Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 100, Hammond, Lake County, 24 September 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Tuesday. Sept. 24, 1912.

THE TIMES

r Th Lake Couly Printing at4 Pnk. Ushlnc Caupitf. Tb Lae County Times, dal'i? except Sunday, "entered a aecond-claaa mat tr June 18. l0"; The Lake County Times, dally accept Satarday and Bun ay. entated Feb. , Jill; Tba 0ry Evening Times, daily except Sunday. ntered Oct. S, l0f; Tha Lake CoentJ Times. Saturday and weekly edltlea. entered Jan. 30, 1911; Tha Times, dally xcept Sunday, entered Jan. IS. ItlJ. at tba postoffloa at Hammond. Indiana. il under tha act af March i. 1I7H Entered at tha Poatotflcat, Hamicoa& Ind.. as second-clam matter. foreign ADiERTisisa orriaes, IIS Rector Bulldlr. - . Cblcacs ruBLicATiojr urnccs, Bammoad Bnildlnc Hammond. Ind. TELKP1IO.NK.1, Hammond (private exchange) Ill (Call for decarta.ent irantad.) Gary Office Tel 1JT East Chicago Office Tel. 64-J Indiana Harbor Tel. S4M; 160 Whltln , TaL 0-M Crown Point .....Tel. 61 Hesewlsrh TaL IS Advertising solicitors will Da aent, or rates given on application. It you have any trouble getting Tha Times notify the nearest o(Qce aod save It promptly remedied. LAKGKR PAID IP tlHCLLATlOl

THAN AM OTHKR TWO NEW.

f APERI IX TUB CAI.CSIKT REG I OX.

AJiOXTMOUS eommuntcattont will

ot bs noticed, but others will be

prluted at discretion, and shouM bs

addressed to The Editor, Times. Ham snond. ind.

a bit of scasea. Including typhoid fever,

imaginable diphtheria, cerebrospinal meningitis,

a sense nauseatlug in tuberculosis, etc.; with the sanitary

that it is so directly at variance with (control of water sheds, the purificnthe fact?. It is well known in this.tion of water by stornpe. water puri-

tion." The whole story is

the cheapest buncombe

and it is in

community at least that the governor's father was very far from entertaining the sentiments now accredited to him. He was a native of

irginia and it is known that his

ympathies throughout the slavery

struggle were distinctly and em

phatically with his own people. lie came to Indiana simply for the reason that he believed this a more like

ly field for the practice of piedicine than he had found in Missouri, and

is not to be doubted that he car

ried with him in his departure from that state the cseen and respect of

the slave-holding class. Dr. Marshall

was a very excellent gentleman and

stern partisan, yet his sentiments

did not i'i any particular lean in the direction now indicated by those truly sloppy effusions of the Missouri sob-artists. The pathetic picture of Tom Marshall weeping at the ances

tral home from which his father was

exiled "because of his abolition sen

timents" is enough to make those

who knmv the governor indulge in the luxury of a great, big horselaugh.

For WILLI IM HOWARD TAFT. Against PHKE TRADE AND FIIEB SOtP.

Hammond Coramandery, No. 41 K, T.,

will visit Gary, Wednesday. Sept. 25, when South Bend will confer the Malta degree in full form. Leave Sibley and

Mohman 6:30 p. m. Hammond Chapter, No. 117, R. A. M

will meet Tuesday, Sept. 24, Instead of Wednesday, Sept. 25. Mark Master de

gree.

SEND IN THE RESIGNATIONS.

Among the things that the Re

publican party in Lake county

ought to do, and in a hurry, is to

demand the resignations of Frank N

Oavit of hiting as senator from

this locality, and Herbert Jones as county recorder. Mr. davit is hold-over senator

and will sit in the legislature next winter. Mr. Jones is a Republican

officeholder. lire job belongs to

Republican, but he is a Bull Mooser

these men were nominated bv the

Republican party and the Republi

can party worked for them and

elected them.

Now Senator Oavit and Mr. Jones have a rerfect and inalienable right to be for Roosevelt, Debs or William

J. Bryan or anybody else they please

We hold no brief with them on that

account.

Just now they are busy, however presiding at Bull Moose meetings

and being featured as P.ull Moose leaders ,and yet holding office given

them by Republicans.

Now Mr. Gavit is either a Repub

Iican or a Bull Mooser. Recorder

Jones Is either a Republican or Bull Mooser. They can't be both.

if they are Bull Moosers, let them

have the courtesy to send in their

resignations to the proper parties

right away.

Don t straddle the fence, gentle

men.

Don t draw salaries under false

pretenses.

