Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 12, Hammond, Lake County, 20 April 1912 — Page 4
1
THE TRIES. April 20, 1912.
TIKE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br Tk Lake Couaty Print! Pafc.
Uaalua Com)tir.
f FOR THE 1 EM-iDAYl
LIFE'S OCEAN.
The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered aa scond-class matter June J8. 1$0S"; The Lake County Timea, dally except Saturday and Sun
day. enteied Feb. S. 1111; T,he Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday.
entered Oct. S, 109; The Lake County! Are brackish with tke anlt of human
Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO. 1911; The Timea, daily
except Sunday, entered Jan. IS. H1J. at
the postoffiee at Hammond. Indiana.
all under the act of March S. 1179.
Entered at the Postoffiee. Hammond.
Ind.. aa aecond-claaa matter.
was thrown out of work as a mining'
Ican insurgents .near Parral. He enlisted in the Mexican federal army and served a machine gun with good effect in a long fight which resulted in driving the Maderist troops from that city. He was cut off from the government forces when the retreat-
on1 -t-r non lnd V (rrftiAl 9 fSti itro a fnr
Inf.tkom.bl Sea, nhoie waves are " "1AAiOC11' M"
ycmrf ed by hunger to leave his hiding place
Oeeaa of time who-e waters of deep I an dwas captured. The commander
woe Inf tfiA tnsnrrft(tAH neremathlv nprmil-
ar Mm t r crr fma Knf a a Via urn 3
v uaju w iivci asvv u '
Tfcou shoreless flood, which, la tBy departing he was shot in the back.
presumably on orders, on the pretext
that he was attempting to escape.
ebb and flow.
Claapest tke limits of mortality,
Aid, nick of prey, yet bowling on for
more, Vomlteat tby wrecks on Its Inhospltable shore.
FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICES, 912 Rector Building ... Chi cays
PUBLICATION OFFICES,
Hammond Building. Hammond. Ind,
TELEPHONTBS,
Hammond (private exchange) . . . . ..Ill
(Call for department wanted.)
Of course, when Fountain enlisted
for war he voluntarily accepted the chances of war and it is not likely
Treacherous in calm and terrible In tnat tne authorities in Washington
can do anything in his case. But the manner of his death is something
that deserves the consideration of
the large number of Americans who
have been wrought up to a high de
gree of enthusiasm over what they
believe has been the struggle of the
Mexican people to obtain liberty
storm
Who shall put forth
fathomable Seaf
on thee, na-
-Shelley.
the map as far as publicity is con-
cerned. " " ' " '
to Kansas.
1865 Macon, Gan
forces.
occupied by
Union 0
PRAISES anent THE TIMES real
estate edition . continue to come in.
Everybody's doing it.
HAD TO PAY FOB IT.
That our north end cities are get
ting somewhat metropolitan and
things other than "gay white ways" Mexican, in laree Bart. are still the
. iC 6"uwlBs Same Mexicans that figured in the
oary orc.. .. . .... ...j iji it. ine omer aay a. cedar creek dime novels of twenty years ago. And fn'HTho?!::::::::: SS rl fT,rj Zhol "p 1. it better than rno
Whiting Tel. 10-M . " " "' Diaz.
Crown Point TeL jciotnes, dropped into a restaurant.
Pommes croquettes were on the bill
Advertising aollcitora will sent. of fare so he took - chance at ,hem
rates given on application.
"THIS IS MY 70TH BIRTHDAY" Cardinal Farley.
John Cardinal Farley, the dis
tlngulshed New York prelate who was
recently elevated to the cardinalate.
was born in County Armagh, Ireland.
YOU can do anything with a April 20 1842- H cam the United
I C I M A. . ...
hov." savs a wrltor Must be all uclr l civu war. ana locat.
.io t tw fQn ed ln New York- In 1866 h0 graduated girls in that family. from st. Louis John's mii v.
ham, and a year or so later Cardinal
McCloske sent him to the American
THE ice man has dusted out his College in Rome to complete his theo-
safe and the coal man Is sending out i?Blcal Btudie8- He was ordained m j I Rome, and a year after his return to
ma inns tor uusi. kw vrv , . .
