Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 205, Hammond, Lake County, 30 January 1913 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

Thursday, Jan. 30, 1913

T

E TIMES

NEWSPAPERS Br Tht Lake County Prlatiaa; aad Fob. UabJaa; ComiliT.

The Lake County Times. dally except Sunday, "entered ja second-class matter June 28. lSOSVThe Lake County Times, daily except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. 3, 1911; The Gary Evening: Times, daily except Sunday, entered Oct. 6, 1909: The Lake County

limes, Saturday and weekly edition.

entered Jan. 80. 1911: The Times, dally

except Sunday, entered Jan. 15. 1912. at the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana,

all under the aet of March . U79.

Entered at the Postofflco, .Hammond.

in a., aa secomd-claas mutter.

FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICES,

12 Rector Building- - . Chicago

Phi txii? q for Iri

M&IIT. Swiftly walk over the mfrttm wTf, Spirit of Night! Out of tne misty eastern caveWhere, all the lone and lone daylight. Thou movent dreams of joy and fear Which make thee terrible and dear, Swift by thy night!

PUBLICATION orFICE, Hammond Building-, Hammond. Ind.

TELEPHONES, Hammond (prfwate exchange)....., (Call for department wasted.)

XU

Gary Office ...Tel. 117 East Chicago Office Tel. MO-J Indiana Harbor....... TeL S49-M; ISO Whiting- . Tel. 0-M Crown Point Tel. S Hegewinch .TeL II

Advertising- aollcrtora will be a ant, or rate given on application.

If you bare any trouble getting The Ttaaea notify the nearest office and

fcave it promptly remedied.

LARGER PAID CP CIRCULA TION

THAN ANY OTHER TWO IfEWS

PAPERS IX THE CALUMET REGION.

ANONTMOUS commanlostlons will

fot be noticed, but other will be

printed at discretion, and should be

addressed to The Editor. Time, Ham ttond, Ind.

435

Astated meeting- of Garfield lodge No. 569, F. and A. M., will be held on

Jan. 31, at 7:30 p. m. F. C. degree. Visiting brothers cordially welcomed.

E." M. Shanklin, W. M. R. S. Galer. Sec

There will be a special meeting Wednesday evening, Feb. 5th, Royal

Arch degree. Refreshments. -'

Wrap thy form ta a mantle stray, Star-tnivroiight !

Bllad vlth thine hair the eye of ay Kiss her until she be wearied out. Then wander o'er city and aeat and land. Touching: all with thine opiate waad Come. long-sought ! When I arose and saw the dawn. I algh'd for thee;

When lla-ht rode high, and the dew

was gone.

And noon lay heavy on flower and

tree.

And the weary Day tnrn'd to her

rest. Lingering like an unloved guest, I algh' for thee.

Thy brother Death rame, and cried.

"Wouldst thoa mef"

Thy sweet child Sleep, the filmy-eye,

MarntarM like a nooatide bee, Shall I nestle near thy sldef Woodat thoa mef And I replied, . $ not thee :

Death will cone when thoa are dead,

Soon, too soon-

Sleep will come when thoa are fled,

Of neither wonld I ask the boon I ask of thee, beloved Sight Swtft be thine aproachlag flight, Cosae soon, soon! Percy Bysshe Shelley,

Z u'o: lZt:LZ AMERICAN REPRESENTATIVES IN FOREIGN CAPITALS MUST SOON

taWM-tl,. strictly frert. nr wtl ly, b .bl. to make right ,!e- GIVE UP POSTS; O'BRIEN AND LEISHMAN MAY REMAIN IN EUROPE

. . ... , x ! v i , uuuiurm, ortrevru dlui- i tioiuuo wuvrje uiatLtirv Ul iiUIlf M V til C I

age, candled storage etc., will miss I concerned." Pshaw he might at I e' " '7 f.

some familiar mottoes. least have given a gallon of gasoline

Nothing but the fresh egg goe3 hereafter, until Arjril. when the

i 1 iifWhf a -a a v a ww

storage crop will again be harvested,! xUHUIKjUUa AUVILL.

against another ten months consump-1 There is & growing tendency on

tlo-n. the part of the magazines to conduct

Goodbye, storage. We will miss I financial departments made up of

you. Hut we can get along very financial advertisements and so-called

nicely, thank you, without you. I "advice."

