Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 262, Hammond, Lake County, 25 April 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Thursday, April 25, 1912.

THE TUPLES NEWSPAPERS r" By Thm Lake Coaajy Priatlas and Pae. ' Uaklas Ceaaaar.

The Lake County Times, dafty except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June IS, 10"; The Lake County Times, daily except Saturday and Sunday, enteied Feb. . 111; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. I, 1101; The Lake County Times. Saturday ana weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 111; The Times, dally except Sunday, entored Jan. 16, 1911. at the postoffloo at Hammond. Indiana, ali under the aot of March V 1I7. Entered at the Postoffice. Hammond. Ind.. as second-class natter. FORKIGX ADVERTISING OFFICES, 12 Rector Bulldln . - Chicago PUBLIC ATI OX OFFICES, Hammond Building. Hammond. Ind. TELEPHONES, Hammond (private exchange) Ill (Call for depart ro as t sraatad.) Gary Of Bee..., Tel 111 East Chicago Office. TeL 474-R Indiana Harbor...... ..Tel. SSs-R WhitlnaT TeL 10-M Crown Point....... .....TeL el Advertising- solicitors will be eent. or rates given on application. If you nave any trouble retting The Times notify the nearest office and have It promptly remedied. LAItGGK PAID CP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWS PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION. ANONTMOU3 communications will ft not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and ahocFd be addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham mond, Ind. -. M1IONIC CALKXDAR. . Hammond Chapter, No. 117, meets second' and fourth Wednesday of each month. , Hammond Commandery, No. 41. Regular meeting first ad third Monday of each month. , Political Announcemsnts FOR AUDITOR. Editor Tiites: Kindly announce my name as a. candidate for the office of Auditor of Lake County, subject to the will of the Democratic nominating convention, ED. . SIMON. POR 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 bo held at a date to be decided upon. JACOB FRIEDMAN. POR SHERIFF, Editor Times: Kindly announce my name as a' candidate for the office of Sheriff of Lake County, subject to the decision of the Democratic -nominating convention. MARTIN & GILL, WHAT TWAIN SALT). The prescience of the late beloved Mark Twain is almost remarkable. Two days after the inauguration of President Taft in 1909 ho declared that Col. Roosevelt would run again. He added: "We may expect to have Mr. Roosevelt sitting on us again with his twenty times the weight of any other presidential burden that a hostile providence could impose upon us for our sins. "Our people have adored this showy charlatan as perhaps no impostor of his breed has been adored since the golden calf; so It is to be expected that the nation will want him back again after he is done hunting other wild animals heroically In Africa, with the safeguards and advertising equipment of a ;park of artillery and a brass band." WHAT INDUSTRIES COST. The cities of north township have witnessed a remarkable industrial development in the past ten or fifteen years wnicn is very gratifying to those who have prophesied a remarkable future, for Ihem but the .time has come when it is wise to estimate the cost to the community some of .these Industries and figure out whether or not it is worth while to continue the" policy of conceding everything for the sake . of locating them. ; Today the cities of the region are very much concerned about the matter of correcting certain costly errors in city building that were the result of the greed for new industries. For Instance when the Gibson yards were located south of East Chicago the city officials of Hammond took the bull by the horns and vacated Forsythe ; avenue. Forsythe avenue has been stunted in its development as a result and the people of East Chicago will never forgive Hammond for this act. The opinions of those who wanted to save this street were over-ridden

Oi? Fo THE 1 EMrnDAY

THE LOVE OF WOMAN. Dear, I will stand beside tk.ee o the esd. Thy loving; mate, thy comforter, thy friend. If peace and plenitude shall bless thy ways, will enjoy them with thee all days. If shame and sin should be thy bitter lot. My faith will cover thee and question not. If thou art false to me. then I will air Thy spirit fetl asleep that cruel day; Bat thou wilt wake, and need Bay lov-1 rare, I I win watch with fasting and with prayer. EUa Barker. J

in the mad scramble for the advant-Uhe

age that would come from the men! that the New York Central lines would employ at Gibson. j It now develops, that the Gibson hump yards are not the success that its designers DroDhesied. that the

railroad would have built a viaduct! withdraw themselves from considers over the yards at Forsythe avenue if jtion.

