Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 113, Hammond, Lake County, 9 October 1912 — Page 8

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THE TIMES.

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Notices have been sent oat by the Associate.! Charities of Kast Chicago and Indiana Harbor to the effect that on Thursday evening October loth wiU occur the f.rst annuii meeting of the organisation. The: will be poort speakers an.1 the work of the past year will be reviewed in such manner that a'.I present will know what has been done for those who have reeded the. kindly interest of the association as !! as the more substantial thinss of life, which they were not able to provide for themselves. Those to whom r.otk-es were sent were nsked to send them on to some friend, making copies to send to still other friends in order that a goodly attendance be had. The meeting: will take place at the Commercial Club rooms in Indiana Harbor and is open to all interested whether they have received an Invitation or not. One of the most important features of business wiU bo the election of officers for the ensuing year. The main rpeaker Is Miss Carrie Rein, secretary of the Associated Charities of South Bend. Miss Rein is said to be one of the best authorities on organized charity work in the state of Indiana, bavins' been actively enraged In the work for many years.

i-lui was general secretary at Evansvllle before goins to South Bona to art in a similar capacity for the organization there, and she has held her present office for ten years, doinwr most tfTective work. Miss Rein has been much interested in Ike work of.r the l'ast Chicago and Indiana Ilarbo- organization from Its inception, indp.ng to secure a secretary anil lending her valuable council on all question.-; on which it was asked. The program in full is as follows? I 'resident's Address K. X. Canine. Keport of tl e general secretaryMiss Edna Hatfbld. Report of th.- Treausrer V. K. Diamond. "Principles of Organized Charity" Miss Carrie li-ln, secretary of Associated Charitle sof South Bend. Membership- II. II. Clark. Finance J. It. Farovid. Election of officers.

of th.e Twenty-third precinct and I am the chairman. Tim recently pot the chairman and president idea of running things Ti'Otti Ju..U-,o Klbert II. Clary, of the steel corporation, while on his recent visit to New York. "John n. I'ett-rson. Martin Gill, Judpro Becker, C. O. Sefton. Tom Knotts and myself will deliver speeches. We. have a hurfdred native vot-rs in the club and I want you to put this in a prominent place. Be sure to come down." Then Tim hun no his receiver.

INTRODUCE NEW SYSTEM EDUCATION

.WE CAN'T BE THERE ;T!H BUT HERE'S NOTICE i jBig Democratic Rally Is ! Planned for Ridge Road

District Toniffht.

NEW WAREHOUSE. The East Chi on pro Transfer company is about to put up a new warehouso and freight 1 pot to be used in connection with its business. The buildin:? will be erected at ll.ailro.ad avenue and the I 'en ns l vn n la tracks, and August Joimson has the contract. As the building is to be of corrugated iron, its construction w!U bo rapid once the work beirins, and that is to be at once. The dimensions are 30 by SO feet, one story hiirh and the cost will be approximately $2,000. It is expected, that within ten .lays, the weather beini? favorable, the roof will be on and the company can begin to use t h e building;.

Alderman Tim Engrleliart. duke of the Ride road, rang up The Times o it ice this morning-. "We're croing to have a hisr Pemoci atio rally in my hai: at nidge road and Broadway at eight o'clock tomorrow nijiht and I want you to come down," said Bis Tim. The boys of the Twenty-third precinct of my ward are groinsr to meet in my had. It is nice and v. arm and well lighted. Pick Houren is president of

LOTS OF MUSHROOMS. Accord trier to residents mushrooms are so plentiful in bake county that it is a simple matter to pick a basket inside of an hoAir'a time. There are several edible varieties which can be found on farms In the country and in the parks and lawns throughout the

cities, which are said to be more delicious than the meadow mushroom.

IHKKE AUK MOHK THAN TmtF.r. TIMKS MORE TIMES C1HCUI.ATKD EVERY PAY TTIAX ALL THE OTHRR DAILY PAPEHS IN LAKE COUNTY PT'T TOGCTHF.lt.

(Continued from Pago out) so far thoy have already proceeded in their negotiations with the various manufacturers and employers of skilled help, that every boy in the hisrh school could be apprenticed at this time. To some extent the idea can aiso put into practice for the benefit of the high fsehool Kir's. lltSi .School Iopulnr. ypeakins; on this subject last night, Mr. Henderson said in part: "Sixty per cent of the pupils in the public schools leaxo school in the sixth Riado. Why? Simply because they bave arrived at an asp where the school no l-.i.i-, r meets their immediate demands. They have no inclination for the professions and they and their paren's seen no need of "wasting time" as thoy call it. They Kl, out to earn money and usually shift about aimlessly, and take the first thing they can pet. "The cooperative education system, proposes to chur.se this. It has changed it in other cities, and it will ehani It here. It win make the hifjh soho 1 what it was originally Intended to be, a school for all boys an Bit Is, and not only for those who wish to equip themselves for one or the other professi on." Skilled rirkmrn ffdeil. Mr. Henderson's address struck a popular chord with his audience, and he also found his bearers well prepared to receive so progressive an idea. The riia n.i fa.-t nrers and the tradesmen, with whom the proposition has been taken up, have received it with enthusiasm. The cry of the American Manufacturers' Association is for skilled workmen and German mechanics trained by a system such as is proposed for Hammond today hold the most desirable places in American !n-

