Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 66, Hammond, Lake County, 13 September 1912 — Page 10
10
THE TIMES.
Friday, Sept. 13. 15)12.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS y Tbe (nmr Frletlas; liakistf Ceaupaaty.
?ba Ldka County Times, dal.y except Sunday, "entered a second-class mat. er Juna 23. HOC"; The Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sunday, enteied Feb. I, 1911; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, -ntered Oct. a, 10; The Lake Covnty tlraei. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 10. lll; The Time, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. IS. 1912. at tbe postofCo at Hammond. Indiana, under in. net of March t. 117a. Entered at the FostoTfieo. Hamicond, Ind.. as second-class matter.
rUKtlUK iDVEIHISIMl ill Rector Building
OFFICE.
Chlcaaro
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Ind.
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Call for drp.ii-tu.csi:: irantnl)
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LAKOKH I'AIU L flKtl'LATIOS THAN ANY OTHKR TWO KWPAPEHS IN TIIK CAI.FMET RGGtOl.
A.SO.NYMOU3 communications will aot be noticed, but others will be printed at dlbcretlon. and shoid be addressed to Tbe Editor, Tlmea, Hameioitd. Ind.
What na. bin uamef
hi name. I only knuw he beard Utxl'n voire aatl ca ine; llrouKlat all he loved acrM tbe nea. 'I n live anil nork for ;! ml ane Felled the wnsreoioua oak, AVIth horrid toll Draciseil from the nH The tbrlic-K tiurlcil root mid stubborn root;; With plenty piled the line sard mouittuiiiHlile; nI ttbru hli. mirk n done, without memorlat died. ii Muring trumpet sounded oat hl fume: lie 11 ed, he llel. I da not know hln
No form of bronc ami no memorial lae:l Show me the place where He kin molderlnu hone.
Only a cheerful city Mtnntle. Ilitllded by hi-, hardened hands; Only ten thousand bomex, here every day The cheerful piny Of love nnd hope and courage romcs; These arc hl monument nnd these
ulone -
There In no form of hronxe nnd no
memorial Ntone. A ud If
la there nonie desert or ome honudteH
Mrs
V here Thou, great t.od of anstelH. wilt
nend mef Some ok for me to rend, some sod for me to hreaik. Some handful of thy eorn to take And N.-atter far afield. Till It in turn hll field II hundredfold Of Kralne of gold. To feed the hnppy children of my (....I ;
sourceful and daring Democratic opponent, his record of accomplishments upon which lie must, ultimately rely is for the moment eclipsed. But the fact that but few presidents have rendered more valuable assistance under trying conditions remains. Mr. Taft's fidelity, his conscientious endeavors, his singleness of unselfish purpose, his purity of intent, his noble achievements, are forgotten only for the time. They will be recalled With gratitude and emphasized with effect. From Harper's Weekly, which is supporting Wilson.
WHY are the democratic newspapers not clattering, "Aa Maine goes so goes the Union?"
VKRMONT and Maine have spoken. Now let old Gen. Grosevenor do his worst.
MASONIC CALEM1AR, Hammond Conimandery No. 41, K. T. Special meeting Saturday. Sept. 14.
1:30 p. m.. to assist at layinsj corner
stone of East Chlcaso temple. Spe
cial cars leave 2 p. m. All Sir Knights
requested to attend. Special meeting Thursday. Sept. 12, 7:30 p. m, for drill for above. (1. . MALLETT, E. C
HEAT, CORN AND STEEL.
This spell of torrid weather that we have been having means a lot of
money in our pockets around here. It was fine for the corn crop.
And a fine corn crop always means a busv railroad and a busy railroad
means bu3y steel mills.
These busy things keep u all busy
if we want to be busy.
IX the event that IJr. Wilson .a
elected he says he will not be pester
ed by a hungry horde of o.Tice-seek-ers. Oh no, nothing like that. Why there are 145 democrats now in Hammond alone with their fingers on the
post office.