LONDON America to

Perhaps now.

m

we

editor has arrived

watch the campaign

can get a little help

fication in Europe by biological methods; water sterilization by chemical methods and with the disposal of sewage and wastes by the various processes now carried on in Europe countries. Whenever knowledge as to improved methods is obtained it is the intention of the life insurance interests to systematically aid constituted authorities in applying those methods to conditions in this country. In this way, it is hoped to improve the mortality experience among life insurance policyholders. "It has been contended for some time by Frof. Irvine; Fisher of Yale university that the practical application of all the reforms now known to modern hygiene would add fifteen

years to the span of life in the United tSates."

SEPTEMBER seems to be resting

easily after autumn came in so rude

ly and left the door open behind her.

THE Fort Wayne News calls Gov

ernor Johnson of California a blatherskite who betrayed his own father.

Well, we wouldn't put it past him.

THE longer the turmoil continues in Mexico the more it seems as though the insurrectos were in the field not for a square deal but for a square meal.

WHY should J. Bruce Ismay want to quit as head of the steamship company that owned the Titanic? His reputation as a quitter was good already.

ANSWER THESE. Suppose the delegates to the Re

publican national convention who

were seated instead of voting for Mr. Taft had voted for Mr. Roosevelt or

Mr. Cummins, would either of these and their followers have cried out.

Thou shalt not steal?" Not by a jugful. Were not the names of both

Roosevelt and Cummins before the

convention as Republican candidates

for the presidential nomination, and were they not both ready to accept this nomination had it been tendered

them?

ness the exposure of the entire movement. Relentlessly will the mask and sham be torn from it until it willstand before the people in all

its crude nakedness."

"Young man, your future lies be

fore you. Consider well your actions."

MACON BUSINESS MEN WAGE CAMPAIGN TO HAVE GEORGIA'S CAPITAL REMOVED TO THEIR CITY; URGE VOTE OF THE PEOPLE

PROFESSOR at university says

that intensive culture bv indulerent

women will produce animals capable

of holding intelligent conversation.

Let's all got a wheezy lap dog and go

out walking.

ANTICIPATING defeat the third

termer is quoted as saving he "will eat the vitals out of the party."

Thought so. Wolf masquerading as a herbivorous bull moose.

EEARD BY tUBE

THE melancholy days have come,

for Prof. Stagg and other eminent

football coaches.

THE Chicago press which has

been crying "shame" at the New York police force, hasn't much to

say now.

looking for the to till public will be picked

HIS PURPOSE CONFESSED. "I will rat the vitals out of the old

Republican party and frame up the

organization for myself in 1916."

N. O. Messenger, a correspondent

of the Washington Star, says that Theodore Roosevelt. Democratic aid candidate, thus expressed himself

before he went on his western tour.

In those words the hopelessness of

his present candidacy is admitted, and his purpose, the destruction of

the Republican party, is confessed.

The statement, couched in .char

acteristic language, simply makes plainer still that which has been evident for some time to all intelligent citizens. Albany Journal.

A BERLIN aeronaut tried

balloon yesterday. He leaves

and three children.

new wife

NO, THE Macfarlane who is going to donate his services to the progressive cause is not the Macfarlane of Gary. He would never donate anything.

CONSERVING LIFE.

In our own mills, particularly those of the steel corporation at

THE BULL MOOSE CALF. A young lawyer who was particu

larly noisy in proclaiming his Bu'l Moose convictions was taken in hand

by a political observer of years of x perience.

i ou are a young man beginning

a career in this community. Every

move you make and every stand you take, is to create Impressions the

composite of which will be the pub

lies estimate of you ten years hence.

"Your profession frequently takes

a man into politics. Most of our statesmen are lawyers. In legislative offices particularly are lawyers sought. Ten years from now the

community will be right kind of men trusts. "And these men

from one of two political parties; the Republican and Democratic. The Bull Moose movement will then have taken its place with the populistic and kindred propagandas. Every time your availability for office is discussed, every time tha

soundness of your judgment is a matter of debate, every time your measure as a man is taken, the fact will be pointed out that you WENT OFF ON THAT BULL MOOSE TANGENT. " 'Am I,' you exclaim indignantly, 'to measure the probability of success of a movement and then, putting aside the matter of principle, align myself accordingly.' "Not at all. 'The Bull Moose movement must fail because it is born of insincereity. Its leadership is discredited. It takes a tremendous issue to create a new party and while we are not living in Utopia there is no demand for a political revolution.

