Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 153, Hammond, Lake County, 27 November 1912 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
WVdnesa.iv, Nor. 27, 1912.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br The Lake Cnt7 Prtatlaar mm Pah. llahlss Canyur.
The Lake Countr Times, dally except 6unday, "enterexl aa second-class matter June 28. 1"; The Lake County TlmM, daily except Saturday and Sunday, entered J. 1911; The Oary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, ntered Oct. 5, liOt; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 1911; The Times, daily except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, Kit, at the postofflce at lUmmtod, Indiana, all under the act of March 3, 1171.
Entered at the PotoftV, Hammond, Ind.. as secead-olaM matter.
FORKIGN ADVERTISING! OFFICES, II Reotor Bulldin - - Chicago fii.ication offices, Hammond Building. Hammond, Ind.
?Or THE
TKLKPHONKS, Hammond (private exchange) (Call for department wanted. )
111
CiARY raper feelingsly speaks of the 'Hustle of UroailwKy." Wonder It it is the fame one that was picked up af State artj llohman street the other day? Gary Office Tel. 1S7 Kast Chicago Office Tel. 640-J Indiana Harbor Tel. 349-M; 150 Whiting Tel. SO-M Crown Point Tel. 83 Hegewlsrh Tel. S Advertising solicitors wlH be sent, or rates given on application.
If you hare any trouble fettlnj; The Times notify the nearest office and have It promptly remedied.
LARGER PAID IP CIRCT LATION T II A K ANY OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION'. ANONYMOUS communications will not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor, Times, Hammond. In1
ii ix wr. nrr heered him blame the world Ker Irimlilrii that It brought) Never heered him ml 1 at life. Or exprcw a gloomy thought; Seen It ralnln' pltchf orkx, when Outxlde labor he had planned; All he aid wua "After thin We n't the ana be simply grand!" Seen him abonldrra blah with care. Didn't know which way C turn. Trouble, troubles, ee'wherei Neer, far an I an learn. Walled an' whimpered at hi, fate; Took em smiling, one ly onei Tellings folk.ni "When thee are past What eomrt nexfll be fun." Seen him t the huh In mad. Wagon Muck, an" honaeH tired; eer growled about the road. ,eer kicked Vo he wim mtrrd; Iled far a while an' aald T the bowses. "Never mind. Jew a road or two abend I'.asler goln we ahall And." Seema hi woe appealed t' him. .lea' a sugar does t bo I wed em, too. In je" that way. Mate 'em weten up bin Joy. AIlu lkln je' beyond , The edge o' trouble to the day i flavin known the panKr o' atrife) He'd appreciate hi play. Detroit Free Preaa.
RE QUIHEMENT S OF HIGH LIFE. A SAFE BET
The requirements or niga nie ao There is a good deal of talk of a
not tend to happiness. The pretense general European war. We do not
and sham bo characteristic of people think that it will take place.
wno are Keeping up a iront is a The n)en who have to bet shot the
violent lorm or ijing. women who havp tn dn the wppnin
. ... . i
The thing that throws a glamor and the children who have to do the
about high life is our own lack of sufferlng, will have a great deal to
knowledge of what real happiness is. say Statesmen realize that the We Imagine that happiness depends 1imes are now modern enough that
upon sometning external, wnereas. the common hprd ,sn.t a3 submissive
in point of fact, externals have very as llse(j to hp
nine errect upon our nappmess ex- The extension of education, the In
cept to hinder It. Many a millionaire flupnt.e of newspapers, the growth of
trades unions, and the teachings of
THE RETURN TO ASIA TURKISH FAMILY ON VAY TO CROSS BOSPORUS
has committed suicide, and many a
poor man has longed for a thousand lives.
Happiness is a thing altogether in
ternal, and depends not upon the
multitude of our possessions, but up
on our appreciation of the ones we
have. It is our failure to realize this
433
Garfield Lodge, No. 569. F. A A. M. Btated meetings every Friday evening.
or a saloon ruins a career they feel
with double force the necessity for
the right kind of a men's club.
Hammond is convinced. There is
r.o question about that. The leaven
is at work. The idea is expected to grow until finally it will be possible
to raise the money.
Hammond has no Judge Garys, it
has no Studebakers .it has no men of great wealth to endow an institution
of this kind. Accordingly instead of
having one man to put up the 'firs
550,000 it. must have ten. Then
there must be other gifts.
