Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 101, Hammond, Lake County, 25 September 1912 — Page 4

4f

THE TIMES.

Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1912.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS t Ts l-afce County Printing; and Pn a. 11. hi a i; Coupiiy,

The UXe County Times, dal.y except Bungay, "entered as second-class mat ler June IS, 106"; To Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and BanCay, enteted Feb. I, mi; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. S, !(.; Tha Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, catered Jan. SO. mi; The Times, dally txcept Sunday, entered Jan. 15. 11J. at the postoffjo at Hammond. Indiana, ail under the act of March . 117a, Entered at the PottofJcu. Hammond Ind.. as second-class matter.

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UKCKR PAID CP CIKCCLATIO THAN A XT OTHKH TWO EW. PAPERS IN THK CAI.UMKT REUIOY

ASOXTJIOUS communications will

not be noticed, but others will be

printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor. Times. Himtnond. Ind.

For WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. Against FRKF, TRIDK AND Fit KB SOI P.

T.,

Hammond Corr.manelery, No. 41 K.

will visit Gary, Wednesday, Sept. 25

when South Bend will confer the Malta

decree In full form. Leave Sibley and

Hohman 6;3u p. in. Hammond Chapter, No. 117. It. A. M.

will meet Tuesday, Sept. 24, Instead of Wednesday, Sept. 23. Mark Master de

gree, t

WHAT STILL WELL DID.

In speaking of Enos Porter, who recently repudiated Roosevelt, a Bull

Mooae paper says: He broke every promise he had made, and violated his written pledpe. He voted for the Taft forces, or refused to vote at all on every roll call at the Republican national convention. When ho came home he was ostracised politically by all politicians who believe a man In public life should at least keep his word.

And yet Horace StillweJl and his

lieutenants at the Chicago conven

tion used every means in their power to get instructed Taft delegates to break their pledges and faith with their constituens. Stlllwell said he

was authorized to offer political pa

tronago and even went bo far as to offer to take one Taft delegate to

Roosevelt personally for verification of Stlllwell's promise, should the

Taft man decide to be a renegade.

YOU remember, expert physician said that Charles W. Morse over ;

year ago hadn't six months to live

Well, Mr. Morse never felt better in

his life. Oh, these E. P's.

WHfcN Heveridge begins to taik

back to the newspapermen he might as well get off the stump and return

to the columns of the Saturday Even

lng Post.

THE PRESIDENT SIGNED MOST WILLINGLY The industrious circulation of the falsehood that President Taft threatened veto of the Sullowav bill was one of the chief plays of his opponents and

worked some injury to his popularity, as his adversaries had planned. That there was no truth in this every senator, representative and other public man could have known if he cared to inquire. "Yet it was a good enough Morgan till afVr the nomination."

Xow these same men are with equal industry and untruth circulating the

report that President Taft signed the act of May 11 most unwillingly and was only coerced into it at the last moment. Nothing could be more untrue.

There had been an overwhelming popular demand for additional pension

legislation. The people were most earnest in their wish that the veterans who

had saved the nation should be properly tared for during the years that remained to them. The national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic had asked for such legislation. The remarkable fact of the indorsement of the Sullowav bill bv the legislatures of twenty-seven states was an

stonishing development of depth and wide extended feeling on the subject. Could ar.v president be expected to disregard such a manifestation? Cer-

WEALTHY man in New Jersey advertises that he will pay his own debts. Well, really that's more than some are doing.

Wil

H. Taft. whose great heart has always appreciated

the the

tainlv not

service of the veterans and who has ever been quickly responsive to

popular will.

No one doubted at the beginning of congress that he intended to approve a

pension bill. This knowledge had to be used with the utmost discretion, how

ever. 1 he presidential campaign was opening. 1 here was a general expecta

tion that the Democrats wouid make a strong effort to 'put the president and

the senate in a hole" on the pension question. The fear was not allayed until within a few davs of the passage of the act of May 11. This required the

greatest circumspection on the part of the president and his friends. But as soon as the act of May 11 began to take shape in the senate and months be

fore it actually passed there was no real doubt that the president would sign

the bill which would be finally formulated.

At the invitat-on of senators T was a constant visitor to the capitol whne

tbe bill was going through its various stages. I was aso made a means of communication with the members of the invalid pensions committee of the house. With me went most frequently Tast Commander In Chief John R.

King, less frequently Past Commander Slavbaugh of Fotomac, Commander E. S. Godfrey, Arizona; Commander Granville C. Fiske, Massachusetts; Commander N. H. Kineman. South Datoka : Commander N. P. Kingsley, Pennsyl

vania, and other prominent comrades wlio happened to be in the city and whom the senators wanted to see and counsel with.

