Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 272, Hammond, Lake County, 7 May 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES. Tuesday, May 7, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br Tae Lake Conmty Pristine aad Pub.
! lUhlnc Ceatpaay.
Th Lake County Tiroes, dafty eseept Bun day, "entered as second-class matter June is, 190"; The Lake County Times, daily except Saturday sad Sunday, enteied Feb. t, 1911; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 5, l0t; The Lake County Times. Saturday and weekly edition.
entered Jan. 10, 1U; The Times, daily
for THE EM iDAY
IX ML.iC TIME.
Through orchard of old apple trees That aprinif makes mimical with been
By a-arden ways of vines aad flowers.
bile nowadays It creates about a3 much excitement as it does , when a woman buys a pair of galoshes.
Edison has been known to work nearly a week without sleep, in , the completion of an invention. Newton, the "greatest mind of all ages," wrote parts of his "Princlpia" 21 times. And Robert Bruce saw in the nineteenth trial of the spider, the divine rule for accomplishment that inspired him to make the grandest struggle in the history of Scotland.
Tne entire tneory or tne necessity success with raisins: "i'
where twittertaa; sweet, the bird bo of hardship l3 gplendidly epitomized funds but none is being
in a saying oi president inters oi Hammond you'll notice
to a friend's
PEARY sayg dog meat la delicious.
It might be well to keep this information under your belt lest the price of dog steak goes up.
OTHER cities are
having
M
raised
great C. A.
in
Aad swallows ana their plana!
The path leads winding: to the sate,
! France in response
except Sunday, entered Jan. it, lilt. atHnar with its rusty chain aad weight, J criticism upon the first-draft of one
the postofflo at Hammond. Indiana,
ail under the act of March I. 1171.
Entered at the Postofnce. Hammond,
Ind., as second-class matter. FOREIGN ADTKRTISIXQ OFFICES,
12 Rector Building - - Chicago
That opens on a lllse walk
Where dreams of love and
talk.
Bora of the dim perfumes.
memories
The
stands with
PUBLICATION OFFICES, Hammond Build In. Hammond.
Ind.
TELEPHONES,
Hammond private exchange) HI
Call for departBSBt wanted.)
Gary Office Tel. 137 East Chicago Office..., Tel. 540-J
Indiana Harbor..... Tel. 650-R Whiting ...Tel. 80-M Crown Point .Tel. 61 Hegewisch Tel 18 Advertising solicitors will be sent, or
rates given on application.
old house wide
And locust trees on either side Its windows, kindly as the eyes Of friendship, amlllna at the skies.
Agsln he meets her, brown of hair.
Beside its steps May lilies lift BelTd sprays of snow la drift on drift.
And In the door, n illy, too.
Aa-ala she stands, the one he knew
In days that are no more.
Again he meets her, brown of hair,
Among the rlustered lilacs there.
The sua is sett the blue dusk falls)
A nestling bird nnother rails)
A star leapa la the sky.
Again he breathes the lilac scent
And rone again her head Is beat
) And oh! again, beside the gate,
I To nee the round moon rise they wait,
Before they kiss good-by
of his speeches that it lacked the
usual ease and fluency of his style. "I'll brine those in later," he said.
The ease will cause me much labor, OVBr tnere
porches and tne fluency I shall have to drag
in by the hair of the head."
A PETRIFIED man has been
found in Ohio. Probably trying to understand the political situation
The Day in HISTORY
PUBLIC LIBRARY.
What has become of the institu
tion which, as everybody knows, and
every dictionary tells us Is "A collec
tion of books?"
In Evanston, Illinois, the
library lends pianola rolls.
The public library In Madison,
Wisconsin, owns and operates a mov Ing-picture "show."
There s a play room and gym
nasium in the Lelth Walk Library in
Edinburgh.
The Islington library, in an outly
YOU know you can't vote for
either presidential nominee this year
if you don't register. This is the week.
NO matter how bad off you are
just remember and It may help some,
public I that there are others far worse off.
THIS is a free country, a man
ought to have an inherent right to
read any newspaper he wants to.
If you have any trouble getting ThslLong years have passed) the
Times notify the nearest office have It promptly remedied.
and
since then,
Have changed aad
customs, too, and
LARGER PAID CP CIRCULATION
THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWS.
PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.
