Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 112, Hammond, Lake County, 8 October 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Tuesday. Oct. 8. 1912.

E T

EWSPAPERS

T l k t-mU. CoamtT Prlotlns; Fnk. Ushlax Cok7.

Tbe Lks Couuty Times. aal.jr except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 28. 10-; The Lake County Times. daily except featu rJay and SunCay, entered Feb. t. 1911; The Gary Evening Times, daily except Sunday, entered Oct. 6, 10; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 10, mi: The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. IS, 1913. at tb postotflce at Hammond. Indians. - tinder the act ot March I. It's. Entered at the PostofSca. HamtronX Ind.. as second -class matter.

EM iDAY

it Rector

Buildlnf

orFica;. Chicago

ri'BLICATIO.X OFKICKa. Hammond Bntldlna. Hammond. Ind.

TtLtl'UU.Kl, Hammond (private chait) Ill iCa.ll for departauu:t -ant4.) Gary Office Tel. 1S7 East Chicago Office Tel. 54P-J Indiana Harbor TeL 349M; 150 Whltlr. Tel. 89-M Crown Point Tel. 63 HtgewlfCh TeL IS

ot ean i:tciun;s. W hen larlmr gulden nnnrin hnd rnu, Ere nlglit lint on it m puriilo shroud, A treat tire opal sank the sun Within a bank of anther cloud. With deep turmolc the zrnilb GlraneU, And while the ninitn hreuthed of reWe Nailed n Men nhe riop'es seemed Like crimson petal of tlie rose. The eelln of darknrna, fold m fold. Spread o'er the heaven slu mlirrnusl y. While like n t.irge of burnished rold The moon crept up from out the ura. And vvhereso'er one looked, liehold. An nil the vtntrr unrrpinx wide, A magic moon of fsiry sold Reduplicated In the tide! Clinton Scoilard.

Thero slumbering ambition was iwakened, und reamed of possibilities

for usefulness were revealed, sluglsh 'mentalities were quickened, self-re-! ;pect- was inculcated, resourcefulness

' was developed and thousands were re

claimed from the rubbish heap of humanity. Progress is measured not by the heights to which men rise but by the distance the have climbed. Thousands of the graduates of the Brown and Kinsey school have climbed from the very bottom. The struggles of scores of students would make stories of tremendous human interest. H is another story of "t'p From Slavery" except that the characters are whites who have been enslaved by ignorance.

dTertlslna; solicitors will rates riven on application.

be seat, or

II you nave any trouole getting The Timet notify the nearest cfSce ard have It promptly remedied.

LAHGER PAID IP CIRCtLATIOJI THAN AN OTHER TWO NEWSPAPER IN THK CALUMET RCGIOY

AJnIOXTMOUS communications will sot be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and shood be addressed to The fci 1 1 a r. Times, Ham. mood. Ind.

433

For WILLIAM HOWARD T A FT. Against H1EE TRADE AD FREE SOUP.

WOMAN who pretends to know says the formula for living long and looking youn; is fresh air exercise and don't worry. We can get all the rest but would love to have a little more light shed on the don't worry stuff.

WOMAN eloped with another man and not only took the family bank roll but took hubby's steam launch. May be necessary to nai! all these things down when you leave home -even the family honor.

"HEAVEN has been kind to me in limiting my influence." said Governor Tom Marshall recently. Yes we think so and we think that heaven will continue to limit it to Indiana.

AND when you hear about Prof. Wilson's utterances that he is free from entanglement with bosses, remind yourself that T. Taggart. wa.s the boss of tie whole works when Wilson, spoke in Indianapolis last week.

Hammond Commandery, No. 41. clal conclave Monday, Oct. 14th, in. Work in Red Cross.

Spots p.

LOVINGNESS NOT ENOUGH.

The average young man of the present day rates his wife as an asset. He wants her to contribute to his

1 prestige in the social and business

world. If she is merely loving, without brilliancy or beauty, he argues that she will not add greatly to the matrimonial bargain. It used toTe different a few years ago, but the high cost of living makes

RUNNING THE ENGINE. Mr. Uoosvclt had a buily time In Montana on Sunday. He stuck to his rule never to make a speech on Punday; but he put in the whole day riding on the train and engaged in much interesting conversation, doubtless.

suited to . the Day of Rest from the things of time and sense. The only deviation from this strict observance was when he climbed into the engine

while the train was bumping along, crowded the engineer out of his peat, land, seizing the lever, ran the engine

Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M., regular meeting Wednesday, Oct. 9. P. SI. and M. K. M.

them take nowaday. -3.

few chances on e!th

WILSON AND GARY. Wilson's Gary organ is trying to explain away the professor's remarks

about the U. S. Steel corporation. The explanation could run sixteen instead of four columns and that's all the good it would do. Gary if Gary. The U. S. Steel Corporation is responsible for Gary, Gary

speaks for herself. All the Woodrow Wilsons and the fusty musty pedagogue in the world can't hurt Gary or the U. S. Steel Corporation. Incidentally there was a frost last night. You'll notice that as election time draws nigh Wilson enthusiasm, what little there is of it will die down and cold hard sense return. These nipping mornings and frosty nights bring the terror of the souphouse and the empty dinner pail right home.