Hammond has learned how it must
be done. It will do it one of these days when the city will take rank
with others of its size in the state
Hammond Chapter, No. 117, R. A. M. Regular stated meeting second and fourth Wednesday of each month. November 37. Royal Arch.
Hammond Council, No. 90, R. a M. Stated meetings first Tuesday of each month.
Hammond Commandery, No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting first and third Monday of each month.
THE South Chicago Calumet ha3 swept the Inland Steel company's immense plant in the lake for the third time in two years. What with getting out a newspaper, destroying and rehabilitating the Inland, the Calumet office must employ quite a busy force.
FEMALE hunter who traveled 3,600 miles in the Congo in search of a
lion says she never got a shot at a single lion. Wish a lot of duck hun
ters around here would take a few
lessons from her in telling the truth
THE LEAVEN IS WORKING.
THE bath-tub trust it seems vio
lated tne Sherman law an unclean
trust in spite of its name evidently.
WHEN" it comes down to facts, of
course we have no objection to pay
ing 35c for a haircut if the hungry
barber wouldn't bore us to death try
ing to sell us one of his infernal
smelling hair tonics.
THE FARLEY CASE.
In speaking of the acquittal of
Miss Cecelia Farley of Columbus,
charged with murder the Fort Wayne
News says with a great deal of plain
speaking
"We have Miss Farley's own word
for It that she has not been all that
she ehould have been by several
measures, and there are some who are even so flinty-heated as to doubt whether she was really the fair and
innocent flower she alleges she was
when Zollinger came into her life
Indeed, her subsequent conduct with
gentleman friend. Qulgley, would in
dicate that. Cecelia was a girl who
Will Hammond get a Young Men's was kind-hearted and accornmodat
Christian Association as a result of the effervescene of enthusiasm that was aroused for the project by the forty-third annual convention of the state organization In that city? That Is the question that hundreds
of interested young men asking today. Many of them are satisfied that between 400 and 500 members could be signed up in Hammond in a month. But that is not the problem. A project of this kind must have the proper foundation. From years of experience in which not a single Y. M. C. A. project has failed the state
organization has learned that outside of the revenue from memberships the organization must have a fully equipped building. A building suitable for Hammond would cost not less than 5125,000. To assure the building of such a structure it would be necessary for ten men to give 55,000 each and the rest would be raised in smaller sums.
It is vinderstood that the field has been canvassed and that present indications are that the workers found it impossible to secure pledges for the first 550,000. Hut the convention left the desire for such an organization that is expected to grow until it reaches fruition a year or two hence. In as
phlegmatic a community as this an idea does not take root at once. We have to feel the need of a thing for five or ten years before we get it. It is really expecting a good deal to think that in a month's campaign enough sentiment could be aroused to make it possible to raise $125,000 for this purpose. Hut the business men of this community have been mightily impressed. They- are thinking hard. Every time a pool room makes a criminal
Socialism are matched against the I
schemes in the chancelleries. We bet
on public opinion.
LAFE Merwin had right ear torn
off Sunday evening while driving
that our admiration for high society with Miss Lottie Simmons, of Calubegins. We think that a champagne met. Mercyville (Iowa) Banner.
supper is a jolly entertainment be- Naughty Lafe, what didest thou?
cause it looks like it. We regret that
the old family horse is not an automobile, and we prefer steam heat to the old grate fire, not because the steam heat and the automobile are
WHEN anyone says anything
about old Si being pulled away from
the pap bottle, it'B laughable to see
essentially the more enjoyable, but him taking the hurdles and stubbing
hnra.mo thev cost mm-e mrmpv If nis toe at every third hurdle.
prunes were 1.50 a pound they
nnrl mnahronma a In Mirto u-ftnlrl fall XiXJUti AO XJ JljOOX LJ n
i
below the level of spinach. I The editor of one of our Gary
It should afford as much pleasure contemporaries, dazzled by the sheen
to a person to go to the theater in a or oriental rugs and the magnificence
street car and in ordinary clothing as of potted ferns seen at a reception a
to be driven to the place in a cab and few days ago, remarked that society
to wear a picture hat large enough to in the steel city "is in a whirl."
obstruct the vision of a dozen people Last night the democrats met in a
in the seats behind. It. ought to give Hungarian cafe to rejoice over vie
as much satisfaction to read a single tory. At the same time the bull
book, and know it well, as to buy 40 moosers and their temperance allies
yards of them in bindings to match gathered around another festive
the wall paper and never see the in- board to give thanks that it wasn't
side of any. It ought to be as pleas- worse
ant to ride behind the same good old The butchers-and grocers have a!
family horse every day as to own ready danced and now comes the an-
three tables full and use a different nouncenient that the annual ball of one on each pubic occasion. Hut to the Gary police department is a social
the mind of the high liver simplicity f t-vent of the near future
has no charm. To seem to be happy Really, society is in a whirl in
Gary.