JIM Jeffries' and Battling Nelson's
opinion on the presidential situation
times, in district of London, is a first aid would be worth reading,
to travelers, with a complete and up
to-the-mlnute collection of time
tables for all the railroads in Great
Britain.
COL. COETHALS. CZAR OF ISTHMUS, MAY RESIGN IF HBS NOT GIVEN TRAINED MEN.
A VinWWnTT rAmmiinl(AMAn will
I TkpAmrk V-fa at Af laa1 faW.aa
not b noticed, but others will 1 "
talis;
Bat nfce fcae never chanjreil to aim. Nor has that Itoaae, ao old aad dim
Where oaee they aald ftood-br
That place, which a ring; keeps TerYork, conducts a technical school,
air I with rlaaaoo in rrlrrv mnrlrotlrxr
. a iiu w . uwv a a vvsa- a j a a a
GOV. Hadley predicts a riot at the
Chicago convention. Is Mr. Hadley
The library in Binghamton, New goin to 8tart one?
mechanical and electrical englneer-
VICE President Vau Clain talks
like a man who knows exactly what
printed at . discretion, ana snouu L.. ... . ... . -i.. in, architecture and drawine. anl h,a t. nu..,,.
I VBinnnB)iw sam m .mm - - ...... , . - r I UV h aUiniUg BUUWi
addressed to The Editor. Times, Ham
mond, Ind.
MASONIC CALENDAR.
Hammond Chapter, No. 117,
Where evermore tls lllae time.
And love can never die. Madison Csweln.
themselves against liability. But even If the workingman and his
family are compensated in case of ac-
any other courses for which there
may be a demand
Fourteen clubs and conizations WONDER when the candidates
of all sorts hold their reeular meet- wln start work for the Chinese
inss in the librarv at Nashville. Ten- primaries
nessee. .,
A business man's information bu-
meets cident and injury that compuensa- reau la in operation in the library at
second and fourth Wednesday of each tion is never commensurate with the Xewark, New Jersey, where current L . , . v. I . i i . - a i t 1. I. .. . . . 1 tonal
WHY doesn't Mr.. Barnhart run
the name of his "devil" on hl3 edi-
month.
Hammond Commandery, No. 41. Reg
ular meeting first and third Monday of
each month.
page?
Political Announcements
actual lOSS SUStainea Dy tne WOrK- business rUrertnriPS nf nrnrMeallv
- V every city in the world, city maps.
The' workingmen,. themselves geological surveys, and post and
should take steps to provide for the automobile routes, are accessible,
rigid inspection of scaffolding andeven by telephone
superstructure ana any iaise worn Belfast.. Ireland: Cardiff. Wales:
i " - -
upon which the men are required to Jackson, Michigan; Lynn, Massachu
wor. mis worn or inspection migni setts; Denver, Colorado in fact, also be construed to be a part of thejscore8 Df libraries conduct yearly
work. This work of inspection might lecture courses,
also be construed to be a part or tne Thev have Christmas festivals and
work of the building inspector. Maypole parties In the branch U
In the nervous Bcramble to get hr&ries of St. "Louis,' Missouri.
tnrougn witn a jod too nttie atten- The public library at Cleveland
tion la na id tn the safetv of workine-1 iu.
K , , llaa ,uUiC hj uc lu a mcaauic, lue I tt .v t . . . men. The lives of the workingmen type of cultural public ,ibrary of LtS ZVll
are apparently neia too cueapij. i America. It is one of the most Dro- hoped that Alderman Battle Axe Castle
is too much a question of taking a gressive, successful and popular In man isn't left out of the proceedings
nil n n fft - I i .a . . ..I '
v""v. i line counirv. it never lowers itkpii i KVERYRnnv is fin no- (
ine acciaent to plasterers in ine Dy catchy advertising; it Is prevent- ve" tne earth is to have its waist
Democratic nominating convention. toITapper building, the accident to the ej Dy a clause in its charter from
be held at a date to be decided upon, painters in the Schutz theatre build- active use as a social center. It is-
"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" May T. 1812 Robert Browning, famous English poet, born. Died Dec. 12, 1889. 1849 Gen. William J. Worth, a noted . soldier in the war with Mexico, died in San Antonio, Texas. Born In Hudson, N. T., March 1, 1794.
isbo Kentucky adopted a new Con-
stiVution. 1865 Walter T. Colq4ultt. former U. S. senator from Georgia, died in Macon. Born In Virginia, Dec. 27, 1799
1884 Gen. Grant made his flank move
ment from the Wilderness battle
field to Spottsylvania.
