Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 62, Hammond, Lake County, 5 September 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Thursday, Sept. 5, 1912.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS r Tb Cmtr Prlattag Hub.

Uahlaa: Coat pa ay.

The Lake County Times, daliy except Bandar, "entered aa second-class mattar June SI. ai"i Tha Lake County Time. dally eacept Katsrday and Sua.

ar, entered Feb. I. 1111; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, ntarcd Oat. f, 10B; Tha Likt County Times. Saturday and waekly edltloa. ntared Jan. 10. 111; Tha Times, dally except Sunday, en tared Jan. la. till, at the poet of Oca at Hammond. Indiana, fe-l ander tha aet of March S, 1-7. Catered at the Postofflca. Haim Ind.. as second-class matter. roRKiGii AOvxRTiiisa oyrJcj, it Rector Building- - Chlcaao rOBUCATIOH OFTICSS, Bammoad Building. Hammond. Ind.

4 P1 LJThpitt? Op for Irxtif

TBEPHUXKS, Hammond (private exchange). .....1X1 (Call for debarment want-. Gary Office.... Tet 1IJ

East Chicago Office Tel. 84-J , Indiana Harbor Tel. S4M: 168

Whiting Tel.

Crown Point .....TeL 13

Hegewlsch TeL IS

Advertising solicitors will 4e seal, or rates given on application. If you have any troubla getting The Times notify the nearest at flee and have promptly remedied. LARGER PAID IT CIRCUATIOX THAU A XT OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THB CALCMKT REGIOX AMONTMOUS communlcatlona will

aval be noticed, but outers wilt be

MY CHILDREN, konn Is cloaedt the ladowa -buttered dowai The chairs stand empty and the place la stilli Far from the glaro and struggle of the

toira My children dance npon a sylvan hill. Tbe yellow shine fada from the summer day. An elm trunk reara aloft Its Ivy load) The purple aster swings across the way

And golden rod oVrhanga the aaady

road.

Lons sails are flapping In a distant

breeze.

HlKh e lifts make shadows on the

whitened aand

I eee the vales where grow the wonder

trees

On picture post csrds sent by little

hands.

I mar not ace the mi ret I hold It well When mother brings them home so

tanned and fare.

That I may listen to the talea they tell, As high they clamber on my evening

chair.

I are, through baby ryes, dim meadowa

grow,

And hear my long-lost eollle bark for

Joy,

Adowm the vanished laaea of long ago.

Where I, too, romped and played, a

little boy! -J. J. Meehaa, in New York Ttmea.

WARNING, BUT UNHEEDED. One motorcycle girl was nearly burned to death at Gary, Ind., when her clothing caught fire from the gasoline tank. This will probably not serve as a warning to other maidens who. seem , to get delight from a bouncing ride on the rear seat, with, drapery and veils trailing . widely, .behind Cleveland Leader. Yen and It wont be a bit of warn

ing to those who wear mighty little drapery and not even a veil. Some of

these motorcycle females seem to be determined to show how few clothes are really needed astraddle a seat on

a motorcycle.

MULAI Hand refuses to wear

European clothing. Say trousers are too cumbersome. Well they are

Mulal, but you can't trot around this region without panties so you'd better stay away.

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A-.TCVX-

ANOTHER VESSEL GOES TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA; HELVETIA IN COLLISION WITH LINER SINKS 300 MILES BELOW QUEBEC

CANDIDATE Durbin is going to insist on a red-hot campaign. Might as well. If things don't liven up a little we are all going to forget there is such a thing as a campaign.

addressed t Tha Editor, Times, Ham

mond. Ind.

433

essjiMKasE-

fluence of the newspaper?

is.

Well, it

printed at discretion, and shoud be I to lunch there was a breeze, and that

at evening when you went home It had cooled down considerably." But the publication goes further says the Joliet Herald very sagely. It says that "a person attends a function. When the nannr comes, th r-

wmmod Chanter. No. 117. meets of that Action Is the first thing

second and forth, Wednesday of each looked for. If the function happentnonth. led to be a dance, though the reader

saw every one present, he will read

Hammond commandery. No, 41. Reg- tnrough four or five Inches of type

, alar meeting first and third Monday of and be careful not to miss one of the

each month. In Amen nf those nreiutit "

- v.

v -1 11 .