Some of the magazines pretend to

give opinions on stock and bond in

vestments!

If any one is seeking advice in fi

nancial matters let him avoid these

sources. Most of the "ad-

AX exchange seems to think that there is a posibllity that by 1916 the distinguished citizen of Oyster Bay

will be claiming that he established 1 sensa

D,.U6i, a vice.. a regUate(i by the 3dVertise

me imttct pusi. wen ii ne scopsimt

there we shall all return thanks.

WE imagine the most difficult

thing In the world would be to make

one of these latest style straight-

lined girls out of one of the chubby

round roly-poly ones.

Take the Munsey magazine. Old

Munsey is one of the publishers who

lingers at the dugs of the steel trust

and other corporations. The Outlook,

has a large share of its stock in the

Standard Oil hands, and other magazines with financial columns are subject to similar influences.

j i you want advice go to your

banker. Trust not the Wall street -owned magazines that hand out

selfish information.

YOU BET THEY'D YIP.

Still we cannot help wondering

what the democratic press would be

saying were it. a republican presi

dent-elect who knocked the inaug- REPRESENTATIVE Roddenbery,

ural ball and finally "refused even of Georgia, complains that the head so much as to greet the plain people of the Pension Bureau 'rides in a at a public reception." It is readily limousine, drinks champagne and

conceived, however, that we should does the turkey trot." Well it hear plenty concerning snobbery, ex-J doesn't cost the government anything

elusive aristocracy, haughtiness, and for a bureaucrat to do the turkey

swollen pride. In the case of Dr. I trot.

Wilson, however, it is cheering and

heartening to observe that he is

simply endeavoring to preserve demo

cratic simplicity and rebuke the

to get physicians to express them- high-toned society of Washington

setves regarding me smanpox srnia- city. Fort Wayne News.

lion.

. ,vy(; -i

There are time when tha welfare

of a communitv. demands a sacrifice THE early coming of Easter this

of professional ethics, if professional year does not cau8e that full-feellng-

ethics were ever meant to be carried after-eating in father's pocket book.

so far. The newspapers may fill Its

Heart to Heart

Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON

Top, left to right I Thomas J. O'Brien, W. W. Hockhlll and Myroa T. Herri ck. A. Lelahiuaa a ad Henry S. BeateU.

Washington, Jan. 30. American am- , of the Faubourg St. Germain through

' Hammond Council, No. 90, R. S. M Etated meetings first Tuesday of eara month.

Hammond Commandery, No.

T. Regular stated meeting first and

fay of: each" month.

columns witn anonymous warnings

to the public, and they will do no

good. ; If backed up however by the

nam? of a reputable physician, some

gooi may be accomplished.

After all, this over-zealous main

tenance of the ethics of the profes

sion, amounts to just what the self-

seeking advertisers, wish to attain.

only in a less direct way. Self-seek

ing advertising, which is the only kind the "ethics of the profession"

41, K. j really seeks to put down, is done for

the purpose of getting business. The

physician who carries the "no pub-

WHAT has become of all the won

derful Boy Scout .tuff that we were

promised some time ago?

DONT BE A BORX.

Mrs. George W. Wickersham, wife

bassadors. ministers and consuls in

foreign lands are packing their trunks. Sadly they are preparing for the- fateful fourth of March, when they must send in their resignations to the new president. The majority of our representatives In foreign capitals enjoy their work. They are rich and live high. Their duties are not arduous. It is a pleasant life and they do not like to give it up. Among the ambassadors, only two,

and

v. .-nt!. iii I John G. A. Leishman at Berlin

xnumaa j. j JLrie at ivunc n.c

EEMEMBEE HOW YOU FELT. Have you children?