1S7& Salmon jP. Chase, Chief Justice of
the United States, died. Born Jan. 13, 1808. 1875 Hamburg mall steamer "Schiller" wrecked off the Scilly Isles, with loss of 200 lives. 1892 Centennial of the discovery of Puget Sound celebrated at Port Townsend, Wash 1910 George V. was proclaimed King
of Great Britain and Ireland. 1911 President Diaz of Mexico gave notice of his Intention to resign. THIS IS MV 84Tir BIRTHDAY" William J. Stone. William" J. Stone, United States senator from Missouri, was born In Madison County, Kentucky, May 7. 1848. At the age of twenty he. was graduated front the University of Missouri, which later conferred upon him the degree of LL. D.
The year following his graduation
from the university he was admitted to the bar. He served one term as prosecuting attorney of Vernon Coun
ty, Missouri, and in 1885 was elected
to Congress on the Democratic ticket. After serving three terms in Congress Mr. Stone was elected governor of Mis
souri in 1893. From 1898 to 1904 he was vice-chairman of the Democratic National Committee. In 1903 he was elected to the United States senate, to succeed George G. Vest, and was- reelected in 1909.
Congratulations to: Lord Roseben-, former prime minister of England, 65 years old today. Brig. Gen. Albert L. Mills, U. S. A., 58 years old today. Joseph G. Cannon, former Speaker of the national house of representatives, 76 years old today. J. H. Turner, former premier of British Columbia and now the Agent General for that Province in London, 78 years old "today.
FOR AUDITOR.
Editor Times: . Kindly announce my
name as a candidate for the office of -Auditor of Lake County, subject to the
will of the Democratlo nominating con
vantlon. ED. SIMON. 4 FOR RECORDER.
Editor Times: Tou are authorised to
announce to your readers that I am
candidate for the nomination of County
Recorder, subject to the wishes of the
U E A R D BY RUBE
THE salt trust Is to fte indicted. No
doubt the. proceedings its trial will make dry reading.
Up and Down in INDIANA
fit " y 5NV f V"i v:f J ZjM4 1 1 III u"iSyf )1 I
Colonel CoethaS. Colonel Ooethala, '.a charge of the construction of tbe Panama canal and czar of the Isthmus, will resign rather than remain to undertake the opening of the canal without a properly trained administrative force, says John Barrett, director-general of the Pan-American Union, who recently returned to Washington after & visit to the canal zona. Mr. Barrett declares that CoL Goethais has made It plain to him that he and the men who are with him will not be willing to bear the brunt otthe responsibility of operating the canal without a trained force behind them. The work of preparing these men should begin at once, the dlrector-generel soya.
41'RY OCT 5 HOL'RS. The jury at Noblesville returned a verdict late yesterday afternoon -sustaining the will of the late Madison Brooks, executed in 1896, and revoking all of the ten codicils made since the original instrument was written. The Jury was out fifty-nine honrs. ' The original will distributed among the children of the deceased 900 acres
of land. Thecodicils covered .the disposition of 1,400 acres , o fland. but
JACOB FRIEDMAN.
I hugged by a wireless arm.
THEN apaln the explosion that was
lng, the accident to the man who was 8Ues bulletins generously and keeps heard a11 over Lake county may have
killed on the Superior court house m close, sympathetic touch with its , n , . Deuowins and the accident on the electric sub- patrons, but alwaya with the tranlAVnT T.
Editor Times: Kindly announce my station on the north side all might purpose of raising the standard oflquoriaw.
name as a candidate for the office of I have been nrevented. in 1 tup m-jj.. i
It Is timejthat contractors and The public library of St. Loum14 one wonW think that they are run-
builders were made to appreciate stands as a type of the other sort of for an st Ch,cas aidermanlc their moral as well as tielr financial institution; it is just as progressive, I ' I TTJ TT T T3 I. soil. . n. i n
resDonscibillty to the men they em- nntar or, co0cfi QO ru.i 13 ia,K- "l oryan
, ... I'-!'-. v.v.voo. o vlc,ciauU, for the presiden cy and j ust as iik el y as-f
vivj. .woo v.. mxa.xa -luui 11 is more aenmieiy a social cen-inot th Hun
FOR SHERIFF. imes: Kindly ar candidate for tl
Sheriff of Lake County, subject to the decision of the Democratic nominating
convention. MARTIN S. OILI
ULTTOTICED HISTOKICAL EVENT.