NEW TROUBLE FOR GARY. " -I

A priae of a large khaki-colored Tte fan Blt3 upon the bleacher aad winter apple will be given by us to misses never a move of any Dlaver.

the person who will explain why Ha caa repeat the game next day. or -Gary always has to have some little next month, play by play. Yet he is trouble of her own. . New it is the the flrst f en0w to read a full account conns. We have the utmost faith in of the game written by the sporting ihe ability of Bro. Carr however to writer, agreeing at every . instance

cure Gary of worms. that the writer has written correctlv.

. . I "

Let Homer do It. But. now that one secret hna h.n

divulged, let us divulge another one.

Tl A ,. 1 j& - . .

JADED New Port society had an LU" Ter ?rrait ." elenhant spraying perfume over the man nature ,s "sponsible for the ia-

guests from Its t?unk. Sort of a Battleaxe Castleman effect.

You pick up a paper and 6tart to read an editorial, for instance, if you

SHAME to have It rain on Labor rea,i such matter. The first few

Day when Tom Harle worked so hard statements of the article contain that Xmakj that. picnic a success. which you know. You say to your

self 'ihaf you have thought the same

ItVtfnOr nft.n Ko -ir .1, 1 ... ,11.

- - i3 telling the absolute truth and The recent republican primary in you finish the article in confidence, Michigan shows a regular republican accepting not only the things you alvote of 145,596. The progressive ready knew, but many things which vote waa 6,660. Four counties which you did not know. And when you did not make immediate reports are nave finished the reading nonody not included In his figures. could make you believe that you did In this primary, In a state that is not know everything stated In the

said to be "crazy about Roosevelt," article

the regular republican vote outnumbered the progressive vote by the ratio of 2 to 1. Bull mooee leaders are making a

great deal of noise. They have made so much noise about Michigan that the casual newspaper reader might

conclude that there is no Republican party in that state. But of course the bull moose leaders will not be

embarrassed by the figures. Doubtless they will complacently claim that there was co republican ticket in the field says the Lafayette Jourr nal.

THE INNER LIFE. "It would be almost as if we had come back from the dead if we could look into the hearts of any houseful of common folk: if we could but see

their inner life uncovered the disappointments of their daily lot, the broken ambitions, the griefs, and

then wlthwhat good cheer they front

the present life, so narrowed from

the scope of youthful dreams; how

loyal they are to the day's work, so shrunken from early hopes; with

what patience they adapt themselves

to imperfect companionships; how Invincibly the dreariest of folk face danger and monotony. Under he

hard surface life of our fellows lies the human heart. When that heart is seen, all men are one," is one of

the best things ever printed In that

inimitably self-laudatory muck-raker

Collier's Weekly.

IF you can find anything warmer than the race between Hammond and Gary for the pennant In the Northern

Indiana League we wouldn't want It

in a sleeping-room at bed-time.

MAN found a $2,400 wallet, re

turned it to owner and was given a

cigar. Owner probably ran a "nlggerbaby" stand at some Jerkwater

county fair. 1 '

"THE Lord hath delivered them Into my hands. I have them on the hip. I have them in open. I'll show

them as Israel hewed Amnion, hip and thigh." The Bull Moose. This

man is- becoming sillier every day

Who was it said that the devil was a

good hand at quoting Scripture how

ever.

"JUDGES are underpaid," says the American Bar Association. You

mean some of them are overpaid for

what they do. If a judge got a cer

tain sum every time he tried a case,

the visits of Roosevelt and Beveridge we might get something done in our

and the tremendous effort made to courts

carry the state for the third term

In Vermont despite the big cam

paign barrel of the bull moqse tribe,

party, the bull moosers ran a poor third. The legislature will be overwhelmingly republican, a republican

governor will be elected. We recom-

mond now to the third termer a read-

T00 BAD ABOUT FRED. -

This is clipped from the Logansport

Journal:

Twenty-nine campaign state-

HOME. Margery Bell, a Cleveland girl, ran away from home to find out bow lonesome the world is. When she got back

Margery snid: "You'll never know bow much you want your mother or father or brother until you are away from them." Is it not so' i Tbe world is so much bigger and

stronger than we arc. and unless somebody is mother or father or brother to us it will break us.

Therefore the unerring instinct of

all humans the homing lnstinct-

The Margery Bells, lured into the

paths of dalliance, chase tbe winged

butterfly of pleasure, listen to the patter of soft fountains and watch the dryads dance until until the clouds

lower and the hardness of the world

appears and the feet are tired and the

heart is sore

And then? Like little children who have forgot

ten all but tbe glinting sunshine and tbe pretty flowers, and who wander far

afield until evening comes and all

seems naught but strangeness, and

who sit down and cry for home, !

