Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 223, Hammond, Lake County, 20 February 1913 — Page 4

THE TIME3.

Thursday, Feb. 20, 1913.

TM1P

NEWSPAPERS y T Lake Ceoa.tr Prlatlmg ui Fob. Uaatag Coaspaay.

The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "enTered as seeond-olass matter June 28. 190S"; The Lake County Times, dally exoept Saturday and Bun., day. entered Pee. I. It IV.- The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. , ltot; The Lake Couuty Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO. 1911: The Times, dally except Sun flay, entered Jan. 15. 1S12. at the poetofSce at Hammond. Indiana, II under the act of March . 1$7.

Entered at the Post of flee. Hammond. Ind.. as secoad -class matter.

FOREIGN ADVERTISING. 12 Rector Building- -

OFFICES, Chicago

PCBLICATIOlf OFFICES, Hammond Building,- Hammond. Ind.

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Gary Office,. ...Tel. 117

Kast Chicago Office. . Tel. kit-J

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If yaa hare any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest offloe and

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URGBR PAID VT CIHCTTLATIO!

THAN AHY OTHER TWO MEWS

PAPERS II THE CALUMET REGION.

awowTMOUS communications will

eat be noticed, but others will be

printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham

tnona, ind.

415

Oi? w THE 1 EMriDAY

VOtTH'S DEBT. Wfc la the pretty wood

Tbe larcbea apurtle red for the year's

turning-. Then, in men'a moving; blood.

Sweet April doe set frolic Are a-bura-

log. But w, alaee the trees eland

Naked and deep asleep, yet natheleas

yea rat ok For the spring;' kindling- bend.

Let youth no fort h, and set the woods

a-burnlng. Sack .ulrk fire la la youth

(And this youth known, having no other

learning;). That where It moves, la troth.

Its touch anal! set the dead earth'M

soul a-baralng. "Ha seed all debts to pay

Se let youth thank the sweet year for

hla turning. And newly every day

io forth, bo forth, to est tbe woods

burning. Roae Maeaulay, la the Spectator.

CHICAGO'S PROBLEMS.

nere ever you are you have to

fight reactionaries If you are in a

small city like Hammond you have to

keep fighting to preserve your streets from confiscation and if you are in

a big city like Chicago you have to fight to prevent the railroads from

ignoring your "city plan."

Chicago today haa grappled with

the Pensylvania railroad on the mat

ter of the location of the new $35,

000,000 Union station. The railroad officials want to get right down town

with their terminals and cut the city

of Chicago to pieces just as it has al

ways ben cut up by railroad yards and

tracks. Some of the big broad far-seein

are wasted, perceptibly increasing the cost of living. .

In the five years preceding March,

1912, the Office of Public Roads had

built 215 object lesslon roads, in all

about three hundred miles of road fif

teen feet wide, and by expert advice

aided in tbe formulation of more than

six hundred and fifty model country road systems, resulting in most In

stances in beneficial reforms. It has

also assisted twenty-six States in effecting equitable State aid plans. The Secretary of Agriculture . looks

forward to the coming year as promising better results than at any time

in the history of the movement for

improved highways.

A KANSAS City telephone oper

ator has left the switchboard to become an aviator. What boots it as long as she didn't have her switch.

THEY DID FAR BETTER. An ancient' Egyptian papyrus 300 B. C. has-been found in which an Egyptian swain called his inamorata. "Oh .Golden Poppy', ' Wellthat's Infinitely better than "Q You Baby Doll," or "You 'ittle tootsie-wootsie." We have more respect for the Egyptian's than ever now.

GOING to prison seems to have become so common with the London suffragists as to have lost its attractiveness.

BABIES are now being sent by

parcel post but mighty few of them are being left in Homewood, Hammond's residence section.

BRYAN ON PERSONAL LIBERTY.