- - - -.v... " ayuinicu secretary
to Cardinal McCloskey. In 1884 he
was made a Monslirnor. and aevn
SPRING has forgotten that It was years later was appointed Vicar Gtfn-
but a few days ago that she made hereral of the archdiocese of New York, debut. Un 892 he was consecrated an auxil
iary Disnop, ana ln 1903 he succeeded
Archbishop Corrigan in the archdiocese of New York.
Congratulations to: King Charles I. of Roumanla, 7a
years old today.
John A. Mead, governor of Vermont,
71 years old today.
Daniel C. French, the noted sculptor.
t2 years old today. ,
MASQUERADES AS MAN TWO YEARS, BUT HYSTERIA AT LAST GIVES HER AWAY
When the bill came he found that
It you have any trouble retting The using cafe French makes the price of
Times notify the nearest office and I Tried potato balls ten cents higher
have It promptly remedied. - in Hammond than in Lowell.
LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION
THAN AXT OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.
THE LAST MOMENTS. We now have the story of the
ANONYMOUS communications will sinking of the Titanic, the harrowing
events that lead up' to it; the impressions of the survivors and in fact
all the awful scenes that attended
the going down of the floating palace but there is one thing we have not
and never will have on this side of
the eternity and.that is the thoughts
of the brave heroes who went down
with the ship. t
Imagination is unable to fathom
not he noticed, but others will be
printed at discretion, and ahocJd be
addressed to The Editor. Times, Ham
mond, Ind.
fjyju433
MASONIC CALENDAR.
Hammond Chapter, No. 117, meets
second and fourth Wednesday of each thelr impressskm3 aa they 8aw the
little cockle shell life boats contain
ARE WOMEN THUS? Here is Marion Fairfax's astonish
ing charge:
I charge that many wives of today,
being idle, restless and thoughtless, aren Insincere In their advocacy of
the Women's Movement; bad housekeepers and unmindful of their hus
band's comfort and health; uninter
ested in their husband's efforts to make a home, thereby seriously handicapping him; dangerously willing to permit so-called Platonic friendships: prone to shirk their fair 'share of the responsibilities of the
martial relation; dangerous to the
community through their though less
and insincere expression of radical views.
Is this a true bill?
month.
T-tammnnA Pommanderv. No. 41. Reg
ular meeting first and third Monday of inS all that was dear to them on
each month. I earth fading away in the icy dark
ness. We have no means of know ing
IN addition to keeping their eye on
the Gary aldermeu who want to make
"park" on their lake front the good
people of Miller had better nail down
the scenery aa well as the sidewalks.
WITHOUT doubt the New loik girl
ho issued 1,000 invitations and then
was wedded in advance before Just two witnesses certainly displayed some sensible qualities. When the preachers de
mand that a wedding be less of
audeville affair we will consder pro
posals from girls (with $5,000 and
more) living in Hobart, Crown Point,' or
Turkey Creek. Now don't all write at
once.
SCIENTIST has invented a machine
to weigh the earth, we read. It ought
ot to be permitted to be used until the
Gary city sealer looks It over.
ALMOST time for Laporte or South
Bend to be breaking into print with a
tory about the peach crop being killed
by the frost.
GEE! It must make the mouths of
those St. John township farmers water
when they read that some Gary men
aVe mortgaged 160 acres for a paltry
175,000.
Political Announcements
the kinemacolor.
!will be' Bent
In time these films
westward. As the
FOR AUDITOR.
A DRAWING CARD
New York motion picture houses
the last thoughts of the heroic cap- yesterday began showing views of the tain, officers and 700 odd sailors as launching of the Titanic and of her
the waters were about to engulf Pflicers- The scenes were caught by
them.
It all happened quickly and unex
pectedly. There doesn't seem to Titanic disaster has attracted more
Editor Times: Kindly announce my have been any extraordinary alarm universal interest than any news
name as a candidate for the office oflup iQ the time the last boats left, eTent of Its kind In the twentieth
Auditor of Lake County, subject to ine
m oi ine u.ucu uu.mu.uu, - u- . of our local nhnrnnlnv manmrpra will
rentlon. ED. SIMON. I0"1 u auu uiieu, wuen iooi dj i r
foot the water approached the procure ine ree,s Ior exnioition nere.
FOR RECORDER. , I promenade d eeliR. what, hannpnprl la
, x..v M A 1 .