Tnen rememher that once you

were young.

Be kind to them.

Never let it be said that you need

lessly turned a child's laughter to

tears.

licity" idea to excess, does so in the CHEAP AT MILLIONS IF IT CUBES

fear that it will harm his interests,

A DOCTOR'S DUTY.

It is a pity more LaTte county doc-jto "advertise." The public-spirited

tors cannot appreciate the difference j physician who knows when to talk between self-seeking publicity and a I and when to keep his mouth shut, is

public-spirited declaration to which the one who is entitled to the great

their names, may he attached, whose est credit

purpose it Is to warn the community nf an Imnendine danger.

Professional men. especially in IT is a good thing there are no

r.mall towns, are nrone to carry to S Turks around here, else some

excess the unwritten law, whereby o ur best people WOuld be getting

nrnhlhiH from "a H vt-rtla. PUnCtUrea Dy B. DUlltt.

ing." The physician who for personal gain seeks to get his name into

The offer of Charles E. - Finlay.

president of the Aetna National

Bank, of New York, to pay $1,000,000 for the establishment in America of the tuberculosis cure reported to

down a rule for conversation.

It was to avoid the four D's: DISEASES.

DESCENDANTS, DOMESTICS, DRESS. It Is a good rule for people elsewhere than in Washington. Talk of our ailments does not inter

est other people.

They have Ills of their own. Tell it to the doctor.

Prattle about our children or our ancestors la usually a bore.

Tell It to the schoolteacher or the men who make ancestral trees. Gossip about servants Is a weariness. Tell it to the employment bureau. Pattering about clothes is inane and has other faults.

Tell it to the dressmaker.

The weather as a conversational top-

in the diplomatic service for any length

of time, and both of them are credited with Intentions to make permanent homes abroad. They have learned to like European life. Mr. Irishman's oldest daughter is

connected with half of the old families J

her French marriage, while the ambas

sador's son, "Jack" Leishman, has long been domiciled " In Paris. Mrs. Leishman has often expressed her preference for Parisian society, and has maintained a home there while her husband was officially living In Constantinople. Rome and Berlin. It is expected that she and her daughters will immediately open an establishment in their old neighborhood of the Bois de Boulogne near "Jack" Irishman's handsome home.

Mr. O'Brien, now stationed at Rome, has been away from his old home In

Michigan for so many years, at the

head of the legation In Denmark and

the embassy in Japan, before going to

Rome and his only daughter, Mrs.

Chilton, has in the meantime become

the wife of a rising young British dip

lomat now stationed In Berlin that he

Bottom! Lara Anderson, John G.

and Mrs. O'Brien are not pleased with

the thought of leaving Europe, where they now have mostof their intimate

ties or trlendship. xney are ncn enough to live where they please, and

it is understood they will transfer their household to either Paris or Lon

don after March 4.

Ambassador Rockhill, now at Con

stantinople, will probably . live in

Washington after he quits the diplomatic service. His wife and daughter are very popular socially at the capital. Other ambassadors and ministers, who will become familiar figures again In their native land after March 4 are Henry S. Boutell. minister to Switzer

land: Curtis Guild, stationed at St.

Petersburg; Larz Anderson, ambassa

dor at Tokyo, and Myron T. Herrlck.!

Uncle Sam's representative at the :

French capital.

Hon. Charles Johnson of Crown Point Capt, Elliott, who Is sending supplies might write for information as to the out of Evansville. Seven thousand presidency i pounds of bacon and other staple foods

.LAUNDRYMEN have been telling us

trte reason that our boiled shirts come back nervous wrecks is because the fabric is no good. The legislature has a bill In the house calling for a pure fabric law. Now, if the shirts and collars

come back looking like tattered battle

in proportion will be sent byepeclal steamer. CapC Elliott Will spend today and Friday in the lower Ohio district. VII,I, DEPORT 20 SYRIANS. A Federal officer at Laporte yesterday gave the authorities the information that 200 Syrians in Michigan City

flags we'll have to have the laundry- have recently been smuggled into that

have been discovered by Dr. F. F.