It is just one dazzling
fling after another.
Highland
is his ideal of happiness. He does not consult his own Judgment with respect to what will give him solid
comfort or satisfaction, so much as
he considers the opinions of those
about him and struts for their ap
plause.
Of course the high liver is not al
ways to oiame. bomet lines ne nas a wife who would rather see him the
leader in-local society than have him
t resiaent oi tne cnitea states, home- TEN thousand New York eivla
times he has daughters and sons who have become "Spugs." A snug is a lead him around by the nose and member of the Society For The Prebully him into a dress suit when he vention of Useless Giving in relation
would rather be sitting at home be- to Christmas presents.
side a base burner reading Shake
THE Chicago girl who ended her
life by leaping from a 20 story building could have kept the wolf from
the door a little longer by sel'.ing the
15,000 story of her life.
f " "" ' - ' ' ' ' , ... ... - ,
l-'r 'vT C ' ' ' . H &lrAi' - S1-' 'hv'" V ! i
fv ,it firt t &r x "ia;Vaa77i ?tr v . . ,
This picture of a Turkish woman, child, and ancient ancestral cart driven by the man nas ueen a common sipht the last few weeks on the plains of Thrace, across which thousands Turkish families have fled before the oncoming troops of the Ralkan allies. The fleeing Turks will seek homes in Asia, whence their ancestors came and took Constantinople four hundred years aso.
LATEST news from Bermuda says that our President-elect has indigestion. Hope the job-hunters do not make him have anything worse.
ing to the point of serious fault, and
it is not at all improbable that she
had been so from tender years. Many a really good girl has fallen before the insidious assaults of the man she
loves but no truly pure woman was ever given to promiscuity in the bestowal of her person. Still, however that may have been, public sympathy has been strongly with Miss Farley in her ordeal and the consensus of opinion is to the effect that Mr. Zollinger got just about what he had coming to him. He was older and more experienced than the girl, and,
leaving his family, he lived with her in open shame. When finally he tired of her charms, he purposed to leave the moral slough they occupied together, and, taking advantage of the viciously unjust dual code, to go back to his deserted family. He could once more assume his social standing by a hypocritical affectation of repentarce, but as for the girl she could not rise above the stigma their liaison had placed upon her. Small wonder is it, therefore, that she rebelled against an injustice so iniquitous and in her distraction seized upon what seemed to her the only method of righting a manifest wrong.
'It is never well to condone
murder but nevertheless it is a fact
that if more liberties met the fate of Alvin Zollinger there would be fewer affinity affairs than this country is now' cursed with. The man who renounces his marital vows and takes up with an affinity, be she innocent or bad, merits any disastrous and disgraceful fate that may overtake him. and the instrument of that fate is entitled to all possible consideration and leniency. It is possibly not too much to say that the Farley verdict was in the public interest."
WEALTHY Englishman has had
his hair insured. What mistakes
some of us do make by thus seizing
time by the forelocks.
CAREFUL attentions to coughs
and colds will be about as good a way
is any to fight measles and scarlet
fever epidemics.
speare. ATkwright, the inventor.
had a wife who became disgruntled OH YOU J0HNDEE!
at the poverty which her brilliant Great life Mr. Rockefeller's!
husband might have prevented and in fact, it's almost ideal.
tnrew nis models into the nre. 'I he Plays golf all morning and then in
wife of a struggling politician, who the afternoon takes out an automo
later achieved national tame, is re- bile full of high school teachers for a
puted to have driven him from the ride and tells them funny stories.