Editor times: You are authorised to !.,... SOMETHING ought to be done to
. ..nyA. T m aa I With thA nhfn nrnh n A-nJtHl
Recorder, subject to the wishes of the J r!! -fl - f . vastate the country in spring and
.. uv, a. lc " autumn. It can be seen from the singing the verses as heard across 4Vl 4K , .....
the trackless waste of . water by hys-l . ,1. . , , , . ' of petty theft and loose morals along
turn to England his eloquence as
preacher and his scholastic abilities
Aa iar as we can figure it out poor speedily attracted attention. For some
old Captain Smith died as follows: 1. I years he was professor of philosophy
ent down with the ship. 2. Shot him- at Birmingham Theological College
self. 3. Went down standing on the land later was professor of divinity at bridge. 4. Jumped overboard. oscott College. He has served at
WHILE our county may be making Canon of Birmingham, and since 1909
Droeress and our mllllonalrea ari rm. nas Deen rector or Sst- I'eter s ln
ting divorces, none of our women folk Leamington. Father Barry is equally
has attained the distinction of havlna- wel1 known as a writer and public
a. irrtal xofrptarv ' I speaker. He has lectured at the Roal
j ..... , ... institution ana in isss ne maae an ex
ouain utxy iiicae iitue iciepnone usi-
Iemocratlo nominating convention, to
be held at a date to be decided upon.
JACOB FRIEDMAN.
FOR SHERIFF.
terical women, the thoughts of the whatvpr r,th th,v tak ot of rh,
uuumeu uieai on aecK, on wnat were
Editor Timbs: Kindly announce my they?
cago.
name as a candidate for the office of Sheriff of Lake County, subject to the
decision of the Democratic nominating
convention. MARTIN S. GILL.
None but the great unseen knows! !
FOOD AND GOOD BEHAVIOR.
Malcolm McDowell, the newspaper tho shivers because
SOME people will always persist in digging up something to worry about. Here's a man who is having
he sayB the
Panama canal will be blown up by
ISMAY!
Prominent in the list of t.h Raved reporter who became a banker and
.
then exercised some of his newspaper a volcano in two years
kindness In giving the down and outs
from the Titanic was J. Bruce Ismav
one of the owners of the boat
ismay says ne was asked to get In """" """ lulu U'SUU1 a oe- THE business man who doesn't ad-
a life boat. Well it wasn't comnul- Hever in lDe civilization of food says vprMa npr tn.. what h i ina
ory for him to obey was it? There the Jol,et News- A a recent discus- ing untI1 he Degilia to compare notes were passengers who had paid thous- 8,n 7lth an 0scar G- &Ytr at his wlth ihf) Dusinesa man wno UBes the
ands for suites who were entitled to B,ae ne aavocaiea rooa ror tne work- puMlc,ty pollcy Then he advertlses
far more than Ismay was entitled to. CI" ttl' lu" cxPuse ot ine corpora
Special provision was made for Is- uon8- bome or 11119 discussion I-j
may in the life boat. He accented it. worth thinking about, and it is here THE Illinois Judge who fined his
Thence he was carried aboard to the Quoted: wife $25 lor contempt of court prob
Carpathla and given a specially re- Mr- Mayer B&ld: "This plan will be ably spent that much money in ad
served suite of rooms. A sign was adPted by the corporations Just advertising as he will no doubt have to
put on the door "Don't Knock." The soon aa they realize it means mony fork over in the long run
first thing that Ismay said when ha In thelr Pocket and it does mean betgot on the Carpathla was "FOR ter and more work ,r their men are
GOD'S SAKE GET ME SOMETHING fed "
TO EAT I DON'T CARE WHAT IT I Mr- McDowell offered a concrete IS OR WHAT IT COSTS." Ismay eample. He told of sending out 150
was thinking of his own belly, not of men r his winter "coffee line" to
the poor souls who were drowned work at Bome rather heavy grading
through the criminality of his com- labor ia the winter time
pany. , He was not thinking of Butt. "The fellows hadn't had anything
Astor or the scores of heroes back to eat for a day or two," he said.
. THE score of the "Day In Con
gress" now running off the sporting
page generally reads something like
this, "Met at Noon", "Adjourned un
til Next Noon."
COL. Bryan Is raising onions on
his Texas farm this year, and will
there, fathoms deep WHO COULD ana iney simply weren't able to do thereby undoubtedly make himself
HAVE BEEN SAVED but refused.
He was only thinking of Ismay. Well we would rather be Major Butt dead THAN BRUCE ISMAY ALIVE.
the work. Because they lacked strong with the common people
strength the bosses thought they were 'soldiering and fired the bunch.