We met Senators Crane, McCumber, Curtis, Smoot. Burnham and others of the president's closest friends and advisers. They were confident in their assurances that the president would sign the bill. The comrades named felt no sioubt of the result at least two months before the bill was signed. As we all know, President Taft put himself to great personal inconvenience in order to sign the bill and let it begin at once its beneficence to the veterans. The bill was net ready for his signature when he left for Princeton, N. J. lie made the jourrey back to Washington expressly to sign the bill. He reached the White House a little before 11 p. m.. Saturday, May 11, affixed his signature seven minutes before midnight and had to leave Washington again the next dav. Of these facts I was personally cognizant, as I was present when the bill was signed. JOHN M'ELROY,

Editor National Tribune. I fully concur in the foregoing. There is absolutely no truth in the statement that the president was opposed to any pension bill. On the contrary, we were assured, as stated above, that he would give his approval to the bill when finally passed, which was evidenced bv his hastv return to Washington fcr the purpose. JOHN R. KING. From the National Tribune.

EXCHANGE says that the aver

age newspaper reporter thinks he is

writing learnedly when he refers to a poison as a toxin.

CHEER UP! Many persons take life too seri

ously. They lose sight of the fact

that this country has seen troubles

of all kinds, some the most monu

mental of modern times, and always arisen smiling to pursue its destiny the furnisnihg of homes and prosperity to millions. True, there are a lot of things to worry those of little faith, but they

are mere details going to make up

the sum total of everyday life. Then there are those who worry

overmuch as to who is going to be

president. There is another matter that rests with tbe mass of the people. Having made up your mind which

way you are going to vote, forget

the worriment. Why worry?

iiuw is it mat in every community there are three or four noisy Bull Moosers and everybody else is

quiet?

ENGLISH girl visiting here Pay

Americans need repose. Oh, shucka.

we have no time for repose. Too much going on we don't want to

miss.

is enjoyed by you? Don't you further realize that the new wealth produced from the soil in this good year of 1912 will approximate the stupendous totil of $9,000,000,000 ? Subtract from that immense sum the difference in prices for your farm products row find inMSOG. and you

will then realize what a continued Republican administration is worth to you. Wheat is worth more than twice what it was in 1S96 and crop experts put the 1912 crop at 700,000,000 bushels. That makes a neat little addition to your bank roll, does It not? The crop experts say the corn crop this year will reach a total of 3,000,000,000 bushels. This cereal is worth better than four times what it was in 1890 77 1-2 cents now against 19 1-2 in 1S96. That helps out the right side of your ledger some, don't it? The oats crop is simply immense this year and the grain was quoted at 35 1-2 cents per bushel in Indianapolis Saturday. That beats the 1S9G price of 14 3-1 cents by better than 20 cents on the bushel. That's some help. It is the same thing with your hay, your clover seed, your hogs, your cattle, and everything else you have produced on the farm. And to think that you would jeopardize the present prosperity by voting against William H. Taft for president is to imagine the highly improbable. You who have farmed sixteen or twenty years know the difference between Cleveland free trade times and the prosperous times under William Taft in 1912.

WHAT has become of Mary Ellen Lease, and why isn't she shouting for the Hull Moose.

WAITING patiently to hear from the Piutes and the Abernathy kids.

A WORD WITH FARMERS.

Upon the rural routes of this and

adjoining counties nearly two thou

sand farmers read this paper.

We have a few words with them

both Democrats and Republicans. Farmers of Lake county, do you recall the prices that you could get for your products in 1S96 the tail end of the Cleveland administration the last Democratic national ad

ministration? Fon't you remember that corn In Chicago in that year of financial distress was quoted as low as 19 3-1 cents per bushel; oats, 14 3-4 cents per bushel and wheat 4 8 3-4 cents per bushel. On last Saturday in Indianapolis these same products were quoted: September wheat, J1.02 per bushel; corn, 77 1-2 cents per bushel, and oats, 35 1-2 cents per bushel. Didn't you thoroughly realize that the low prices and hard times prevailing at the time in 1896 were caused by the tariff Juggling with a free-trade tendency by the Democrats in the house of representatives, aided and abetted by President Cleveland? Don't you recall that upon the election of William McKlnley and the readoptlon of protection that business revived and the prices for your farm products advanced by leaps and bounds until the present high level

PROF. Wilson had a dollar dinner the other day. You remember that the man who started the dollar dinner business never won.

THE third termer is still calling worthy men liars and thieves.