the cities of East Chicago and Hammond had Insisted on it and that tha hump subway, which was to be a substitute for Forsythe avenue, is practically worthless as a connecting link in this thoroughfare. A corrective project is now under consideratlon which will cost thousands of dollars. ' When the Erie Coal Storase Co. I came to Hammond with its nrnirt to build an enormous coal sifting and storage plant the people stood by and 6aw the mayor and the city council lose Sohl street an act which retard ed the development of East State street ten years and resulted in the building of a plant of such an obectionable character that it rvjined . . 1 ,, ..... . I me enure neignnornooa as a residential district. inaiana rtarnor toaay is vitally l concerned in the settlement of the traction, question for the reason that it finds itself in a pocket between the canal and the Pennsylvania and

Lake Shore railroads which have cutllive anyway? "We believe It was

off all possibilities of ingress and egress from the west, north and east. No question has bothered Indiana more than that of opening a high way across the canal so that It can have a direct route to WhiUng, South Chicago and Chicago. It will develop a fairly direct route to Gary. In Gary the people have been compelled to fight for the ODeniniz of streets under the track elevation of the Gary & Western, known as the "High Line" and all because of the fact that the city officials who might have conserved the interests of the city did not provide for the future opening of subways under the elevation when the necessity for them should become apparent. The Calumet region now has enuuga mausiruu aeveiopmem pres ent and under way to make it fairly independent and tnere should be greater hesitancy in the future in closing streets, especially those that migui. ue uenoiea inorougniares, or which will provide inter-city connec tions. " nTT a wr w m s.-a I n.AMj& la OJb&Z,. . This advertisement is appearing in a New l ork newspaper, - the Globe and Commercial Advertiser; Long Island. FIHMSHED BUNGALOWS TO HET OX FIRE ISLAND BEACH Surf and still-water bathing; boating:, fishing; rent $175 season. Can commute from N. Y. Lots for sale. SEASHORE, 334 5th Ave. One of these days some shrewd business man will find it profitable to stick some portable houses on the Miller lake front. There are hiilei and miles of beach there with interurban cars nearby. Furnishings don't cost much. Returns would be nanasome. . Lake Michigan beats the Atlantic coast when it comes to summer homes and it won't be long until the beach between Miller and Michigan City are well tenanted during the warm months. Here Is an opportunity for some one. NOW. JUST LISTEN! We suppose that just as soon as me uartters ior xne nooseveir. tnreeringed circus get their breath, they will begin , to rend the atmosphere wiiu ui oi irsuu , tuievery etc. cetera over the isew Hampshire primaries. It has been quite noticeable that the Roosevelt clan is only too eager to disparage a Taft victory. They always have plenty of reasons even though the reasons have no basis of fact. They never give Mr. Taft any credit, never concede that he may have friends who believe he has made a safe and a sane president. They forget that the people who are

strong. for the leader of the republican party are not the ones who clamber upon the housetops amid the clashing of cymbals and the empty

sounding of brasses to brag about It. Col. Roosevelt Is Ill-advised if he thinks that because be makes all the noise fte has all the jrespect of the people. Far from it. THE PEOPLE MUST HAVE IT. The matter of furnishing adequate transportation in the Calumet district promised the "Baldwin Locomo-

myjtive company when it decided to lo

cate in the Twin Cities, hinges entirely upon the passage of franchises for the Gary and Interurban Railway and the Hammond, Whiting and East Chicago street railway. Both these companies are ready to build. These facts are uncontrovertible. There is absolutely no speculation or imagination about tftem. . The two franchises are now In . . , . . ,,. . . , . ., " , the hands of the administrative and legislative authorities of East Chi cago. To these bodies the people' of entire Calumet region ook fo relief. Leaving the Baldwin Work3 ou of consideration for the moment the region needs fuller , transporta Jtion equipment, and without additional and complete transportation facilities the Baldwin people will The matter Is urgent. Talk, discussion and preachments are Idle, action is necessary and. speedy action at that is obligatory. The people know where the responsibility rests, They will fix it in a hurry If the franchises granting Is not forthcoiniS speedily. IT is kind of the Chicago News to tell us that "The little paper ruffles which are put around lamb chops when they are served need not be thrown out with the bones. Thev can be converted into artistic shades for electric lights by using a little ingenuity and some mucilage." How 'in 1 vfin pti (Tercet tViaf neo th. . AMONG tne bitterest , enemies o President Taft are the Sons of Rest or the men with soft palms who stand on the street corner and livesay how do some of those fellows Carlyle who wrote that any Individ ual who didn't work for a living was either a thief or a beggar BOSTON clergyman says that American women wear too many clothes at summer resorts. Either he has never been at a seaside resort or another church scandal is im minent GEORGE Hamlin and Cornelius van vuet, tne virtuous 'cellist, ap peared in recital at Mandel Hall Thursday ' afternoon. Elgin Courier A punch in the plexus for George eh? HARRIET Beecher Stowe, will the 8uffragette8 please note wrotft thJ book that shattered slavery and at the same time raised six children and did a1 ber own cookiag and sewing IN the second dance the girls stood at one end of the hall kneeling, Bloomington (Ind.) Telephone Must have been the shin shiiffla Suggest they try it at Garden Hall PERHAPS if you had to provide for an ocean disaster one day, a flood the next and a cyclone the next you would understand why the news paper game is bo exciting. .THE esteemed ; South Chicago Calumet says the best time to swa the fly is before he is born, but for got to print a . diagram of how to conduct the operation. i a uirLOMAi is a man who so shapes things that It makes his wife provoked to even think of any one but herself cleaning up the back yard. LOOKING for sympathy for Bruc Ismay is about as easy an occupation as threading a needle while wearin an eight ounce boxing glove. TITANIC surely was a great boa not enough Are boats, binoculars danger drills and too much cham pagne and Ismay IT simply chokes the Col. to giv utterance to his ruffled feelings on the New Hampshire primaries. THE Murfreesboro Messenger is taking pigs on nbscriptions. WeU pigs Is pigs, bring 'em on. THE more you can believe about

