Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 250, Hammond, Lake County, 11 April 1912 — Page 4
i
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS By Ta Lak County PriiUif a4 PnbUsalajr Cnaj,
Th Lake County Tlmea. daily except Sunday, "entered as second-class mattar Juna tt, it ot"; Tha Lake County Times, daily except Saturday and Bunday, enteied Fab. J. 1U; Th Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. t, 10; The Lake County Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO. ltll; The Times, dally except Suidsy. entered Jan. IS, 11B. at the postoffic at Hammond. Indiana, el! under the act et March. 2. 1I7S. Entered at the Potoffle, Hammond. Ind.. as second-class matter. rORBIGlY it Rector ADVERT! SI XO Bulldlns OFFICES, Chicago PUBLICATION OFFICES. , Hammond Building; Hammond, Ind. TELEPHONES. Hammond (private exchange) Ill 'Call for dsoartmeat wanted.) Gary Office TeL 1ST East Chicago Office. ....... .TeL 4T-H Indiana Harbor ..T1. 55-R Whiting...,...,...... TeL 80-11 Crown Point.....'. ..TeL fcS Advertising solicitors will he sent. o ratee given on application. If you have any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest office and .have It promptly remedied. LARGER PAID CP CIRCULATION THAN 'ANT OTHER .TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION. ANONTMOUS communications will not - be MtUsed, but others will be printed ai dlecretlon, and shou7d be addressed to The Editor. Times. Hammond. Ind. 43S : Political Announcemants - ' , FOR AUDITOR. Editor Timbs: Kindly announce my name as a candidate for tn office of Auditor of Lake County, subject to the will of the Oemocratlo nominating convention. ED. SIMON. . .. , FOR RECORDER. Editor Times: Tou are authorised to announce to your readers that I am a candidate for the nomination of County Recorder, subject to the wishes of the Democratic nominating convention, to be held at a date to be decided upon. ' - - JACOB FRIEDMAN. MAKE THE BEST OF IT. A doctor is being sued for damages by a woman in whom, after he had made an excavation for appendicitis, he inadvertently sewed up a towel a yard long a foot wide and having red border. ' - V Yet how thoughtless some women are! This woman ought to be glad to get her towel back. First thing 6he knows she will lose the suit for damages and the doctor will put in a claim for the doggoned towel. NOT SITTING ON THE JOB. The nothing - short - of - wonderful progress that Is being made by Indi ana Harbor, Calumet and East Chicago, spurred on by their location and the conservation of energy by leading citizens, continues to be the topic of the hour. The new add! tions to the Inland; the beginning of the Baldwin. Locomotive works; the harbor recommendations by U. S. e army engineers ana new work on other mammoth industries pre xaak lng such remarkable changes in the topography and chorography of these places that one has to visit them every week to be able to recognize them Like learning, there Is no royal road to progress. It comes only by the display of -every attibute of hard work and vitalised energy the lea.l ers in a city are capable of. No man would expect to make a success of his business by sitting on the job and no community can do so either and push ahead-' , The tri-clty combination of Indi ana Harbor-Calumet and East Chi cago is a hard one to beat. Great things, surprising things can be looked from It in two years. ROWDY AUDIENCES. A community is known by the behavior of -.its audiences. Accepting that as axiomatic; Hammond Is rather an ill-manered city. Its audiences always contain enough smart Alecs to spoil the performance for those who go to enjoy it. - Whistling in the galleries, boisterous laughter on the part of both young men and young women and the-between-acts scramble of a large proportion of the male part of the audience ' for the side-door entrance of the nearest saloon are all rather disconcerting to the rest of the audience.
