman is the leading barber

and restaurant man of the town, and

he serves short orders, lunches, sandwiches, hot coffee at all times in a most palatable manner. A specialty is also

made of hair cutting, shampooing.

easy shaving, etc."

IN connection with the above one

could start- out with an olive oil salad

and wind upWith an olive shampoo and

hav it all charged on the same bill.

They are certainly versatile down in Martinsville..

WlftSN the old republic hen started

setting she never dreamth that her

China egg would hatch out.

CHICAGO TRIBUNE headlines: 'Ride

on Water Wagon Ends in Accident.

we And after an investigation "that it

does ndt refer to H. C.'s vehicle.

'Round hout Owen County. (Martinsville Democrat.) "George Hancock fwrn near Hynds-

dale, took a load of logs to Martins

ville for Charley Parrish. Thursday.

.frncle Kph Knoy is no better.

"Charlej-N Parrish and Tom Gose took

a load of ties to Martinsville Satur

day.

Protracted meeting is still going on

at Corinth. Ilpports are fine meetings and large crowds.

"Miss Laura Holmes and Georgie

Holmes of Mooresville are visiting rela

tives in these parts at present.

"Everett Knoy of Hazelwood visited

his father, Eph Knoy, Monday night.

"The hogs around this place have a

new disease, and a great many are dy

ing. The disease is the gun, ax and butcher knife.

'"Mr. Dan'l Smith of Gosport Junction

was circulating through here on last

Sunday."' l

J. P. G. As far' as we know Alderman Castleman's speeches have not

been published in book form. Wedo

not" know where you can buy the his

tory of his life, but you might ask the librarian to assist you. THE supreme court has ruled that beer is a commodity. In Gary's "patch" it will always be regarded as a wholesome beverage despite the courts. A CHICAGO Judge has ruled that smoking is no vice. This ought to be quite disconcerting to some of ths vlrttious prisms who pride themselves on their abstinence from tobacco IF you perused this column very closely last night you ''will notice that our proofreader ls back on the job. The water -wagon crowd was too fast for him. DEAR RUB5: Please add to your

list of trials and tribulations: Ordering wheat cakes in the restaurant and the waitress only bringing you one little patty of butter. Xo, This ln' to Take Place In Robertsdale. (Chicago Record-Herald.) ChifTon pantaloons and tunica , of faithfully tailored Oriental design will

be worn. Mrs. Will O. Irwin, mother

of Mrs. Crocker; will wear coral pink trousers, veiled with a brocaded cloth of gold tunic, with a girdle of turquoises. Mrs. Crocker will wear mauve trousers, embroidered near the ankles with gold and silver braid. Miss Jennie Crocker will appear as Guinare, the princess oV the sea, wearing trousers of pink chiffon over soft green silk. The ball will be given at a local hotel. The postmaster general has ruled that rural carriers may throw seed on the snow along their routes for the little birdies. We ll now know what to do with some of those free packages of congressional seed that we have been getting.

LATEST GROUP PICTURE OF DUKE . AND DUCHESS OF CONNAUGHT AND POPULAR PRINCESS "PAT."

The Day in HISTORY

GRADUATE of woman's college says

she has invented new way of washing dishes. Why need of inventing new

way? What's the matter with the old

way letting the old man wash them?

HAVE you got an invitation to Lil

lian Russell's th wedding yet? Well, cheer up, we will run her cut, first position, and that will do you just

as well.

UNDERSTAND that a pink dragon,

one with cerise trimmings, has been

found out west. l nat s wnere our

Hennery Coldbottle ha3 been.

PERSONS are getting mighty non

committal nowadays. It Is hard to get

a word about' the postmastership from

anyone in Crown Point.

ABE Attell, the fighter, says he was

doped. Somebody ought to send Attell,

Harry Forbes, et al, to an old man's

home somewhere.