an Investment the more apt is It to turn out a swindle.

EVE was lucXy, the missus says. She never had to ask Adam to hook her up the back. ONE sure fragant sign of spring Messrs. and Mesdames Billy 'and Nanny Goat. THE fog still continues and if you don't believe it look at those Cubs. PLEASE pass the street car fran chises. HEARD BY RUBE AS it is Mr. Ismay escaped cotd water only to get Into hot water. THE fashions of the '50's are to return again. This will give grandmoth er a chance to bring out ..her shawl, bonnet, mantle and hoop-skirt brocade that she has always been telling us about. DESPITE the fact that Governor Bass was one of the seven little governors, we notice that the New Hamp shire primaries went to your Uncle Wm. Taft. NOWDAYS a man -isn't in it unless he's Engle, Elk, Buffalo, Moose, Owl or married. t WONDER why it is that people save their last summer's straw hats when they know theat they'll never wear them again and that they will be pitched out during spring house clean ing? ALTHOUGH it is April time, the only green stuff we've seen so far is the garnishing that comes with the roundteak at the boarding house. ACCORDING to grain experts the oats crop is the only one that will be good in Indiana this year. You- know what happens when the rye bags and corn stalks are empty. THAT new book, "Blinds Down," sug gests something. Now, what is it? TEE hee! The old Monon railroad tried to show oft and bought some new locomotives. Now they find that they are too high for their durned old bridges. SPEAKING of the high cost of living what's become - of . the old-fashioned German who was content to have his with the family at supper time. We mean a nickel pail of beer. WE read In Thk Times that the peo pie of the Twin OVtles are "clamoring loudly for. street car service." Those twins are always -noisy. Somebody please make them shut up. GARY missing ones (revised list) M. Weil, Doge-Face Charley," "Dia mond" Bill Frazer, John MacFarlane, Beau Brummal and newspaper man; Al derman BaukuS, City Clerk Moose, De tective Oscar Schmidt, Rev. Hamilton, Meyer Himmelblau and a Ipng and dis tinguished company. WHO will be the next one? IN a letter to a newspaper a wise man suggests that waterproof floating suit be available when a ship is about to sink so that a man could don a life preserver, if he would feel happier with it along. So equipped he would be dry er, safer and more comfortable than the occupants of the lifeboats, and If he would take a lunch pall with him he could gayly float around several days to be piclced up. This Is a good idea and we hasten-to add to it the brilliant suggestion of our Hennery Coldbottle that a case of Bud be anchored alongside the lunch pall. In such an event Hennery believes that one could "gayly float around for several days" (providing the Bud didn't give out). Hennery will have the idea patented. Up and Down in INDIANA nLOOMISGTOX FOLK HEIRS. Several well-known Bloomington people are heirs of Starling Hunnicut. a wealthy real estate owner of Ran uiego, cal., who leaves an estate of $100,000. Mr. Hunnicut owned practically all the property on the ocean beach at San Diego and died without issue. His wife died several years ago. Hunnicut was a native of Bloomington and after making his fortune in the West returned to Bloomington last summer and took the names of all his relatives. Informing them that he was going to make them the beneficiaries of his will. They are Mrs. A. D. Rog ers, Mrs. W. P. Stephen. Mrs. Joseph Hensley, wife of the Bloomington chief of police; Mrs. Henry Bender, Daniel Hunnicut.. Ttiomas, Oscar and Homer Huntington. BEIP REWARD IX SO YEARS. J. A. Newton, a Columbus shoe dealer, yesterday realized on a habit, which he formed twenty years ' ago. He had no safe in hs shoe store and every night for twenty years he plac ed his books on a chair at the front of his store that they might be saved In case of Are. A few nights ago, his $10,000 stock of shoes was destroyed by Are but Sheriff Miller kicked the front door of the burning building open and saved the books, by which Newton's loss - was adjusted today. DIAMO.XU WOM.IS RETCHKS. With both her hands resembling one solid diamond stone, so crowded were her fingers with rings. Mrs. Charles II. Anthony, Muncle's "diamond-heel ed" woman, who startled Washington and New York city society with her gorgeous gowns, arrived home jester day , , : - . "There is nothir.g like It," Said Mrs. Anthony In referlng to her Kastern trip. "Washington society Is gay and Broadway has Its charms, but after all there Is no place like dear old Muncie.