la the summer time men have been
permitted to enter the theatre and seat themselves' without wearing their coats. Time and again male patrons of the Hammond theatres will walk all of the way to their seats with their hata on their heads. Couples go there to hold hands, kiss each other and perform other sickening acts. At the performance of Margaret Illington In "Kindling" when the play was so absorbing that the average person forgot he was in the theatre in his absorption in the play a fresh young fellow distracted the attention of the entire main floor by a loud laugh at a critical point. K.J one saw any humor in the situation but this young man. Those In an audience should be more considerate of the rights of others. Stamping on the floor and whistling are not gentlemanly ways of expressing approval. The rowdy ought to be squelched In the Interests of the hundreds of others who go to the theatre to get the most out of a play. OUGHT TO TRY IT HERE. An enterprising motion film maker is issuing a "news weekly." He picks up a dozen films in different parts of the world. A series might show Taft and a cardinal reviewing a Saint Patrick's day parade, fire down in Gotham, some Tripoli war views, the King of Saxony inspecting the royal mules, an aviator doing monkey-shines, the president of Brazil going to church, Roosevelt haranguing the mob, a flood down in Arkansas, and so on. Yet one might get all of those views in Lake county. "We have our floods in the Calumet and Kankakee confines. Alderman Battle-Axe Castle man addressing the pe-pull, City Clerk Moose going to the Claypool, Messrs. Hodges and Parker in the grand stand review the parade of dictagraph -witnesses and the Ananias club, Hammond rejoicing because West Hammond is Quiet, and a whole lot of other salient rapid-fire view. THE HINT TO JAPAN. . Japanese protestations of inno cence of any intention or thought of establishing a naval base, on .the Pacific coast of Mexico may be worth their face value. It may be that no power in Europe or Asia cherishes any such ambition. Yet it is Just as well to let the world know that this country cannot stand back, and quiet ly watch any naval power not already in possession of a port in the Western Hemishphere gain such a foothold on American soil. However friendly a strong nation seeking a supply depot for its warships might be, the natural effect of such a step could not be tolerated. The drift for many years has been toward the withdrawal of European powers from America. The acquisition by any of'them of new territory or new naval depots has been out of the sphere of practical statecraft. Spain and Portugal are already. The American possessions of France, Holland and Denmark are small and of little importance. The one British colony in the New World which has grown gfeat under the union Jack is. virtually independent in respect to its own affairs. Canada, not Great Britain, shapes Canadian relations 1th this republic. While Europe is withdrawing or becoming less and less secure in America, no Asiatic state, certainly, will ever be permitted to gain a foot hold. Self-interest and regard for the welfare of weaker nations in this hemisphere demand that the United States enforce that limit uoon Old World ambitions. ' CONVERSATION OF MARSHALL, The .law as a profession is too de moralizing for the Hon. Thomas Riley Marshal, Governor of Indiana, or Mr. Marshall is too highminded and pure to be associated with the law. "Do you ,. now. why. I forsook the practice'of the law tn'lndlana to enter politics?" he .asked his audience at a Y. M. C. A. mass meeting in Washington on Sunday. Nobody, of course, knew; it seemed so sudden and strange. The Governor explained: " "Well, it was to preserve my selfrespect. I wanted to get into a profession where my conscience could be given breathing room, where I would not have to wink one eye at the truth." X If the legal profession had a debasing influence upon Mr. Marshall he was a long time inding it out. Ad mitted to the bar in 1875, he practlaed steadily and lucratively until the summer of, 1908. when the Demo cratic party of Indiana nominated him for Governor. He was the senior partner in two law firms, the first, Marshall &; McNagny, formed in 1876; the second, Marshall, McNagny & Clugston, In 1892.' ' The'latter partnership was dissolved in 1909, the State of Indiana requiring Mr. Marshall's Individual services as
Governor. So that, for thirty-three