If you show me a man who drinks to excess, who spends money getting drunk that belongs to his children and his family, and who fills himself up with liquor and goes home to make his home a hell, I tell you that man has forfeited his right to drink, and society has a right to restrain him. I will give you another case. If a

man, under pretense that he is de

fending his right to drink, Insists on

establishing a saloon and In running it in such a way that it is a menace to

society, that it Is a corrupting place;

runs it in such a manner that it be

fouls the neighborhood and jeopard

ixes the community, I Bay that when the man insists not merely on the

right to drink, but the right to drink in that saloon, and at all hours and

men of Chicago, the men who are under all circumstances, he Is asking planning for a city of 10,000,000 peo- for the enforcement of his rights In

aarfleid Lodir No. Ess v. a jl. m. 1 1 v,.. ..uuv.uvu waui me such a way that he is infringing upon

Stated meeting Friday evening. Feb. j railroad to recede to Twelfth street the rights of others, and he has no ti T:ao p. m. e. A- degree. Special where the Illinois Central, Western right to ask It, and It ought not to be

rVT " " Grand Central nation allowed.

v '""'"- ii give you tnese two illustrations rr ! a i . I

ine ioop win men be extended to There are many more. I simply give Twelfth street and Chicago's business them to you that you may see that district TYiaV avnanrt nn hnth fsd r I i , , i a ,

Hammond Chapter No. 117. R. A. M. ' " . - lue man Wno lB1K8 auoui personal

Regular stated meeting Wednesday auu luc wrBt Biaes OI ine river, over f liberty has something more to do than

evening, Feb. 26. M. M. degree. I lwo or tnree times as much territory. I to get up and talk about it. He must

The withdrawal of the

Hammond Council. No. SO. R. 8. M.

freshmenta. Visitors welcome. "" R.' T5. OALER, Sec. E. M. SHANKLIN. W. M.

YES, OH WHEBE? What's become of the old-fashioned fellow that used to take his best girl

for a sleigh ride?

And what's become of the o. f.

sleigh?

And the o. f. snow?

Chicago Suffragists Who Will March at Washington, D. C.

A NEW York hen laid seventy-two

eggs m an ice-house. Everything

seems to be coming the way of the cold-storage men.

PITTSBURG millionaires are paying $20,000 a year for flats in New York. But, considering Pittsburg,

can you blame 'em?

DEA R B BY RUBE

PLUMBER is head of new Insurance company. Understand he hopes to make some good financial connections for It. Auto owned by every sixtieth person in Indiana. Just our luck to be among the other fifty-nine who can't afford to buy gasoline. ONE thing that we like about Woodrow Is that we have yet to see a picture that shows him in a plug hat. HUERTA, Madero. Orosco and Guantanamo. What with these Mexican names and the recent attack of Turkish and Balkan cognomens you can hardly blame our proofreader for finding riding on the water wagon a little rough now and then. WOULDN'T be a bad Idea if this woman suffrage ' business werf force. Kvery married man wuld then control two voVW!." By stalling wine that he

w-5uid buy ber a new hat or something

I7iodu6 aXy Johnson

err , - . . 1V i . ' "

. V 111

!1 1 I . - 1

rauroaa ne prepared to come down and ierii.- v, ..ouiri ret her vote for his can-

ii auiiui ana iounriL r ci a n , . i - --

BUted meetings first Tuesday of l"min,iia lo "treet is neces- black and white outline whaiTe re- dldate

month. v wnjuuiuiauuii oj. ini i cards as within tne umits'of his ter-1 CRAWFORDSVIL-ie firm aavertises

plan. A civic center over on" the sonal liberty, andtts'n'' you have acat fur for fifteen, and twenty-five

west side is another feature . of this right to jdecIAs-Vhehter he has gone

plan, Jn fact the whole Chicago planTtoo far Invades your rights.William

Hammond Cemqandery, No. 1,

f." ' T.'SgiliS.? Staged n3"fftifig'

third Monday of each month.

