Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 42, Hammond, Lake County, 16 November 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
Xovrmbor 1G, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br Th Uke Cannty Prtattaar mm Pnh- '
The Lake County Times, flatly except Sunday, "entered as second -class mat-j tar June 2S. 10"; The Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sun-1 day, entered Feb. 3, I1T; Th Gary' livening Times. aly except Sunday.' entered Oct. 5, 15, The Ijike County; Time. Saturday and weekly edition, ' entered Jan. 30. 1111 ; The Time, daily1 except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, 1913, atj
the postoffica at Hammond. Indiana, 21 under the act of March J, 17.
Entered at the Postofflra. Hammond, Ind.. as econd-la matter.
4 I Jt- for 'THE E-Mj DAY
FOREIOSt ADVERTISING 1 Redor Bnildlnir
OFFTCRS.
Chicago (
ri BI-ICATIOX OFFICES,
Hammond Building. Hammond. Ind. i
TKI.EPtlOVKS, Hammond (privnta exrhaage) Ill Call for deoartmnt wantad.)
Gary Office East Chicago lflce . . Indiana Harbor Whiting Crown Point llegewlsch
OIR I. I) Y OK THF. SNOWS. Aallon spoke to a Nation .1 )urrn unit word to a Thronei 'I'aughlcr am I In rny mother's lionae. Rnt mlotrrsa In my ow n. The eaten are mine to open. Am the R-atea nrf tnlwe to close. And I Met my house la order,"' Said our l.ariy of the Sunns. Neither with lanehtrr nor weeplne. Fear or the ebild'N nmnte Soberly under tbe Jilte Man's law My white men. to their mj. ot for the Gentllra ilamnr Insult or threat of blown How we tbe knee to Baal." Said on r ladr of the . "My speech in rlean and mIbkIo, I talk of common thine Word of the wharf and market place And tbe ware tbe me re bant brings: Favor to those I favor. Hut a stniugling blork to my foea. Many there be that bate w." Said our lady of tbe Snows.
Advertising aollcltor will be sent, or rataa given on application. If you hava any trouble getting Tha Time notify the nearest office and have It promptly remadled.
LARGER PAID VP CIRCCI.ATION THAN A5V OTHER TWO XKAV8PATERS l THE CALtTMICT HhX.ION. ANONYMOUS communications will not ba noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should ba addressed to The Editor, Times, Hammond, Ind.
..Tel. 137 ealled iy ehlefs to council
Tel. 540-.T ! ke din of a troubled yenrt Tel. 349-M: 150 For ne mkr of a alixn ye would not see, Tel, SO-M i And a word ye nonld not hear.
Tel S3 1 11 our nensaae and anaweri
TPel 33 Is tbe path wc chose;
For we be also a people,"
Said onr Lady of the Snows.
"Carry the word to my Msters
To tbe tlncens of the East and the South.
I have proven faith in the Iterltaee
By more than the word of Ihe mouth.
They that are wise may follow
Kre the world's war-trumpet blows:
But I I nm the flrst In battle.'
Said our Lady of the Snows.
A Nation spoke to a nllnn.
Throne sent word to a Thrcne:
"Daughter am I In my mother's house,
Bat mistrewa In my own!
Tbe gates are mine in open.
As the testes are mine to clone.
And I nblde by niv. mother's house.
Said our Lady of tbe Snows. Kudyard Ktpllnjf.
- FOR G ART'S BETTERMENT. Gary is dedicatins today and tomorrow two institutions that will work for its betterment. One is its "Hull House" or "Neighborhood House," as it is en 'led. This institution, a three-story affair is located in the heart of the foreign quarter. It should rio a great work. Men. women and children will benefit by it und it is interesting to hear if defined as a "substitute for the saloon." Credit should be given to the Presbyterian women for its existence. Tomorrow Gary will dedicate its $65,000 Carnegie library. It is housed in a beautiful home and the structure is a credit to the rity. Gary can be proud of the two new institutions that it has acquired as it has others ihat have won its fame as ihe most modern and up-to-the minute city of its size on God's preen footstool.
There is no getting away from that fact.
. .'" . . aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa -p--ac -sf Turks Captured in Balkan War and Fighters Laid Up by Wounds
"TI1K Open lor." a new melodrama, is said to be a pronounced success in Xew York. But then the open door always is popular there, especially after m ft! night and on Sundays.
