Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 304, Hammond, Lake County, 14 June 1912 — Page 4

4 Fridav, June 14, 1912.

THE TTTTTI

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

By Tmm Lake Ceaaty Prlatla mm rum

Uaalac Comaaay. The County Times. dal,y except Sunday, 'entered aa second-class mat

ter Jane II. l0"; The Lake County Tb twHIgM sinks to the arms of sleep

Times, dally exeeot Saturdar and Bun- - r deUa!

"THE RIVER TtRXS."

The river tnraa 1 (It peaceful breast

Of the brood tag; sea.

The red bird turas to his aaate la the

eat.

The bud to the beet

Oh learfti ny love, from this sweet

reat

And un to me.

ble man will recognize his limitations j THE mueio teachers of Indiana are

upon such subjects, but the essentials to hold a convention In Elkhart. Like

day, enteied Feb. I. 111; The Gary

Evening- Times, dally except Bandar, entered Oct. I, 10; The Lake County Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 1911; The Times, dally

izeept Sunday, entered Jan. 15. lilt, at the postoffloo at Hammond. Indiana,

Ail under the act of March 1. 117s.

Entered at the Postofflce, Hammond,

Ind.. as second-class matter.

frOKKlUX AUVKKTISIXQ UPFICES, It Rector Building - . Chicago

PUBLICATION orriCBs,

ftamnaond Building. Hammond. lad.

TELKPHO.XBS,

Hammond (private exchange) Ill

(Call for department wanted.)

Gary Office Tel ISt

East Chicago Office...,. Tel. I4.J Indiana Harbor........ Tel. 550-R Whltlne; 4 Tel. 80-M Crown Point .TeL (3 Hegrewisch ..TeL IS Advertising; solicitors will be sent, or

rates given on application.

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

have it promptly remedied.

LARGER PAID VP CIRCt'LATIO.t

TRAM ANT OTHKR TWO M8WI

PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.

ANONYMOUS communications will

- not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and shouM be

addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham-

, saond. Ind.

The spent winds softly sink aa they

vveep

la the arms of the pine

Come down, O love, from your frown-

las; ateep

And sink Into mine.

The breeae has a tale for the ear of

the rose And her fragrance Is stirred;

The aprlaa; haa a aeeret that every one

knows Bat I have not heard)

O love, ere the miracle draws to Ita

eloae. Whisper the word!

Luls I'ntermeyer. la "Firs Love.

of life are usually not dependent upon the decisions of the learned. Even In the greatest religious, financial and social questions there is always a fundamental of human

to have their . candid opinion Alexander's Ragtime Band.

on

The Day in HISTORY

ANYWAY the convention will

narhts that even the most ignorant BolTe one ue8a without a shadow

artA .hiiOT.tn think of a doubt: "What shall we do with

WtAW IlbU NUU " v

our ex-presldents?"

BY making its meetings somewhat

public the Republican national com

mittee 'has at least escaped the perils

of the dictograph.

about and decide for themselves. For instance. It may require a board of statisticians to decide upon how money should be divided between 500 laborers and capitalists who are at work together. But it does not require anything beyond the

most ordinary reason to see that he who does nothing is entitled to noth

ing. .

It may, require the keenest intel

lectual and spiritual analysis to solve jt

the great problem -of the relation of earth and heaven in all its details.

But certainly, it requires only com- SPRING seems to have at last got

"THIS DATE I HISTORIC" June 14.

1845 The Parliament armv Aft.A

the royal army under Charles X. at Naseby.

1777 American concrresa adontert th

flag of Stars and Stripes.

