Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 111, Hammond, Lake County, 7 October 1912 — Page 4

4

THE TIMES.

Mondav. Oct. 7. 1012

THE T

NEWSPAPERS T Tk Iarka County l'rtatla- and FnW tiaklua. Coatfiaar.

Th UK County Times, dal.y except Sunday, "enterod as second-class matter Juna 28. J80S"; The Lake County Times, daily except Saturday and Bunfiay, entered Feb. I. 1111; The Oary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 5, 10; The Laka County Times. Saturday and weekly edlttoa. entered Jan. 80, 1911; The Times, daily xcept Sunday, entered Jan. 16. HIS. at the poatofflca at Hammond. Indiana. undar the act of March I. Ii7. Entered at the Postofflco. Harotronil Ind.. as second-class matter.

IN T1IK COOL nV THE EVKMSG. In the cool of tie evenlaK, nhru Ihe low, Hvreet hlpera nnkru. Whro the laborer turn them hompwar!. and the weary hae ttwir miii hea the ceusert of the tomcm iVr the foreait ailr are abaken, la it hut the tvlatl tbnt eomptU o'er the far urern hill f S-ir they way ti.M hut the hunnrt vtuUi that wander through the heather, ltuaffe all the meadow rns.H aud beid the ilenjr fern: They Hay 'tis but the vlndn that bow the reeds lu prayer together. And till the khnkcu pool with Ore alimi; the Khadony burn.

In

the

I dhkk; 12 Rector

AI)VKHTl.MJiU Buildlna;

UPFICK.. Chicago

PCBI!CT10X OFFICE), Hammond tul)d!nr. Hammond. Ind.

IELIlFHU.X KB, Hammond tprlvata cxcnaogre) . . . . , . (Call for detarta.dnc irtnttl)

111

Gary Office East Chicago Office. Indiana Harbor Whttlr.ir Crown Point Heg-ewisch

Tel. 137 Tt. 69-J , .Tel. 349M; 160 Tl. 0-M , Tel. 63 TeL 11

Advertising solicitors will Da aea: rates given on application.

or

II you have any trouble getting T&a Times notify the nearest offlca and have it promptly remedied. UAKUGK PAID 11 CIHCtLATlOS TI1A.N A.VT OTHKH TWO EV. APKR IN' THK OiLCMF.T KFtilON.

the beamy of the twilight. In

Harden that He lovelh. They have veiled Ills lovely vesture vvitb the diirkneNM of a name! rhroiih Him f4urieii. through Hi Karit. en. It it but the "ind that mo vet h.

.No more! lint oh. the niiraele, the

miracle 1 the Maine.

In

when the

the eool of the evenliisr,

sky Ik an old Mory, Slow ly tly Inc. but rememtiered, aye, and loved tilth passion mill

HiiKh! the frlnues of Ills Knr-

ment. In the fading' golden clory. Softly riJMtltnjt He Cometh o'er the far trern hill. ( Mfretl ojr.

They are properly supervised and the

big policemen who look after the boys are the best friends they have. Manifestly the injuries that have resulted so far are the result of improper supervision. Hoys have had to learn at t he expense of a craeked rib or a. broken arm that this or that is dangerous. ' By all means leia encourage the school playground. It is a great institution but let's devise some plan for supervising them or else concentrate them in two locations; one on the north side and one on the south side and then employ two competent supervisors. It would be a good idea to Ret Judge Willis lirown's expert advice

on the matter of the supervision of these playgrounds. He is right in the basic principles which he lays down for the government of juveniles.

stump speaking tours and abusing

each other like drunken fish-wives. I

Charges of falsehood, Insincerity, hypocrisy and betrayal of trust are hurled back and forth until the public is fairly deafened by the din. In the old days of forty and fifty years ago it was considered a national reproach and disgrace because the party papers and the party orator?, lampooned and attacked the opposition candidates for the chief magis

tracy, yet at that presumably ruder

day these candidates themselves at least possessed the dignity and grate to sit silent, themselves and to allow others to do the dirty work. Fort Wayne News.

Gary Balkan Patriots on Way to V ar and Veteran Chief

ANONYMOUS communications will mot fca noticed, but others will ba printed at discretion, and shoa'd bs addressed to The Editor. Times. Htmuinirl Ind.

-"433

WILLIAM

For HOWARD TAFT.

Against FKEE TRADE AND FREE SO IT.

come about through the stirring fight against the powers of evl! in West

Hammond there is small dispute. "How far the little candle sends its beams" indeed!

"PUT us off at Armageddon." Indianapolis Star. Have somebody pinch you. You are already off.