Is Involved in this attempt of tbo J, Bryan.

WASHINGTON woman quarrelled Pennsylvania railroad to sneak down

i,t. t... ,..... a -a ti... at 1 town with Its terminal.

. -r: " r.:V" Those who ar adh.rincr t tbo CONSIDERING someot the snap-

Tht water was too cold and she walk- Weals of the Chicago plan are fighting 8h of Mr. Wilson that have been) Tcothin lit. . iittia eni.i the move on the part of the railroad. Published. It ought not to be won-

water tri hrin, them around. They are men of resource and ability Meat ,that he told a photographer

SENATOR Curti3 of Indiana who Chicago backs them up.

is against garlic and the onion must I After its fight for the preservation

nave ridden out to tne btanaara ais- of Calumet avenue the neonle of

and the' chances are that they will who was traillnS him that he was no

gain their ends providing the city 0f gentleman.

cart to Heart

Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON

A WEST Virginia lawyer referred

in st VAQIfhv wlnAW in .nnirr ac a

trlct on a South Hohman street car. Hammond will be interested. In the modern Cleopatra. Probably he had

coiiosai ngnt or tne Chicago plan

commission against the Pennsylvania

SCHOOL ALL THE YEAE ROUND. Several years ago the idea of school or college all the year round would

Viavn heart fcntlv Henrli imlaT It. tsi

an established fact in a number of SOU?dS . aS " Jt had somhing to do

discovered that she had soaked her

pearls.

PRESIDENT-ELECT Wilson's new

private secretary has a name that

with the colly-wobbles.

educational institutions, public and private. It is not merely that the

summer session has been widely in-j ALL that keeps some men from be-

troduced, but the summer work, froniling wicked Is the price.

being a purely voluntary and separate

affair, has come in some Instances to

be an integral part of the year's WON'T SHE THOUGH 1

FRIEDMANN MUST MAKE GOOD.

Doubt and disputed claims and as

sertions must soon give place to cer

tainties In respect to the Friedmann cure for tuberculosis. The storm

raging about the Berlin physician's

Ueported discovery is reaching a stage

which will speedily force a termina

tion, one way or the other.

Friedmann must give and urge the

cents. Been wondering all along. where

lnell our office cat had gone, to..

LAPORTE wives now have new du

ties. AH because tbe barbers there shot the price of hair cuts up to 33

cents. .

OIK OWN' MEDICAL BULLETIN

In ancient times doctors were call

ed leeches.

Psychotherapy The dictionary de

fines this woTd as meaning the pro

cess of mental Influence which a doctor exercises on a patient to

make him think that he is well when he believes he is sick. However, now days all doctors who adhere to ethics use psychotherapy to make the patient think that his bill Isn't big when it really is. When psychotherapy is used correctly it works wonders. ' "Whoever saw one physician approve of another's prescription without taking something awayor adding something to It?" Mike Montaigne. Special A specialist is a doctor who can raise a Van Dyke beard. It is hard for a doctor who can't grow a beard to become a specialist. SUBSCRIBER asks why we don't see

the rainbow any more? Probably

Dame Nature is afraid to hang it out. Some or those research chemists at tjie Orasselll chemical plant might try to

fix up a scheme to extract all the colors from it.

COAL. THIEVES HARASS DEAL

ERS." Timks' headline. We might ada

work, according to reports received See that Philadelphia suffragist3 fullest nublicitv or stand discredited

at tne unuea states tiureau oi n-au-ihave decided that the first words He must Drove his case or lose his

cation. ItaUEht to babies hereafter. after rsmitaltnn and whatever nrnstiae he

It is claimed by the advocates of "mamma" and "papa," shall be "votes has gained by the widely heralded that the weather man has been getting

the all-year plan for public schoolslfor women." So? Well, when patclaims made in his behalf. the coal men's goats lately.