1800 Bonaparte

"stepoff." Unable to ewtm, he emitted a scream and' sank beneath the water. The cousin, swimming some ' distance away, heard the cry and immediately start to, the aid of his drowning; relative. .The youth had . so fie undef the third time when rank reached the spot. Diving:, he managed -to get a hold on his cousin's hair and by this means raised him to the surface and swam with him to the shore. A movement 'a on to call the attention of the Carnegie Hero Commission to the incident. BLACKSMITH DIBS BY ROPE. Alonzo Moore, a blacksmith, 66 years

tinue to lead the world in numbers,

in records made and in triumphs won. Everywhere that men fly far and fast death Is the price they pay

for fame and other rewards of their

daring and their prowess, but France

pays most because France leads in

the number of flying machines and

flying men and in the use made of

both.

In two phases of preparation for

possible war the French people have shown remarkable enthusiasm And

willingness to run all the risks in

volved and pay all of the inevitable cost in money and In the lives of brave men. French submarines and

French flying machines and airships

for military use are not only numer

ous but they are handled with great

courage and skill. In the air, especially, France has been fearless and resourceful enough to win the admira

tion of the world.

When a French dirigible is wreck-

Hammond Chapter No. 117. R. A. M..ed and two or three officers perish,

THE navy is to be provided with a

corps of dentists. None without a

pull need expect an appointment to

mon sense to know that he who love3 away from old winter but the latter

and serves will not be cast into hell-1 gentleman Is disposed to flirt consid

fire because of unbelief in something erably.

or other that Is not Important.

Rely upon scholars for deep analysis and investigation. Revere and honor them. Let their great work go on. But when you approach the fundamentals of simple living, do not deny

the divinity of your own

sense. Do your own thinking; think without his fearful wind-jamming.

simply and deeply; and the scholars will take care of themselves.

over the Austrlans at llarensro. .!

1801 Benedict Arnold, tha Amnrlonn

general who attempted to betray his" country, died in London. Born in Norwich. Conn., Jan. 3. 1741.

1805 Gen. Robert Anderson. who

commanded the Federal forces In Charleston harbor at the outbreak of the civil war, born near Louisville Ky. Died in ranee, Oct. 26, 1871.

1811 Harriet Beecher. Stowe. author

of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," born n Litchfield, Conn. Died in Hartford, July 11, 1896.

1863 Pittsburgh fortified by earth

works In anticipation of a aieg-a by the Confederates

SELF-preservation is th first iaw "07 Norwegian parliament granted

AimticiL vuiiritge iu women.

became master of .old, missing all night, was found hang:

Italy as a result of his victory ing dead in his barn near Shelbyville

of nature. Therefore it is your duty

to swat the fly and paste him hard. "Tins is my stth birthday"

Frederick E. Guest.

Capt. the Hon. Frederick Edward

WHEN Senator Dixon returns toGuest. who was recently appointed

common Montana., how ouiet It will seeni lrea8urer oZ KIn George's household,

wko uuiii june it, ioi. xie is me

third son of the first Baron Wlmborne.

He received a military education at

Sandhurst and as captain of the First

A MAN may express opinions in Life Guards participated in the White his Wife's presence but what is theiNile expedition in 1900. A year ago

use anyway?

433

regular meeting- Wednesday, June 19.

Work in M. M.

Hammond Commandery No. 41. regu

lar meeting Monday. June 17. Work In

Red Cross.

or a French military aeroplane

plunges to the earth and a gallant young soldier Is hurled to his doom, it must be borne In mind that France

is the stronger and safer because of

! their daring. Outnumbered and outI weighed on land and sea by Germany, the French nation is making a

brave stand against all rivals in the

air.

MILLENIUM IS HERE.