WE cannot imagine when Teddy

Roosevelt ever refused to talk before, There Burely is a hen on In Oyster Bay

BEGINS to look as though It is a

shame to keep Governor Wilson out of

that pension. .

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

"THIS DATfIV HISTORY" Jannary 24. 1TI2 Frederick the Great, king of Prussia, born. Died Aug. 17, I78. 1S06 Bishop William Quarter, first Roman Catholic bishop of Chicago, born. Died April 10, 1848. 1861 Jefferson Davis of Mississippi defenses State sovereignity in . speech in Congress, and withdrew. 1870 Prince Arthur (Duke of Connaught) received by President Grant at the White House.

1873 United States Congress abolished

the naval ranks of admiral and vie admiral. r 1888 New South Wales celebrated its centenary as a colony. 1S95 Lord Randolph Churchill, English statesman, died. Born Feb. 13. 1849'. 1903 Alaska boundary treaty signed by the United States ad Great Britain. 1905 Clarence D. Clark elected United States senator from Wyoming. 1911 Edward B. Atwill, P. E. bishop of Western Missouri, died in Kansas City. Born in Red Hook. N. Y., Feb. 18, 1840. ' ' ... ' "THIS IS MY 2D BIRTHDAY" ( C harles P. Flint. Charles P. Flint, eminent as a merchant and capitalist and an authority on .trade relations between the United

Sttes and South American countries, was born in Thomaston, Me., January 24, 1830. In 1S68 he graduated from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn ar.H the next year entered the. employ of a prominent firm of ship chandlers. Two years later he organised a similar firm of his own an) in 1885 he became the head of the shipbuilding and shipownIng firm of Flint and Company, which

had been established by his father in

837. Mr, Flint at various time has

acted as consul and financial agent of several of (the South American repub

lics and in 1889 he was a delegate to

the International American Conference

in Washington. In 1898, both before

nd during the war with Spain, he rend

ered valuable services to the United

States Government in the purchase of

ess4ls and munitions of war. As a t eult of his successful efforts in organiz

ing the United Stales Rubber Company

nd other large Industrial combinations.

Mr. Flint has frequently been called

the "Father Of Trusts."

Congratulations to: Edith Wharton, well known American

novelist, 60 years old today.

Beatrice Harraden, noted English

ovellst, 48 years old today.

Joseph H. Choate, lawyer, orator and

diplomatist, SO years old today.

it;-An . U -7x ftf

'I " fir Z 11 1 v. - A r - - St II jJ.-rT---,iii . unm.,s,,i,wTlacji innnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnMMnnnnnannsn

o Dux-c or ConrLAtrrrTor - ziutckzss cr crau.ita.ZMfzcz

WELL winter seems determined

not to wear itself out prematurely

THE motto should be revised to read that "the way of pool-room is hard."

A HUMAN DERELICT. An emaciated old man dropped dead on

Canal street this morning. There waa no

money In bis sleek, shabby clothes, but he was evidently not a drinking man. Hs could not be Identified. The body was taken to a morgue. Chicago Newspaper.

Six lines of nonpareil type.

Life is' so cruel to some! Nature is

bo careful of the type and so heedless of the individual, and the big city is so

heartless.

The submerging of this old human

wreck, worn and waterlogged, makes

scarce a ripple on the wide waters.

Who was he? The recording angel alone knows.

He lived perhaps much as you and I

have lived. There was a nappy childhood, and he knew joy and sorrow and love and regret, prospered and failed, worked and saved, made and lost, nntll

the day came when he was alone.

friendless and weak and failing. I ask yon:

. Were you ever a poor boy in a great city? Men hurry on intent upon their own. riled tier upon tier In the great commercial palaces are the abundant

masses of swollen fortunes. Happy shoppers fill the great stores. Sated

men and women roll luxuriously In

costly carriages, while you

Tour head ls dizzy as you peer over

the verge of a bottomless pit.

Behind those plate glass windows are

heaped huge pyramids of food, while

you are faint with hunger. .Here Is a

crushing sense of the world's cruelty. But to be thus and old!