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630 S. Hohman St. Phone 86 Hammond, Indiana

Jus! received a large stock of leader and Repeater Winchester Shells 10-12-18 and 20

Gauge. See cur complete line cf Shot Guns and soorto Rnris.

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dustrtes, notably the automobile industry. The cry of the manufacturers has extended to Hammond, and they are only too glad lo cooperate In order to set skilled workmen, men who are more than a human machine, and therefore they are jrlad to throw open their factories to give the buys an opportunity to learn trades, such as machinist, draughtsman, electrician, tool makinff, tin srnithinpr, printing pressman, sterotypinK, cabinet makng and others, and what is more the employers are ready to pay the hin school students as apprentices. They will see to it that the apprentices learn the trade from beginning to end. and that at the end of their four year school term they can command a skilled workman's wat?e and yet have the benefit of a high school education, for the latter is not to he slighted. toilette Clve Crctflt. Cnde.r the new system they would have the same number of recitations, althousrh tl.e study periods would h.e eliminated durinK the day time, as would also be one or the other study which even under the present is more or less superfluous. KiK'lier institutions Rive credit for shop work and so tht Hammond student who desires to advance would really be the painer instead of the ios-.-r. Shop Eer1enee KirHt Hand. Cooperative education as it is known amnn? educators, is vocational tralnint? In the verv test sense of the word. When vocabma! and Industrial training were first Introduced, the ideal way was thought to he to equip a public school in such a way that a trade could be acquired In the school room. The system brings re-"U?ts, to some extent., but as a rule tin- high school frraduate has not the real shop experience, he must still boprin at the foot of the ladder when he rocs out in the world, although he may advance more rapidly, while under the n-w system, the Hammond system, he frets shop experience at first hand, and earns a wapre as he Roes along. Resides no school could afford to put in the equipments that are. found in such factories, as the Betz plant, the fonkey printing house, the Simplex Railway Appliance, the Standard Steel Car factory, the pfraub.j piano factory and others.

t niier the eopoerattve student is to receive the his teachers, his parents ployer. A premium is to

stlck-to-itiveness. so that he will not be.

working at one trade one month and at another the next. Bench work is of course still to he continued in the schools. Iden OliI In Cierniany. Tradesmen frankly admit that their apprentices as a rule have to shift for themselves in learning the trade. They serve the required numer of years and receive their card hut because of th high wage that the apprentice receives from the very beginning his employer necessarily must get all the work out of him that he can. without taking time to explain the fundamentals of the trade. The fact that at the present time about seven hundred people are enrolled In the night schools, is proof of the

fact that the public school system as it is generally understood, is not meeting the demands. The taxpayer is not receiving bi.-i money's worth for the hgh uraiie institutions be maintains. Germany adopted the cooperative education system thirty years ago, and therefore had that much of a lead on this ocuntrj-. It has gone beyond the experimental stage although the .i lea is new in Hammond. There are at present ninety-three

boys in the Hammond schools and arrangements can he made to apprentice all of these. a'thouj'V. it is optional with the students.

TAKE CHc. (K YOl H HI". A MIL Safeguard yourself by chevtlng I ninn Seoul, ctinrantrid porf nud rlenn, manufactured from nun-cured and rrdried Kentucky leaf, under up-to-date MMnliary i-ondltfonM. Oisee uMc-d never reftiNed. Sale the tickets.