LINCOLN AND ROOSEVELT. There was perhaps no young man in the country who was more ambitious than Abraham Lincoln, but in addition to his ambition Lincoln had

a level head and he had some regard

for the rights of others. He was not inclined to damn or otherwise to condemn those who had the temerity to hold some opinions of their own. The truth is that Lincoln in the one thing that made him greatest was the very opposite of Theodore Roosevelt and the attempt to make another Lincoln out of Roosevelt is one of the most preposterous things ever attempted by men who seem to be reasonably intelligent on other subjects. Roosevelt has done some great things; he has had a great mind, but he and his designing friends abused his talents. Huntington Herald.

THE CITY MARKET AGAIN. Hammond grocers maintain that they do not at all object to the establishment of a city market in that

city. They say that their profit on farm produce Is so small and the loss in handling perishable goods is so great that there is really nothing in the business. Nevertheless, City Sealer Frank O'Rourke has the evidence, he says, that a number of grocers have been depreciating the market plan and in some instances have told farmers that they need not try to sell them produce if they are going to participate in the city market. This looks a great deal like intimidation. It also looks as though there are some grocers in Hammond who do not relish the prospect of having the farmer sell his produce at a slight advance over what he, the grocer, had to pay for it. This is another proposition that requires some breadth of view. The little narrow-minded grocer will see his profits diminisihng as a result of the opening of the city market. The grocer of calibre, however, takes a different view of the situation. He knows that if Hammond becomes the logical market for the truck farmers of the county that they will come, not only to sell their produce, but also to spend the money they get from the people. The result will be apparent to the live business man. He may lose the profit'. on a peck of potatoes, a dozen ears of corn, a half bushel of tomatoes, etc., but he will get It back when he sells that selfsame farmer a ten dollar bill of groceries. Frank O'Rourke is going to see this proposition through, no matter what opposition he encounters. It is a good thing that the project is in the hands rf a man whose backbone

is a stovepoker, otherwise it would be another case of "boulevard lights." The only regrettable thing about the whole project is the fact that it has been delayed so many times that it is about o lie sarted at the very worst time of the year.

SERIOUS CITIZENSHIP.

In a recent Issue the Richmond

(Va.) Times-Dispatch printed

short editorial which Mr. Bryan's

Commoner thinks ought to be read

in every precinct, in every state of the Union and posted ud on every

school house. In every counting room and factory in the land. The Times is willing to join in bringing to as wide attention as possible said editorial. It follows: There Is nothing more Important than that we should take our citizenship seriously. Some people take it as a joke, some as a frame, some as a chance to help friends or prind axes. No man is worthy of citizenship unless he regards It as a mission and uses it for the common pood to free his fctlowmen f rom every kind of servitude and oppression and make them their own levers to raise

themselves to better estate. Citizenship is a duty, and every man who has a high Ideal of life, who makes it bravo and serviceable, has a ripht to be called a eltlezn and no other should be enrolled upon the roll of honor. A citizen Is a man who honors his city, his state and his nation by livlner risrht and doing pood. Such a one repards citizenship seriously. The dity of citizenship i:s committed to each man as a trust to be discharged always for the common welfare and the hipher purpose. A ballot Is to be used for the benefit of mankind and not for the advantape of Individuals."

THAT peculiar feeling of embarrass

ment that comes over a newly-married man who just doesn't like to call his mother-in-law by the name of mother

is usually relieved when he is able to call her grandma.

KCIKNTISTS now say that ere long we'll soon be able to extract eggs and other nitrogenous products from the

air. And if they ever do we fear that

bad eggs will result if the Pittshurg atmosphere Is run through any extracting process. "THK merit of this prince both in private and public life may with advantage be set in opposition to that of any monarch or citizen which the annals of any ape or nation can present to us." David Hume's sketch of Alfred the. Great. This was all right a generation apo, but since the advent of the immortal T. It. the publishers will have to tone this description down a little. AS it is Miss Republican Party doesn't want Senator ;avit and Recorder Jones wearing her (lowers at any of Miss Hull Moosey's soirees, so kindiy reM?rn yout honors, gentlemen. STORMY times ahead for the superior court Gale vs. Gale, :dll. Is the latest suit filed in room number one. Somebody, pleas", hand Judge Reiter a slip