WE note with interest Ihat Vincent Astor gets sixty-five million dollars today. We get our $6.."n today. Lucky Friday for Yin., lucky Saturday ftr us.
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AFSAID OF BAY RUM. Old Hontce Greeley one of America's most noted editors was certainly an extremist of a type rapidly becoming extinct. One of his ancient
I friends has been found who has re-
Hammond Commandery. No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting first and third Monday of each month. November IS. Red Cross work.
Hammond Chapter, No. 117
M Regular stated meeting seconJ
and fourth Wednesday of each month Special meeting November 20. Mark Master.
Hammond Council. No. 90. R. S. M. Stated meettng3 flrst Tuesday of each month. Charter will be delivered by
Grand Master Herbert Graham, Tues
day, Nov; 19
Garfield Lodge, No. B9, F. & A. M.
Stated meetings every Friday fivenlng.
BULLY FOR MIRIAM. Klbertus Hubbard's laughter
Miriam has entered the I'r.iversitv of
Michigan. She is the most, physical-
R. A. My perfect girl there. Not only th:t
but she is very "easy" to look at.
She was asked how it happened.
"Long ago I learned that one can
not keep well unless one works in the field and gains health from the sunshine," is the way Miss Hubbard sums up the situation. "In mv
father's school I did exactly the work-
that the boys did."
Here is a hint for the girl who lolls
-.lover the fire all day' taking second
F w. Awfully sorry, but weIlan'1 lnrllls c oouna nction ami
haven't a list of government jobs and w""ryini a bos of cream chocolates, salaries from which you might make he 13 the Kani(" Sirl who cannot una selection. Good luck to von anv- derstand why her complexion is sal-
wnv. We admire your gall. !ow an'1 wh ber niuscles have that
peculiar bound feeling that makes
any exercise more active than step-
GKRMANY says she wants peace ping into an automobile or watching
in the Balkans. Probably linotype a golf match too fatiguing to even
operator's fault and should have read attempt.
'piece of the Ralkans." Here she is. ;he old fashioned rivi
working side by side with her brother in the sririlAn r-;r tho fioMa r-vf
THE HORRORS OF WAR. grain. er lndoor houn'ar;
The Greek army is officered as fol-lto meal and sleeping time. Her
loVs: Hypostrategoa (brigadier! cheeks are as red pk tho nnnlot ihn
general), syntagmatarchis (colonel), are beginning o blush in the wir.-
antisyntagmatarchis (lieutenant colo- dows, and the flow of the open is ir.
Hen, tagmatarchis (major), lochaerosl her eves. She inn -ivs hr
(captain), hypolochagos (first lieu- brother a race for swift, and sure
tenant ), anthypolochagos (seeodd shocking of wheat sheav es. or she can
lieutenant) and anthypaspistis (ad- bake a cherry pie that would make
jutant). I any man with a grain of gratitude In
These names look like a lot of six! his soul propose after the first scg-
rionths colic prescriptions in the bath ment.
loom cabinet. You never heard Snnhnn net Ssii.nn
Gawstruth! No wonder the Turks complain of neurotics, nervous head-
fee! aches nor anv rf the nilivionte n-i-ih
inactivity and acute self-adulation are want to visit upon their victims Her idea of a good time was a bobsled party to a farmhouse ten miles down the pike with the thermometer hovering below zero, while her greatgranddaughter is a creature of limousines and close taxicabs. She was the
ozone girl with the clear laugh and flashing eye, ancestress of the exotic girl with the subdued smile and veiled glance. Girls if you want to be a living shouting proof of beauty thnt comes from work get out into the open nir. "I'm so tired. I've been playing bridge all afternon and it was simnlv
Just a littl friend! v
lat.i'd many interesting stories of the famous newspaper man. This is one: "He was a stanch teftotal!er and hated the very name ef rum. Now, 1'ay ruin is not a beveraRe, and I do not know whether It would int'xio;ite or kill if one drank it. but at any rale, Horace (ireley took i;o ilefporruo chances. My father shuI th;it .Mr. rcley carried his teetotftlism so fr that when bay rum was used on hi fnee after shavinif he would pursn up his mouth as tipht as a drum, so that by no possibility could a drop of the liquid find its way between his lips. He made a comical picture with his lips screwed tightly together, his eyes fiimly shut and an expression on his face a.s if he were undersoiriar a terrible ordeal."
NEXT week thev will re-begln probing the monev trust. Hope thev get it done before Christmas else there wont be anv money left.