1: itf t . i. 111. a sj a aa umoiii a a a aa- & l va. i 1111 r i r u tti t r -ionniTiir a cmrt soi aa1!. . m vv . . . .
' M I . i""' a ajia.i tcu- noi me non. tsui croiius mignt lend a
caDie aispatcnes or bunaay carried the crippling or workingmen entails ter than any other in the country, j little more starch to the spectacle by
tne briet news that Christians had J much suffering by their families as jn a recent address before a social com ns out aeainst the Hon. Tom Ep
captured a frontier of Islamism. well by the men themselves and
Italians, after a lapse of centuries, I should be miminized as much as poa
Lake county paper would get out a Chicago edition. Yet this newspaper has been doing that during the past
few days.
Last night
have once more possession of the Is-sible.
ltfnd of Rhodes which was occupied
in following out the Italian program
of securing possession of the Turkish TIMES CHANGE.
possessions in tne Aegean sea. as much as he has seen this coun-
Thts little island attracts an in- Uy grow and all of the fine hopes and ttrest that is wholly disportlonate to good predictions he has for it. that
its size. When the curtain of history esteemed pioneer settler and historwas rung up It was already a civlliz- ian.of Crown Point, Rev. Timothy ed state". In. the classic era it was BaJ( probably never dreamed that he the scene of bitter warfare and dur- woui(i live to see the day when a
ing mediaeval times the terrific struggle between- Christendom and Mohammedism , found a foothold along Its shores. The island was successfully dominated by Athens, then by Sparta and then by the forces of Alexander the Great. As the centuries passed it was controlled successively by the Romans ,the Byzantine government and adventurers from the Italian states. Then came the rule of the Knights Hospitallers of St. John cf Jerusalem only to be succeeded in
the fifteenth century by the authori
ty of the Sultan Suleiman. Since
then it has been under Turkish dominion and its capture last week places in Christian hands a political division that has bowed for the past four centuries to the will of the sublime porte.
hraim Knotts.
HIGH prices for grain are now
blamed on th. flnnris I.av. it in th.
1 - J 1 J 1 1 . A i I - -
wuia was uiviueu mio vwo pans, farmers to get by with excuses,
educational and recreational, and
I service conference the librarian, Dr
Arthur E. Bostwick said that the
both were social service. Helen
Lockwood Coffin, in Everybody's.
'OW days the prices of autos and
suitable motor clothing are so even
that a man hesitates to decide which
he'll spend his money for.
CHINA Is in the market for a $300,-
GOV. Wilson says that "politics is OOO.OOO loan. That bank down in Dyer
business." Well it certainly shouldn't that says u has 500 Per capita on de
posit now has a good chance to put out a few taels. on laundrv and rice field
be, and the sooner they are divorced or politics run by business men instead of professional politicians the
better for the country at large.
first mortgages.
NEW YORK'S police department has
four chaplains, and If thfe local cops had
one they wouldn't be so free with those benefit balls they hold every year.
ANOTHER popular fallacy gone to
the dogs with the Santa Claus one.
IF the presidential campaign ha3
not lapsed into personalities we don't
THE TIMES' green believe we should know a personality I Government scientists now report that
sporting edition made the Chicago- were it to meet us on the street and
ans sit up and take notice. try to shake hands.
HARDSHIP A FACTOR. MISSOURI girl demands 120,000 The theory that hardship is one of for 7 kisses Passed on her rubby
the factors In the price of success ap- llps' Mercy the PrIce 8eems to be
plies not only to the general .trend of Mng'uP every day so get 'em as soon Player."
a great man's life,, but frequently, if as you can.
not usually, to each one of its signi-
there is no real hair restorer.
SOME one has found that a baby's
cry has music In it. "Without a doubt
the discoverer Is one who has not had
the Joy of walking the floor at night.
IP our circulation department had Its
way it would be giving free a book en
titled, "How to Become a Big League
PROTECT WORKINGMEN. The number of building accidents In Hammond in proportion, to the
number of men employed in the
building trades is entirely too large
Within the last two or three years there have been three men killed and
at least a score injured in preventlble
accidents.