. . . - ... I I

in the large cities that the children 1 raises the children, ma, on returning j If he has placed his remedy in thel politics hath its pad parts, an -are healthier and happier In school from the noils, will probably be sur- hands nf eminent, authorities chosen right. President Taffs cow, which has

than on the streets. It Is further prlcsed to hear what, the little dears by the German government, they will ben ,!h" Wt "J"" iv.t ,j,Bt, f ..... .. . .. lawn, will now have to go back to

isoon tea ine worm exactly wnai to Wisconsin

ur,-?ed that by taking advantage of an j Bay to her.

optional summer term children who are compelled to leave school at an early age will be able to advance further In the grades than at present.

.Backward pupils will also have an opportunity to make up back work, but this has always been more or less a feature of summer sessions. In the case of the higher Institutions, particularly the technical schools, the new movement for allyear work Is undoubtedly part of the nation-wide demand for scentific efficiency that is making itself felt in every phase of American life. The

hope for or what to expect. If he hasl

taken no such step he will shortly find

it necessary to do so or see himself

everywhere discredited.

No man can long evade or befog

such an isssue as Dr. Friedmann has

THE asbestoa nlant matter beine raised. Too much is at stake for

definitely Bettled let the world roll mankind. The standards of his pro

fession are too high. The rules and

demands of his own country's govern

ment and its people are to exacting.

THEY are all most through cut

ting ice at Wolf Lake now, but they

have hardly started at the city hall

on.

IMPROVED ROADS SAVE. It is estimated by the Office

Public Roads of the Department of

Agriculture that about ten per cent

of

feeling is that education, especially of Qf the rQadg ln the Un(ed gtate8 are

an advanced character, is not child s I impro-ved

play alone, but serious business, and

If twenty per cent of the public

WOODROW Wilson has been given

passes to all the . league games in

Washington next season. Another

Incentive for the American boy to

aim high.

WE can hardly wire any sympathy

down to Brother Madero at this time. Need all we got for hizzoner, the Hon.

Tom Knotts whose foes are once more

busy In the legislatchoor.

WISH John B. Peterson would hustle

down to Washington and take his seat as soon as possible. Got a garden in

mind and don't want to buy any seeds when we can get 'em for nothlng.

THAT rumbling noise you hear ln

the southwest doesn't all come from

Mexico. Some of it is caused by the

roaring of local merchants because the

legislatchoor didn't pass the garnishee

bill.

RING up about twenty-nine or thir

ty jail sentences for the cash register

trust.

ECONOMY OF LIFE. In every field we are teaching and practicing economy except one. and that is the most important of all. We eliminate waste in manufacturing, but we do not eliminate waste of human beings. We teach conservation of everything but life. Recently a Chicago park policeman saw a ragged, bntless, coatless and almost shoeless small txy watching a squirrel burying peanuts. --.,, "What'a your name?" queried the policeman. "Bernard Rogers, sobbed the boy. "and I'm hungry. A Bquirrel Lid a peanut over by that tree. Can 1 have it if I find it?" Most policemen have hearts, and this one was no exception. lie bought the boy a bag of peanuts, which were eaten ravenously. He then took him

home and afterward reported that there was not a bite" to eat in the

house.

This lad, if he lives, will be a future citizen. Aside from the brutal inhumanity of allowing him to starve In a

land of abundance think of the unwisdom of it from a public standpoint!

The pity of it is that his Is only ona

case out of a multitude.

Of those who survive many are

stunted in mind and body. Others are criminals, having learned to steal out of their dire necessity. Still others

are filled with hatred against society. And who can blaine them?

Is it not time to conserve the chil

dren?

This wonderful age of progress has

transformed the physical world. Can

it not do something for tbe human

world? Here is another case tn point:

Recently the factory commission of the state of New York examined child labor conditions. It found tots of ten

years working from twelve to sixteen

hours a day ln cannery sheds and oth

ers even younger wearing out their

baby lives in tenement work. From the mere cold, economic stand'

point can we not eliminate this waste of our future men and women? Fathers and mothers, these little

ones are like your own, with the same tender bodies, the same baby faces, the same innocent ways. How dare we. look our own children in the eyes so long as we participate in the sins of society against these

other children?