INDIANA REPUBLICANS SEEK STANDARD BEARER Col. Charles A. Carlisle of South Bend, Manufacturer, Business Economist and Publicist, Mentioned Throughout State in Connection With Honor.

EFFICIENCY, PUBLICITY, COPARTNERSHIP (By Colonel Charles Arthur Carlisle, South Bend. Ind., in "Judicious Advertising" for February. Efficiency is the life blood of progress; publicity is the advance guard and copartnership the. great Index that will eventually , serve as the arbitrator of peace. The science of business today and of the future will be built upon it; the welfare and Interest of the people, civic, state and national, will depend upon It. It is the efficiency of man more particularly than that of machinery, that in my judgment must be dveloped. - The efficiency of administration reflects the men with braijis, refined through the school of experience, who know how to formulate a policy and select the right man to execute The efficiency of production in like manner reflects credit, under the policy of organization, to the department heads who employ the results of science and experience, and develop the spirit of copartnership conserving energy, eliminat ing waste and bringing the finished product through at the lowest mini mum of cost, and equal to the high est standard of quality. There is n. place and a work for every man, and the successful de partment foreman or manager of the future is the one who develops the highest efficiency for every man in his department. It Is th brotherhood of love, the spirit of copartnership and an equitable distribution of profits that will make the policy of administration effective through factory efficiency. HE career of Col. Charles A. Car-! lisle a chain of his own welding is a romance of success, a se quence of hardship and deprivation, but all built on a solid foundation. The motif of his life Is the conviction that tho greatest element in all tho world that reflects the most brilliant success is simplicity of character and humility of heart with kindly Intentions for all who struggle, because he himself was refined through these processes. To link this introduction with a question that is timely and vital in Indiana Is the burden of this story. The democrats of the state have chosen their standard-bearer. Will the republican party choose for its gubernatorial candidate a politician or a business man of administrative ability who can divorce business and politics? It is time in Indiana that the office seek the man and not the man the. office. Want Him to Announce Candidacy. Friends of Col. Charles A. Carlisle, of tne great btudebaker corporation at South Bend, who are urging him to become a candidate for governor on the republican ticket, are rejoicing at the sweep of a movement set afoot last fall to induce the South Bend man to an nqunce his candidacy. They believe that If he would accept ho would carry the state, though he has never held office and says he never expects to. wnen col. Carlisle a true type of the highest ideals of sincere and. hu manitarian American citizenship was deaf to the state-wide call for his can didacy in 1903-04 as the party souarht a standard-bearer, he could not be pre vailed to do anything but throw himself into the fight for the man who was chosen to lead the party. The swift procession of events, how ever, resulting in party stress and tur moil, have once again brought the South Bend man into the foreground In 1904 he wired the Indianapolis Star In answer to a query, "My political as piration are confined entirely to the welfare and success of my party." Heeded Cry of the People. cincinnatus was called from the plow more than once to serve his coun try, however. The spontaneity of approval which an editorial in this paper last October met has encouraged the warm friends of Col. Carlisle over the state to become active in his behalf. The edi torial said in part: The next republican candidate for governor of Indiana should come from the northern part of the state. He should be a man identified with business, manufacturing and farming interests and - he should be a man who is a republican without being a politician. He must have a higher duty than politics. If there Is a better republican lit the state of Indiana and a republican less of a politician than he Is. we should like to know him. Colonel Carlisle is a business man of integrity. He is actively connected with one of the greatest " manufacturing institutions in the world. Hp is a close student of natural and political - economy, a conservationist, broad-gauged and many sided. He is a man of presence and a Christian gentleman and could he be induced to become a candidate for governor the republicans of Indiana would flock to his banner with enthusiasm. " They Want a Business Man. Never, it is pointea out, witn unmistakable force, has there been such a need for a man of Col. Carlisle's sterling stamp to lead the republican party this campaign. There is a cry from the people for a gubernatorial candidate who Is not a politician, but a business man of his type. The masses take, no Mrs. Anthony says she had "one great time," but ays the publicity given her was all uncalled for. She intends going to Indianapolis next week to order several new gowns, and she declares they will surpass any In her wardrobe. She intends to spend the summer in Colorado. s STPI' TO BE CIRCC9 MAX. An un-ldentified man was instantly killed by a Wabash freight train at Logansport. He attempted to board it In the yards, fell between and his