WHO INDEED ? From a hafty addition of the figures in our exchanges of Greeks about to return home w? estimate that within a radius of 2" miles there are nearly 52.4 20 ready to tranship for the gory Balkan battlefields. Who's going io shine our shoes, apples and make egg sandwiches?

MRS. Langtry wants men to dress in the fashion of the Charles period.

See ourselves while togged out in blue velvet knickers with lace on them, a slashed doublet and , big picture hat with plumes being chased by several husky roundsmen down Hohman street.

DOCTOR lectures on eugenics cays we can raise a race of geniuses by practicing eugenics. Possible but those of us who are single must remember too that leap year is nearly

over and the cold plunge lia3 to be

taken before yon can practice any thing.

BULL MOOSERS ON EACH OTHER.

Stubbs formerly called Henry Allen

a grafter, unfit to be on the board of

charities. Allen eaid Stubbs beat him for Congress by "planting" whisky in stroflK Methodist communities in his (Allen's) name. Scott won, but neither Allen nor anybody else evtu suspected Scott of planting the whisky. Stubbs and Allen ought to get together and agree who it was that planted the whisky. Murdock said of Roosevelt two years ago, "That faker will never dare to run again." Hrtstow said that Long could not be the friend of the people because he was backed and befriended hy Perkins.

ho would dare to print what Rr oseveit said about Rristow when be

fired him out of the Postoffice Depart

ment? Or what Bristow whispered

back?

What family paper could print

even in dashes and blanks what Le.

land formerly said of Stubbs or the kind of a thief Stubbs said Iceland

WHS?

But now these gentlemen are r II

Bull Moosers together and no doubt

acknowledge that they were misin formed. aKnsas City Journal.

H. B. BROWN; PHILANTHROPIST. The news that H. P.. Brown, who went to Boston to receive the .'13rd

degree in Masonry, has been taken ill calls to the minds of thousands of successful business and professional men over the country the tremendous service that he had rendered in the general uplifting of humanity. Other men have been philanthropists with their money; Brown has been a philatnhropist with his time, with his life: Men of wealth have

endowed co! leges; Brown began with

nothing and built a university with

his bare hand:;. Associated with him in this enter

prise is O. P. Kinsey, the off-horse in the team, who deserves just as much credit for building Valparaiso University as the president of the institution. Brown and Kinsey came to Valparaiso nearly 40 years ago. They were school teachers possessed wjth more than the average amount, of nerve, initiative, determination and all

round business ability. Some one had started a normal school and failed. They took the building and equipment; made a part payment in enthusiasm and advertised, "Valparaiso Normal School. II. B. Brown, president, O. P. iKnsey, vice president."

lhe name of the school has changed

to indicate its wider field of activities

but the officers remain lhe same.

Valparaiso Normal was started on

the basis of making a higher education possible for everybody. In order

to do this Brown and Kinsey had to

reduce the cost of living to the mini

mum, ho successful were they in

solving this problem that today rooms

may be rented for GO and 75 cents

week and board may be had for $l.r,o

to $ 2 . 0 ' -i week.

Thus have they made it possible

for the man of small means to secure

an education. The school has grown

to such proportions that the enroll ment it. now larger than in any othe; school in the United tSates.

mree nunareu uouars a year is ample to take a man through college

and most of the students get through on far less thin that. The institution is absolutely unique and has no successful Imitators. While some of the great men in the United States are numbered among its xlumni; the good that Brown and Kinsey have done is really measured hy the hosts of men and women who were given their first chance in the world in his school.

to suit himself, lie got along so well that he thought he would make an experiment and jerking the "Johnson bar" the lever that regulates the speed pulled it two notches too far, with the result that some of the passengers were thrown out of their seats. It would not have mad" so very much difference to him if he had

wrecked the train he was having lots of funand that would have made a "corking" newspaper story. It was something of a coincidence

that it was the "Johnson bar" he pulled this time and it is the Johnson bar he is working with in his race for President and with which he bids fair to wreck the Government Express he would run. Such an incident in the life of any responsible man would discredit him with the peo'ple; but it was ' just like Roosevelt." He didn't know how to run an engine, he had never attempt

ed such a thing before, he knew that levers were to pull, and he Jerked the "Johnson bar" two notches too far. Th;it is precisely what he would do at Washington should he be elected President. What difference does it make so long as he can enjoy himself and shock the old souls with "the boy that is in him?" N. Y. Times.