"And who are these leaders? Theodore Roosevelt, Mho repudiated bis promise to seek no more than the two terms in office, advocated the election of William Howard Taft because he knew that tempernientaliy he was so different from himself that

I his administration would be sharp

ly contrasted to his own, and who found the Republican party good enough for him until he was cast out by it at the Chicago convention. "George W. Perkins, formerly of the Harvester and Steel trusts, worth $.'.0,(HM,(KiO or more. Damned by the farmers from the Saskatchewan to the Everglades because of the excessive profits he wrung from them on harvesting machinery. Now engaged in the business of ameliorating the conditions of us poor .vvork-

AT Emporia, Kan, T. R. aked the people to pive him a rest. Nice thins? if T. K. would reciprocate the compliment. "WARNS Girls AGAINST CORSETS." Headline. Oh. what's the use! WE think that old Abe Martin hit the nail on the head when he said that a lot of patriots joined the bull moose movement merely to pet their names into the papers. IF the old rule of hanq: your clothes on the hickory tree, but don't go near the water had been enforced Pharaoh's

daughter never would have pone to the river for a swim and the chances are that we never would have heard of

Moses.

"I AM the naked issue," shouts the

colonel. Will somebody kindly lend

the pentleman a barrel? Exchange. "Yes, and out of respect to the oTher bu!l monse brethren kindly see that It isn't an oil barrel. WHAT'S become of the sweet and obi-fashioned pirl who wouldn't be

seen double-riding? on a motorcycle? NOTICE by a want ad in the Chicago Tribune that "an experienced married man" wants a job. Can this be Nat Goodwin or It Is Gary's Louie Bryan of millionaire baby doll fame? AND in passing it might be well to mention that New Chicago is also on the Gary-Hobart street car line may. IX an up-to-date newspaper office now days as toon as an aviator poes up into the air they get out his obituary in case of emergency. IF those Hammond aldermen are as economical about their home lamps as they are about the business district illumination it's, no wonder that poor old John U. ran t afford a new golf outfit. IN addition to the usual fall crop of literature we know of a lot of aspiring young bookmakers who would like to have their works issued about the time that things hepin to hum down at the Mineral Springs race track. WHEN Theodore Rex dies and poes to heaven he won't be an angel. Noth-

"r jriiWli rar iiiirtffrft tfi

Macon "BoorUrt' at Ashburn, Q. For two years the popl of Mcon have been fl;htic for the removai of Georgia' capital from Atlanta, to their city. They have recently Instituted a state-wide campaign, and win urge the legislature at it next eesnion to put the question of the capital's removal to a popular rote. In the accompanying photoRrafh are seen ome of Macon's "Boosters," who recently toured the state one hundred strong: in a special train, telltna; the people why Macon rather than Atlanta should have the capital. The "Boosters" are said to bare made a splendid impression upon the people, especially in southern Georgia, where sentiment favors Macon strongly.

pul. T1IKN again if the Rubicon had been anything like our own raging Little Calumet is in the spring time Caesar never would have crossed the stream and there's no telling hut that would have been the end of him. IF Uncle Sam could only get the national hygiene congress, which is in session down at Washington, to take up the phase of hygienic politics a lot of good might result. Trinfing presses will not be the only things working over time this fall.- In addition to ruby lips we might mention the cider presses. EVEN In those days. "I fear the trust." Othello. II., 3.

Up and Down in INDIANA

ing less than an archangel will he be

THANK heaven', the, baseball and j which It if presumed political worries will soon be over with. I were driven away in

SltKB ;() II A I I j FROM SAKE. Early this morning burglars entered the office of the Lafayette Artificial Ice company and robbed the safe of $500 in money and $1,000 in checks. The robbery was not discovered until late today when George rialfe, secretary of the compans', went to the office. The safe door was open and It appeared that the robbers must have known the combination of the safe Tiloodhoumls belonging to Officer Frank Younker of the police depart merit were placed on the trail and they went to a barn near the plant, from

the burglars an automobile.

Hut then the worry of saving up for Christ mas starts. Af;OI."T two months from now one Hi lohnson of Calyforny will be heard of about as much as one Battle Axe Cfistienian late eouncilnianic terror of Gary and also a defender of the pe-

The thieves broke a window to gain an entrance to the office. The entire Lafayette police force is working on the case. im rioM'.F.ii nnin. William Mattox, years old. is dead at the home of his son. John.

ONLY 10 per cent of the world's inhabitants speak the English language and some of these write baseball stuff for the sporting pages.