X'"K,tvv"v.v.Y':,y-,-v.-: ' ' 1

Col.- Charles A. Carlisle. longer the interest in politics as they were wont, only because they cannot warm up to the office-seeking candidate instead of the seeking-candidate office. They do not yearn for the per ennial pie-counter visitor. They are weary of having the cards stacked and have called for a new deal. Sometimes the patience of Job is in explicable. The vote-casting population of In diana is turning from the perennial and the professional politician steeped in intrigue, hatched in underground cabals and combinations. The lack of interest which the masses take in politics in the present day Is due primarily to the fact that highminded business men cannot be persuaded to participate in what has come to be a game and a gamble; in a riot of backroom conspiracy, in the venality of adroit machine politics and the herd ing the plebiscite to the hustings. Democrats Have Strong Men. Ijt us look at the situation as it pre sents itself on the obverse side of. the political medal, on which two faces are already "moulded Samuel A. Ralston and William O'Neill With the demo cratic nomination for governor in the hands of Samuel A. Ralston as a representative type of democracy, and his running mate, William O'Neill 'of Mishawaka, bringing the fight Into the northern part of the state, more insistent than ever, comes from the manufacturing section the cry that tho republican nomination for governor hail from the portion of Indiana which is showing such marvelous Industrial and economic development and commercial progress. Northern Indiana, with Its network of industries, its coming waterway arteries, ramified by great interurban and steam railway systems; being brought closer together every time the sun sets, must assert its claim from the political system as well as the economic The calloused hand of toil is making Itself felt in northern Indiana. It pounds for recognition. Career Is An Incentive. Col. Carlisle is one of the best known business factors in the state, and has had no other aspirations than to work for the good of his fellow men, his party and the country at large. As one Of his distinguished friends once said of him. 'Your career is an Incentive to American youth more power to your elbow that before long it will be Governor . Carlisle President Carlisle." and eventually It was Leslie's Weekly which said of him several years ago when an effort was made to get him to run for governor: "His rapid advancement in life is due to his own efforts. Men of Indiana's business and financial circles are convinced thst he has the training and qualities Which assure an administration of public affairs on a basts of political cleanliness, strength and safety." Col. Carlisle Is an exemplar of versatile American manliness, moulded at a devoted mother's knee from the time as a poor lad he wrapped parcels in a country grocery, climbing the ladder of opportunity by patient steps until he numbers as his friends today presidents down to the humblest wage earners in his home city. Ills art of making and keeping friends is his strongest trait. He Is a paradox an unconscious politician. Ancestry Is Distinguished. John Carlisle, grandfather of Col. Carlisle, with his father, Andrew, emigrated from Scotland In 1762 and, with the loyal legion of Scotch-Irish, helped to blaze a pathway for civilization down through Pennsylvania and the Shenandoah valley f Virginia, up through the northwest territory to Ohio's first capital. Chillicothe. where forty-eight years ago Col. Carlisle was body was cut in twain. No papers Of any kind were found on the body. His hair is clipped, has a dark mustache, is about 20 years old and is believed to be an attache of the WallaceHagenbeck shows that opened in Peru yesterday and to live in Huntington, Ind. VKTOES MEAT IXSPECTIOX. Mayor Shank of Indianapolis yesterday vetoed an ordinance passed by the city council at its last meeting reQuiring the inspection of all meats be

