Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 212, Hammond, Lake County, 7 February 1913 — Page 10
10
THE TIMES. Friday, Feb. 7, 1913.
THE TIMES
NEWSPAPERS
9T Tmm Uk Cnt7 mmttrng mmm Fmm,
P
Or for A riEj &Mi jDAY
ir i
nere and
The Lak County Time, dally except
Sunday, "entered as second-class mat
ter June 18. 1S0"; The Lake County
Timee. dally except Saturday and Sun
day, entered Feb. J. 1111; The Gary
Evening- Times, dally except Sunday. I That I hat! helped to make their path-
MV WEALTH, can leave behind me.
there. A friend or two to nay when gaue
entered Oct. 6, 10; The Lake County
Tlmea. Saturday and weekly edition.
entered Jan. 0. ltll; The Times, dally
except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, 11B. at
the postoffice at , Hammond, Indiana,
all under the aot of March a. 187.
Entered at tne Poatotftw, Hammond,
2nd., as aecoad-claaa matter.
FOREIGN .IBVKttTISING OFKICBS,
12 Rector Building- - - Chicago
oj fair.
Uad brougbt tUem milea uhfn they
were bowed with care." The rlehea of thle world I'll carry on.
If only three or four shall vniir to may.
W heu 1 have panst-d beyond thlM earthly uphere.
That I brought uladnesa to them on
a day
When bltrrne wa their. I'll take
away More rtchea than a blllionnire leaves here. u. F. P.
PUBLICATION OFFICES,
Hammond Bn tiding, Hammond, Iivd.
TEUCPttOSES, Hammond (private exchange)....., (Call for dusartment wanted.)
Ill
Gary Of flee Tel. 1S7 East Chicago Olflce Tel. B40-J
Indiana Harbor TeL S49-AI ; 150
Whiting Tel. SO-M Crown Point Tel. 3 Hegewlsch Tet H
Advertising ol letters wtll be sent, or
tatee given on application.
If you hace any trouble getting The
Times notify the nearest office and
bave It promptly remedied.
LARGER PAID tP CTKCZTLATIOX
THAJi AST OTHER TWO NEWS
aTEWI IX THB CALCMET REGION.
ANO NTMOUS comnronlcatlons will
et be noticed, but others will be
printed at discretion, and should be
addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham
mond. Ind.
f
433
Garfield Lodge No. 669 P. & A.,M. stated meeting Friday, Feb. 7. 7:30 p. in. E. A, degree. Visiting brothers welcome. R. S. Oaler, Sec, E. M. Shanklln, W. M.
Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M., regular statedy meeting Wednesda evening, Feb. 12. "Work in mark master. It
Hammond Council, No. ). R- S. M. Etated meetings first Tuesday of eaek month.
Hammond Comm&ndery, No. 41, K. JT. : BegtUar stated meeting first and "s?frd MotiStv of each month.
FEBRUARY will have only twenty-eight days; nevertheless, the month will be the longest in the year to many a yearning Democrat.
associate of Judge lien 13. Lindsey In
various matter sof municipal reform.
Creel is, or rather was, a news
paper man, a hard-hitting, stralght-
from-the-shoulder fellow who, when he put up his fists, expected the other man to do the same and give him back just as hard thumps as possible.
When he had occasion to write of u
man who he thought was a sneak, a thief, a scoundrel Of any partcular dye, he said so, without mincing his word3. Its a lifelong habit. He can't break himself of it, now that he talks instead of wrkes. And just because of this. Mayor Arnold, of Denver, has
suspended him from office becauseH
"he was causing dissension in the
fire and police board by calling its
members names."