Friedmann, of Berlin, if it proves ic is also slightly frayed, although the beneficial in 95 out of 100 test cases, Bunsbine is a more exhilarating theme

could probably be duplicated in several other countries. It 13 a mani

festation of the intense interest taken throughout the civilized world in

the search for means of overcoming

WHILE earnestly emphasizing his the terrible "white plague."

.:. . w V. :. v remarks at the Ohio Society banquet,

Ul criticism, uui a uiauuciiuu euuuiu

surely be made between him and that of the doctor who utters a timely

warning through the newspapers, for the benefit of the health of the community! This abhorrence against publicity, whether fancied or sincere, amounts frequently to a silly obsession. Not

long ago in response to a public de

President Taft knocked over a water bottle on the table. This would never happen at an Indiana Society banquet for obvious reasons.

STOP ONE OR THE OTHER. A girl who took advantage of the

leap year privilege and proposed was

mand. the state board of health went duly marrled-

a iew aays alter tne wedding one morning in the "wee sma' 'hours" the

wife noticed that the husband talked in his sleep. Following up the clew she discovered that he had another wife and seven children. Now one ought either to cut out

chemists to Inquire into the cause of j

a typhoid epidemic in Indiana Harbor. Instead of turning at once to the water, which most naturally woud be blamed for the condition, the investigators for certain reasons, or for no reason at all, sought to di-

Thousands of rich men and millions of the poor are as deeply con-

cernea as jur j?iniay in voe ngni

against the destroyer which kills

more human beings than fall a prey

to any other disease. In proportion

than the condition of our livers.

Pon't be a bore. There are many good people in the

world whom their friends avoid because their talk is so deadly dull.

Don't be a bromide. Do you know

what a bromide is? Well, he Is the chap who drives the commonplace Into a corner and makes it squeal for freedom.

Everything he says has been said a

million times before.

He is trite and banal and his long

men up for malicious destruction of property. RAINY DAY. (Smartsburg correspondence to the Crawfordsvllle Journal.) O. II. Enozh did not go to Yazoo,

Miss., Tuesday as intended. Too many calves. j WE read in the 'steemed Laporte

Herald that its chief of police has returned Trom Canada, where "he went at the instance of Attorney H. W. Worden, to arrest a woman, who, in the mind of Attorney Worden. was none other than Bella Gunness, the Laporte murderess who was burned to death in the fire that destroyed her house on the McClung road nearly five years ago, ;

and' whose charred and tiecomposed body lies burled In a grave in Forest Hill cemetery. Chicago." Old Bella

seems to have a dual role. Her charred

conversational suit is to say obvious

to their means they would give as thine9 in an uninteresting way.

liberally to conquer this most dreaded I Conversation to be worth anything I body is m a cnicago cemetery, yei me

foe of life. There would be no limit should have some snap, sparkle and Laporte chief goes to arrest her m

to the financial resources which originality. . " '

As for topic, the world la full of " -

Talk about the latest book, some

thing good you have aeen in the pa

pers, church, high prices, the trusts, woman suffrage, new thought, the

crops, the way to boom your town or

might be brought into use if money would insure the final victory of

science over tuberculosis.

All attempts to calculate the

economic burden of this plague run

into staggering figures. It is a tre

mendous tax upon industry and every l neighborhood, evolution, the pranks

form of material advancement. Its yon played In your childhood, the lat-

that's a cinch.

vert the nublic mind from the belief

that the water was responsible, and leap year or talking in one's sleep

went after the milk supply. They found certain evdence that a dairy X - 1 1 .1 I ,

, jvi Aivrj -riensseiaer as Drettv as

his supply of milk, had been con- you can, sayg the Reasselaer Repub. laminated.. Not enough however, to ican Well it ookg pret.y good ag ,t

warrant tne closing or tne dairy

Later they investigated the water and gave it a clean bill of health. In the eyes of many the investigation was a ridiculous fiasco, as even were the milk primarily responsible, - the water could not remain uncon-

is, after an auto trip through the marsh, Virgie and Kniman country on a wet cold day.