There ls the alternative to beg or

steal. If you can squeeze back your

pride and beg few will stop to listen

If you steal they will put you in an

iron cell. Sympathy? Charity?

The city is too busy. It does not

know. There are so manv frauds. The

city does not understand nor dlscrimi

rtate.

And so the "mlserables" go gradually

flown, down, down, to that lowest plane

of life whose outer verge is starvation

or suicide or

Unless Rome tender human heart

shall help what shall become of these

Nature will not help nor commerce nor

the angels from, the skies. .

Let us open ur eyes aud hearts lest some of the frail, deserving human

barks go down before our eyes.

burned to death last'May by the ex- Smoot printing bill, which would subplosion of a coal oil. lamp, and who. stltute power presses for hand power left an estate, valued at ,000. Bennett in printing-paper money, i had been her husband, but she had ob- Senator Jones, Washington, Introductalned a divorce from lilm two years ed amendment to the Bherman law to

before her death. He learned that the permit trade agreements to take effect course decree had never, been entered in abroad.

Adjourned at 8:63 until 2 p. m. today.

noon. .' ' '" ' "(

HOl'SE. District of Columbia appropriation bill was considered. President Farrell of Uiiited States Steel Corporation again testified on cost of ateel production before Steel Trust Investigating committee. . Chairman Hardwlck announces "the Sugar Trust- Investigating committee

a weeK.

Up and Down in INDIANA

the order book by the court clerk. and

at once brought suit against the wom'-l "' Met at an's four children for one-third of the

estate. An investigation revealed that

the decree had been left out of the order book inadvertently by the clerk and Judge Blair made an order for a nunc pro tunc entry yesterday to show that

Bennet was divorced April 17, 1909.

bride: of a week dies.

T Jtilfl f hnn a vaaIt nff 6i fiAr uracil 5 r

dav. Mrs. William C Hods-cock wife of "P l" ,rl"l "'" - " . i

, , . . , , . . The Rules Committee deferred hearthe chief draftsman at the Monon shops , c " ... ... .. ji i . ing on "Money Trust until Wednesday, at Lafayette, died .yesterday from . .. . , .

.nn... jutu..tn .,, . ' Tne uivu service uommmeo cuubiumallgnant diptheria. contracted in , . . . ,, , , , , . . ered plan to extend civil service to. Keokuk, la., her former home, where , . ' , ' - , , ..... deputy internal revenue collectors, last week she was married to Mr. Hedae ' cnu

., . - vi i Foreign Affairs Committee neara va-

wedding day.- and It developed into diptheria which caused paralysis of tha heart. She was 20 years old,.

FAVORS NEW COIRT HOUSE. The Hendricks County Council, at

Danville, in called session yesterday.

rlous interests regarding greater water

power development at Niagara Falls. President Nelson of Postoffice Clerks' Federation advocated eight-hour day before the Postoffice Committee. , Representative Surser, Kw Yorlc, proposed $25,000 fr the United States

considered plant and specifications for delegation to the International ,xhibi-

repairing in court House, recently -tion In Belgium in 1913. partially wrecked by the roof and ceil-j Democrats caucused on the steel tariff

ipg caving in. stepnen c uark, an 'bin.

architect of Indianapolis, Submitted

ARRESTED AFTER FIVE YEARS. After having evaded the authorities

for five years, Murl Carey, 26 years old.

f Indianapolis, 1723 Milbur street, was

arrested yesterday by Detectives Mullin,

Stewart, Lowe and Hall and. Deputy Sheriff C. F. Vosburch of Grand Rapids,

Mich., charged with wife desertion. He

will be taken to Grand Rapids thU morning. Carey, it is alleged, deserted hie wife and two children In Grand

Rapids five years ago. He has lived in Indianapblls three years, havfilg

come tb Indianapolis from Tipton. Ho

is a carpenter by trade, and had remar

rled, his second wife being formerly Miss Gussie Garrison of Tipton. They

have one child, 3 years old. Carey said

yesterday that he believed his first wife

whom he Is accused of deserting, had

obtained a divorce from him. He mar

rled Miss Garrison about four years

ago. She believed ne naa been aivorc

ed, he said.