A wondering public would like lo know just what Creel called Denver politicians that caused them to play
the baby. One supposes that their hides are thick as those of the rhinoceros. Perhaps, though, he folQuincey, who routed the chief
amazon of Billingsgate market by calling her an "isosceles triangle,"
when she had spouted all her foul
talk. Maybe he alluded to his "col
leagues" or "his confreres," and, like
that stage politician, Bardwell Slote,
who, when he was called "a dodo,
confessed that he thought it must be
a nasty personal attack because h
didn't know, what it was, these Denverites may believe that the terms were sweeping attacks on their hon
esty and morals. ,
What a satire Gilbert could have
made of such a situation; how he
would have flayed these modern Dog-
berrys! Now that Creel himself has married Blanche Bates, that charming actress,, he might take a hand in dramatizing his fellow officials and
their doings.
HOW MUCH LONGER? These people who are never happy unless they are ripping some public utility corporation up the back; these
people who call everybody porch-
climbers who are fair enough to see some good in a concern which has in
vested millions of dollars in the region should take notice of the
needle ice situation in Hammond at
the present time.
Hammond is the only city in the
entire Calumet region from South
Chicago to Gary that is bothered with
needle ice. Hammond is this minute
jepordized by fire.
East Chicago, Gary and South Chi
cago have all solved the needle ice
proDiem. Hammond with its new
pumping station is still, inconveni
enced and imperilled.
How long? Oh Lord how long
would those who designate some of
us as porchclimbers stand for such
service if the Northern Indiana Gas
& Electric Company owned our pump-
ng station.
NO need to put the postscript, "Bunt this letter," on missives intrusted to the mail in London these days.
THE coal bin is sickled over with
, the pale cast of thought and then
some. .-'
M. FOUQUIERES, the French Beau
Brummel, who is visiting Philadel
phia, says he likes this country very much. He must have come here for
rest.
WE read that a young couple got a
license to wed and then disappeared
Come now, that's no crime. Think it
is rather commendable.
THERE are five newspapers, born
in this country every day, but what
has that to do with eugenics?
ATHLETIC YOUNG ARMY BEAUTY TO HEAD SUFFRAGE!1 PAGEANT IN WASHINGTON
NOT INVINCIBLE. 'Tis said that when Czar Ferdi
nand, the great Bulgar strutter,
travels to a neighboring court that
everybody is broke for three weeks
after the visit because of the vest
number of gamblers in H. I. M. retinue. ; !
We would be willing to bet ten
golden Napoleons that if Ferdy and
his crowd ever came over for a visit
with the court at Gary the "patch"
faro dealers would have his whole
outfit making for the nearest pawn shop inside of two days.
PROF. Ward of Boston says the
better the brain, the fewer the babies and that highly intelligent people
have progeny. Why, what the well guess we'd better not start anything, v
Hf- ?r -J
Isaac N. Burch, a prominent banker of Chicago.
Congratulations tot Francis Wilson, the well known
comedian, 59 years old today.
Robert J. Gamble, United States
senator from South Dakota, 62 years od today.
J. B. R. Fiset, a member of the Sen
ate of Canada. i years old today
Robert B. Mantell, the noted Shipe-
Hiiearan actor, 59 years old today.
Rt. Hon. Alfred Lyttelton, former British colonial eecretary, 66 years old today.
SKCl Kl'.S HO.Mi i.kaves kokuho
William Gray, alleges swindler, arrested h Kokomo Frjlday night, has
jumped His bond and left for parts un
known. Gray was boosting- the organization of a company to te known as the "Kokomo Agriculture Company." Ho was arrestd with Melvin Murray Of Kokomo, who was the acting secretary for the firm. A number of Kokomo citizens will lose by the- transaction f Gary. " Murray will be the heaviest loser, as his lose probably will be 1,000. OLDEST ELK IX STATU. A. L. Brown, retired wealthy farmer of near Valparaiso and Intimate friend of Abraham Lincoln, celebrated his eighty-second birth anniversary yesterday. He is the oldest Elk In the state and has been a member of the Valparaiso lodjr twenty-two years.
SUBSCRIBE rOR THE TIMES.
(D
Crgam
Mrs. Richard t Alurleson.