WHAT has become of the old-fashioned delicious sardine? Outside of a

taminated in the presence of so seri- human sardine in a South Hohman

ous an epidemic, and ultimately the street car we haven't run across a

state board of health itself discredit-1 good sardine In years

ed the report. In the meantime, however, this newsDaner souarht in

formation from a number of nhv- GOOD-BYE, OLD SCOUT!

- - 1

sicians, with the object of warning Lake county and all Indiana in

the public against the use of unboil- fact is about to bid adieu to the

ed water, in spite of the apparently April storage egg. After Jan. 31

unwarranted report. While several I commission merchants, grocers and admitted that it was almost impossi- others handling eggs, must refrain

hie for the water to remain uncon-lfrom selling anything in this Hue

laminated, so fearful were they of ten months old, or older.

criticism, that they begged not to bej The imperial state of Indiana has "quoted." Only one of those ques- spoken and the storage egg is doom-

tloned in this particular instance, ed. It has passed the era of its use-

could be found who was sufficiently fulness and must furnish the in-

possessed of the courage of his con- gredient to one grand scramble.

victions to publicly voice hi3 belief! Our eyes, accustomed upon enter that the water was dangerous. Simi-Jing the tea utore or grocery, to a va

lar difficulty was found in some cases riety of signs, purporting to record

effects are felt in every community,

however small, and in all countries

The world would find Its progress

much quickened if it could be freed

from the most destructive of disease.

But there is an "if" of tremendous

importance in the proposition Presi

dent Finaly makes. It is by no means certain that the hopes raised by the

Friedmann treatment for tuberculosis

will be realized. The highest scientific authorities have not yet placed

their guarantee upon the new serum.

The tests made have not been long

enough and public enough to claar

away grave doubts. The offer made

by the New York banker is one of

est big news event fn yonr neck ef the

woods anything except the four deadly D's and the weather.

HEARD BY RUB E

(Lowell correspondence to The Times.) George Winter of Toledo, O., has located in Lowell, where he says he will run a home barber shop and give instructions in violin, guitar, mandolin and banjo music. INASMUCH as the other barber at Lowell also works as an undertaker, the inference is that the Cedar Creek township natives either sport Parisian beards or are else long on Gillette bladesi TOWN MARSHALL MUSTARD of Rensselaer beat up an onion grower there. Hot stuff when Mustard and onions mix.

county across the Canadian line, and

that action will at once be taken for their deportation. SPENDS DAY' IX ARGUMENT. Prosecutor Claude Phillpott of Covington began the argument for the state in the Gilbert Crumley murder trial yesterday morning, continuing until adjournment. He laid special stress on the claim that defendant had utilized his innocent daughter as a medium for the reconciliation and remarriage of himself and wife in order to regain possession of 13,600 alimony he had paid. C. M. McCabe will continue the argument for the state today. The jury will probably not get

the case before Friday or Saturday. FINDS OWL IN STOVE. W. R. Webster, a farmer living south of Shelbyville, had an unusual experi

ence while kindling a fire in his heating stove this morning and for a time had visions of a haunted house. He had placed the kindling nicely In the : fire box when It began to scatter In j every direction. The unusual disturb

ance was expiainea wnen a screecn owl made its way out of the stove. It is supposed to have found its way Into the stove from the flue. INSANITY" CAUSED BY' INJURIES. Shannon Pike, 45 years old. of Shelbyville, has been recommended by a sanity commission for treatment In an asylum. Injuries received In a fall from a house on which he was employed as a bricklayer last summer are said to be largely responsible for his condition. He has tried recently to kill members of his family.