Then I caught It from the firm. T THB Sreat Bea tragedy ought to
told them what the- trouble was. make Bome Peo'P1 begin to take
They got more men and fed them ePlritual Inventory, but sad to say all
A BUSY PLACE. Strangers who visit In Abilene go away with the Impression that it is the busiest place in the west. The
Commercial Club owns an old switch engine and three box cars. When it is necessary to impress a visitor the steering committee takes him to the Union Pacific hotel and then the switch engine and cars are started. They run back and forth in front of the hotel till the stranger sits up and takes notice of the traffic rush.
Most of us have never been across the Missouri but we have seen some
parts of Indiana. This description of Abilene reminds one of such progres
sive centers as Angola, Wlnamac or
Columbia City.
and . they did their work well. It's to the companies' Interest to expend an extra 15 cents a day, If they get a dollar's worth more of work.
these lessons are soon lost.
THE weather man is quite evl
dentlv takfne nitv on thos who urn
"It is our big corporations who compened to wear their winter suits
for some time to come.
will see this first and put it into
practice. There is no doubt that If a man Is hired to do 25 cents worth cf
work and he has only a 5 cent stomach, the employer loses 20 cents."
HEARD BY RUBE
THIS . DATE IX HISTORY April 2t.
1751 Ira Allen, brother of Ethan Allen
and one of the foundersof Vermont, born in Cornwall. Ct. Died in Philadelphia. Jan. 7, 1814.
1795 John Phillips. founder of
Philipps-Exeter Academy, died.
Born Dec. 27, 1719.
1836 Texans under General Houston
defeated, the Mexicans under Santa
Anna at San Jacinto,
1861 West Virginia declared for the
Union.
18 1 9 Capital of Louisiana changed
from New Orleans to Baton Rouge.
1898 Charles E. Smith of Pennsyl
vania became Postmaster-General
of the U. S.
1911 House of Representatives passed
the Canadian Reciprocity bill. "THIS IS MY C3RD BIRTHDAY Rev. William Barry.
Rev. William Barry, one of the most
noted theologians of the Roman Catho
lie Church in England, was born ln London, April 21, 1849. He received
hla education at Oscott College, near
Birmingham, and at the English Col lege ln Rome. He was present at th
celebrated Vatican Council and the
taking of Rome in 1870. After his re-
a
eners will learp. that listening on the line is In the same class as opening a
letter that is for some one else.
AS yet we haverft heard anything
tensive lecture tour of America.
Congratulations tcft , :.
Dr. Adolf Lorenz, the world-famous
surgeon. 68 ears old today.
John Muir. the celebrated California
from the suffragette as to equal right naturalist, 74 ears old today.
for the men when lifeboats are being
filled.
COLD has been found ln Pennsylania coaL The way tho black stuff is
being priced leads us to wonder wheth
cr It wasn't meant that coal was found
ln the gold.
-t.rijc.1 are eniorcing tne smoke or-
Prlncess August William, wife of the
fourth son of the German emperor, 25
years old today.
LOVE'S TENDERNESS
Oh, I think tbat I have Journeyed, far
and very far,
Seeklna; vrbere yon sojourn, (nesslng
?L"CV. "tr,CVy ,n,Ch,S th&t t"r Following Where yonr feet we.t long
VI BinuKing IUIOS. XNOW ..
ii nume oi me campaign stogie smokers were nabbed the crusade would certain
ly be a good one.
j-iiciN again ir mat scientist ever
weighed the earth while Tom Knotts
and Judge McMahon of Hammond were IShadowy and shifting; are tke thoughts
up ln an aeroplane for a private confer- I of you and me,
ence the tonnage would be considerably I There's neither stable earth beneath
And cleaving to the comfort of the
accrct that I kaoir!
Shadowy and ahlftlna; are the light
of sky and sea,
displaced.
IN the crush of steamship news we
haven't had time to kick over the
traces because the soft coal strike has
been settled and an agreement has
been signed up for two years. How.
ever, but your prices don't take any
heavy downward plunges.
WORD comes that 900,000 people in
London are "among the class of two-
room dwellers. Rents along the Thames
must be something like they are along
the Grand Calumet, near Broadway.