over and a pair of goloshes. YKS. and if it so happened that the steel corporation had decided to support t fie national prohibition ticket this fall the Gary Tribune, would have followed suit with equal alacrity. 'FIND MAN CALLF.D PKAP." Examiner headline. Ret you he once lived in .Michigan City. AN honest cop in a bip city nowadays is as scarce as an honest street paving contractor in a small town. THKSi; polar pictures that they are showinp around at the yhotoplay houses will do until about Nov. 15 when the more Icy ones showinp a post-election gathering of ex-bill moose candidates will probably tak? the popular fancy. NOTIOK that old Judge Pete Grosscup lias joined the Armapeddon movement. If we remember riphtly It was tbe colonel, who as president, denounced Pete as nn "undesirable" when he tinkered with Judge Landls $30.000.000 fine. Pete evidently has been shrived since. GREAT CAKSAR: Tettlcoat factory goes out of business because they aren't wearing 'em any more. Without a doubt the very skirtmakars are also

shaking in their boots. WOOPROW WILSON has at last attained fame. The colonel has nominated him for membership in the Ananias club. IF It wasn't for the diabolical cookinp In some of the restaurants a lot of girls would still be single.

"THE SCUM OF THE EARTH."

y 2mSAr fe&fc Ah

-v. -v-v, c a w v,-, m- '."it "t" i ima. XV ever j t-.w t j -t ,p ,

. a VNX1

Motions and Orders

ALMOST time for the bald-headed men to hold a convention of rejoicing over the near approach of the disappearance bf the housefly.

THE London Lancet says the cigarette i3 the least harmful of smoking. Still. Lucy Gaston Page will

never close her denunciaitn of tha

"makins."

WE are so much interested in the press notice of "The Girl of the Underworld," by the Rensselaer Republiean "-A laugh in every line, a scream in every sentence, and a roar in every act." Note the title care-

Ifully

THE LOCOMOTIVE WORKS. There is every reason to believe that there is something in the report that the American Locomotive

company is to start building its Gary

plant.

The time is ripe, the steel business

never so favorable, and the demand for locomotives never of such volume. And the American company-

has been busy watching this region

ever since its chief rival, the Bald

win company, secured its site at

Calumet.

When the United States Steel corporation a few days ago sold twentyfour Broadway lots something that it hasn't done in nearly five years and accompanied it with the announcement that a new residential

section would be subdivided the

move carried with it more than ordinary significance. We think that we shall learn its significance in a very fhort time. In connection with the location of these plants In Gary, the Gary Tribune last night made the following remarkable statement: The locations of the American "Car and Foundry company and the American Locomotive company In Gary has done more Injury to the growth of the new city than they have done pood. What do you think of a newspaper professing to have the commercial welfare of the city at heart making such a statement as that?

Up and Down in INDIANA

E A

BY RUBE

A VISION of dirty dishes at home comes to us when we read about those bull moose ladies selling stamps with the colonel's picture on them for $10 eac h.

ARMY HEAD TAKKS MOHPHIK. I lisheartened because of financial reverses and the serious illness of his wife, Capt. W. II. Rarker, head of the Salvation Army work at Klwood for the past two years, attempted to com

mit suicide at his homo by taklnp morphine. He was unconscious when found. Three physicians worked with him several hours before the drup's effects bepan to wear away and he is reported still in a serious condition. Harker came to Klwood from Newcastle shortly after bis marriape, his wife, the dauphter of a wealthy farmer, having; been disinherited because she entered the army work. 1. Y LIGHT THIKF TIKI-.S CiF.MS. The boldest diamond robbery in the history of South Rend Is holdinp the attention of the police. Retween 11 and 12 o'clock a thief entered the residence of former Mayor IV R. J. Schafer. almost In the heart of the city, and stole gems valued at $I,O00. The booty consisted of two solitaire diamond rlnps and one set with a sapphire and ten diamonds. There Is no clew to the robber. The thief entered the. house throusrh an unfastened door. The rings were taken from a cabinet. Nothing else was molested. IJIKS WHII.K n n IC. nOILKR. There is considerable mystery attendinp the death of Georpe Dunn, 43 years old, which occurred in a boiler at the plant of the Western Motor company at Marlon. Dunn and other employes were enpaped in maklnp repairs. Iunn was inside the tube working, when he rolled over dead. First it was believed he had been electrocuted by the current supplyinp a hand lamp which he was usinp. The city electrician said the lamp was receiving only 150 volts, insufficient to cause death. It is said Dunn was not suffocated, as there was plenty of ventilation. Coroner Cameron will hold an autopsy. HOLDS I I rtSHIKIt FOR V0. While a crowd of shoppers pazed. a robber mounted to the wrapplnp department of a department store at Marlln, covered the cashier with n pistol, seized $S00, strode through the crowd and escapeil without being molested. SCHOOL BOYS PHOVK KIOTO! S. Class riots In the hlph school at Redford have become serious. Members of the freshman and sophomore classes, not content with grotesquely cutting each other's haid, have began to attack Juniors who ride wheels. Several attempts to throw riders and wreck wheels have resulted in narrow escapes from serious injury. The police department has been called on to step the practice. MYRION C;iRL DHIVKS POISON. Mattie Oliver. 19 years old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Oliver, residing near Matthews, committed suicide at the home of Mrs. Ellen Sibley In Gas City, where she had been passing the summer, drinking carbolic acid after having threatened to kill herself for several days. It is believed a love affair was behind her deed, although her sweetheart, Rert Rrewster of Gaa City, asserts there was no trouble between them and that they had planned to be married in a few weeks. Miss Oliver Is said to have told friends she was going to end her life, "because no one loved her."