years Mr. Marshall's conscience did not have breathing room, and during all that time,, an entire .generation, he was tempted to wink one eye at the truth. To Inhale freely with bis conscience and look the world unwinking in the face he went into politics. There seems to be no palliation for Mr. Marshall. He was not a hedge 'lawyer; 'he did not ever have to read law by the light of a pineknot fire as Lincoln did. The Governor is a college graduate, was tenderly nurtured and well brought up. If he erred In embracing the law and living by It for thirty-three years it was with his eyes open. There is no occasion to be caustic with Tom Marshall for his change of heart at the age of fifty-five. While the lamp holds out to burn no lawyer is too old to seek the sanctuary of politics. Formerly It was not regarded as the purest of professions. ' But these are times of uplift and new standards. Banking, manufacturing, the law, medicine and even theology are under suspicion. As they have fallen in public estimation politics has risen into a sublimated atmo sphere. Worthy men, weary and dls illusloned, are going into politics in a spirit of self-sacrifice. Some of the purest men in America are now dedi eating themselves to the public wel fare. Never were there so nany friends of humanity and preachers of ethics aspiring to the Presidency, New York Sun. ONE Washington clergyman com pares the colonel to King Arab who slew Naboth to get his vineyard. One of these days a certain clergyman will be ducking behind his pulpit to escape an angry man who is showing every tooth In his head. v ADMIRAL Peary rises to report that he has eaten dog and found it delicious. Yes but it is very annoy lng to break oft a piece of tooth by biting Into a section of brass dog collar in a wiene. SEEMS, as though the "Beautiful Snow" stuff has been canned, hermetically sealed and shoved on the top shelf in the cannery without the least regret or passing cpmputfc tion. HAMMOND high school seniors have set a $2o limit on expenditures for all ." . commencement functions which for the benefit of the poor ought really to have been cut in two. THE next time we get hold of any fresh steel news we will direct the boy to have the foreman get It up hut hold it on the overset galley until it becomes generally known. DEMOCRATS in North Township will furnish all the candidates for county office on the democratic ticket, if the rest of the county enter tains no objections. CONTEMPORARY says Governor Stubbs always puts it in mind "of sore toe." It would be more truth ful and expressive to say a shoe full of sore toes. SHOULD a married woman work?" anxiously headlines an ex change. They certainly snouid. or some of their husbands would starve to death. THE old Kankakee river Is hereby advised that it has had its little day on the front page and for the love of Mike to be reasonable. MICHIGAN'S man of mystery Kimmel refuses to submit to an oper ation. Must think his name is writ ten on the inside. THERE are no Alphonse and Gaston'' methods in Illinois politics as far as we can . see, sitting on the state line and looking west. LIN A Cavlieri says it is too cold in America and she will never sing here again. Why doesn"t she wear more clothes? MOTHER Nature is far too busy getting her spring . things ready to waste any thought on the high co?t of living. WE admit that Col. Roosevelt will get the wart-hog, the dig-dig and the hat delegate vote without any battle whatever. THE beef-packers seem to have got over their nervousness. The con Burners are shakier than ever though MASSACHUSETTS will send a commission to Europe to investigate 'labor. Why go to Europe?
THE TIMES.
HE A RD BY RUBE PLAY BALL! s THE pink , sheets and the green nstead of the nickel show these even ings. IN Gary In 19J2. "How did her pa make his money? Why. he was an important witness In what-his-name's case." WONDER if that tiger; the Miller men are trying- to run down is the offspringof the blind one raided there a few weeks ago. . . -- MORE little snags of newly married life: Dosing baby with pepper mint to make him stop crying and then find out an hour afterward it was merely - a drink of water he wanted. POLITICAL promises are like loaned books. You seldom hear of them again. DOWN in Crown Point they are tryng to break out of office (and out of jail sometimes) while up In Gary half the population Is trying to break Into office. "WATER unfit to drink or touch" are headlines in a Jollet paper and our special correspondent. Hennery Coldbottle, has gone there post hast. Hennery always did like Jollet,. but his wife objects, you know. DYER beauties who have been aspir ing to be baby dolls or wear coronets should think of the stories of the Countess de Beaufort and Ethel Thayer Bry an. . BACK to the farm. We see that Hammond has broken ground for its new country club. ,' IN Chicago they used voting machines Tuesday to very good advantage. Some of the Lake county machines are often used to good advantage, too. ; TREAD lightly! Perhaps the board lng house lady will take sfway the prunes and bring in some strawberry short cake. TOM MARSHALL may have Quit the law and became governor to preserve bis self-respect, but what does that get me?" probably argues the rotund mayor of Gary. GOV. WILSON'S first sweetheart Is supporting him in his race. Good Idea for some Lake county politicians to adopt BROTHHR Clarence Darrow. whd.is in great grief down Los Angeles ways, would do well to consult some of the Gary dictagraph smashing experts. Or he might follow the usual course, as Is In vogue in Lake county. . AS usual the Hearst papers took all the eredlt for the democratic showing In Illinois. :-.;, l FRANCE has abolished "a. m." and p. m." and will from midnight to mid night have I" to 24 o'clock. This will certainly ball up things when those cuckoo clocks begin to spin out the hours after 20 o'clodK The Day in HISTORY THIS DATE IJf HISTORY April 11. 