1 Am Willing To Prove I Can Gere "You To That End I Am Giving Away 510,000 Worth of Medicine

system, the guidance or and his embe placed on

In order to show beyond all doubt I that I ara in possession f a medicine i that will cure kidney trouble, bladder trouble or rheumatism, I wi'l this year fcive away ten thousand collars' worth of this medicine, and anyone .suffering l'mm these d:st ases can get a box of it absolutely free. Ail that is nece.-rs.try is to Her.d me your address. I don't mean that you are to use a part of it or all of it and pay me If cured. I tm-an that I will s'-nirl you a box of this medietas absolutely free of charge, a gift from me to tb.e trie Acid sufferers of the world, so I can puhw taem where and how they may be cu'e.l I will not expect payim t,t for this tree m.dicine, nor would I accept it now or iater if you sent it. It is free in the r ai meaning of t;ie word. For twenty-five years -a. quarter of a cr.tury I have been trying to convince the public tr-tt I have jomth:r g genuine, something better than others have for the cure of stubborn, chronic rheumatism, for torturtnut kidney backache, for annoying call to urtriMt". but it is hard to convince p.-rph m hey try a few things unsneoes.sfuiiy end ; up ail hope nn.i refuse to listen t anyone thereaf ter. Happily, I am in a po .:i :t now to dert.or.st ra te to sufierers at m own expense that I have a medicine that cures the diseases. I j-a t ask them to sj.nd j.r.y money to find out; I don't ask them to believe nie; nor even to taki the word of relish!" peop! but all I ask is that they allow me to send them the medicine at my own cost. T!:ut is s vi rely fair. To this end I have pet nslde ten thousand dollars, which w.il be used to compound my me.iicine. Much cf it is ready now to be sent out, all of it freh and standard. I here will be enough for all sufferers, though there b Thousands of them. And anvone who needs it can get some of it free. But in order that I shall know that you have a disease for which this medicine is intended, I ask you to send m some of your leading svrnptoms. If you have a-v cf the symptoms in the ii.-t printed here you ne'd my medieine and if you will write me I will gladly s.-nd you a box of it froe with full dii-ec'lons for your use. Look the symptoms over, see which symptoms you have, then wil-.o me about as follows: "Dear Dr.. I notice svmptoms number" here put down the numbers,, give your age, full address, and snrt it to me. My address is Pr. T. Frank Lyr.ott, 9171 Deagan Bldjr., Chicago, 111. The ten thousand dollars I am spending for the enmpoun ling of my medicine is only a part of the money T am d"vnting to this cause, for the package of medicine I scni you will be fully prepaid at mv expense. From any standpoint you view it. YOTT Incur no expense or obligation. Just tell oth"-s who you know aw suffering who sent you the medicine that cured you. T am f-orr.tRing to glvA away ten tbound dollars' worth of medicine, and I

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DR. T. FRANK LYNOTT k it ei-ring iwir (10.000 worth of medicine. will do that; I am rromlring to seni any sufferer who writes me a box of tl is medicine and full directions free of chare;, and I will do that. I can say furtber that this met": loin has been v rchf d for according to law as comply,,r j., every detail with all requirements. t, wiil stop rheumatism, it will stor. nain

and iiacKache, it will Hop too frequent d-sire to urinate ; it will heal, soothe and strengthen. Ton will be better In every way for having taken it. There is not an ingredient that can inlure; not one but will benefit. All that I ask Is that you use it yourself so that you may b personally convinced. Owing to the larg-j number of requests, I have had t-n thousand mora copies of my medical book printed. This book is new and up to date and contains complete descriptions, symptoms, causes, effects and cur. s of kidney, bladder and rheumatic disfases. Ail who write for the free medicine will be sent a copy of this grand illustrated medical book th largest ever written on these diseaoe

I for free and general distribution. ! If you need medicine such as I have, i if you are anxious to lie cured and don't (want to spend anv mor.ev LOOKING for (cures, write me. Read the svmptoms iover and iet me hear from you today.

Tbese Are the Symptoms : 1 Pain Id tbe bark. S Too f refiuent desire to nrinnte. ? linriilnic or obtnictlon f ttrtoe. 4Tnin or orrn-s i the bladder. 5 Pr.wUftHo tronhie, fi Vn r pln In l be itoaiiiMi. T- General ilehl It . .w eak iin.dUj-lneea. SPalu or wrenMi under rUht rlh. S Swelltn In oj part of le body. 10 f 'onstipnttnn or lUpr trouble. ( I 1'nli.ltmlon or ptn under the heart. 12 fain in the htp Joint. 1 3 I'nia In ilie neck or tiend. 1 Ptn or .irfnoM ir, the kldneyn, 1 !V- Pin or ewePlnir or the joints, lft PmIii or "welitt.fr of the unun lea. 17 I'Ktn and "orf-nM, In rierT e. 1 Acute or chronic rlietiniini.m.

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One ol our Special Representatives will bring It to your house and &

Demons Irate It fo yon on one ot your fixtures.

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Let Mm stiow yon this new light In operation. II you do not wish it

there is no obligation to buy. If yon need it, yon may purchase from the demonstrator.

Ten days alter the lamp Is Installed yon may pay ns 75c and 75c on each of the next iwo gas hills. S 5p

This Is an 80 candle power "HOME LIGHT." It consumes 3 1-3 feet S

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ui yaa m ait nonr, wmen means mm yon get mree nonrs ligat

for one cent

We guarantee mantle, cylinder and globe for three months.

Northern

Indiana

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Hammond

Electric Whiting

East Chicago

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Indiana Harbor

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