and one of the best known theologians and educators of Canada, was born in Pictou, N. S., January 30, 1845. After receiving an academic education in his riativV 'place: lie conrphrt'hia -studies in the universities of Glasgow and Berlin. In 1866 he was ordained to the ministry of the Church of Scotland and for : nearly thirty years thereafter he filled pastorate sof prominent churchea In Ottawa, Winnipeg and Halifax, acquiring wide fame as a forceful pulpit speaker. While pastor of Knox College in Winnipeg the Rev. Dr. Gordon served as a chaplain through tha North-West rebellion campaign in 1885, accompanying the fight column under Gen. Mlddleton. In 1894 he began his career as an educator at the Presbyterian College In Halifax and In 1903 he succeeded the late Principal Grant as head of Queen's University, one of the foremost educational institutions in hA Dominion. Congratulations to: Jacob M. Dickinson, former Secretary of War and at present engaged as special counsel for the Government In the "Stee Trust" suit, 62 years old today.

GREAT CAESAR! Seeing how vio

lent this suffragette racket is getting

to be over around London tower mere man won't be safe any more unless he

many factors in the problem which, disguises himself in female garb

will tend to a sneerlv determination - READ that Mrs. Anthony of Muncie

of the exact results of the Friedmann

remedy.

It cannot be long before the true

value of the treatment will be clear

ly ascertained. Then, and not until

then, will the world know whether

it it a discovery worth untold mil

lions or merely one of the numerous false beacons which have raised the hopes of millions of sufferers only

to dash them to deper despair.

TARRYTOWN boy who found and

forwarded to the, owner a pair of

gloves dropped by Mr. John D. Rocke

feller from his automobile Is intense-

has broken Into print again with dia

mond gloves. Must keep the Muncie

glass factories working triple shifts.

SIR THOMAS CROSBY, the 82-year-old ex-lord mayor of London, Is once more practicing medicine. No doubt 40 years from now The Times will be printing that Sir Alex Schlieker, exlord mayor of East Chicago, has the shingle out once more. OFFER GARY CHAUTAUQUA THIS SUMMER." Gary Post headline. Yes, do get it! Think of the home talent

the Garyites can listen to. There's

hiszzoner, the Hon. Tom Knotts, Rev

Homer Carr, Battleaxe Castleman, Bill

Cain and other too numerous to mention. NOW talking of ousting the king and setting up a republic at Stockholm. Th

Up and Down in INDIANA

The Day in HISTORY

Popular Actress j

j Now in Chicago j

JIIX.K APPOINTS RECEIVER. On application of George White, i,hn Ta-h a. real estate dealer, was

yesterday afternoon appointed byJudge Ogden as the receiver of the Riverside Coal Company, at Washington, owning one of the largest mines in that section. The receivership was brought about because of trouble existing between the miners and operators. TO ('(Hi: KOH KI.OOD VICTIMS. Five hundred flood sufferer's in Ashbysbuig, Ky., and more than 1.000 in Calhoun, Ky., were found today by Capt. William Elliott. United States Al n-'-V Capt. Eiliolt and City Staler John Wallenmeyer, who accompanied him to the flooded towns along Green and Pond Rivers, returned to Evansville, laM night, after having been delayed

on their return at Spottsviile, Ky.. where their launch was disabled.

Provision for all the people at Cal

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY"" January 'M. 1835 Attempted assassination of President Jackson at the Capitol

by Richard Lawrence. j 1S36 Apaca wool first Introduced into England. ; 1S47 Lord Elgin reached Montreal and topk the oath of office as Governor pf Canada. 1S62 United States iron-clad ship

Monitor launched at -Brooklyn. 1867 Evangelical Alliance of the United. States organized in New York ity. 1879 Jules Grevy elected President of Fiance. 1891 icharles Bradlaugh, a famous English radical' leader, died. Born Sept. 8, 1833. 1906 Frederick VIII. proclaimed King of Peilmark.

1912 A copyright treaty between the

Unitec states ana Hungary was signed at Budapest., THIS IS MY 8KTH BIRTHDAY lift. Daniel M. Gordon.

Rev. Dr. Daniel M. Gordon, Principal

I III

ri , I It

w

:mmt

houn and Ashbysburg will be made byof Queen's University, Kingston. Ont,'

in "a vv th.OYneJJ.e).A J