"PERSECUTED FOR RIGHTEOUSNESS SAKE." The News cannot bring itself to believe that Governor Marshall is in any sense responsible for those ab

surd and ridiculous stories sent out from Missouri relative to ths reasons behind the departure of the governor's father from that state to Indiana. It is soberly recited in the dispatches that before the war the elder Marshall was actually driven out of Missouri because he was "an ardent abolitionist," and we are asked to believe that the governor himself was "visibly affected on Monday when he visited the house in LaGrange, Mo., from which the Marshall family had been shoved into exile because of Its stand for aboli-

Gary, we see the careful efforts ta-;lnK people

ken to conserve life aid limb from accidents. To be sure, in a way, it is a cold-blooded business proposition, but in the end, it is very effective and praiseworthy. There is now In session at Wash-

"IU11 Klynn of down east F'olitical boss of . Pennsylvania of the pugugly type. Said to have made hi i fortune out of special privilege contracts in many Pennsylvania cities. "And these are the men who stole

YOUNG BRIDE OF GUNMAN "LEFTY LOUIE" WOULD GRACE BALL ROOM OF THE "400'

-:

-. .. .. .-.. ...

ington a hygiene congress which is 'the progressive movement from its also taking up the human conserve-j real exponnents. Robert La I-'oleite Hon question. Its functions are f Wisconsin and a scoro of others more in the way of disease preven-J''1!' of whom now repudiate the 'new tive lines and It also has to do with ' party.' sanitary aspects. And we might) "And you are going to align yourmentlon in passing that the great 'f wlth these propagandists who life insurance comnanies arc ta k- in a ' would have found no fault with the

a great deal of interest in this con-J Republican party, as a party, if it gress another business proposition ; had permitted its delegates to be but equally as commendable as the 'bulldozed by Theodore Roosevelt and

his ilk. "Don't you do it. If you can't be

insurance a Republican be a Democrat. Don't

companies are doing in this respect be a mugwump. Don't lay yourself may be gained from a circular we'open to the ridicule of the. commuhave received from the Association ' nity for having aligned yourself of Life Insurance Presidents. To 'with a movement that -will ere long quote in part: - be so thoroughly discredited that it "In particular the committee (in-, will become known as the most monsurance) is following that part of(umental political farce that has ever the work of the congress dealing been perpetrated in this country, with the control of contagious di-j "The next three weeks will wit-

efforts put forth by Industrial cor porations.

An idea of what the

i " ; - " "J' ("'' -J i. . i -" -t S V ,

9

4 ', .A

3T.

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Wlfs of "Lefty Louie" RosenberQ. The eighteen-year-old brld of "Lefty Louie" Rosenberg, gunman, charged wifh complicity In the murder of Herman Rosenthal, gambler, had a beauty and a charm that would grace even a ball room of the "400." Her skin Is wonderfully clear and a natural peach bloom flushes her cheeks. Her ears are small and perfectly shaped. Her Hps form a Cupid's bow and ber i eth. small and pearly, give added effect to her beauty. She was a saleslady and clerked In a department store befo.the married "Lefty Louie". Utile more .than a year ago.

WILL TELL WHAT L

WAITS OF

ABOR

LEGISLATURE

times m .-HE.tr

T STATE ( A1MTOL Indianapolis, Ind.. Sept

be reintroduced at the next session and that labor should work to havl

t. Edgar them enacted Into law.

A. Perkins, president of the Indiana More factory inspectors.

State Federation of Labor. In his re

port which he will make at the an.nu U

convention of the federation at Rich

mond this week will outline the legis

lative plans of organized labor at the coming session of the leprishiture. The

main point in the address is that Perkins recommends that all of the old bills supported by labor and which were defeated In the leprisla-ure should

at Ilardensburg. He was one of the pioneer residents of southern Indiana, going there from Kentucky early in life. For several years he had been an invalid, and had been living at the homes of his children in various Indiana cities. He had been a widower since 18S9. He is survived by four sons and four daughters, Ir. W. K. MacDonald and Georpe of Terre Haute, John of Hardinsburg, Mrs. Louisa Kmelzer of Indianapolis, Mrs. Margaret Vogel of Washington county. Mrs. Emma "Wibble of Praireton, and Mrs. Klva Simcoke of Marlon. IXOilw HICAtiO-DETItOIT GAPS. Arrangements to finance an interurban line between St. Joseph and Detroit, which will be announced tomorrow at Laporte, will complete the only gap and finish a straight connection by interurban between Chicago and Detroit. The road will tap several small rltles which have an aggregate population of lO'l.oOO and is said to have Rood prospects. P.ackinrr Is said to come from the owners of the Kala-mazoo-tirand Rapids line, which is desirous of having direct connections with Ohicatro by electric road. ACCIDENT HESIITS FATALLY. Thomas Jones. 28 years old, was run down and instantly killed by a northbound freisht in the yards of the Motiun railroad at Monon early this morning. He came here about three weeks ago and has been in the em1 loy of the Monon Crushed Stone company. A photograph was found on his perpon. showing: him in naval uniform, but nothing- has yet been ascertained concerning the man prior to his appearance here. The coroner will hold ;i n inquest tomorrow. He had been drinkintr during the eveninur and had been warned to k i p off the tracks. IS IT ST VTK PRISON. The state prison at Michigan City, was visited yesterday by Eugene . Purine, H. C. Stewart, and O. L. Jones, a committee from Baltimore, Md.. accompanied by Joseph P. livers of Trenton, X. J, secretary of the national prison conprress, and at one time ...nnected with the Indiana reforma