(ST.

in 1899, and was transferred to tne bishopric in the year following, occu-

pylng.tnat position unUM bi appoint

ment last August to succeed Archbishop McNU at , Vancouver. . t

Congratulations to: Duchess 'of Fife (Princess Royal), 46

years old today.

Herbert B. Hadley, former governor

of Missouri, 41 years old today.

Prince Mobammed Abdul Mounelm.

heir apparent to the throne of Egypt, 14 year old today.

tear Aamirai uriei store, u. o. s..

retired, 65 years old today.

Brig. Gen. Ernest A. Garlington. In

spector General of the United States

Army. 60 years old today.

Earl Beauchamp, who is mentioned

as the likely successor to the Duke

of Connaught as Governor General of

Canada, 41 years old today.

The Ingle Investment Company has Just completed a new mine near Wins-

low.

EXPLOSION WRECKS HOME. The recently built home of Elmer

Conners, near Logansport, was wrecked by the explosion of an acteyleoe

plant early yesterday morning. Every

window in the house was shattered and the doors were sucked in and .wrenched from their hinges. Conners, his

wife and six children were burled from their beds, but ail escaped seri

ous injury. MADE HER OWN WAY. Doris Underwood, who shot and seriously wounded Ottla Fisher, a drug clerk at Muncie last night, is a teacher in the public schools. Left motherless when 10 years old she educated herself, kept house for her father and later obtained a position teaching in the country schools. She taught two terms, then used her savings to take a course in Butler College and Indiana Uclver-

BLACK MAILING IS CHARGED. rjohntWc: PetlC "a NewiCaitl elec

trician, is under arrest charged with blackmail. His wife confessed yesterday morning that Petit forced Trevor

Wright, a prominent grocer, to pay him $100, saying that Wright had been too friendly with Mrs. Petit. Wright admitted paying the money and the ar

rest of Petit followed.

Up and Down in INDIANA

CATTliB RAISERS ALARMED.

An epidemic ' of contagious pleuro

pneumonia has broken out among cat

tie in Hendricks County that bids fair to cost stock raisers many thousands of dollars. Jt la similar to the scourge

that swept the county is 1IS0. On the

farm of Jacob Hlggins, "northeast of Danville, five fine steers have died and others are affected. The state veterin

arian and Pr. Helghway of Ladoga, to

gether with Dr. Dau&herty of Danville,

examined the afflicted cattle and ord

ered a strict quarantine, even going so far as to order everybody to stay away from the sick cattle. The present outbreak in this county is traceable to a shipment of feeding cattle brought

from. Tennessee. MERCHANT CHARGED WITH ARSON,

Ben Kahn, "proprietor of the Farmers and Workingmens store, suspect in an alleged Arson Trust, was placed on

trial in the Circuit Court today at

South Bend. Kahn's trial will be 1m

mediately followed by that of Ben

Fink, alias- Franklin, the supposed

"torch" of the so-called band of "fire

bugs." Prosecutor Montgomery charges

Times Pattern Department

DAILY FASHION HINT.

should approximate the conditions of hlh were lmnrovfedcach hIeh

aari-f a. 1 .i-nM 1 r

"J asvaaag UV.IVV tV V.4 d XA U iUlI V V. Va F V

a view to the proportionate traffic

upon it a high degree of efficiency in highway transportation would be

reached.

It is figured that millions of dollars

I could be be saved annually in the

transportation of crops, the wear and

tear on wagons and vehicles, and inj

SOCIETY woman says tango is far! the minimizing of the waste in truck

better than ttja old-fashioned minuet j farming. Where roads are bad, the of our grandmother's days. Yes but farmers frequently find it impossible

VANHORNE'S anti-chink bill conjures up in the imagination what awful things some Chinaman must have done to Van's shirt once upon a time.