FR Eli TRADE AND WILL EVENTUALLY LEAD TO THAT. It may be safely accepted as a fact that all real democrats are at heart diametrically opposed to the policy of protection. Wilson is a stand-pat free-trader. Now how does that affect Gary and the Calumet region? This is a steel manufacturing community. U has been built up under the protective system. Capital, secure in its belief

that the existing order is not to be disturbed, has poured its hundreds of millions of dollars into the region in the development of what is to become the world's workshop. It is safe to say that there is not an industry in the region that is not benefit tod either directly or indirectly by the republican protective tariff. And the prosperity of thfse manufacturing concerns makes it possible, to pay big wages. For the first time in the history of this region manufacturers are paying ?2.H to $?..C0 a day for laborers and the wages of the other employes have gone up accordingly. So the manufacturer who is developing a big business and the la-

noier wno is getting Dig pay are

both interested in the preservation of

the protective tariff which has made these t'ugs possible.

And when all of this may he changed. When the mills which Taft

found idie when he took over the Roosevelt administration and started to working again may be closed

for four long years; when the farmers may be compelled to take small prices for their crops, when the now

prosperous workingman may be idle

on the streets, when the banks and business houses may fail; if Woodrow

Wilson becomes president of the

United States, is there any necessity for considering any other issue than the TARIFF. Why quibble about what Wilson said of the United States Steel Company at .Gary. THERE WON'T BE ENOUGH PEOPLE IN GARY TO MAKE A GOOD SIZED POLITICAL MEETING IF THE COUNTRY HAS FOUR YEARS OF WILSON. Gary is built on its one industry and its subsidaries. All of these are prospering because of the protective tariff. Take that away and see what

wiil become of Gary. So the great issue in Gary, as in the other manufacturing communities of the Calumet region, is the tariff. Wlson's against us on that

issue. There is no use of deluding ourselves by taking any other view of the situation. , It is not what Wilson SAID but how he STANDS that concerns us and there is no question how he stands on the tariff. He is a rank free-trader.

INTERSTATE COMMERCE COM. AND CONNECTICUT UTILITIES COMMISSION INVESTIGATE CAUSES OF FATAL TRAIN WRECK

V

J: 'cn ' ' l : - ; . a ; . 4 . . . I 2 f , i. v . . .. .- V ,t . ...u. . . , . . $i u "i A && v :v y - v- - - . r;-- - -'t -,x v -j , J.4 v, V v1? XVk - ' - h , - T5 r V iv X'H

Train wreck t v-tprt. Conn. Inspectors ot M LnterstatA commerce co:aauason bsve tegun an in into the Questloa whetter the recent txaln rw.K at VVeatyort. Conn, was directly reepcusible ini more thn fie of the seven deaths, and whether lh numoer lnjareu at least 6u imxiii nt bavu ln Litid iu t.uAt nud Uis Hats Uv-tu nJiide up ot steel, electric lienied coaches instead ot the wouden, Piotcti K'" iigbted cars. Aociasr Investigation of the wreck has been started Dy trie patllc utilities commission cf Connecticut. It la being carritxl ou with especial reference to a well-auUiemicatcd report that Just u few days before the wreck occurevl the road Issued orders to Its englnernen to oe more zealous in making up tlne. The train wm going at the rate ot a miles an hour when the wrecK occurred. Tbe accorripanyt-ig Dicture was taKea snortly after the crah. Later Ue derailed cars caagbt Ore and were totally destroyed.

WHAT TEDDY THINKS. I'm twice as great as Washington, I'm twice as great as Grant; Because they didn't get three terms, They needn't think I can't. I'm twice as great a 5? Jefferson And Madison combined, I'm twice as great as all the lot Of president s, I find. I'm greater than my country, With its customs and its laws.

And its poor old constitution

With its presidential flaw?. I'm twice as great as any man Above or 'neath the sod. In fact, I'm half inclined to think I'm twice as great as God.

ONE of the least of our troubles is finding out how many votes the assistant-democratic party got in the registrations.

PHILADELPHIA has a lot of singing monkeys in her zoo now. Probably jerked them out of the campaign somewhere.

YOU KNOW THE KIND.

S

With some of the Lake county bull moosers we could name, singing "Onward Christian Soldiers," even the recording angel couldn't keep a

Straight face.