6533 Lottie Lipinski vs. T. Ywanow, etc. Motion for new trial overruled. T035 James McQuaid, etc., vs. Wolf Marcovich. Court rinds for plaintiff for $107.22 with relief. Judgment.

7104 John lilde vs. Dennis I'alKfloi et 1

al. Plaintiff's application to prosecute as poor person Is granted. Defendant files plea In abatement. 71S3 Edwin W. Bump, etc., vs. J. A. McGrannahan, etc. Motion for new trial sustained. Defendant excepts. Koiiiii No. 2. 7571 Frank Welnand vs. C. L. S. & S. R. Railway Co. Plaintiff dismisses as per stipulation at defendant's costs. Judgment. 7Si3 Katherine Winderoth vs. Mary McLaughlin -t al. Plaintiff files Interrogatories to be answered by defendant Mary McLaughlin on or before Sept. 23. 8413 Steve Lanpowskl vs. Ignatz Bursky et al. Defendant Bursky files affidavit for change from county. Granted. Porter superior court. Ten days. S55 f Maurice L. Horner vs. Bertha Warne et al. Flalntlff dismisses, costs paid. 8930 John Cafliseh vs. Snow Steam

Pump Works et al. Defendant city of Hammond files motion to quash service of garnishee summons and return.

9144 Orpha Hadley vs. Herman W. Hadley. Defendant defaulted. 0313 Emma Dunn vs. Howorth A. Dunn. Plaintiff dismisses, costs paid. P332 Hearing on citation issued for defendant continued to Sept. 30. 9334 Charles L. Rrown vs. Alice Rrown. Defendant defaulted. 942 Hammond Savings & Trust Co. vs. A. C. Huber et al. Defendants defaulted. Find for plaintiff for I1SK.20 plus $18 attorney's fees, without relief. 542!) American Trust & Savings bank vs. Georpe Rrahos et al. Defendants defaulted. Find for plaintiff for $1,995.40 and $150 attorney's fees, wltheut relief. Judgment. 9507 Elizabeth Hodcl vs. John Hodel. Defendant ordered to pay $5 per week allowance to plaintiff on each Tuesday, and $25 attorney's fees. 9526 Rank of Whiting vs. Albert Harms et al. Defendant Mrs. C. L. Wildermuth suggests her name to be Cordelia. Room No. .1. 6790 Mike Ple.sa et al. vs. Rernard P. Muller etc. Mike Flesa files amended complaint. Taken ma confessed. Defendant defaulted. Find for plaintiff for $500. Judgment.

946S Dessie Shobe vs. Daniel D. Shobe. Ordered that defendant pay to plaintiff $20 a month for her support during pendancy and $10 on 1st and 36th of -ach month. That all the children be committed to the care and custody of Samuel Rhobe of Rochester, Fulton county, until further order of court. Defendant ordered to pay plaintiff $25 for attorney's fees on or before Oct. 1. 8763 .Mary D. Nagle vs. Wm. J. Harvey et al. Defendant Wm. J. Harvey defaults. Plaintiff dismisses aa to first andhird paragraphs of complaint. Cross complainant dismisses her cross complaint. Receiver discharged on making final report and approval of report. Plaintiff dismisses as to Wm. J. Harvey. Defendant Rertha Harvey Hlrsch to Improve property as per stipulation on file. Plaintiff abides rulings of court on demurrer and refuses to plead further. Find for defendant that plaintiff take nothing as against defendant Bertha Harvey Hirsch by reason thereof, and that she recover costs. Plaintiff prays appeal to supreme court. Granted. Bond in sum of $50 with L. V. Cravens and IV R. Roylan as sureties. Approved. To be filed In thirty days.

Ton will say that a LaVendor claf cannot be beat. If you try one.

DEI

i

SYLVAN IA

LINES

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