Now that Thoma3 E. Knotts and

tne uary city administration are

treading the straight and narrow

path, that the street railway fran- - W J 1 t-.. t

cnlse' m nicago nave oeen TREATED HIM SHABBILY. Dassed. that the citv of Whitine Is

fniinwine th vm tpnnr cr it, wav There is absolutely no question but

that the Krey wolves in the Ham- what the democratic papers of Indl

mond citv council -are ouiet. that ana have ignored Gov. Marshall's

Miss Virginia Brooks has reformed preBidential boom la a most" dlsreWest Hammond, that . Hammond spectful fashion. The Fort Wayne

Chamber of Commerce has been or

ganlzed, that the Calumet avenue ex-

he was elected to the house of com

mons. At one time Mr. Guest was

private secretary to Winston Spencer Churchill.- In 1905 he was married to

Miss Am v PhlDDL daughter of Henrv

world has become of Nick Long-lphipps of Pittsburgh. worth? I Congratulations to;

The Grand Duchess Marie Adelaide

of Luxemburg, the youngest of Euro-

IN the meantime what In the

ANOTHER LITTLE TOWN. THE TIMES carried two paragraphs yesterday , about thirteen houses being erected at Garyton. Garyton until a month ago was a corn field over the Lake-Porter county line, just east of Gary and abput six miles from Broadway. Now it has been taken on the aspect of a

thriving village and a month hence I talk.

there will be thirteen families there and interurban flyers rushing over the Gary Connecting railway which will be in operation between Hammond and Laporte by that time.

Already a half dozen little settle- PERHAPS the southern delegate

ments have sprung up around Gary! hasn't heard about the dictograph.

and the building of more interurbans

yesterday morning. Financial revers

es and falling; health are given as the causes for the suicide. During one of the cold spells last winter he took a lantern under his house to thaw out

some gas pipes. He narrowly missed death in the explosion that resulted and the house was destroyed by fire. He is survived by his widow.

MURDERERS GET LIFE TERM. William Orville Allison and Ralph Broom yesterday at Marion were sentenced to serve the remainder of their lives in the State's Prison at Michigan City for the murder of Wade Robinson, at Landess, on the night of Dec. 28 last. The men were masked when

they entered Robertson's store and attempted to rob him. The storekeeper resisted the robbers and they shot him to death, the bullet from Broom's g-un being effective. Allison and Broom were arrested in North Dakota and returned here by Sheriff Tony George. LODGEMENT SUSPECT MURDER. Friends of Harry H. Langknech. who was found dead in bed in a Chicago

hotel early yesterday, have decided to

Investigate the cause of death. A fund has been raised by two organizations to which he belonged In Lafayette, and last night John T. Seller, and John Kensler, uncle of the deceased man.

went to Chicago to see the Cook County coroner. Langknecht left Lafayettf Saturday with quite a large sum ol money, which he Intended to Invest II

a business opportunity presented itself. When. his lifeless body was found yesterday no money could be found on hit person. Langknecht was 32 years old and was a member of a well-known Lafayette family. For some time hi had been an agent for ths Ahgiedla Scale Company Of Elkhart. It Is feared he met with foul play. SUSPECTED MAIL THIEF HELD A search that began two weeks ago and in which government agents of the middle West have been interested cul

minated yesterday afternoon in the ar

rest at Laporte of A. J. Gillette o

Cold water, Mich., who is alleged to

rifled the malls In a Michigan town. A number of checks were taken, ont for $223 being cashed in Toledo by th Second National Bank of that city.. Nelson Brayton, an alleged aeompltce, was arrested at Bronson, Mich., lait week. Gillette will go to Coldwatet without extradition papers. The government officials believe they have made an important capture.

Oh

7 t

ITostKfflesPerDcnsr

The most durable rubber, the sturdiest strain-resisting construction, m&ke

Tires and Rims

undisputed leaders by right of

rvice accomplishment.

Sold By AU Dealer Who Consider Quality "1

POLITICS has Certainly put the lid peaa sovereigns, H years old today.

on the safe and sane Fourth of July natnP f,om xv,..

; for. the Republican presidential nom-

iinatlon, 67 years old today.

Most Rev. John J. Glennon, Roman

Is I Catholic archbishop of St. Louis, SO

CINCH isn't it that somebody

going to eet the ha-ha rlsht rovallv? years old today

near Aamirai

Kossuth Niles,

retired, 63 years old today.