house and soused him with a bucket At night, he oh well never mind of slop because she objected to the what he does at night, look at the
fetyle in which she had been support- fun he has in the afternoon
ed. And many an equally brilliant man, lacking the courage and resolution of these men, has consented to be made the lackey of some bridge club in preference to running for Congress. But in the majority of cases the fault lies strictly at the door of the offender himself, who prefers the
fieshpots of Egypt to the milk and honey of Canaan, and who sells his birthright to happiness for a mess of pottage. He loses present contentment and future prosperity by his
blind devotion to the requirements of high life; while the right liver, who seeks for the things that count, gains both. There is a story somewhere, in a book of long ago, that tells of a man who journeyed, from world's end to world's end, seeking the pot of gold which lay at the base of the rainbow. Forever grasping, forever struggling,
he made his way over foreign lands and through perilous places, thinking
as he staggered from hill to hill that the wonder spot, where the many-
tinted arch bent down and kissed the earth, lay just beyond. But when be had traveled around the world and found the end of the rainbow at last,
he saw that it rested upon the very
spot from which he had started, and
that a neighbor who had remained at home had discovered the pot of gold
while plowing his own field. The requirements of high life can
not be met by any man or woman
who desires to succeed, for they involve a style of life that saps the strength of mind and body that is
necessary to all worthy attainment
That man will live longest and live most happily who regulates his conduct, not with a purpose of SEEM
ING successful, but with the purpose
of BEING successful; who prefers
right living and clear thinking to the
vanities of high society.
to hi wage? and he believes that there ought to be a maximum wage law.
Well, Elbert, they neem to have it at
our Gary steel works. You ought to
keep up with the times.
WE see by the cables that he has the
indigestion. We told Woodrow not to
eat too many of those Bermuda onions.
PSMICOGNERTIPMEST Is exhibiting
in Plymouth, says The Democrat of that
place. Well, if you feel that way about It it's all right; but there ought to be
little bit more brotherly love shown
around Thanksgiving time, we think.
CZAR of Bulgaria rides out to battle
in a motor car. isow. imagine isapoieon tinkering around his carburetor or trying to pump a tire.
DEPLORABLE clays in South Chi
cago:
We deplore the closed stores at night, we deplore the disgusting carnival, we deplore the present lottery scheme. We belie'e that all of these policies harm the town, the merchants and all concerned. Calumet Record.
LARGER stipends for clergymen
is being advocated. Higher cost of
getting salvation supposed to be free
Oh well everybody's doing it. Poor
clergymen deserve increase as well o
i anybody else.
THERE'S something wrong with
the world when apartment house
owners will bar babies and allow
dogs.
WE hope the Greeks are not find
ing Jheir skirts too uncomfortable in
battling during this cold weather.
BACHELORS become insane more
readily than married men according
to statistics. We are from Missouri
MISS Indian Summer is looking
around for her hat and seems at last
bent on her departure.
EARD BY
UBE
The Day in HISTORY
"THIS DATE IN HISTORY" November 2T. 1635 Madame de Maintenon, one of
the famous women of French his tory.. born. Pied April 15.1719.
morning when the wheels of the baggage car opened a switch and the train, with the exception of the engine and tender. was derailed. The coachts turned partly on their fides and the passengers were all badly shaken up, but nobody was seriously Injured. There were four sleeping coaches In the train. Frank Kaiser was engineer and Richard Strain conductor of tha train. A special was made up at
. ; I'.loomington and the passengers conI tinued their journeys.
SOUTH BEL HAS TYPHOID. Eight cases of typhoid fever were reported in South Bend today by the city board of health. It is also said that for
Jan. several weeks back there has been an
average of five cases a week reported.
AS the Xrnas spirit grows greater
the bank account waxes lesser.
NOW, tomorrow as you all gather in
your little steam-heated flat and as
mother roasts the cold-storage turkey in the gas stove just recall the oldfashioned Thanksgiving. SOME one Is now mean enough to suggest that Colonel Roosevelt has a brilliant future behind him. OUR old friend, Judge Elbert Gary, states that the hi kost of living is due
FROM the big amount of deploring
done we should say that the editor of
the South Chicago paper must have
been soaked on the puss by a delin
quent subscriber.
THAT loud laughing you hear in the
direction of Pennsylvania avenue is
caused by your Uncle willum Taft thinking about the bed of roses Wood-
row will not have about four years
hence.
GREAT CAEHAlt: Gary and Ham
mond barbers have raised the price of t a
a hair cut to 33 cents. Married men will now have to get witle a pair of clippers
for the alfalfa harvest work.
HOTEL DE PRINCE, new hostelry in
London will only admit little monarchs, ex-kings, dukes and counts. We mere-
lv record this so that the Hon. Tim
Englehart, duke of Ridge road, will know where, to put up at when ho
crosses the P"nd.
WOODROW 'WILSON', the demo
crat who. In the ordinary course of events, will be the next president of
the United States." London Sphere.