L. No the farmers and working
men of Indiana have not forgotten
the splendid administration that Dur
bin gave Indiana and they won't for
get it at the polls in November either
ANOTHER shock absorber has been invented. Retter send a. consignment hltherwards. Understand
a new scandal is about to break loose.
PROBABLY we shall have to keen the polling books closed until the fair women clerks et. al. get their bangs frizzed and switches curled.
NEEDS MORE RECRUITS. It doesn't seem as if the country needed battleships as much as It
needs recruits to man them. With the enlisted force of the navy nearly six thousand men below its normal strength, the navy department has begun an active campaign to get recruits for the fighting ships. The total enlisted force now is 4 6,6f. or 3.634 less than required by law. One of the chief causes for the
show me the drsori. Father, or the urn. ' fall ing off was the long delay by the
is it thine enterpriser Oreat tiod, eud ' con eress in nasslnc the naval appro
priation mil, out mis was cimipucai-
HOW is old Aid. Castleman passing the time of day anyway?
J HEARD 1 RUBE
d Ihnniih i he IioiIt lie where ooenn
rolls.
Father, count me amonir all faithful
MO 111! F.dvtard I'.verett Hnle.
WK pause bitterly in the midst of all this political excitement to remark that we haven't bit into a decent Rock Ford this year.
ed by the heavy demand for men on farms in the middle west. Steps already have been taken to establish recruiting stations in Denver, Salt Lake City and Richmond, Va., while
vegetables he has in stock. The- traveling parties have been sent into
nousewite informs Inni of her wants the country.
and the delivery wagon carries them to her door.
She inquires the price, it is true,
but she has no way of determining
what other uierhants are barging for the same article so the chances are that she pays the top price for everything.
The woman who orders over the telephone never sees or gets a bargain In groceries. And when the orders are dlivered the inuskmelon may be only half ripe, the green peas may be hard, the butter may be just a trifle rancid, the apples may be specked here and there and the cut of meat you ordered is not what you would have selected in the market. Now what is the result. The housewife wastes enough money in the improvident way she buys to re-
THERK are lots of republicans
who are on the fence leaning both ways at once and Ixrd what a spectacle they do make.
GET the furnace ready, ready and fill up the coal bin. body ought to be doing It.
get it
Every-
duce the cost of living 20 per cent if her purchases had been wisely made. Besides the exercise of a trip to the market every morning or every
REAL AGENTS OF TEMPERANCE.
The testimony of the liquor sellers of Schuylkill county, Pennsyjvanla, that their trade has been seriously
injured by the competition of moving picture shows comes from a source and with an authority particularly
well informed and convincing. More-
other morning is lost. Nowadays a over, the saloon proprietors are glv
THE BLACK FLAG. A portion of the Gary red light district haa jumped out of its segregated bounds and may now be found down in the 'south part of the Ridge road district. It is the haven for auto parties from all over the county and machines comes there from Hobart, Crown Point, Hammond and other places. We always understood that the Ridge road district was "a residential one high and dry away from the smoke and dust." Just now it has a very bad plague spot over toward Hosford park.
FUNNIEST thing in the world is to see Harry Darling of Laporte he of Marshall's pardon board, doing flipflops and belly-busters before and after the Maine election.
LAFAYETTE Courier says that Hiram Johnson's physical courage is
his greatest asset. Wrong again, is all mouth. Simply month nothing more.
Hi rwsd
v oman spends too' much of her f.me la the house. This is especially true Li the cities. When Hammond's city market is opened to the public the women of the city, no matter what their ciicumstances, should revive the art of
marketing. They should go to the
city market not only for the purpose of saving money but to insure a good selection of goods.
There is not a housewife in Ham-
mon who should lie above doing hr own marketing. She owes it to the
members of her family. It is about time that she was paying some attention to the matter of carefully selecting the produce she buys. She will eliminate the middleman
ing practical evidence of the truth of
their complaints, for numbers of them are retiring from the business because they cannot make n living at
it.