They will probably switch to "Pull For The Shore" directly.

SOMETHING 1s wrong In modern education when a setiool-boy cannot give the names of the president's

cabinet, but nows the star players

in every team in both the big leagues.

TROUBLE with organizations is that somebody is always leading them around by a string.

THEY are now discussing theology's last legs. Know any leggy clergymen ?

HAVE you fovind any frost on the pumpkin during the last few days?

A garland of oaks may be a fine ! thing but a Garland base burner is more desirable thcae lays. WHAT'S become of the old-fashioned political smokers they used to hold in the evening? ritKSS atrcot nf the Bull Moose party writes us that twenty-nine poet;, are now writing in behalf of T. R. Wonder they don't fret a few long-haired violinists to set the stuff to music.

LIST'S sec. this is Judsre Klhert II. '

Gary's fiSth birthday. Congratulations Kibert and many happy returns of the 1 day. JFST about the time you think that those Balkan bantams are about to ku to it they'll do as usual and take to Hie long grs. Ml'ST be fine thina to be one of those newly -discovered t iondc-haired Eskimos up north. No bull moose peeh8 to read, no agitation about women wearing thi fits leaf styles, no gas bills to pay and no garage biils to be footed. SOCIALISTS now urjre that all farm lands be confiscated and be divided

evenly. Fanners will please remember this. 'STEEMED oid Gary Tribune has not yet recovered from the effects of Governor Wilson's attack on the steei trust. It felt worse about it than did the poor trust itself. FKR that Hearst cables from London that he is coming back to fiht for the Democrats. No doubt all of his employes and a brass ba tid will be at the docks to lend the r.c-cessary cheering. IF there Is anything a matter with

the rett of the world Gary has timiiar troubles. If they start a senate investigation clown Jn Washington a committee has to come to tlary to take a squint at its ..leel works. If Kun men tfe.t bu,-y in New York they follow suit in Gary. If oth-i cities Ret the platrue men Gary xt? tho grass worms. If they start a war in the Balkans then Gary frets as much space In the papers boastinsr about the volunteers it wiil send. Gary reminds us of Rosalind in "As You Like it." If a hart do lack a hind. let him seek out Rosalind. If the cat win after kind. So he sure will Rosalind.

Winter jrarments must he lined. So must slender Rosalind. They that reap must sheaf and bind, Then to cart with Rosalind. Sweetest nut hath sources rind. Such a nut Is Rosalind.

He that sweetest rose wdll find,

Must find love's prick and Rosalind. AND in the meantime what has be

come of tlie poor old ouu moose in Lake county. Helonpeth it to the ?pe cie-s xtinctus?

WHiLE fattier is shove Hngf in the

winter supply of anthracite that the coal man brought this afternoon the rest of the family will fratlier around the sittinsr room table while fds plays

on the planner that pathetic piece

Teddy, how we hate to see you go."

The Day in HISTORY

son, came to Columbus tod'iy in search of his wife, who he said had eloped with another man and cal'ej ut police headquarters for help to induce, her to return to her children, who are sick. Ha was at once aries-ted as a murder suspect. One of two )if n who traveled In a wagon last May near Martinsville was murdered and Jones Is suspected of the crime. Since the murder was committed police have been on the look out for Jones and an officer front Martinsville canie. for him tonight. o.M'i:ssi;s ma w hohui:kii:s. Wiiiard Gibson, IT years oid, who es

caped from the Boys School at l'laintielii last Friday, was found hiding in the barn at the home of his faiher, west of Lafayette today, by Captain John Kluth. He had on his person a large amount of jewelry, hardware and other floods, which lie had stolen since his escape. At Pittboro he robbed a Kentrai store and obtained a large amount i of merchandise. He also stole money

at the I'laiiiheld school before he escaped, it ii aibsed. He admitted to Captain Kluth that he had burglarized several stores since leaving Plainfield. Gil; son. a few years ago, shot and ser ously wounded Ids small brother and sister at their home in this city, but was not punished for the act. IIS.1F MAY KII.I.KI) BY THAI V. John Myers, of Princeton, was struck by a O. it E. I. pasenger train at noon today and instantly killed. Myers was deaf and could not hear the warning whistle of the approaching train. Tiie accident occurred at Massey, near here, where Myers was visiting. He whs unma tried. noAitn to consider m:w .ivii..