U. S.

tension project is certain of success.

that Johnson street is not going to

be closed, that the Hammond, Whit

lng nd East Chicago Railway Co.

has improved the service, that Castle

man has been ousted, that the Erie

coal storage warehouse IS to be mov

ed out of Hammond, , that the EH yards will be eliminated, that Gary

leads the N. I. league,- that the con

tret for the fence around the Baldwin plant has been let ,tht the In

diana Harbor Belt railroad is build

ing a sidetrack into the plant of the

Northwestern Iron Co., that Hobart is booming like sixty, that the Seaman line is snail-pacing it into Crown Point, that the Hammond ea6t side park has been purchased, that

rne btandara steel car Co. 48 running again, that the Lake Superior court has its extra .judges, that the Gary bribery cases have blown up.

that Cedar Lake is orderly,' that the Hammond water pressure ia better, that the ' Baldwin and Schlesinger

works are surely coming, that the

whole region, has -all of the new in

dustries it can accommodate at the

present time, that the county building better roads and lots

News says with much truth.

"Governor Marshall, while in Fort Wayne this week as the guest of the democratic Editorial association, is to deliver the keynote speech of his presidential candidacy, and the News sincerely trusts that It will have the effect of awakening a lot of sleepy editors who thus far have satisfied their consciences by according to Governor Marshall's boom a sort of a. half-hearted, perfunctory support that has been fully as damning as silence. The truth is that the democratic press of Indiana has treated the governor shabbily and shamefully. That portion of it that depends on the Taggart press bureau for editorial inspiration has accorded him little or no support, and even those papers that might reasonably be expected to be moving heaven and earth in his behalf are dull and lethargic. This unwarranted apathy is difficult to understand, for the governor really has a good look-in at the Baltimore convention if only he Is supported from Indiana as he should be. And such a support must come primarily from the democratic -press."

will be a great

development.

factor in suburban

THIS by the way is about as good

a time as any to fill the coal bin.

Up and Down in INDIANA

SEATTLE paper proposes Ade and

Kin Hubbard as the nominees for the

leading places on the republican

ticket. We also suggest James

Buchanan Elmore the illustrious and

sweet-singing bard of Alamo.

HEARD BY KHJ.EE

TJO YOUR OWN THINKING.

All history contains the names of

j, men and organizations that have

of! denied to people the right to think

bridges, that a new county infirmary j for-themselves

is being built, that the harbor and

FOURTEEN thousand people saw

the opening baseball game of the sea

son in Toronto. It may not be long

before we can even up matters by re

fusing to admit Canada to either of I

the big leagues.

YOUTHFUL HERO SAVES LIFE. That Ogden Allen, 12 years old. of

ICumback, is alive, is due to tha bravery 6f his cousin, rank Allen. 13.

Young Allen was wading in shallow water of White River near the bank, when he unexpectedly walked into a

HDTo) TTiT7'

is the most efficient and perfect of leavening agents. MADE FHOll PURE CREAM 07 TARTAR No alum, lime or ammonia.

REV. Anna Shaw says that if she

were elected President she would choose Andrew Carnegie as her Sec

retary of War. And Andrew ia way! off in Scotland, where he can't help!

himself.

IT is said that large crowds are at

tending the lectures of Dr. Cook in Germany. Which s does away with

the assertion that Germans have no

conception of American humor.

CONGRESSMAN Redfield. of Brooklyn, announces that he Is willing to accept the Vice Presidency. The . Carnegie .Hero Medal . Commission should be notified at once.

canal at Indiana Harbor will receive big appropriations from Congress at its next session .that Hohman street has been straightened and will extended through to Munster, WHAT UNDER THE SUN 19 THERE TO WRITE AN EDITORIAL ABOUT.