Every community that has provid
ed a substitute for the barroom, and
conducted it on a commercial basis
without obtrusive philanthropic and
religious annexes, has seen the traffic in liquor decrease, or so change in
character as to result in noticeable improvement in conditions. Summer amusement parks attract family
parties, the members of which, be
cause of the environment nnd
economic necessity, drink moderately as to each individual, though the
gross amount of liquids consumed
The half dollar or dol
flOOD thins: that old Diogenes lived when he did or else he would never been able to buy kerosene for his laptern In these days. T. H. is out in the '.and of the sunset, joyfully shouts a bull moose scribe. Mlsht as well stay there, as he'll be the central figure of a sunset early in November. NOW that it has tasted a tew drops of metropolitan Joy Hammond is itching around to have, the Chicago subway extended out its way. SEE that at a nuptial affair down at St. John they had a "good old-fashioned wedding: dinner." And this is the kind we Kladly accept an invitation for even though it entails Ihe buying of a present.
RKAD that poor old John P. is riding
around on a bicycle. If those ungrateful folks over at Whitintr would
only work a little harder John might
able to afford a motorcycle on the
installment plan.
SOME one calls politics a farce. Like
Mr. Manallnl viewed married life we
think that it is a "detuned serious
reposition."
THKN asjain will some one please
xplain just how Chicago is to set that
$131,000,000 to build her subways. Sup
ose this part of it is also sub rosa.
PAP.IS cables have it that the Robe-
pierre dresses, the kind thiy u.-ed in
he relftn of terror are coming hack
nto style. Probably suggested by the
Napoleonic ambitions of on T. II.
KLKHAIvT is kicking because its hautauo.ua didn't pay. - Well, whatcan
ou expect of a one-horse railroad
unction that only breaks Into print
when one Bub Proctor flaunts out as
second edition of that great and good
oung man, the Hon. Al Reveridge?
THEN attain it wouldn't have been
sui h a perilous passagre for GcorKe
Washington when he crossed the Pel a
ware if the old Knickerbocker Ice Co
had been in existence. It would have
had all of the ice cut and stored in blft
sheds for ten miles on either side of
the classic stream.
FARMER has donated a cow to Gov
ernor Wilson's campaign fund. So the democrats are even going to milk the poor bovines in tfteir mad race to col
lect campaign coin.
THE fdave traffic had its Abe Lin
coln. Almost time for one for the
white slave business.
SINCE Uncle Sam is to establish a
money laundry in Chicago some of the
street paving: contractors oughtn't to
have no qualms about some of the loot they are fretting. Only one-hour ride.
to th cleansing establishment.
THIS weather is like a woman's mind
and from now one we think that we.
will refer to it in the feminine gender.
IN the meantime the orchestra will
play the '"Tasf Rose of Summer, while
Brother A. K. Knotts will pet Into the
Armaeeddon pulpit and denounce the betless betting- machines.
MOTHER fret out the heavy ones!
1F. OF" t'LLB NOT ASSAl'l.T. A man who breaks a club over the
head of another man he findn In his home as an uninvited Kueat in not
jruilty of assault and battery Jidne
Markey of Criminal Court decided -tcrday In the case against John Kleelittmer at Indianapolis. The proiseeut-
lnff witness was Aloeix Kututz. 2207
Massachusetts avenmi. Klechamer wan
found pullty in Police Court find up-
pealed. Kubitz admitted to Judue Markey that he received "what was
oniinfr to him." The evidence wh
that Kle hamer found Kubitz in his home and called the police. They did
not arrive soon enough to suit Klechamer and he obtained a club which he broke over Kuhlt's head.
and will find that she is able to buy may be large
better produce at a lower figure. Thejlar that one man spent at the bar to
women of Hammond should re-establish their reputations for thrift bypatronizing the new city market. It will be rather a crude institution at first but it will eventually develop into a great thing for the city. Just remember that when tbe man on a salary is able to reduce the cost of his food twenty per cent that he increases the cost of his salary by just that much.