PROF, has discovered a love note on a Babylon brick 4.000 years old. What a snap life was in those days. If a man threw a brick he could say that he was just sending a love note.

WHAT has become of the old-fashioned drummer who used to get into town in the, afternoon behind a spanking team and then before night have the milliner out riding?

NEW York Telegram says New York is the Mecca for cranks. Superfluous information.

MAKE the best, of this glorious

October weather. We have several corns and a hunch that it isn't going

to last long.

QUESTION' did Trof. Wilson get away rom Gary without being hailed as "Woody old pal" by Alderman Tim Englehart?

WELL you certainly were importuned to register, enough. Tisn't our fault you don't get a vote next month.

Hammond Commandery No. 41, rest- ! ular meeting- Monday, ('ft. 7. when j

Lincoln l arn commandery will confer the Order of the Temple. Refreshments.

Hammond Chapter No. 117. regular meeting Wednesday, T. M. and M. E. M.

It. A. Oct.

M

WHERE DID YOU GET IT? Imagine, if you can, the consternation that would come upon the world of money-lovers if this great question

were asked and a truthful answer compelled in every case where we now ask, "How much have you?" Suppose men were so determined to have no "tainted money" wrung from the pnor, that when a man wanted to buy a house he would be asked, before he counted his money, "Where did you get it?" Suppose, before a man could buy a spool of thread, a steak, a suit of clothes or a loaf of bread, the question, "Where did you get it?" should precede the acceptance of his money. Then, and not until then, would honest toil be s-t its true part; for the dime dishonestly earned would become as valueless as the common street dirt. Money is acquired dishonestly bv

scheming tyrants of trade ami by men in low business, because it wlU pass as par any place, and be refused by none because few social distinctions or disbarments are created on account of the source from which wealth comes and because the overmastering question is not "Whore did you get it?" but "How much have you?" America's greatest vice is the love of money. It is our duty to make tainted money as valueless as tainted character is repulsive. If every tainted dollar were refused by every honest man. the dirty dollar would be as valueless as a canceled postage stamp.

WHY THEY GO TO INDIANA. It is pleasing to see the Calumet

region grow even if of late most! of

the gain has been in the shape of big industrial developments on the Indiana side of the state line. There are several reasons why in

dustries prefer to locate in the

Hoosier state. In the first place the legislature there has passed favorable laws and has maintained a friendly attitude toward employers of labor. This viewpoint is also reflected in the county and municipal governments of Indiana.

For instance, when a few streets in name only, never used, never recognized and not needed, are sought to be vacated to enable an industry to acquire a large undivided tract, in Indiana the authorities do not hold up the property owners for large sums for "compensation." In Indiana the state freely grants submerged land to factories along the shore of Lake Michigan. The former condition is held to be the reason

DENIES ITS DENIAL. On Tuesday. September 2 4, THE TIMES printed that there was a possibility that the American Loco

motive company might build very shortly upon it-s Gary site. The Gary Tribune ridiculed the story stating: "It is to be regretted that the rumors are In circulation. The locations of the American Car and Foundry compar.y and the American Locomotive company In Clary has done more injury to the growth of the new city than they have done good." This was certainly a remarkable

wulunl1 ,ut? canons oijxvhy lhe Baldwin Locomotive Works

1 u, '"a'" ",iu u"ue Xlu"e H'-ldid nor. locate north of Lake Calumet

jury to the growth of the city than they have done good." On Saturday The Gary Tribune printed these headlines on its editorial page: ALL SIGNS POINT TO PLANT IN GARY American Locomotive Company Is Having Great Rash of Business. Xo wonder that artorio-sclerosis is so prevalent;

A HINDI. housewife writes: "On hot afternoons I He down and listen to the cooing of the cuckoo in the distant mango grove or to the sweet music of the bulnil on the Kanuni flower plant, just, at the edge of the veranda." Far better than listening to the raucous music of the bull moose and bull con.

ELEGANT time to lay in-a lot of peek-a-boo hosiery and bathing suits for next summer.

LOTS of politics about, here just now but fail to see any woods on fire.

GET out of the wa; ball hero.

of the foot-

"4

IT REACHED TO CHICAGO. T I. 1 . . ,

in uie oi(i reauers mat you were

wont to carry to school until they were dog-eared and shabby, there was a little story about the little candle and the beam it threw so far. The

West Hammond situation brings forcibly to mind. The reformation of the city across the line brought

about, by the newspapers of Hammond and Miss Hrooks Is the candle

in the glcom that until now ha3 en veloped West Hammond. The crusade has gone farther h6w

ever. The light of the little candle

Is shining in Chicago. The day after

THE TIMES attacked Wayman edi

torially he started on his clean-up of

the world-famous vice districts in

Chicago and that this crusade has

SCHOOL PAYGR0UNDS. A number of Hammond school

children have been hurt while at play in the public play grounds.