Poor old T. R. must feel mighty gloomy foreis-i minister under Freyclnet, And
HAIR HARVEST DUE. "Get me a seat on the inaugural stand. I want . to see Governor Wilson lift hia right hand'and take the oath of office. Then me for a barber stop." J This from a man from Kansas, E. F. Boxwel, of Holsington, who, from
devotion to political principle and respect for hia word, has in the last Bixten years raised a mane forty-four inches In length he is now willing to be rid of. In 1896, -when McKinley beat Bryan, the border man vowed never to have hia hair cut until a democrat became. President. He is now on the last lap of his journey and within sight of the promised land and a barber chair. He ia probably only one
or many. NEWSPAPERS are having a great There will be some amusement in deal of fun with the Chicago Interthe Capitol even if there is no inaug- Ocean which said that "Amudsen uration ball. And this is not the found the South pole in an underonly long-haired gent who will scurry shirt." Old Doc Cook can put one
towards Washington looking for a over now.
Job.
.MODERN WAR METHODS.
Those Krupp folks over in Ger
many are clever ones when it comes to steel making and artillery designing but they lack a good press agent. During the present Balkan war we have been hearing a great deal
about the allies' victories due to the fact that they use Schneider cannons. We don't know who this Herr
padon us it is Monsieur Schneider is but he seems to have the brightest press agent. ,
THE DEMOCRATIC SITUATION. Developments in Hammond's po
litical situation are coming so fast
that it behooves the veter to pause occasionally for his bearings. . For the present then we shall dwell on the democratic prospects. The status in a nub shell is this:
Judge Lawrence Becker would like
to be mayor ex-officio. Mayor John
D. Smalley backed by John A. Gavit "the man behind" is the leader of the
stalwarts, who have thrown Becker overboard as water-logged material.
John L. Rhode heads a faction, large
enough possibly to defeat Smalley,
but not big enough to win against the
field including all parties. Barney Carter backed as a workingman's democratic candidate. The whole thing could be fixed up nicely through the promise of the postmastership but here Is the difficulty; eliminating Rhode and putting him in the post-
office leaves the stalwarts ind Jude Becker still at bay, and eliminating Smalley giving him thes fe.'.eral position still leaves Judge Becker and the stalwarts at bay, while Barney Carter's friends are not satisfied with anyone but him. That probably explains the latest development, Carl Bauer's boom on
a so-called non-partisan ticket with
Judge Becker his sponsor and strong
est supporter.
about it. but he might cheer up and seek the assistance of hizzoner, the Hon. Tom Knott?, who killed a similar bill aimed at him by the lndtanny senate. IT is lent now, but if we didn't record It here no one would suspect the fact. St RI'RISE AT SALT t KKKIv. From the Valparaiso VIdette.) Miss Anna Tofte. daughter of Al. Tofte, residing near the site of the old Gossett's mills at Salt Creek, was surprised. WE are surprised because The Vidette editor didn't print the names of the guests at the Salt Creek party for the residents at S.- C. are many and distinguished since last November. Ol'R idea of what is not heaven on
earth is expressed in Abe Martin's say.
I lng that, "Talk about hard luck. I
hadn't been married two weeks when th' Pearl laundry commenced to sew on buttons fer nothin'." THERK is at least one honest bailiwick In Indiana. Madison county wants one of its .courts abolished because It isn't needed. THE unexpected happens: "Boy playing hookey save burning schoolhouse." NOW that the Hon. Battling Nelson has won another fight the skies over Hegewlsch town won't be so leadencolored ALL. doubts that the Indianny legislatchoor won't finish its business by March l are dispelled by the happy announcement that Br'er Tom Taggart will take all of the pe-pull's prepresentatlves as his guests to the doings down by the Potomac way on March 4. IT is with stirring prides that we
note that the East Chicago club is showing its love for music by the pur
chase of a new graphophone.