So we. When the mirage of tbe faroff feathery palm tree and sweet water rises In empty air, when tbe rivers of gladness lose their runnels In life's desert places, then we see the mocking folly and sit down and long or cry for home. We all tribes of the wandering feet we all are Margery Bells. Home. Like Noah's dove, we find no place to rest our feet, and so with tired wing we come back to the ark. We may wander far from that one little corner of God's creation that we call home, but always in concentric circles, and always we come back to it To ns it is the center of the world. "An exile from home splendor dairies In vain." Misfortune T God pity blm to whom

it comes with no home or hearts to share iti And sickness? Poor, Indeed. Is he who is without so much as tbe poor animal who seeks his bole for shelter and a place to nurse his wounds. And Joy and pleasure? What are they all worth if there be no place nof hearts where they may be divided. Home, sweet home. A charm from the skies seems to hallow It there -Which, sought through the world. Is ne'er met with elsewher

I isr fl

Last minutes of the. "Helvetia". In a heavy fog bank the Canadian Pacific liner. "Empress of Brlta'ln." recently collided with the collier "Helvetia" some three hundred miles below Quebec, The collier sank almost Immediately after having been disengaged with difficulty from the liner's bows on which she had been held for almost thirty minutes. The accompanying photograph shows the "Helvetia" turning over before the final dip. The liner, with the rescued crew of the lost vessel on board, limped into port with bows smashed and with a deep gash In her tem. -

Up and Down in INDIANA

States, after having concluded the important treaty that bears his name. 1M7 Jesse James, the noted bandit, born in Clay County, Mo. Killed in St. Joseph, Mo.. April 3, 18S2. 1873 Great Britain paid the Indemnify awarded In the Alabama claims.

SEEK RELATIVES NEAR MARION. '1898 Queen Wllhelmina of the NetherAn effort Is being made at Marlon to! land ascended the throne, locate relatives of William Prust, who 1905 Japanese and Russian envoys

signed the treaty of peace at Forts-

was killed near Rockwell City, la., on

the night of Aug. 30, supposedly by a train. Postmaster Marlon F. Evans Is in receipt of a letter from Rockwell in which Inquiry is made concerning the identity of Prust. The Dostmaster at

Sac City, la., gave the information that' he believed Prust's home was In some

small town near Marlon. Thus far no relatives have been located.

mouth, N. H.

SEIZE CARLOAD OF BEER.

"THIS IS MY 60TH BIRTHDAY" Sir John Newell Jordan. Sir John Newell Jordan, for many years & leading figure In the'' British

: diplomatic service, was born In County

Down. Ireland. September S, 1852, and received his education at Queen's Col

lege, Belfast. His career in the diplo-

Pollce officers yesterday broke into ajmatic service covers a period of more

WHEN TO REGISTER.

Section 4 of the law provides for

registration as follows: "The regis

tration board of each precinct must

In the year of a general election, hold

three sessions, the flrst on Thursday,

the one-hundred-and-eighteenth day

preceding such election, to be known

as the May session; the second on

Friday the sixteenth day before such

election, to be known as the September session; the third on Monday, the twenty-ninth day before the Oc

tober session." The May session this year opened May 9. The two remaining sessions will be on September 6 and October 7. Those who registered on May 9, providing they have not

in the meantime moved and do not move before election day need not register again. Those who have nnt

registered at all or who have moved.

must register at the coming sessions. If they fail to register on September

6, or If they again move, a third and

final opportunity to register will come on October 7. A vote-, in order

to be entitled to vote must be registered, hence registration should not be neglected.

H EAR D BY

U B E

freight car on the Clover Leaf track

from which they confiscated six wagon loads of beer, which was billed to Marion citizens by a Terre Haute brewing company. The beer was stored In the basement of the County Jail. Officials of the Clover Ieaf Company ap-

than thirty-five years aad has confined

wholly to the Fart East. He began as a student interpreter in China In 1S76

and became successively the assistant secretary and secretary of the British

legation at Pekin, consul-general in

Corea and minister resident at Seoul.

peared on the scene and protested . With the Japanese occupation of Corea

against the action of the police, declar-jhe returned to Pekin to become the lng the railroad company was respon- British minister there; a position which

slble for the beer until it was delivered. She still holds

tine has been stirred. If one teaspoonful of peroxide of hydrogen is added to half a tub of tha water In which white clothes are rinsed

me result will be an agreeable surprise. It acts as the best bleaching

agent known, for It gives a pure white

color without any damage to the fabric. This may be applied to silk and wool as well as linen.