There is an inclination to condemn

the institution for this rea-on. The trouble seems to be, not with the

idea but with the manner of its exe

cution.

It is conceded that anything

that promotes hard, enthusiastic play

in the fresh air is a good thing for pupils who art- confined in school rooms for five or sx hours a daw

What the pupil needs to be taught

is how to play. That is; how he mav

enjoy the privileges of the play

grounds and still not interfere with the rights of others.

The school boy or girl needs to be

taught the rules of the game without imposing pedagogical restraints;

fjr the old-time pedagogue is the worst killjoy in the world. Nothing delighted him or her more than to fill a room with stypian gloom. And

having done that, their high and lofty mission wan fulfilled. Ground rules ought to be made and enforced. Enforced by some one with the point of view of Judge Willis Hrown who makes boys be pood for the fun of being good and playing square. Then there ought to be constant

supervision of tic playgrounds while the children are there. If it. is impossible to have a supervisor for each of the playgrounds select some of the older hoys to enforce the rules. Work out the boy city idea in miniature. In Chicago the playgrounds are not scattered about the city where ever there is a school house but they . are concentrated in a single block.

near an unlimited labor market; the latter has freely been stated as the reason for the existence of the city of Gary. I'.ut these are not the only advan

tages that Indiana holds out to pros

pective factories. Property in Indiana Harbor and vicinity is made nttractive for indus

tries by aititicial waterway improve

ments costing millions. Before I'ncb Sam had promised assistance th Hoosier boosters built canaks and per

fected pi, ins for a great development

of terminal facilities. A canal is now

being dredged through Lake George which will become Whiting's inland harbor. Hammond will benefit from this and from the project to deepen

Calumet river from the Forks to the

Indiana Harbor canal.

They are getting busy in Indiana.

The big attractions there are facili

ties for cheap transportation by rail

and water, freedom from labor trou

hies and favorable and friendly gov

erning bodies. Unless the opportunities for water

way development m trie t aiumet re

gion are improved at. once by the city with its $5,000,000 bond issue now

avaiinbie. it is iiKoiy mat tne rivniry between the Chicago and Calumet rivers will soon be lost sight of and it will not be Chicago or Calumet, but it will bo "Chicago or Indiana." The Calumet river to Riverdale is also quite as susceptible of deepening as t he oast branch. We wb'h our Hoosier neighbors every possible success. Yv'e do not begrudge th meane iota of their splendid development. On the contrary, we are glad to be taught the excellent lesson of their example and to respectfully present tbes a me for the

consideration of our own powers that be, but which occasionally also slumber. Cu linnet Record.

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GREAT COAL QUESTION. Mr. George F. Faer. president of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, than whom it is hard to imagine any better authority, has said that there is no danger of a coal shortage this winter. Dealers say his view is far too optimistic, that there will be a short

age, and then go on to show why.

It's pleasant for the consumer, this

wide difference between the old doc

tors. Maybe if the worst happens we

can overcome the diflicultv bv deal

ing with Mr. Ra2r direct, but we

ought, to make sur-? of this before the

cold weather starts in earnest.

AND if you think THE TIMES dictionaries are not a. potent factor in the education of the people, you

ought to drop in and note how many

are selling.

IF W'm. Rugh got advertising rates

for all the space he has taken up in the newspapers, he would never need

to work again.

A NATIONAL SHAME.

Now that Professor Wilson has re

sponded in kind ana branded Colonel

Roosevelt as a crook the nation has before it a spectacle that is far from edifying. Here we have two men, candidates for the highest office in the land, going about the country on

ONE of the features of the present tryine tines is that T. R. ha j announe'l that he i? to make but one ypepch a (1 a y. CHICAGO cep gut dollar bribe, turned it over to the poor fund and arrested the yrivi r. 'e bate to say what would happen urre $10,000 shoved under a Chicaso top's beak. "I'liOXK makes people crazy." Gorman cable. No doubt from callins "one double one" and havlnjr the operator person pivinsf "two double nine" and then sayirifr. the llneisbtisypieasecaUacain," when you remonstrate with her. NO sooner does one of these sweet youner things marry a dentiwt or a chiropodist than they quit calilns him Aly or Bobby and insist that even the iceman refer to him as the doctor. l-'l'.WV how these little thinsrs worry the Chicago papers. '.Steemed Uec-rd-Herald Is printintr reams of editorials on the necessity of pronouncing latin correctly. "KILL the onion and you leave a pap in the universe. Kill anything els--e and there is a substitute. Tho onion is alone, unique, triumphant.