tory The committee if looking ln'o'trirls

r!nn management and methods at in lworklne in citrar or lobacro factories.

' - . . I...

stitutions repurde.l as models ot tneir j street.

kind, and expects to apply its find

includiiij

some women inspectors, are declared to be necessary, although the e f -

hcieney of the state factory inspection department is praised. Taking u the prison labor question at the Indiana reformatoi y, a matter in w hich he declares sliKht progress has been made in the last year, Mr. Perkins attacks the prison labor contract systerr. and urKfs labor to endeavor to obtain from the legislature an act empowering the reformatory to buy a sufficient amount of land to furnish employment for many of the inmates. Bills which he lists as. having failel at the last session, but which should again be introduced and should he pressed are the follow Ins: A bill reprulatlng women's work; a bill restricting: the use of injunctions in labor disputes and legalizing trades unions; a bill providing for the employment of expert shot flrers in co;l mines; a bill providing for sanitation In foundries. The last two conventions, he points out, have gone on record as beinK in favor of free text books in the public schools, and the 1911 convention of the federation ordered a bill of this character to be prepared for submission to the general assembly. He expresses confidence that a workman's compensation act will be passed eventually. He sas: "Yet wa should plant ourselves firmly on tho proposition that we want no compensation iaw that contemplates a repeal of the two liability laws passed at tho last session of the legislature. Thit an effort is belnsr made to repeal 'these laws Is no secret. The attempt will be made to repeal them outriprht or to emaculate them through amendment. The efficiency of this legislation is thus made apparent. The best recommendation for. their retention Is ths opposition of tho;o who find their operation over. "And we should be careful that wa are not beguiled in to a loss of thosa excellent measures throueh substitution of an experimental compensation law." Mr. Perkins say the child labor law enacted at the last session of the legislature was an Improvement over the old law-, but he says it was a compromise and that In order to pet . it passed at all it was necessary to eliminate some of the features that wer contained in the original bill. H says the next letri s'.a t ure should amend the present law by addincr to It those features which failed to pet In at the last session. He declares that labor should Insist on the inhibition against

less than eighteen vears Old

to the Ma.rland prison.

Higher Courts' Record. Supreme Court Minute. 2221. Pavld W. Kierrish vs. the stat--of Indiana. Clinton C. C. Appellant's reply brief. Supreme Court New Suit. 222S4. James Uli ntrwort h ft. si.. v. Frank Funk. I'.enton ". C. Record. Separate assignments of error. In term. llnd ppeln1e Court Minute. 773. The P.altimore & Ohio Southwestern Kailroad company vs. the Cincinnati, La wrenc-r bu rr A Aurora Electric Street Railway. Itearborn C. C. Appellant's additional authorities. S369. Joseph Lynch vs. Edith Poyer. Marlon S. C. Appellee's briefs. Appellate Court .New Suit. 8473. Adams Express company et. al. vs. Ernest. P. Velborn. Gibson S. C. Record, separate assignments of error. Joinder in error. In term. Bond.

ARK YOU READING THE TIMES?

trades of children. he sys.

should be a matter for reculatlon; tha ace at which children may be permitted to work at nijrht should be raised: and that part of the law which permits children to work In cannln factories should be stricken out. With these corrections, he says, Indiana, would have .1 child labor law that would put it in the frnt rank of tha states. Perkins attacks the proposed parnish e law, ami says that there is practically no dancer that it evfr will ha passed. It has been before many lepislatures in Indiana, he sajs, and always has been kil'ed. Perkins recommends that labrr taka action looking to a proper celebration of Indiana's centennial In 1 9 1 . and says that labor should take part in It. He repeats what he has said In former annvial reports in regard to the necessity for kecpirp tho state inspection bureau out of party politics. OT this subject he siys: "So far as I have knowledge, '.his eriti'ism cannot lie a.painst the department at this time, but the best manner in which future criticism can he prevented is by placing the department on a plane removed from party affairs."