The World's Great. What the world calls a great mat. is usually one who has suffered so Btrangely that historic science considers It worth while to hold an autopsy.

Times Pattern Department

DAILY TASHIOW HINT.

Some of the cases were billed to prominent residents of Marlon. The au-

Congratulations to: Rt. Rev. Chauncey B.

Brewster, Pro.

thorltles say they confiscated the beer testant Episcopal bishop of Connect!

PRESIDENT Taft was menaced by

an armed woman the dispatches tell us. Heaven only knows what these suffragettes will do when they get

started.

IF historians give T. R. no other title they'll have to admit that he is a great explainer. NOW look here! You Gary and Hammond fans cut it out. Isn't it enough to be bothered with the Nicaraguan revolution, Hon. Al. Beveridge rampaging around, the hot wtsather. etc.? IT would seem that a lot of these docs who have branched out as bull moose leaders might find It much cheaper to take their preliminary training in politics , via the Scranton correspondence school. r ANOTHER aid to smashing down the hi kost of living. The government is going to smaih the fire engine trust.

HAMMOND now has her new country

club all set. Now let's see what she'll

do with it.

IF you are patriotic, of course, you

will read word for word all ot the

speeches made by the presidential candidates. -

DETROITERS have re-nominated

seven of their dictagraphed aldermen. This must cause ex-Alderman Battle Asp Castleman of Gary to weep. You'll

recau mat oia cassy was one of the

city fathers who didn't come in contact

because of many complaints made by

persons in the city and their belief that it la unlawful to ship alcoholic beverages Into "dry" territory. A suit is expected to follow. WILL PROBATED IX GERMAN'. The will of the late Gottfried Aufderheide, written in German by the testator, was filed yesterday before Judge Ross of Probate Court at Indianapolis. The will disposes of an estate of about 18,000. It Is different from the ordinary will in being written in German, and also In the phaaeology. The testa-

cut, 64 years old today. '. Richard A. Jackson, vice president and general counsel of the . Great Northern Railway. 54 years old today. Thomas E. Watson, the "stormy petrel" of Georgia politics,' former con. gressmsn and People's Party candidate for President In 1904. 64 yeara old today.

HOCSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS. When counting the Wash make out two lists, one for the washerwoman and one for yourself. A book may bo pur-

tor provides that his funeral expenses .chased with carbon paper in it such a should not be less than $100, and must clerks use In the stores. Write the

. 5830' y 5Ladles' . Caps.

"BEVERIDGE Promises Good

Laws for State," says Indianapolis Star. And so Bev. tos going to make

our laws too. That will be nice.

ing of that famous poem "Oh Why ments, headed by that of Albert J

Should the Spirit of Mortal Be Beveridge, bull moose candidate for

Proud?" governor, were filed with the secre

tary of state Friday by Harvey It

Stout, jr., secretary of the bull mocwe

THE 4 Hammond street lighting committee.' In only a few of the affi-

proposltion Is now two up and one davits filed were there record of sums

to piay. expended in the camoalzn for nom

inations, and those were for small

I a rvt rit P amjw, m a i m

davits, the majority of which were WHAT THEY KNOW. tho6e of bun mo0sers who attended A New York publication has given the state convention in Indianapolis, away a "shop secret." It has called neglected to Include any record of exattention to the fact that few people penditures for hotel rooms or other like to read what they already know personal expenditures of that characa thing which all newspaper men ter. Beveridge's affidavit was as understand, but which they have so follows: 'No money expended for any far tried to conceal from the public, purpose. No promise of any kind "Pick up any city paper." tho New given.' That of Frederick Landis, York publication says, "and it will be candidate for lieutenant-governor, found that a greater part of a column read: 'I did not spend a cent nor Is about the weather. It tells you make any promises ot any kind. " that when you came down to work it We would hesitate to accept that was hot, that at noon when you went last sentence.

AN OBITUARY.