TAFT AND STEEL. President Taft's . administration will be known in the history of the steel business as the time when the top notch production in steel took

place. As compared with that of his

immediate predecessor the steel bust

ness during the Taft regime has been

away ahead. Here in our own district the trust "as well as the Inde

pendents are so short of basic iron

that they have to go slower on steel

purchases because of the inability to get basic iron from neighboring con

cerns.

r PAYING FOR AIR PRIMACY.

"If blood be the price of admiral

ty," said Kipling in his splendid "Song or the EngliBh," "Lord God,

we nave paid It in," and so some French poet may well write of his country's purchase of primacy in the

air, if the aviators of France con

THE Democrats should have chosen a month with an r in it for their convention If they expected to have the steamed oyster instead of the steam roller In Baltimore.

Always we have had the Catholic

martyrs flung to the lions by the

pagans, the Nonconformists burned at the stake by the Catholics, - the

Baptists exiled and persecuted by tbo

other Nonconformists, and the free-

thinking son. turned out of home by the Baptist father. .

In political organization we hava

had our Ogs of Bashan claiming the

right of giants to rule because of their size,- our Charles the Firsts asserting the divine right of inheritance in government, our Napoleons

wresting power from the weak

through the efficiency of the sword, and our modern school of reaction

aries who have decided upon the "judicial mind" or intellectual superiority as the proper basis of authori

ty. . Even in science we must struggle constantly against the tendency to underrate our own powers of observation and common sense, because we cannot see clearly the difference between scientific facts that require scholarly explanation and the common facts of life that every sane person is capable of judging for himself. The power tb reason correctly on certain fundamental subjects Is not learned in schools and does not depend on scholarship. . There are some facje that must he flguted out by experts, and the sensl-

ANTBODY who thinks there isn't going to be some excitement at the Baltimore convention also should cast his eye over the galaxy of Democratic candidates...

A GLIMPSE of a late picture nf John D. Rockefeller the gasoline

price-raiser convinces us that Whit

ing is hot going to get that drinking were successful and pretty too,

fountain this summer.

AS the Washington Post says: "It makes a lot of difference whose boss ia

being gored.

EVER since we began praising the

beauty of the Hammond 'phone girls

the Gary and East Chicago operators have balled up our long-distance tails in a way you'd never imagine. This

Is always the way with the women.

WITH all of those negroes In the up

rising everything above tne Cuban hor-

lson certainly looks dark.

AS the pe-pull haven't access to the lake front the Gary cops won't have to be like the Chicago cops and worry as to whether any of the damsels are daring to wear skin tight bathing out

fits.

IK a lot of folks would spend less

time in swatting the fly and do a lit

tle swatting at those who utter up the alley there wouldn't be need of so much

swatting in the first place.

the 'steemed Chicago Examiner speaks of a woman being bitten in "her

strawberry patch."

WHY does Chicago want the Gary

coks oven gas? With all of that dyna

mic Roosevelt air floating about they

got enough right at home without go

ing to the heavy expense of piping.

CALIFORNIA woman, delegate to the

national convention, says that he is 111 and has given hubby a proxy to represent hef. When the day comes that suffragettes exist here as well as

there almost any man can get wlfy's

proxy by a little Jollying and possibly

a new hat.

THEN again If men do attend the

conventions at delegates using their

wites' proxy you can figure that this Is the only way a lot of them would

ever reach there.

SEE by Tab TiitKs that Hammond business college so far has graduated 1,000 pupils and saya that "ninety per cent were successful and the other 10 per cent got married." But a lot of good stenographers who got married

E

Go

MINAS GO

Hammond's Greatest Dept. Store Saturday Grocery Specials Money Savings are Big in our Grocery

SOAP U. S. Mail, with grocery order, - seven 5c bars for . SUG-AR Best Eastern Granulated with grocery order of 1.00 or more, (meat, butter or flour not included) 10 pounds for. . . . . ................ BUTTER Elgin Creamery, guaranteed absolutely pure and finest quality obtainable, per pound FLOUR Gold Medal or Ceresota, the two best brands, Va-bbl sack, 3.15; -barrel sack, 1.59; -bbl sack .