SHE WOULDN'T CHANGE.

"No woman of forty yearns for

youth again, when she reflects how much better time the young girls had

in her days, and bow much better

time the old girls have in this one.

remarked a bachelor girl of forty who

The Day in HISTORY

"THIS DATE IX HISTORY February 20. 1716 David Garrick,- the famous English actor, born. Died Jan. 20. 1779

iooks thirty, as she shed her Street! 1779 Americans under Major Clarke

clothes for a "gym" suit. I captured inoennes. ind.

1781 Robert Morris appointed super

intendent of finances by Congress.

I rn nr.r horn in Ph il ail elnhia..

grandmother didn't believe in getting I to get their products to the shipping jsion somebody there is Manuel, who! uird. in Havana, Feb. 16. 1857.

so close together out in the ooen. points, and thus perishable product'3l used to be King of Portugal. 1 1829 Joseph Jefferson, .the famous ac-

rT ., ,, ..ia r.t-tuaA Kahn with deliberately conspiring and

iiv v utile tic van v j wv - ' , . , -t .

in the midst of such conditions?

How daro we?

tor, born In Philadelphia. Died at Palm Beach, Fla, April 25. 1905.

1846 First legislature of Texas under

the United States met at Austin.

1878 Cardinal Pecci elected Pope as

Leo XIII.

1884 Remains of the victims of the

Jeannette Arctic expedition reached New York. "THIS IS MY 51ST BIRTHDAY" Ai-chbiafcn Caaey. Most .Rev. Timothy Casey, Roman Catholic archbishop of Vancouver."" D.

C was born in Charlotte County. New

Brunswick, February 20. 1862, and received his early education at St.

Joseph's College, Memramcook. After pursuing theological studies at Laval

University, he was ordained in 1886, and was appointed curato at Frederic-

ton In the same year. Subsequently he was rector of the Cathedral at St. John

and chancellor of the diocese. He was

-appointed coadjutor bishop of St. John

assisting Iqsettlng of the fire which damaged his stock and store.

MAYOR SVGOESTS CHANGES. At a meeting of the City Council at

Columbus today the annual message of

Mayor Charles S. Barnaby was read.

In which he recommended that the office of inspector of the board of health be discontinued and that the

h". Mi Ml ' fir

... v .-

5822.

Lady's Dress. Here is a delightfully charming frock and something entirely new. The waist

sanitary officer take over the duties of! ' cut with the body and sleeves in one

the inspector. The mayor also recom

mended that ye city quit expening money on the Garland Brook Cemetery,

which is under the management of a private corporation. He also recommended that the city clerk be made

purchasing agent for the city, to whom

all beads'

of departments must submit

requisitions for supplies.

WILL! OPEX NEW COAL MINE.

E.. J. Hackett has nought 100 acres

of coal land from Mrri. Martna Whit

man and

einlty of

g on the Southern road. Work

will open a biine in the vlMuren. eight miles south of

Petersbu

On the shaft and switches will be be

gun at once. Two hundred men will

be employed at the' mine, the second

' to be opened this year in that vicinity. 10 cents to the offlce of this paper.

and tbe closing is at the left .side of the front. The dress as represented is made

with a flonnce of bordered goods, the yoke and collar of all-over and the panel trimming of insertion. The frock may be carried out nicely in plain goods If so desired. . Pattern, No. 5.S92, Is cut in sizes 32 to 40 inches biwt measure.. Medium sire will reqnlre.to make the dress as pictured 9& yards of 27 inch bordered good, s of a yard of IS inch all-over for yoke and collar, 2 yards of insertion for panel and a of a yard of 24 inch satin. If made of plain material G yards of 27 inch goods is needed. The pattern cn be obtained by sending