We always t bought that be would be
president wln'n Hill Taft packed his trunk on March 4-
NATIVKS of Gary have stiff necks.
No doubt it is caused by thejr stretch
ing them to gaze upon the top of that new Broadway skyscraper. WISH some one would invite us to a similar affair: In answer to the Otterbein correspondent in last Friday's Journal. I will state that we will be on the look out for ail he correspondents on Thanksgiving day and vvc- assure you that we would be highly pleased to entertain that jolly bunch of writers on that occasion. I also wish to thank the correspondent of Drookston. It. F. D. No. 15, for her kind message of cheT. and only hope that she as well as many others will hi- among our visitors in the future. Gl.iiblens Corner correspondence to the Lafayette Journal. FRANCE'S birth rate shows a decrease of 115, 1R" babies last year. We
will have the court pmlo;ogist figure out hojv many games of bridge whist, etc.
177S Washington's army went Into
winter quarters at Middle brook, X. J.
1S09 Fanny Kemble, famous actress,;
born in London. Died thre,
15. 1S93. i
1S12 John Dunlap, who printed the . Soutn Bend doctors do not anticinpate Declaration of Independence, died j a serOU8 epidemic, believing that the in Philadelphia. Born in Ireland j rhanga in the wrath will prevent tha In 1747. ! di&ease from spreading.
1SH The London Times used the first j rotary steam press. ISOrt IM.In Pnrrot ma.lo h I first!
the "Walnut ' '-irrun .uuri m i. uniiti.u.-. i.v
test a codicil to the win or the late Francis Puph, on the ground of unsoundness of mind, that the odicll was
CODICIL TO WILL CONTESTED. Suit has been filed in the Martholo-
sstage apearance. at
Street Theater. Philadelphia. 1S6S Sir John Young appointed Gover-
ii.mhin Wisconsin launched at; n- ou'y execuieu auu. L.lal
. .u. . ... r ' - - .
1S9S-
San Francisco.
1911 Archbishops Farley of New York and O'Connell of Boston created Cardinals.
i signed by the testator or any one au
thorized by him to sign his name. The estate In litigation is worth $25,000. OXE KILLED, ONE IXJMIED. , Perry Smith, 21 years old. was killed, and Walter Witts was badly hurt when a handcar on which they were riding
Jown on a trestle south or
Popular Actress Nov in Chicago
THIS IS MY N3RD BIRTHDAY" F.arl Mount Cnxbeli.
T.'oi-I Mnunt r'ailh!! 11'hn ts One Of. W38 I'Un
onlv about three dozen members of the' Richmond by a C. & O. pasenger train.
House of Lords who have passed the Both men are from Richmond. Four allotted span of three-score-and-ten by; other men who were on th car jumped
decade or more, was born Nov. 27. to satety
lStf. His father was the Kev. iJ. u. . ,
Moore, Canon of Wlndsod, and in his; youth the son had seemingly small i prospects of succeeding to the high ' title be now bears. After graduating; from Cambridge In 1S54 he was called to the bar and for many years there-!
after was t-ngaged in the practice of law. About fifteen years ago the death of a distant cousin resulted in bis succession to the peerage under tho title of Earl Mount Cashell, which was created in 1781. Congratulations to: Alvey Augustus Adee, who has held the post of Second Assi stantSecretary of State of th United States for a quarter of a century, 70 years old today. Edwin C. Hurlcigh. former congressniann, whom the Republicans of Maine htivo selected to succeed Obadlah Gardner in the I'nited States senate, 69
years cdd.
Up and Down in INDIANA
M'HIE-S. TOB. CO. FOREX (XXX.Y) Kentucky Plug Cut smoking tobacco bii made the imokrr wise. He knovs ijimllty. - or.. foil package for 5 Adv.
FII.KS IMI'I'RK MILK II llf;KS. A crusade for pure milk was inaug
urated at liiitford City ast evenint,'. when five affidavits were filed against three dealers, charging them with selling milk in which there were "visible evidence of dirt." The accused dealers
are Harry Painter and Abe Clarke, two
charges each, and Robert Jones. C. L. Hutchns. drug and food inspector, filed
the charges. The arrests followed warnings given the dairymen some
time ago. CAR WHEELS SPLIT SWITt II.
Motion passenger train No. 3 south
bound from Chicago to Louisville, was
I wrecked at l,uetisvi lie, inirteen mues
J north of Blooming ton early Monday
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