The law places the responsibility
for the accidents on the owner and contractor. These in turn ".Insure
THEY are still having a great deal
ficant details.
i- 1 v 1 1
ir. oamuei jonnson laoorea over of fu88 down In Lafayette over the
his English dictionary during seven presidential situation on the repub-
ears or Ditter narasnip, ana wrote llcan ticket but no blood ha3 been
Rasselas, his greatest book, to Kt,fi vct
1 j
raise money to bury his mother.
Carlyle went 20 times over the
confused records of the battle of
Naseby to inform himself thoroughly
on the one item of topography the
"lay of the land." Plato wrote the first sentence of the "Republic" nine times before he got it to suit him. Gibbon wrote the first chapter of the "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" 10 times. Sir Walter- Raleigh gave the im
pression of accomplishing things with great ease, yet Queen Elizabeth
said of him. "He can toll terribly."
NEWSPAPER headlines, "Railroads
Struggle to Make Both Ends Meet,
suggests that the man with 75 per
month, a wife and four kids, isn't the
only one that has to worry.
A LOWELL, girl writes to find how to
sew on the top button of a union suit
without removing the' garment. Re
plies are limited to fifty words.
A LOT of us would like to wear
straw hats, but none of us has the nerve to start the ball rolling.
AS Abe Martin remarks: "Some wives
never give their husbands a pleasant
these were revoked by the jurors on the theory that this portion of the estate would be divided among the heirs according to law. It has developed since the verdict was returned, the 1,400 acres will not be divided as the jurors had expected. DIES WHILE RETURNING HOME. Death seized Mrs. Ann Parent, 70 years old of Union City, while she was on her way back home from visiting her daughter in the South. She died just after the Cincinnati Southern train upon which she was riding, had passed Lexington, Ky., yesterday morning. Her, body was brought to Union City late yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Parent was the wife of W. G. Parent, a Union City grain merchant. Her daughter, Mrs. P. D. Warner of Gulfport. Miss., was traveling with her. Mrs. Warner stated that her mother had become ill in Gulfport and therefore wished to be back home, whereupon she started with her. Coroner Coe has taken the matter in charge and is conducting an investigation. RESCUE EFFORT BRINGS DEATH. As a result of a vain effort to save
his grandchild from death by flames. trial
Amos Sarber, of deputy county treasurer, is dead at his home in Laporte. A week ago Garvin Lowry, a 6-year-old child, who was visiting at the
home of his grandparents, through the playing with matches, ignited a large pile of waste paper In the basement and In a moment was envelop?1! in flames. The grandfather, who was lying in bed seriously ill, heard the shrieks of his grandchild and with aa superhuman effort In his weakened condition made his way to the cellarway. He tried vainly to fight his way through the flames and. reach the grandchild and received burns about the face and body. The child was cremated, while the grandfather, severely burned, was removed to the hospital, where his injuries resulted fatally yesterday. . GUILTY OF MAN SLAUGHTER. The jury in the cast of Harry Healy, of Washington, charged, , with killing Robert Walker, marshal of Montgomery, returned a verdict f manslaughter yesterday morning. Healy was returned . to jail, and his attorneys filed a motion for a new
Friction Drive; Chain Driven in Oil
MODEL "L", 5 Passenger, $1,300.00
( r I v. B)
j
SINCE Gov. -Marshall made that
break In Washington about lawyers, his boomlet has needed the most
careful nursing imaginable to keep it I loo unless ther havin: somethin1 sent
ajve . . - I home on approval.
SEVERAL lmpetous subscribers out
Hobart way have bothered us with the
query as to when la the best time to
doff the feather tick
"U. S. STEEL mills are now running
95 per cent capacity." In other words
all of the smoke stacks are smoking'
MAT is that delightful season of the year when a girl can wear short sleeves
and not have to continually swat at the
mosquitoes.
WE note that Ex-President Diaz is' pawning his diamonds of course that is one way of getting notoriety but
we don't believe that Diaz Is seeking
It.
WHEN a man buys a new automo
MODEL "H", MODEL "H",
4 Passenger, $1,200.00 2 Passenger, $1,000.C9
MODEL "R", 2 Passenger $1,500.00
MODEL "R", Touring, $1,600.00
$1,700.00
MODEL "S" 7 Passenger, $2,100.00
ALSO A FULL LINE OF CARTER COMMERCIAL TRUCKS
Coup,
On Thursday, May 9th, we will open salesrooms at 120 Fifth Avenue, West, Gary, Ind., with the above line, having secured Lake and Porter Counties. Will be pleased to demonstrate to any one interested.
Phone Gary 1450