OK the time being the poor, old
Mexican rebellion. West Hammond's
troubles, and the Baldwin Locomotive
works will have to be contented with
the next to the last page.. Even Gov
ernor Marshall's announcement that he has some new bombs to spring In the Gary bribery cases fails to get more
than a single column head.
jiujjx smoaei s. n. again and not a
bit of wool soap in the house.
MAYOR DARROW'S CASE POST
PONED, news headlines. Is it Dosslble
frit ;
n Ml . If 1 J I
A
Alexandra Zaleakl, m female
male garb. The l.mlnlne trait of yielding to a fit of hyrteri revealed the acx of Alexandra Zaleakl. a Polish girl of twenty, who masqueraded aa a man two years while roaming about the country in aearch of her husband. She was married at sixteen to George Zaleakl. and they lived at Gary, W. Vs., until two years ago. Then George disappeared, and Alexamra donned men' clothes to find him. Bbe has worked as an elevator boy In New York, heated rivets ln a locomotive shop, and driven mules In a coal mine. She was working iu a machine shop In Erie. Pa when her sex. became known.
This Week's News Forecast
nor wind of truth above.
And lol I love the shadow of the lady
that I love!
This waa where your feet went, long
and long ago.
And shall mine not follow In the light
of what I knowf
Oh I think thta I shall Journey yet,
far and very far.
On the quest of where you sojourn. In
the hope of what you are! Gerald Gould.
Up and Down in INDIANA
Washington, D. C.,- April 20. The coming week will afCorS something
of a. breathing spell ln the hard-fought contests for the presidential nomina
tions, r The conventions and ' primaries to be held will be neither so numer
ous nor so Important as those that have marked the week Just closed.
The Interest of the Republican politicians will be confined largely to
Missouri and Iowa, where State conventions are to be held for the selection of delegates to the national convention at Chicago. The Roosevelt claims
appear to be the stronger so far aa Missouri Is concerned, though the Taft managers are not ready to concede that they have lost the State. In Iowa,
the Taft people have strong hopes of winning as a result of the progressive
vote being divided between Rosevelt and Cummins.
The Republican State and district coventions In Rhode Island will be held Wednesday. The Taft people are In control of the regular party organisation and expect to win out In the convention. A different situation exists In New Hampshire, where Tuesday's primaries are expected to determine the complexion of the Republican State convention. Governor Bass and a strong progressive following In the Granite State are working hard in the Rosevelt interests. Encouragement has been lent to their efforts by the recent Roosevelt victory in the neighboring state of Maine. In pursuance of a movement Initiated by President Taft. representatives of business organizations throughout the country are to meet ln Washington Tuesday to discuss plans for the formation of a "national board of trade," which ahall have for Its object the bringing of business men ln touch with the government for advice and counsel in the adpilnlstratlon of laws, the enactmet of new statute and the development of commerce. Amonff other la rare and Important gatherings of the wek will be the
annual convention of the National Retail Grocers' Association, at Oklahoma City; the annual meeting of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association, in New York, and the annual convention of the Southern Wholesale Gro
cers' Association, ln Montgomery.
Of Interst ln church and educational circles will be the unveiling of a
statue of Bishop Carroll at Georgetown University. Bishop Carroll was the founder of the university and the first Catholic bishop and archbishop ln
the United States.
The anniversary of the birth of General Grant will be made the occasion
for the customary memorial exercises and banquets In various parts of tho country next Saturday. President Taft is to speak, at the Union League Club banquet In Philadelphia and Vice President Sherman will be heard it a Bimllar function to be given under the auspices of the Amerlcus Club at Pittsburgh. Archbishop Ireland has accepted an invitation to deliver the annual oration at the memorial exercises in Galena, 111., the old home of Gen
eral Grant. -
TOOK 25 GRAIN MORPHINE. a,
Thomas McBaln, age sixty-two, died
at St. Joseph's hospital at Logansporr,
last evening, as the result of an over
dose of morphine, taken with suicidal
intent. McBaln took one hundred one
quarter grain tablets Monday night.
that Laporte getting Jealous of Gary) ana was found in an unconscious con
dition on tne doorstep or ma nome in
TEN days from now the Titanic story
will be relegated to the inside pages.
tnere won t be much about It, and
there'll be new news to interest you.
You'll forget all about the disaster and you will think of It about as often as you do of the Spanish war. The world
is nothing more than an audience watching news being reeled off at a
high speed rate.