17T0 George Canning, celebrated Eng lish statesman and oratol, born Died Aug. 8. 182T. 17S3 United States Congress pro claimed the end of the Revolution I ary War. 1861 The Pennsylvania legislature took the first official step in the loyal States for the defense of the - Union, by appropriating 8500,000 ' for a' reorganlastion of the State militia. 1862 Huntsvllle, Ala., occupied by a Federal force under Gen. O. M. Mltchel. 1877 Many lives lost in the burning of the Southern Hotel In St. Louis 1884 Charles Reade, English noveltnt, died. Born in 1814. 1894 United Mine .Workers' conven"Got my Soro Foot in it Rifihtl-TIZ'; "A TIZ Bath, My Boy, a TIZ Bath! You Can't Beat It for Sore Feet, -Corns and Bunioni !" Is this man a tender-foot? No. He Is a joy-walker- one who uses TIZ and gets from the feet a happiness one never felt before. "Sara I t V TIZ Everr Time f Feel Trouble.' When your feet are So tired they feel like stumps, wheff they ache so that they hurt way up to your heart, when you shamble your feet along and it seems as thoush 'all the misery you ever had has settled in vour feet, look st the happy TIZ man in the picture. Tou can be haoov-footed just th same. If you have corns and bunions that everybody seems to step on. just think of this happy TIZ man. He nad corns and bunions, too. This man used 112, ana now he has no more tender, raw, chafed, blistered, swollen, tired, smelley feet, - corns, callouses or bunions. As soon as you put your feet In a TIZ bath, you feel the happiness soaking in. It's like mountain ozone to lungs. .Nothing- else but TIZ csn give you this happy foot fsellng. Don't accept iv substitutes. TIZ, 25 cents a box. sold every where, substitutes or sent direct, on receipt of price, . by j waiter Luther Dodge a Co.. Chicago, III, J Recommended by all Drug Stores, de-
0
Pacific End of Panama Canal Already Navigable; Island id Distance to Be Made Gibraltar of America
tion at Columbus ordered a general strike. 1897 War declared between Greece and Turkey. "THIS IS MT WITH BIRTHDAY1 . Geau WUe T. Dmggaau Brigadier General Walter T. Duggan, U. S. A., retired, was born In England, April .11, 1843. As a young man he came to the United States and settled in the West. At the beginning ef the civil war he enlisted as a private inthe Fifth Wisconsin Volunteer In fantry. He served from 18S1 to 1S63 and participated in . a number of Im portant battles. Two years after the close of the war he entered the regu lar army as a second lieutenant f the Tenth United States Infantry. He was promoted through the jsuccesslve grades of the service until he reached the rank of brlgadler-geceral shortly before he was retired tor age in 1907. Since his retirement General Duggan has made his home in Los Angeles. . Congratulations to: ' Dr. William Wallace Campbell, direc tor of the Lick. Observatory. 60 years old today. ' John W. Weeks, , representative In Congress of the 12th Massachusetts district, 52 years old. today. Charles E. Hughes, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court ef the United States, 60 years old today. CoL John Van Rensselaer Holt, "father of the United States Field Hos pital service," 64 years old today. STANDING OF RACE FOR DELEGATES KEFTTBtlCAjr. 3 B 2 i I S m o I i STATE. Alabama Alaska . .24 i 3 .13 . a 22 2 8 a 12 2 20 8 19 ie e s e 79 2 2 14 14 2 22 'f Colored Diet. Colombia, Florida 12 Georgia ...28 Iadlaaa .80 Iowa M Kentucky 26 I.oainlaaa 20 Mala 12 Michigan .......80 12 2 4 2 7 IS Missouri S Mtsiisalaat .....2 Jfew Mexico 8 New Tork SO North Dakota. . .10 Oklahoma .20 Palllaslaes ..... 91 Sooth Carolina.. 18 10 TVaaessee ......24 Vermont ll Virginia .24 Wisconsin 4 2 20 ..Total . ... 302 68 4 3 ;, 10 Roosevelt men concede only 100 of the delegates accredited to Taft 64 in New Tork, 8 in Iowa. 8 in Michigan, 6 in Kentucky, 4 In Indiana, and 8 each In Vermont, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Missouri and the Philippines. They list all others as contested. Of those above listed as uninstructed the Taft forces claim 3 in South Carolina, t in Virginia and 2 in Michigan. Taft men will contest 2 accredited to Roosevelt from Missouri, 2 from Oklahama, 3 from Kentucky and 1 from New Mexico. ' . DEMOCRATIC. 1 a a 7 X STATE.