When the Brown county commission- i tended tours of the Fnited States and

I c rs meet at Aas.'i v iMe ioi:.o;iu n is t annua, me uim in emu mo po.uim

expected they will at once take up the' sn 19C. Of recent years he has resided matter of building a new jail. The old j 'he most of the time in Vienna, where

structure bunt more man ntty eaif

"THIS DATE I H1STOKV." October S

j William I abdicated the throne of Holland. 'iRSl Hudson river railroad opened j from New York to Albany. ! 1 SO.". First issue of the San Francisco Evening Bulletin. I 160 Franklin Pierce, fourteenth presi ident of the Fnited States, died in j Concord, N. H. Corn in Hillsboro, I N. H.. November 23, ISO 4. ilSTl Beginning- of the great Chicago J lire, by which IS. 000 buildings were I destroyed and 10 lives lost.

1ST7 First locomotive entered Winnipeg-. irll The monarchist uprising in Portugal failed. "THIS IS MY ffOTH 111 BTHD A Y. I '.nil II Sauer. Emil Saucr, the famous pianist and composer, was born in Hamburg1, October S, 1862, and received his schooling in his native city. He studied music first under his mother. Later he studied with Nicholas Rubinstein in Moscow, which was suplemented by two summers spent with the famous Franz Liszt at Neimar. At the age of 2! the young musician began hie career as a concert, performer. Since then he has been heard In all of the principal centers of Europe and las made two ex-

of Saxony, Roumanla and

than lifty year- j he has held the position or imperial

ago has not been used for more than 1 and royal professor of music. He Is two ytars, the county prisoners sin-- j p.lso court pianist by appointment to

that time having been "boarded out" In j the kings

Johnson county. There is plenty of I Uulgaria.

money in the county treasury to construct a modern building and the board members aia said to be unanimously in Javor of it.

DON'T HITCH TOITR "WAGON TO A fcTAR HITCH IT TO A TIMES' AD AND GET RE.CTLTS THAT COUNT.

IN regard to thanking the Lord for good, crops, an onlooker says "it has come to be thank our political party instead of thanking the Lord."

BUT A SINGLE ISSUE. The Gary Evening Post and The Gary Tribune are in a death grapple over the speech Woodrow Wilson made in Gary some tima ago. Ever since the visit of the distinguished New Jersian it has been a case of "Wilson did Wilson didn't Wilson did Wilson didn't." in Gary. The real issue, the one Issue that Is a matter of concern in this great manufacturing community, THE TARIFF, is being lost eight of. There is no question about Wilson's stand on the tariff. HE IS FOR TARIFF FOR REVENUE ONLY WHICH 13 MERELY A HOMEOPATHIC DOSE OF

heard I BY I Ijhwh i ingaanmanKs-aaj jsiury, . '.. i ii... ataumjTirT;.

INDIANA woman retting- a divorce from her husband because he didn't like her peek-a-boo waist. Unreasonable man'. OX Sunday five were killed In a Nicaragua war battle and nine were killed In an auto race at .Philadelphia. Give us the ways of war any day. DISPATCH says that President Taft fell asleep at a county 'fair the other

day. No doubt Willwm was dreaming of those nice greef, apple pies that Aunt Delia Torrl- makes now and

anon.

MAGAZINE vrlter complains of the hi kost of Keeping warm. Let him buy a flannel muffler to wrap around

his w'ire's fevt.

WHAT, witjh the Jleeker trial on, the Balkan crisis, war bullets flying in

Mexico, Nicaragua and Tripoli, senate

Investigations and the three ringed political cainriagn, the editors w.I have to

slice dowi on the world series news to th inkiest iota.

Up and Down in INDIANA

Coming To The Hammond Theatre

ESCAPED (OWHTS CtlGHT. Jacob Gilman, 27 years old. of Chicago, and Henry Heidt, 17 years obi. of Milwaukee, who sawed their way out at St. Joseph. Mich.. Friday night, were captured at .Laporie today by Chief of Police Meinkc, who apprehf nded them in an attempted robbery. Oilman and Heidi were In prison for attempting to wreck a Michigan Central passenger train near New Buffalo. Mich., by placing obstructions on the track, imperiling the lives of Several hundred passengers. Scott, the third man who escaped is still at large. OltlM'.R TO HOLD CONVENTION. The biennial tate convention of tho Protective Home Circle wiil convene at South Bend Tuesday and Wednesday

of thU week. The convention is expected to be the most important held by the order since It was organized in Indiana. Past Grand President J. CDehrn, of Indianapolis and L. (Jamnions. of Shelby vtlle-, wdll be among the prominent speakers. Arrangements have been made to care for 250 delegates. Besides tiie business sessions a b!t!l and an auto tour of the city will be prominent features. CAM, ON I'OI.ICK R RESTED. ' Stepen Jones, 45 yea,ra eld, of Andei -

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JACK EESSEY. In Stock at the Hammond Theater Week.