The ' Day in HISTORY
MEXICANS AS THEY ARJ2.
An effort t is being made by some of the Americans remaining in Mexico and those In the border towns on this side of 'the Rio Grande to Induce the United States government to take some action concerning the death ot Thomas Fountain.
t Fountain was!
r J. BRUCE Ismay says the Titanic
was "the last word in ship-building.
Let us fervently hope it Is of that
kind of ship-building.
CHAMP Clark's friends are going
to- wear buttons almost as big as a saucer. Ought to get a soud tureen
as a model.
THE Northern Indiana baseball
an American who league is putting every city on it on
"THIS DATE IS HISTORY Anril 2ft.
1534 Jacques Cartier bailed from Fiance on his first voyage to the New World. 1657 Spanish fleet vanquished and de
stroyed In the harbor of Santa Cru by the English admiral Blake.
1776 First recorded marriage in Mis
souri took place in St. Louis. 1808 Napoleon III. born. Died Jan. 9,
1873.
1812 George Clinton, vice-president of carried toward the house
Shultztown. He waa ptaced In bed by members of the family, who thought
him drunk, and no attention was glv
en him until noon the next day. When he did not awaken a phsiclan was called. After nuch effort he was- revived
and he said he had taken morphine and wished to die. He became unconscious
and died at the hospital. CIKf: COVERS 12 ACRES.
Twelve acres of ground are needed
to provide for the huge tents of the
Hagenbeck-Wallace circus, which will
show ln Indianapolis April 22. There are twenty pavilions in all. The big
circus tent under which the ring acts' take place has accommodations for 10,000 persons. There are three rings, two stages and a hippodrome track i quarter of a mile long. Overhead are
Strong appliances for aerial performances. The circus performance is opened with a spectacular pageant, with nearly 1,000 persons. collie: gives fire: alarm. The barking of a collie dog possibly saved the lives of the family of Louis Wettschurack. a farmer living six miles west of Lafayette, early yesterday. - The large barn on the " farm
caught fire, and the flames were being
The dog
the United States, died in Washington, D. C Born in Ulster, N Y., July 26, 1739. 1854 Massachusetts Emigrant Aid Society organized- to aid emigration
roused the sleeping family, and Wett
schurack was able to save eight valuable horses. The barn was destroyed, together '. with all content.", including
one, thousand bushels of grain and
farm lnmplements. The loss is $3,000, partly coVered by Insurance. OWNED INTEREST IN 8ISW. John R. Sterling, age fifty-live, part owner of the play "Sis Hopkins." ln which Mrs. Frank Mlnse. of South Bend, known on the stage as Rose Melville, has starred for years, Is dead, in Detroit, Mich., according to word received at South Bend yesterday. Mr. Sterling had visited South Bend frequently and was well known. He was one-third owner and Mrs. Minzey two-
thirds owner of the Bhow. He died of heart disease. A widow and three children survive. Andrew McCay, business manager of the company, Is critically ill in Louisville, Ky. FOIR 1XJTJRED IN WRECK. In a head-on collision between a pasenger ear and a line car at 5:30 o'clock Wednesday evening, at a point a quarter of a mile south of CassviUe. on the Indiana Union Traction company's line, four persons were serious
ly hurt and several others severely shaken up and bruised. The injured
are: Amos Hagee, of Tipton, motorman on line car, head cut and bruised, injured internally; Verne Wilson. of Bunker Hill, passenger, two ribs broken; Enoch Hobson, workman on line car, internally injured; Henry Shumaker, of Huntington, cut on scalp, upper lip cut through, heae, bruised. FIND RABIES IN DOG'S BRAIN. Failure to pack in -Ice the head of a dog killed near Vevay before shipping it to the pathological laboratory of the state board of health, at Indianapolis,
prevented the laboratory authorities from making an examination for indications of rabies, as requested. The dog had bitten a child. Indications of rabies were found in the brain of a dog killed in Madison
but the authorities did not know
whether the dog had bitten any person or other animal. Heads have been received from Michigan town, Dlllsboro and Shelbyville. Athur Loehr, of Greenfield, appeared before the board for treatment for rabies. Loehr was bitten by a dog suspected of being rabid, although the brain was not examined.
If you smoke a La Vendor once yea will always call for them.
NEW SECRETARY TO CHINA'S PRESIDENT
i f
i
Vl-Kynln Wellington Koa,