TH1-J "draped" skirt hasn't hit Crown Point vet but it oulv costs ,50 cents to go from thence to Whiting.
"IF it were not for our mistakes life would be pretty monotonous," says Lile. Yes and how happy some of us would be with a little more monotony.
WE hope that having all these postoffice fights on his hands will not prevent Hon. J. P.. Peterson from returning thanks on Thanksgiving.
bhi-OKh entering a battle the Iloumanian wife says, "Go light lose
no time in embraces." What not I
even a hand shake?
l 1 1 hkfi are good men writing
poetry these days, wasting their time
'.hen they might be grubbing stumps
or cleaning harness.
RUBBING IT IN. If there is anything on earth that gives us a longing for eternal rest and deep, damp solitude, it is a man who comes to a town or county, builds up a big paying business, grows rich and then squats down on
the gold like a door knob, and is too
stingy even to let the gravel grind in his own gizzard. A real, genuine 1Skarat, stingy, selfish man can't, be honest, and if he ever gets to heaven and has wings, he will fold them up and walk for fear he will ruffle a plume or lose a tail feather. The kind of men who build up a town and county and enjoy life and make the best, citizens, and are enterprising, energetic and liberal men, who believe in living pud letting others live, do not, when they get a dollar, squeeze it till the (goddess of Liberty feels like he had on a corset. Such squeezing is what causes hard Umc-s and stops the circulation of the American eagle. If it were not for the. broad-gauged .enterprising men, it would be impossible to build up a prosperous city. Knox Republican.
fact. The majority upon which the government can depend has near vanished several times, in critical situations, and any day another test of the temper of the House may oust the Asquith ministry. The best informed politicians in London expect to see another general election before the home rule issue can be finally disposed of. When that test of public sentiment comes there will be one of the most bitterly contested campaigns in tbe history of the United Kingdom. Hecent threats of civil war in Ulster have done much to shake the confidence of weak-kneed Liberals in the wisdom and timeliness of the policy of the present, government. The Conservatives, on the other hand, have been encouraged by numerous victories in recent bye-elect ions
nnd they will go into another fight with the energy born of their consciousness that if they fail again to
carry the country at the polls their last, chance of successful resistance to the Liberal program for Ireland will pass away forever. It is a prospect for hard fighting such as Americans, in their most strenuous campaigns, can hardly understand. The intensity of feeling aroused by the home rule issue is of Ihe kind which leads to common talk of civil war in Ireland. The social and business future of the United Kingdom is believed by millions of voters to be at. stake upon the final battle over the question of self-government for that island. When that crisis comes, America, as heretofore, will give its sympathy and good wishes to the home rule cause and the Liberal party, by a very heavy preponderance of the public sentiment of the country.
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ACHI How we shail miss Herr Cor Marshall wnen fie poes t nshipgtnn VV e vlIi ne-er at.r.l;ri uet sueti faru and fasudioui. Tna nksai vmg proclama. tions.
"WHAT would eo,l,)r.,l.. - 1 - 1
ilh ra rt 1 I rt 1 1 1 li It ' Hi
VOTE ON IRISH E0KE RULE. The latest tests of t ne strength of parties in the House of Commons indicate that -the present Liberal mmlsirv will be forced to ask Ihe elec-
lu,'uu uultu .iuBuiu iui u-r first th,,)E. tiiat we W(,;cl ,lo would he
more voie oi connuence oetore insn to parboil all restaurant cooks and i
home rule can become an established j then, merely on general principles, we
would hamstrinv ai! proof readers. "SPIRIT of the Balkan?" is tit'.o of an article in The Outlook. To our mind the spirit of the Haikans is gar
lic, j NOW why should any of us rail ag-ainst j
the Chicago Telephone company? Re
cheerful about the service. R. K
Is the president of the concern. ARK MARTIN sez: It's gittin' C be purty discouvaein' t" th' average democrat C see th' same ole well groomed faces lined up at th' pie counter ever' time th' party Kits a look in. Without doubt the Hon. John Billings Peterson of Crown Point is bothered with a similar sense of me'.ancholy these dreary days. CHICAGO surgeons declare that appendicitis is so common that it. is a matter of course. Just like the artermath, the bill, we presume. T. R. I poins? to run for president four years hence, Meddiinff MrCnrmkk announces. 1't s i-,.pe that the bull
moose party doesn t get split at the June convention in 1 ! 1 ij. ANOTHKH pood democrat gone: Fred Prody was much surprised when, after usinc: Ids team of mules for half a day. the youngest anil strongest one suddenly lay down and died. There was no apparent cause for its ileal ii. It is a bad loss and l-'red has the sympathy of Ids friends. Valparaiso Vhbdte. THKY can have shaves no"W: Our barber. Clifford Hothwell. is hark from an extended vacation in various parts i.f the country. Griffith correspondence to Tin; Times. I XC PKNTA IjRT. as lb-rr ponlus IKintz would say, we have joined the S. I". T. P. C. G. U. C. ;, the Society for tho Prevention of Oivins I'seless Christmas Gifts S"e are a charter member in good standing. I'KKr and Chile have made up after a quarter of a"" century. In these days o. progress there is even hope that Indiana Harbor and Kasi Chicago will throw away the green eyes, kiss and make up.