THOSE people who refuse to be-1 lieve that the third term candidate

will do something sensational at the last minute are afflicted with mental

strabismus.

IS it possible that the Baldwin company is fencing in its site as a Lake county precaution? - THIS month of June is so Whimsical that one hardly knows whether to put on the heavies or the B. V. D.'s. IF these convention rows keep up the way they do the people will abolish them altogether and attend to the nomination voting themselves. ' IF they had a few cops like the Hammond ones elsewhere carnival gambling would soon take a back seat. '

JUDGE balks at kissing bride."

From The Times. Judge, how could you? Bet you even though the bankers

TWO Muncle men are engaged in (were In Gary yesterday that they

coun ting the number of bubbles one j didn't strain their wallets unloosening

cakft nf snan will makfi. What a hnsr I f0,r tBT day.

IT is believed that Messrs. Jeffries,

Johnson and our own Bat Nelson are simply missing half their lives by not being in Chicago Just now.

rushing, restless world It is.

ACCORDING to a dispatch from Paris, It will not be but a ytsar until all men wear corsets. - They wont be

J men when they wear corsets.

IF we can get by with It we will

take anyone up with ten to one odds that Alderman Battle Axe Castleman

j continues . to serve despite court or

ders. ;

NO doubt Battle Axe will now join

the rest of the pe-:pull who are in for

the re-call of judges.

One 10c Box Cooking Salt and one 10c Box i E Shaker Salt ... I UU Fancy Red Salmon, onepound tall 1 0n can. I vjj

Fort Dearborn or Karo

Syrup, 10-pound can . . .

Argo Gloss Starcn, three 1-pound lip packages I 10 Barber's Best and Cheapest Matches, 4 A p 20c package : . I rl Early June Peas or Solid Pack Tomatoes, ORn

UU

38c

2 cans.

Fancy Cream Brick Cheese Holstein brand, 1 Q per pound. I Our Red Raspberries in heavysyrup, IKr per can fj Blue Cross Macaroni or Spaghetti, two 1 Cf 10c packages ....... I 0u Mammoth Brand Lye,

three 10c cans ,

25c

A fine assortment Sawy

er's Cookies, ttn

25c 52c 29c 81c

Minas Blend Coffee, best value in Hammond, SB7n

per pound U Rumford's Baking Powder, 25c can 1 Qf a -s 0 Kitchen Klenzer Scouring Powder, 2 cans. w" Grandma's Washing Powder, large 4 package 10 Fancy Queen Olives, quart Mason jar 25 C Fancy Hand Picked Navy

Beans, 3 pounds ........

per pound.

Extra Fancy Seeded Rais

ins, the 15c kind, .41-1-lb package I lb

PINEAPPLES Another large shipmentof fancy Cubans, ripe and very juicy, per dozen, 73c; each. ..... ORANGES Fancy Sweet Navels, special for Saturday, per dosen MILK Borden's Peerless or Carnation,dozen small cans,45c; per can, 4c; dozen large cans, 89c; per can. CAN GOODS Choice of Sugar Corn, Green Beans, Kidney Beans, Hominy, dozen cans, 88c; per can HAMS Oscar Mayer's Celebrated Brand, weigh from 8 to 12 pounds each, per pound Saturday Candy Specials

New Crop Salted Peanuts, per Atr pound ,. I U Best Quality Molasses

Kisses, 4 nA

Imported Walnut Meats, all halves, QQp per pound All our regular 40c Hand

Dipped Chocolates, per pound.-. . ... . .

25c

per pound.

Cracker Jack, 3 packages. . . .

17c

62c 27c 72c 72c 15c 10c

Wrapped Caramels, worth 20c, per 4ff,

IUU

pound.

i

r: f