OUR neighbor, John " B. Peterson, should thank his lucky star that he isn't in the unenviable position of that New England .congressman who will have to pay dues to the Congressional Ladies' t-ulb- for his twelve grownup daughters. ELKHART is complaining because there are ice packs in its river. Inasmuch as the river was one of the streams that went on a tear a few weeks ago we are not surprised to hear of ice packs as the-af tcrmath.
he coritii-ued um'ir the Ioubet minis
try of 1S92. .V. the end of iha y;?ar
he became prime minister for the lust time, a:Mi in 3A'5 h was again prime minister tor several months. In atrtition to being a successful lawyer and politician he is known as a brilliant journalist. Several years ago he was tl'-cted to member ship in the French Academy. The. wife of M. Ribot ij an American woman, daughter or the late
Powder
.
is the most efficient acd ' perfect of leavening agents
MADE FROM PURE CRTAM OF TARTAC No alum, lime or ammonia.
as
Popular Actress Now in Chicago
EQ)tfe3ti
Tfimmes9
XSOTIUK tnat they have round a girl at the University of Illinois with a perfect foot. Most women however would rather have a perfect fit than
a perfect foot. .
The Day in HISTORY
V v" SIS W
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By special arrangement with the publishers, THE TIMES is able to offer its readers the greatest club bargain ever offered an exclusive bargain- -one that can not be duplicated by any other paper in LAKE COUNTY. READING SUPPLY FOR WHOLE YEAR Regular feibacriptlo Price. Times, (daily except Sunday .-. . .$ 3.00 Opportunity Magazine, (monthly) 1.50
Farm and Fireside, The National Farm Paper,
(every other week)
Poultry Husbandry, (monthly)
Woman's World, (monthly)..
.50 .50
. $ 6.00
! ' - All to you for one year, for .$ 3.00
Opportunity Magazine
MIKE M0NTIGNE.
winter's snow the question might be
amended by inquiring as to the pres
ent whereabouts of divers resolutions
made on, or about January 1.
VTC lUUVUT 4 TJ T TTTT-O' t
" -l. Mavnr P.svnnr tn:.v nrike his
In asking what has become of last Epictetius but we'll stick by old
Michael Seigneur de Montaigne, the philosopher of the Renaissance. When old Mike was writing his essays in Perigord he was just as bitter against physicians as he ever was and he toDued off one of his master-
CREEL CALLING NAMES. I nies with a nuotation from Nic-
It's too bad that W. S. Gilbert is coles. This is it: . dead and we have no American of "Of physicians it is written that
lust, his raliher and tralnintr Tn " un Kives ngnt to tnetr suc-
writing "Pinafore" he laid down
up
cesses and the earth covei their failures."
ruies 01 pomeness ior oniciai dusi- Without bring considered facetious ness, which have been adopted by the we respectfully refer the quotation to
British admiralty, at least so far as tw atianklin the editor of tho jpw
Lake County Medical Bulletin.
th stage is concerned. He put great stress on the necessity of always saying "If you please," and
there was a shuddering emphasis on I DEFENDANT in a Cincinnati di-
the total depravity of using the "big, vorce suit told his father-in-law: big D." He didn't catalogue any "Lucile is a good, lovable wife and a other exhibits of bad manners, for fine housekeeper. I made a mistke he held that nothing could go be- in marrying so young and beautiful
yond tne two ne cited, wnat would 1 a girj. l snouiu nave married an he do, then, if he heard of the re-1 older woman." He ought to have
prehensible conduct of George Crel.l locked himself up in the dippy parlor
police commissioner ot Denver and that's what he should have done.
AND January was never so warm
before, but once in .1890 before
most of us were born how time flies!