rr - S t 7 77 - . 7,
ims weeKs iNews forecast
THIS PROBABLY HAPPENED.
The world is full of queer folk and
ii is only by learning of the different
types that Tom, Dick and Harry can nerve racking
find amusement in life. . game, cf course." ,-n't you see that
Seretary of the Treasury Mac- little friendly game with four women
Yeagh received from a Chicago man each bent on wresting a cut glass bon
an accidentally uncancenea two-cent bon dish away from the other? Any stamp on a piece of envelope and the way to get the prize if they have to following note: "My conscience lie for it and steal points. If some would not let me keep this stamp, one would suggest their going out inthough I had torn it off with the in- to the garden and gathering tho tention of using it again." cegetables for dinner, or taking a If Gov. Marshall will kindly sprint of a dozen blocks, they would promise not to send the miltia we look upon it as a hardship and corn-
offer to wager a portion of our weekly plain of their delicate constitutions
stipend that the man couldn't remove the stamp from the envelope.
XEW York criminalog'.st says that
blue-eyed men are the only thinkers
ONE feature of such bets as that I GOOD night!
which compels a man to push a pearut along the sidewalk for four city
Mocks, with a sausage, is the proba- SOMEBODY ought to issue a Jihad
bility that the winners will also get! for the benefit of the Hammond city
Jobs helping to run the country. council.
IT is bad enough to have Pat Nelson hit a man a wallop in the countenance without having him rub his board over his opponent's face.
NEW York's subway passengers number nearly a million a day. We have noticed too that they nearly all try to ride at the same time.
FRANK ABOUT FRANK. Frank Waller was a unique character. An honest comment on his life is difficult to make in a newspaper. We do not want to say an unkind word about him. He put nothing into this life and got nothing out of it. His hoarded wealth brought him an early grave, and he could take none of it with him. He was honest as he saw honesty, obeyed the laws of the land when it. cost him nothing: neighbored with no one; trusted no one; got all he could, and kept all he got. Marquette (Kan.) Tribune.
POOR W00DR0W! We see by the papers that our next president is going to the balmy Bermudas for a month's vacation. If that was nil it would be a most delightful rest however The dispatches further say that "but a single stenographer and only ten newspaper correspondents are lo accompany him." If only one correspondent went along It wouldn't be a vacation. Mr. Wilson will bo kept busy. Pity the trials of presidents-elect.
! AVashlngton, IV C, Nov. 16. With all of the disputed points in the lato 'elections now settled and the returns fully digested, the politicians and the 'public will have ample time to Indulge In speculation concerning Ihe probable policies of the next administration and the selection of cabinet officers and other advisors for the new President. No authoritative information along these lines is to be expected at this time, however, since President-elect
Wilson will be enjoying: a vacation beyond the reach of interviewers and impel tunate politicians. The Potninion Parliament will assemble at Ottawa next Thursday to begin what promises to lie one of the most contentious and bitter sessions in many years. The naval programme of the Government, which involves the voting of an Immediate "emergency" contribution of $30.rt(i0,0ut to the British navy, is expected to nwrt with violent opposition. Other important matters that the stssion will deal with will be the railway act, Important amendments to the bank act. and a renewed atempt to (rente a permanent tariff commission. The construction of dams in international waters for power purposes and several other important matters of concern to the United States and Canada will be taken up by the International Joint High Commission when It reconvenes in Washington Monday. Because of its many unusual features, the case of Burton in Gibson, thu New York lawyer indicted for murder in the first decree in connection with the death of Mrs. Rosa Metischik Szabo In Greenwood Lake, on July IS, promises to attract much attention when it comes up for trial Monday at Goshen. N. V. important onventinns of the week will be the annual meeting; of the National Association of Railway Commissioners, in Washington: tho American Civic Association, in Baltimore; tho American National Woman Suffrage Association. In Philadelphia; the Investment Bankers' Association of America,
; In Xew. York city, and the National Ff deration of Retail Merchants, in St. j Louis. I other events and happenings that will figure in the news of the wee; ' will include the National Horse Show In New York city, the visltn of the Atlantc battleship fleet at Charleston, S C, the Pacific NorthweM Land I'nr.- ! press at Portland. Ore., and the social debut of Miss Ksther Cleveland, old-
THANKSGIYING turkey promises to be high in the abstract and in the concrete as in price and in the tree
THE Bashi Bazouks are said to be
in a bad way. Probably somebody!