MARKETING A LOST ART. Years ago, before the day of the telephone and the auto-delivery wagon, the housewife slipped her market basket over her arm and went to the town market where she purchased the provisions for the day. If she was a woman of high degree she may have driven to the market in a carriage but the housewife, herself, made the purchases in nine
cases out. of ten. This important!
matter was not left to the servants. The suit was that she made a personal selection of the things she bought. She provided a variety for the reason that, she was able to chose from the merchant's entire stock. She selected only the choicest of the produce displayed. Today the housewife goes to the telephone, the grocer or produce merchant names over the fruit and
j THE East Chicago Masons here's it-? them wFl show their brethren
'roi other parts of the country how they tio things in the Twin Cities to-mOrrt.V.
THAT harsh grating noise you hear is George Ade coming hack to Indiana wearing a set of side-wheelers or known down on the farm as gala! pas.
TAFT IN NOVEMBER. ,Maiiy a Democrat has been elected in August, only to be buried under an avalanche oT votes in November. Mr. Taft's prospects are now at their lowest ebb. First driven by treachery and shameful abuse to the extreme of undignified per3onal defense, then fought with unexampled bitterness in his contest for 'a deserved renominaiion, and now confronting not only an open detachment from his own ranks, but also a most re-
his own Injury and the injury of his family provides a ride in a trolley car, a glass or so of beer, i visit to
the "movies" for wife and children
where the opportunity for such ex
penditure exists.
If the sensitive visitor to popular
places of relaxation and entertain
ment can rid himself of the notion
that every infraction of good manners is an offence against good morals, he will be impressed by the excellent
order and creditable behavior of
those who surround him. Drunken
ness is rare. The managers of these
enterprises neitner encourage nor
tolerate it. They realize that perma
nent success depends on the approval
of women, and that the safer an
pleasanter their threatres and parks are, the greater will be the receipts
at the box office. A decent sobriety
among their patrons is an essential prerequisite of the continuance of their profits. The amusement, park or cheap theatre that establishes a reputation of safety for unescorted women and children has laid a firm foundation for its future. New York Sun.
Up and Down in INDIANA
ered to hear him. In the midst of the throns: in the hotel lobby. Oovernor Marshall was invited to ln an applieallnri for membership in the Fraternity of RuffaloB. Me did so, and was voted Into the order on the spot. tSKS FOIi FIFTH UIVOHCK. For the fifth time Mrs. Lillie II. MoFerran - Creek - Bennett - Mcl.auh-lin-Hushtleld of Shelby ville Is appearing as the plaintiff In ft divorce suit, and this is the second time she has asked a divorce from William If. Rushfield, her most recent husband- Three months atro Judtre Blair refused her a darree
In the Shelby Circuit Court, and lata yesterday afternoon she decided to make another try for the decree by fllln complaint in the Shelby Superior Court. She is also askina; the restoration of her former mime of Creek. Hep four husbands are IivinMr, all of them betnjr residents of Shelby county.
MifS Anfflin will produce Edward Knoblauch's gypsy play ''Egypt,", at Albany, N. Y., on Sept. 3d. George Foster Phitt, Mr. Ames' stae di'ettor, 1 mounting it.
KIM) BOSKS OF VI STOOO N. Parts of the skeleton of a larc'
iniraal, believed to have been a mas
todon, were unearthed yesterday on the farm of N. P. Jones, north of Rushville.
Vmone: the parts found were two teeth.
The larger of the two. thoutrht to be
from the lower jaw, measured seven
inches in length, and the roots were
six inches loii. The enamel is well preserved and has the appearanee of marble. Resides the two teeth, a piece of bone, six inches in diameter and two
feet Ions, was found. The find w!-s
made In a travel pit thirty-live feet
under the surface.
finds ;oi.i IN nK VAim. Free (redd in considerable ipiantities
is believed to have been found at Laporte yesterday afternoon in the yard
of Aucust Kuehne. when the later was ditrcintv to net sand. The first Kold, or
what is suposed to be Kold, was found
in a rock which split in two when the spade struck it. revealing a brilliant metal. Several bushels of the stone
will be sent for analysis to experts.
M AHSH 1,L. JOINS HI FFAI.OS. Pelay due to a broken entrine made
the Lake Erie Ai Western train more
than an hour late in brinlne Gover
nor Thomas It. Marshall to Fort Wayne
yesterday, to be the artiest of honor at
the Fort Wayne Fair. He was met at
the station by a bijr reception committee, headed by a band and a drum corps, and was escorted to his hotel.