It is a Fpecial creation to tempt the palate of a weary world. It proves the futility of man's wisdom. H might have guessed at everything- ele under the sun, but he would have never guessed an onion." Exchange. Till? may be ail true but you can't make a girl whose beau is to come in the evening believe it; neither can you

tell it to a woman until after she has been married more than a year.

NOTICE that the Valparaiso studentssupplied the neee'ssary noise at the

Gary Peraocratlc rally." Strange and

unusual. Yalpo must be waking up.

EXCHANGE cites that while a irl nay be red-hraded nature sees that she ic.ver has to wear bust forms or hip

pads.

FROM now on these college presidents who write hooks on economic sub jects will profit by Dr. Wilson's sad

r-xporienee and make, no mention about

the "undersirabie men from .southwestern Europe. Getting so now days that a collegfa president never knows wbf-n they'll nif ke him a governor or a presidential candidate. AFTER reading the Orozoo and Madero dispatches one has to recall what old President Diaz said when he left that Mfxlro would not he able to fret aloriK without him. THfV; is the time, of the year when

the housewife is trying to take the tan off of her arms and at the same time trying to put tan on the green tomatoes

out on the pantry window sill.

WHAT'S the matter with the old-fash

ioned Irish politicians down in Ne.

York state? Ssee that candidates for governor Glynn. Howling-, O'Gorman and their bo.s, Murphy were routed out

by Heir Sulzer. "COAL prices to go up." Headline

Wonder whereineil we poor consumers

will go to?

SUFFERING Tomcats: Timer states that there wilt be a new road built for

autoists. Where do the poor pedes trians get off at?

WONDER if the "Turks ever started in to menace Jerusalem a la Balkan

stvl whether the local Hebrew reser

vists would sro :o the front?

GREAT CHRISTOPHER: Here's our

weekly laundry bi'.l charging $l.rl for doing up a co-tple of fdjirts and wrecking a couple of collar?. Ten years ago

mother got the family

for a half dollar. Gt OI ) idea if women pet their rights and do sinokt-. There'll be a better selcrtion of Christmas cigars for their hubhys.

Up and Down in INDIANA

HI' III) lTr.HI,(KKI(i TO WE It. An Interlocking- rail system and operating tower is to be Installed at

washing done j Princeton ' "the C. E. I- and Southern Roads and the Evansville & South

ern Indiana I ra-lion company, m estimated cost of improvement beinsj $23,000. The main tower will be located on South West street, where all the roads cross. P.y this system the stopping of nil trai!;s at the traetion

atid railway junction away with.

will be done

I, EWE FOR SCENE OF WAR. j More than Jil'ty lot a! Greeks at For Wayne left today for New Yoik city, where they will embark in a few dajsj for the purpose of taking- up arms j atrainst Turkey. It is stated that fully!

100 more will leave before the end of,

the month. There- are more than 500 i

members of th local Grik colony, and !

every one Is now in a hlfch state of ex- ! citement. as word has come! that every I

ne of them may be needed soon. j SF.MOHS WIN TI G OK W.tH. !

The Day in HISTORY

"THIS HATE IN IIISTOllV October 7. 1756 New Hampshire Gazette, first newspaper In New Hampshire, established at Portsmouth. 1763 Cape Freton as annwexed to Nova Scotia. 17S0 Americana defeated the British at battle of Kings Mountain, North Carolina. -

Seniors of t

Collesre today won the annual tug of

war from tl.e juniors. rv-r-.-ora urns was made, the junior-; being pulled in

to the canal, across which the fight was waged, in two minutes. Many witness-

1 the struggle.

Winona Agricultural . i si 2 Napoleon defeated the Russia at

battle of the Moskowa. 1 891- Equestrian statue of Gen. Grant unveiled in Chicago. 1S94 Wendell Holmes, the poet, ilied In Boston. Born in C.imbrldp-e, Mass.. Auer. 29, IS','3.

1??5 William Mctmore Story, noted

sculptor, died near Florence. Italy. Born in Salem, Mass.. Feb. 1?. 1S19. 190S Harry A. Garfield Inaugurated as president of Williams Collttre. 191 The I.aurier cabinet lesitrned as a result of the Canadian general rlci-tlnns.