irlisle? the great Henry Clay wrote. to a friend, ' then ambassador to Mexico: "He is a man of sterling qualities, respected. honored and loved by all. I hold hira a personal friend and as such I introduce him to you." Bred and raised close to nature. young Carlisle carved out his own ca reer, rising through the various departments of journalism Into a railway experience of brilliancy from which he stepped out Into the activity of commercial and manufacturing life. Col. Carlisle was married in 1891 to the only daughter of the late Hon. Clem Studebaker, founder of the house of Studebaker's at South Bend, and since that date has been prominently and vigorously Identified with the progress and life of Indiana, in civic, state and national lines. Champion of Modern Progress, He was vice president of the National Association of Manufacturers and had t that organization its way would doubtless have become the first head of tho 'department of commerce under Roosevelt. He was a member of the Carriage Builders National association, vice president for Indiana of tho Scotch-Irish Society of America, an official of the famous Indiana Society of Chicago. He served four years as a ' member of Governor Mount's staff as lieutenant-colonel and was eommanding colonel under Governor W. T. Durbln, who said that Col. Carlisle had ' won recognition throughout the state as one of the most active, enterprising and successful business men of Indiana. He is a 32nd degree Mason and & Shriner, a member of the American Academy of Political and Social Science of Philadelphia, tho American Institute! of Civics of Now York, the Chicago Athletic association and Twentieth Century of Chicago, the Sphinx club of New York, composed only of national advertisers, the Northern Indiana Historical society, tho Columbia 4 club of Indianapolis, and the Indiana club of South Bend. He has been president of many Indiana political clubs, and an ardent champion of modern political progress along sane lines, divorced from the dangers that threaten tho welfare of all the people all the time. Friend of late McKinley. It is given to few men to possess the personal friendship of so many men in all twalks of life as has fallen to the lot of Col. Carlisle. He numbers among his friends some of the nation's greatest men. The nation's martyred McKinley praised him. Col. Roosevelt counts him as a friend. Former Vice President Fairbanks calls him one of the most able and forceful men of the state, while Senator Beveridge says of him: "Courteous and kindly to all. loyal In friendship, active .In good causes he Is fearless In the championship of what he believe Is' right." Thomas A. Edison, the "Wizard of Menlo Park, said: "Carlisle is a typical American, sanguine, pushing and bright, a man of the wooly west where everybody hustles and business is only limited by nervous prostration." The late General Lew Wallace said: "The history of h! life Is instructive to the younger generation." The late Mark Hanrja esteemed Col. Carlisle highly, and to read the messages of friendship that, have come to hira from ministers, bishops, manufacturers, editors and leaders in thought and action one can only marvel at the versatility and many-sldednesa of his friendship. Labors to Serve People. He believes In efficiency of administration that is honest, that labors conscientiously to serve the people under the law, conserving energy, eliminating waste and without religious, personal, social or business selfishnes. The farmer and the business man will be vastly Interested In what Col Carlisle has studied deeply, and thoroughly accepts as part of economic necessity In facing the latter day problems of expensive living. These are reci- ; procity, conservatism, associated chari- ! ties, reforestratlon, good roads, scientific agriculture, conservation and the broadening of country life. xie hOlua inak xiikh ui-niaa tiuu y1"er regulation are more effective methods in dealing with the liquor .trafflo than drastic laws, for If an evil is to be ' eventually and permanently corrected the majority of the people must agree, publicity , being. In his estimation, a vital factor for 'reform. Col. Carlisle believes in the people having direct primaries and elections. His tributes to the influence of womanhood and the unselfish love of woman has won him unstinted praise. ' A Broad-minded Man. In the uniformity of law and Its efficiency, , in federal government supervision and when necessary, federal regulation over all interstate ' affairs, and In the absolute Interdependence of capital and labor, inculcating the spirit and principles of copartnership and co-operation are views of Mr. Carlisle's that stamp him as broad-minded In tho extreme. No one who has ever visited the immense Studebaker plant art South Bend, a hive of Irradiating Industry hat reaches across the world, can but see how proud the South Bend man is of the, theory that every man and woman should have fair, square and honorable oportunity for success. He feels that success is due to efficiency, copartnership and publicity, these developing a solution that will serve as the index for the fair and equitable distribution of profit and other great problems yet to be solved. fore sale. He said he believed It would prevent farmers and small butchers from bringing their meats to the city market, and thereby create a monopoly to the detriment of the people of the city. He declared that the ordinance has some good features. and that with the proper features he would approve It. Mayor Shank also declared t-a.t he was afraid the city would not be able to bear the expense of the additional Inspectors that would be re- - quired to enforce the measure rigidly.

born. In speaking of John Car