From this point, after a hurried luncheon, the. Governor was taken to the Fair Ground!, where he delivered an adress. An immense rrowd had Kath-
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Liberal stop-over privileges and option of boat trip between Detroit and Buffalo, and on Hudson River between Albaay and New York. Tickets on sale daily to Sept. 30th Return limit 30 days
wYork (Mral Lines
Michigan Central ""The Niagara Falls Route" Proportionately low fares to all Eastern Summer Resorts, including Thousand Islands, Saratoga, Lake George, the Adirondack, Canadian Resorts, White Mountains, Poland Springs, and the entire Atlantic Coast. CIRCLE TOURS Sixty-day circuit tours may be arranged to New York and Boston, Including lake and river routes, and more extended circuit tours, partly by ocean, including meal and berths on ocean steamers, at reduced summer fares. Ask for a copy of our "Guide to New York City." It contains valuable and interesting information about the Metropolis, free on request. For particulars consult Michigan Central Ticket Agents
ia
lssaiTTlMfll:
Out of the 3.6:0 industrial accidents
reported to the California industrial
board, 133 were fatal 3.6 per cent. The
hiKhest percentage of fatal accidents is
found In the linht, power and telephone
Industry fi.6 per cent, of all accidents
In that class. Construction work comes
next with n percentage of 5-5. followed
by agriculture, with 5.2.
1
H BAKHO ROASTING
TOP BUPNtR COCRMO
EES
. a& r Wilis: H fcT
jW-r''-r-';iSeJf f I SMC.f rcn 3 I POTS fN
our f i nr
UeNI"4MMS
ALL OVENS
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TIM Woodruff is posing in N. Y. as the great, pacifier. For whose little sucker is he a pacifier?
EASY Mr. Weather Man don't pull that cold too soon! Remember not all of us wear ear tab3.
RESTORE GRAY HAIR TO NATURAL COLOR By Common Garden Sage, a Simple Remedy for Dandruff, Falling, Faded, Gray Hair.
The old idea of using Sage for
darkening the hair is again coming
in vogue. Our grandmothers had
dark, glossy hair at. seventy-five.
u'V4Ia nnr mttharc i re. srrtiV hefnra
they are fifty. Our grandmothei s i !U kept, their hair soft and glossy with
a "Sage Tea." which also restored the natural color. One objection to using such a preparation was the trouble of nuking it. This objection has been overcome by the Wyeth Chemical Com
pany of New ork, wno nas placed
on the market a superior preparation
of Sage, combined with Sulphur and
other valuable remedies for dandruff
itching scalp, and thin, weak, falling i.
hair. The beauty of the hair depends;
more on its rich, even shading than;
anything else. Don't have dry, harsh faded hair, when a simple, harmless! remedy will bring back the color in j a few days; and don't be tormented
with dandruff, itching scalp ami loose, falling hairs. W'yeth's Sace and Sulphur Hair Remedy will quickly correct these troubles, and give color, strength anil beauty to your hair. . Get a fifty cent bottle from your druggist today, and prove this to your own satisfaction. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will be refunded if the ivmcdy is not exactly as represented.
A Talk on Saving and Gas ECONOMY does not consist in not spending money ; it means getting full value for the money you do spend. Some people think that when the income is cut down it is time not to spend anything. They don't stop to think that by spending a modest sum then it is possible to save a great deal in
the end.
t
That is not only a theory, it is a condition when applied to the Gas Range. And it is particularly applicable when the attractive terms upon which Gas Ranges may be bought are understood. At no one time is the outlay burdensome and the total cost is small. The actual saving in money, year in and year out, on the part of housewives who cook with Gas will be made plain if you ask any one of them. If there were no other reasons than economy for installing a Gas Range now that one would be sufficient. Rut there are two other very strong reasons, Comfort and Convenience, to both of which the women of a household are entitled. Ranges on displa' at all of our offices.
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orthern Indiana
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