Sir Harry Adamson, Lieutenant Governor of Burma, f0 years edd today. Marquis of Doneg-all, bearer of ona of the most distincuished names In the Irish peeraee, fl years oi l today. General BeYVet. the famous South African lender. 6 years old today. Joseph E. Bansdell. Cnlted States senator-elect from Louisiana, 64 years old today. Edwin S. I'nderhill, representative in Conirress of the Thirtv-third district of New York, 51 years old today.

ROSE LAWN. Mrs. W. T. Right and son were Hammond shoppers Saturday. Albert I. Fries was In town Satur-

Mrs. Henry Cobb, of Thayer, was s Is op phis here Saturday. Jim Gillespie has taken a trip to Virginia. T. W. Burton was in town Saturday. Harvey Clark, wife fnd father, are visitors at the Button resort this week. Mr. Myers and Mr. Ed Jones of Walk ertnn. were here on motor cycles Saturday.

DAILY FASHION HINT.

IJETS JlllGMF.Vr I-Olt $7,420. A jury In the Circuit court today

gave Ulysses c. f-mepp juujfmem ir

7 42" aeainst the Indiana nridg$ Com

pany Of iiuncie tor injuries susuu io-u

while, operating at Kkomo in March, 131U. Two years as,o a jury at Winchester awarded Shepp $S.'ro hut the

verdict was set as Hie. jn tiai w be taken.

INSPECTION IS CAMIM.ETE. Generar and Mrs. It. W. Hoyt left to

night for St. Paul. 1 tie Ufparimeni

commander completed his held inspection of the Tw.-nty-tliirdlrifantry this morning: in a problem in cc-upyitiR a

defensive position ant constructing

It'll" trcn-hes. The Third Battalion h, 1.1 field dress parade an I a di ill in B-'.tt's Manual at French Li'-k. . :' t ' - i "'"' The e"orj:-orva tiv o Friends will open t':eir aun'ial nte.-tinir at the Sugar Oiove ('uuru-i, near P'.ainaeld. Aniotii

peaKers vvi.i t-e x u mtt r isnei, adciphia; lieu jam i i Brow n and

Out land. of Woodland

o 'v i i e r of Ph

.-.-id M- aud .. Wichita. Kas. Fri.'nds snot w! ! -etina: i n f '"e services. Tiici n tho old days

'i;i,n ! - :".: C. : Purine: a faimiy ','' 55 rears old, a f.irme r

N. C.

Cyrus Henry, of The Cuii.-rervatB e h tise V.; :. Vea.i; nu' : "t music at o;i: !; or.-iiip without music. . ; P. -l..V. 1 - ( c - r 1 1 .!M 1 lor e y

livincc near Ten-

t-

-.li

eriff

irobah'iy fntn :!y ''-y Sherman n, :;a ;i''.- old. his son-in-law. ant he ' ' "' :"! -ut a mi t itis seeking simpfion.

"THIS IS MV :TIT IlIUTIIDW" t.erKe (ram CooU. George Cram Cook, well known as an author, was born In Davenport, Iowa, i let. 7. 173. He spent three years at the Fmversity of Iowa and later enRaced in hit-'her studies at Harvard and the University of Heidelberg and the Fmversity of Geneva. Since the completion of his education he has had a most diversified career. He tramped over the irr-atcr part of Europe and upon his return to America he enlisted in the army for the Spanish war. ell visited Mexico, taught, school for a

number id jears and tried his hand at truck farming- before settling down to a career of writing r.nd political activities. Of late years he has made bis heme in his native city of Davenport, where he was a Socialistic candidate

for Congress two years hot. " best known literary works "Glimpses of Florentine Art.,' tion and the Superman."

Taliaferro" and "The Chasm." Congratulations t e : James Whit comb Riley, the ' Pof-t." 59 years old today. Kins Nicholas I. of Mor.tcn years old today.

n pi1! 1 JfPii

ii i

Ir. Cook's i n lade ' "Hvolii-Roderick

'I loo Si IT

.TO,

71

WHY ARE

i reader:

YOU NOT A TIMES

5327

Lady's Three Gored Skirt. Tlu.i styl'.'h model will serve cicely fat separate wear or for the development of a complete costume or coat fait. It is an Empire design, cut in three gores with the closing at the back. The woman who tloes not find tho Empire waistline becotnin? may use the normal one, as the pattern makes provision for either style. This model is a pretty one for the use of two contrasting materials so fashionable at the present time. The pattern. f.27. is cut in sizes 22 to "0 inches waist measure. Medium size requires 45i yards of S 5 inch material and 1 ynn" of 27-inch contrasting poods. The pattern can be obtained by sending 10 cent3 to tLc office of tLis paper.