HEARD BY "rube
CAN'T tell us that it doesn't require
a pull to cop off ,a political job these days. Jxok at Hoc Krost, the dentist.
who has just been named mayor pro tern, of Crown Point. . SIX Knglish bulldogs, worth $37,500, have been Imported by a Boston fancier. Gee! but this will make the Hon. Walter Edwards of the Aetna
kennels whoopingly jealous. TWO things In life are certain: Time and the gas meter never go backward. One of the Gary contracting saints has purchased an asphalt plant. Garylot owners may now be spec-tel to unloosen for tfsphalt lanes running in every direction. XT. S. SENATE passed a bill which
prevents present, future and ex-presi- ' he remained for pome thirty years
i dents from having more than one term, f 1890 he entered the Government
"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" February T. 1807 First day of the battle of Eylau. in which Napoleon defeated the
Russians in one of the most bloody contests of the war. 1812 Charles Dickens. tho famous English novelist, born. Died June 9, mo. 1853 Robert Lucas. first territorial governor of Iowa, died at Towa City. Born In Virginia, April 1,
1781. 1S55 The Palmerston ministry entered office In England. 1861 Choctaw Nation decided to adhere to the Confederate States. 1878 Pop Pius IX. died. Born May 13. 1792. 1893 Direct telephone communication established between New York and Boston. 19fll Marriage of Queen Wilhelmina
of the Netherlands and Prince Henry of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. 1912 Myron T. Herrlck of Ohio namii as United States ambassador to France. "THIS IS MY "1ST B1RTHDIV" M. Hlbot. M. Alexandre Felixv Joseph Ribot, who was a prominent candidate In the
recent election of a President or France, was born at St. Omar, February 7, 1842. At the ago of 22 he was laureate of the Paris Law School, lie entered at once into practice. Since that' tlma his raoTpment upward has
been tapid. 'I
33
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This tnagazina is jost what th nam implies It jkeeptt its' readers Informed regarding tih deTekpmt and opportunities jail ovar the world. A recent issue contained 363 diatinct oppor-tunitiear-openlngs for both men and womenj for doctors, jlawyers, farmers, merchants, manufacturers, real-estate agencies and numerous other vocations. Such a magazine cannot bat prove encouraging and stimulating. It Is handsomely printed with beautiful tover page and en high oaallty paper. Opportunity is eold at the news-stands for IS cents a copy. Poultry Husbandry Ths Leading Poultry Paper
Poultry Husbandry Is one of the oldest poultry papers published. It is the standard of the poultry world. A single iesue will often contain from 100 to 200 pages. Just think, this means that a single copy of Peultry Husbandry contains more actual reading matter than the average poultry book that retails for $1 a copy. Poultry Husbandry is full of life, up-to-date, In
teresting and helpful to every. one of Its readers. It furnishes them with carefully selected, reliable and origlnat matter. Each Issue contains numerous special articles, written by the best known poultry experts and specialists.
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The National Farm Paper Farm and Fire si dn ta the beat know farm paper published. It Is vary prrv erly termed The National Farm Pa per. This paper Is published every other Saturday. It combines the big special features of the high-priced popular magazines wk i a standard farm paper. Farm and Fireside is now in its thirty-sixth year. Its policies are proereusive. It aims to be instructive, entertaining, and to carry a messace of optimism and health ta every farm family. It has big special
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This remarkable offer may be withdrawn at any time. Do not delav, but forward your order to THE TIMES, 214 Hammond Bldg.. Hammond, Indiana. Besides getting THE TIMES vou will receive the publications mentioned aboTe for one "year $6.00 worth for $3.00. Old subscribers may renew and get this great combination offer. If you are already a subscriber for any one of these publications, so state, and such subscription will be extended one year. SUBSCRIPTION BLANK Date .....19.... THE TTMSS NEWSPAPERS: Inclosed find f3.00 for which please enter my order for THE TIMES, OPPORTUNITY MAGAZINE, FARM AND FIRESIDE, POULTRY HU
BANDS. Y and WOMAN S WORLD, ail for a penoa or one year.
For
Paris judiciary just before the wir of
1X70. rnd from 1&.5 occupied a hiwii i c,r habit-forniins:
position in the Ministry of Justice. He 1 sale bv Otto Negele and other leading entered parliament in 1878.. and .here j .Vm. kmiffioo?!
In
as
atory. Philadeipnia. fau. ior auumoii vt4)uce. Adv.
RJ
Name ..................
F. D. P.
1