Nowhere among press clippings i3

there an obituary more remarkable

than that which is taken from the

Marquette (Kan.) Tribune and re printed here:

Frank Waller was a unique char

acter. An honest comment on his

life is difficult to make In a news

paper, we do not want to say an un kind word aobut him. He put noth

ing into his life and got nothing out

of it. His hoarded wealth brought him an early grave,' and he could take

none of it with him. He was honest

as he saw honesty, obeyed the laws of

the land when it cost him nothing;

neighbored with no one; trusted no

one; got all he could, kept all he got

WAS it the democratic platform

that collapsed at Indianapolis or

what?

be paid within six months; that " a tombstone must be erected within a year and all his property sold to the highest bidder, his four children being allowed to bid first. They will receive the proceeds of the seate share and share alike. His son, Wilhelm Aufder-

heldie, was named executor. DRIVER INJURED IX RUXAWAY. V. C. Lesher, 2720 School street. Indianapolis, was injured about the head yesterday afternoon when a horse he was driving ran away and collided with an automobile delivery wagon at New York and Liberty streets. The automobile into which his buggy crash

ed was standing with the front against the curb and the rear protruding Into the street. Lesher was unable to guide the horse around the auto and the right wheel of the buggy struck the rear of the truck. Leshor was thrown, striking his head on the pavement. He was carried to a porch and given treatment

by women of the nelghborhod until re- j

vlved. when he was able to go home. The buggy was badly damaged. FIRK CAUSES S1S.OOO LOSS. Fire that gutted the double business block of W. D. natter of Goshen caused a loss of $18,000, with partial insurance. The blase was started in the

with the dictagraph, yet nevertheless kitchen of a restaurant on the ground

he was the only one ever thrown out of oor and spread rapidly. The loss-of

list once and the other will be traced. I When washing cream wool or cotton goods, instead of using blueing try putting the water in which a few onion skins have been boiled, in the last rins- ( ing water, and you will be insured of a

clear, brignt cream. To set the delicate colors of embroidery that has been worked on center pieces, doylies or handkerchiefs and waists, soak them before washing for ten minutes in a pall of cold water Into which a tablespoonful of turpen-

The caps here given represent a sleeping cap, a hood and an automobile bonnet. All are easy to make and may be developed in various materials, according to the maker's fancy. The pattern. No. 5.S30. Is cut in one sise and requires for sleeping; hood 1 yard of 27 inch material, for cap of a yard of 36 inch goods and" 194 yards of edging. For automobile bonnet Is noeded 1 yard of 3G inch material and 2 yards of ribbon. The pattern can be obtained by sending 10 cents to the offlrv of thi paper.

FISHING IN THE STONE AGE AND TODAY.

the city council.

J. K. YES, we noticed that mistake

the other day. It often happens. We

wrote it "the hi kost of living" but as usual it turned out "the hi kost of

loving." However, in the end the effect is the same.

WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST Is

so nice about it that he Is letting Chairmen Hilles and Dixon print their ver

sions of it 6lde by side every day.

John lioyta, owner of the restaurant and lodging roms on the second'fioor, is $4,000, partially Insured. Glenn Lytle lost household goods valued at $1,000, not Insured. C B. Sliver. furniture dealer, estimates his loss at $7,000, practically covered by Insurance. The building, valued at $12,000, was damaged to' the extent of $6,000, partially insured.

BUY XOBLESVILliB OAS PLANT.

THEN again It may be possible that I Nohleavllle r.a r-omr,anv. n.vi i.

we'll have to take this Gary-Hammond ' K.,d I10n 000. r T? w.oth in 1

t.tnu M as manager. The officers of the

for ultimate settlement.

SURE thing the bull moose party is for the common people as Brother Geo. Perkins has asserted. Over In the

new company are A. C Elston of Chicago, president: Mr. A. Clifford of Chicago, vice president, and D. A. McCollum .of Chicago, . secretary-treasurer.

adjoining district the bull moose men. The new company, it Is said, will con

nect Noblesvllle and Tipton, using both natural and artificial gas.

have nominated a doctor for congress. A doc is chairman of .this district and three docs are delegates from Gary and a preacher was running for governor out In Vermont and an attorney runs the party in this county. The bull moosoo really deserves its title of being the professional men's party. "KILL the onions and you have a gap In the universe." Exchange. Yes, but you can't tell this to a newly married couplo.

Moral Courage Merely Obedience. Moral courage is only another name for obedience.

Beat of the1 Pulse. The average pulse of a healthy man beats seventy-two times a m'nute.

The Day in HISTORY

"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" September 5. 1761 Zacharlah Poulson, publisher of the first daily newspaper in the United States, born in Philadelphia. Died there, July 31. 1844. 1774 First Continental Congress assembled In Carpenter's Hall. Philadelphia. 1806 Malta capitulated to the British.

1842 Lord Ashburton left the United

' u r I'a. jail " "W (tl--f A4J.. A ' v (A S-0 I TWE1 LAW )