Alaaka Indiana 3 . Kansas SO 20 .... . . Maine ....;i2 1 5 .. .. Mlaeoart SO SO .. .. North Dakota... 10 Oklahoma ......20 10 10 ... .. Wisconsin ..... .. 78 35 10 SO Total 73 3S 10 SO
12 12 Four favor Governor Harmon. Up and Down in INDIANA TALKS ON TUBERCULOSIS. The second day's lecture campaign of the State Board of Health at , ,., with n a. " . " 7 " , i dress by Dr. J. N. Hurty, secretary of the board. He spoke to a large gathering of citlsens at the Court House on tuberculosis; its cause and cure. Other
r members of the board will conduct meetings at Princeton today. Much interest is being aroused at Princeton among physicians and citizens In genera ' , ' RENAMEI1 Aft CANDIDATE. At a meeting: of the board of trus tees of the State Soldiers' Home yes terday .afternoon. Col. D. B. Kehler, of Lafayette, commandant, was. reappointed for a term of three years. He was for . many ; years adjutant at. the home, and ever since the death of Col. W. S. Haggard has been at the head of the home. The board re-elected officers as follows: President, M. W. Collett of Logansport; vice president, A. C McCorkle of Lafayette; treasurer, J. VT. Rynear of Liberty Center; secretary, L. W. Fulwller of Peru. There are nineteen applications for admission to the home, but the Institution is so crowded that but a few could be considered. PALL SAVES MAN'S LIFE. John Joy, owner of a billiard room at Wabash, Is alive today because a revolver in the hands of Charley Burden, colored, was broken and failed to explode when he leveled it at Joy and thrice pulled the trigger. Burden became unr'uly in Joy's establishment and the proprietor attempted to eject him. When the two clinched the negro fell to the floor and the weapon, "which he pulled from his pocket as her arose, was put out of commission. Burden is under arrest. NEWCASTLE TEAMSTERS STRIKE. Thirty J.eamsters in the employe of the city of Newcastle, getting the streets shaped up after the severe winter, congregated in front of the
lMrf(
Stops Falling Hair and Destroys Dandruff Makes the Hair Grow Long, Heavy and Luxuriant and We Can Quickly Prove It
If You Wish to Double the Beauty of Your Hair at Once, Just Get a 25 Cent Bottle and Try This
Surely try a Danderine Hair Cleanse if you wish to immediately double the beauty cf your hair with littie trouble and at a cost not worth mentioning just moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and draw it carefully through your hair, taking one small strand at a time, this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil In a few moments you will be amazed. Your hair will be wavy, fluffy and abundant and possess an incomparable
softness, lustre and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Besides beautifying the hair, one application of Danderine dissolves every particle of Dandruff cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair. Danderine Is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. It's exhilarating, stimulating and life-producing properties cause the hair to grow abundantly long, strong and beautiful. It at once imparts 1 sparkling brilliancy and velvety softness to the hair, and a few weeks use will cause new hair to sprout all over the scalp. Use it every day for a short time, after which two or three times a week will be sufficient to complete whatever growth you desire. You can surely have pretty, soft, lustrous hair, and lots of it, if you will just get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlten's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter and try it as directed. s
Thursday, April 11, 1912.
" a A City Hall yesterday and announced to Street Commissioner Neal Peed that unless they were grantde an Increase n pay to 84 per day Instead of 1 1. ID they would go en -strike. Commissioner Peed refused the demand and Immediately began searching for other teams. After considering tha matter. th striking teamsters decided to return to work at th old scale. The high price of feed was given, aa th reason for demsndlng higher wages. CALLS : AID BY TELEPHONE , done yesterday to the country home of I. W. Cooper, west ef Newcastle, by fire which originated from a defective flue. Mrs. Cooper, was alone at horn and summoning neighbors and men from Cadis, a short distance away, by rural telephone, succeeded In saving most of th contents of the first floor. The supper part of the house and contents were destroyed. BARS PIPE AT HEADQUARTERS. ' Superintendent of Police Hyland at Indianapolis - yesterday amended an order lasued several daya ago barring patrolmen from accepting cigars front a aaloonkeeper, by tabooing pip smoking at headquarters. Th cigar famine which set in at headquarters when th first order was Issued has now developed into a perfectly good "smoke" famine. Nothing has been said concerning cigarettes, but It Is taken for granted that they are tabooed, also. The night shifts at headquarters especially suffer from the order issued yesterday and like schoolboys, veteran officers may now be aeen slinking inf some dark corridor for a secret puff or two. Ml
j- - I vW!t XL? 1 , ";&-;.