wanted to put in boulevard lights.
I'XP KHSTAXP that Judge llnlier is J tryinq- to enEatre one of Mill Gleason's : rolling mills to roll the ale for that i Gory mayoralty boom of his. t
WK take back all that we use to say ahout'thc Gary common council in its Hattlease Castlemanic days. See that they -,v.ie throw inir inkwells, spittons and dictionaries at one another in the British parliament jesterday. KINGDOM of Montenegro Is stuck up because they refer to Its ruler a. the fighting monarch. How about, hizzoner, the Hon Tom Knotts. san.tak of GaryBazar? OUR special rurresponiiciit, Hennery Cold hot tie, is staying at home these November nights reading Pickens. To give realism to what he reads Hennery has a tankard of ale, a slice of roast t" ef and a long-stemmed pipe with every second chapter. "This is the only way to f?et next to literature," states II nnery, "It enables me to read two books at a sitting." "Castern judge has ruled that safety razor is a dangerous weapon. Perhaps he must have been scratched with the same kind that we tise. HAS your kid started learning that piece of his for the Thanksgiving entertainment that they are going to have at school ?
est daughter of the late president, Grover Cleveland.
The Day in HISTORY
AFTER TIIK HF.ST. When they call for I'SIOX SCOt'T
SCRAP with a ticket In the package CI, SSIFIEI ADVKRTISI "fi irlvea
good for preaents, they have tried It. to your offer on your want HIGHLY
Adv.
1 SPECIALIZED PlULIClTr.
"THIS DTE l HISTOHV" ovemher !!. 1702 Kdward Hyde, Lord Cornbury. appointed governor nf New York and Xew Jersey by tjueen Anne, 1776 Fort Washington, on th" Hudson, captured by the British, with 2, (!"(. prisoners. 1S11 John Bright, famous English statesman, born. Pied March 27 1RS9. 1S46 Cracow annexed by Austria. 18t4 Gen. Sherman began his march from Atlanta, to the sea. 1&S9 Brazilian monarchy overthrown and republic established. "Till IS MY 3STH niltTHIHY" Lord Drnman, Lord Penman, governor general aril commander in chief of the Commonwealth of Aus'rialia, was born Nov. 1C, 1S74. His great-grandfather was for many years one of the most celebrated of the Lords Chief Justice of England. When 2 years old Lord Penman succeeded his great-uncle, in the title. He was educated for the army at the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, aud
served in the war in South Africa as captain lommanding a squadron of Imperial Yeomanry. In 193 Lord Penman married Miss Gertrude Mary Pearson, only daughter of Lord Cowdray, the well-known contractor and fin a ncier. Congratulations to: Timothy Pwight, former president of Yale University, SI yeasr old today. Henry C. Davis, Democratic candidate for Vice President in 1!04, !'J years old today. Lemuel H. Murlin, president of Boston Cnierslty. 51 years old today. MaJ. Gen. William W. Wotherspoon, C. S. A., 62 years old today.
this nun i nisToiii" Xvrmlier IT. 15S7 Joost Van ilcr Vondl, the national pf.et rf Holland. born in Cologne, Germany. Pied in Amsterdam, F b. 5, 1H7H. 1732 Ogletborpw sailed fioni England to plant a colon v in Georgia. LS12 William Warren, famous actor, born in Philadelphia. Pied in Boston, Sept. 12, 1 cS. 1SC9 Formal opening of the Sues Canal. 1S74 National W. C. T. U organized at Cleveland. lV- Cortn. rs.one lar.l for tho Univer eit- of Texas at rVustiu-