SAYS PUXISHMENT IS RIGHT. Bessie Mohr, arrested at LoganBpor

last week on charges of passing forged checks on a number of Logansport merchants, pleaded guilty in Circuit Court yesterday and was fined $100 and sen

tenced from one to five years In the Woman's Indutstrlal School at Indianapolis. After receiving sentence, sha

made a statement in which she declared she deserved punishment. Her father. S. T. Neely of Muncie, arrive'd in Logansport yesterday morning and declined

to give her aid in fighting the case. Ha declared to the Logansport authorities that he has come to her aid in number

less former escapades and can not do so any more. She will be-taken to the Indianapolis Institution today. r PIGEON LOSES MESSAGE. Hungry and exhausted a homing pigeon flew into an open window at the home of John B. Underwood at Columbus yesterday. A blue cord was around the bird s neck and It is believed it had a message, which was lost. On each side of a band the bird had on Us leg was the number 11. The bird will be released with a message this morning LOSES FIGHT FOR ESTATE. Ora Bennett, of Shelbyville by a decision of Judge Blair rendered yesterday, has lost In his fight to gam a onethird interest in property left by Mrs. Elizabeth Strahl Bennett, who -was

plans "at an estimated cost of $20,157.

J.'W. Gaddis of Vincennes, who built

the Greencastle and Huntington Court

Houses, was present with plans for a

new building at an estimated cost of

from $185,000 to $225,000. The seven councilmen and county commissioners expressed themselves unanimously in

favor of a new building. The Council has been . cl.lled to meet again Friday, Feb. 2. to make the necessary appropriation, when the commissioners will advertise for bids. DEFUXCT BASK?' INVOLVED. After a combat in the Circuit Court before Judge Claybaugh, Attorney Alfred Hovey, Indianapolis, was permitted to appear as associate counsel for the defense In the Baldwin suit, which was begun yesterday morning. W. T. Wilson, of - Logansport, executor of the

estate of the late Judge Daniel Pratt Baldwin, has brought suit to enjoin the

county officials from collecting $20,000

alleged uiypaid taxes, which have been

placed on the tax duplicate against th

Baldwin estate. The case promises to

be the most interesting tax suit tried

in Indiana for many years. The affairs of the banks of Ambia. Goodland and

Fowler, closed some years ago, and of which the late Judge Baldwin was the principal owner, all figure In the case

now on trial.

Adjourned at 4:1S p. m.-untllkoon to

day.

La Vendor Cigars are pronounced sxceptlonally good by all smokers.

The Day in HISTORY

DAILY FASHION" HINT.

5492

Girl's Box Coat.

SENATE. In session at 2 p. m. "

Bill passed transferring to new state

all Federal furnishings in Arizona Cap ltol. .

Senator Burton, Ohio, Introduced

resolution to create a committee on public expenditures. Labor Committee heard J, T. Monog ham of Detroit in opposition to Hughe'9 eight-hour law 'for government eontracts. "V Senator Culberson, Texas, inveighed against large campaign contributions in 1904 and 1908, especially crlticlsfcg Republican fund?. Defeat met an effort to consider ths

The box coat gives a loose, comfortable garment, and the large collar at the neck li highly ornamental. The sleeves bars a little fulness at the shoulder and are finished with a pretty turnback cuff. The closlnf is low and the coat is fastened by three large buttons. . Fabrics such as serge, cheviot and tweed are appropriate, sad also pocjee silk, linen and satin. The pattern, B.492, is cut in sises 6 to 12 years. Medium size requirer S Vi yards ot 36 inch material, or 2V$ yards of 50 inch. The above pattern can be obtained by tending 10 cents to the office of this paper.