Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 279, Hammond, Lake County, 13 May 1913 — Page 4

Tuesday. Mav 13. 1313. T E TIMES SOCIETY LEADERS TAKE UP COACHING AGAIN. I InpTTT?" r for lrir Mj jPAY R ANDOM THIINGS AND FLIIVGS NEWSPAPERS By The Lake County Printing and Publishing Company. L

THE TIMES.

id

t-.il ' TkTYO -

The Lake County Times, daily except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 28. 1906"; The Lake County Times, daily except Saturday and Sun

day, entered Feb. S, 1911; The Gary

Evening Times, dally except Sunday,

entered Oct. 6, 1901); re-entry of publication at Gary, Ind., April 18. 1913; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. JO. 1911; The Times, dally except Sunday, en

tered Jan. 15, 1912, at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, all under the

act of March 8, 1879.

Entered at the Postofflces, Hammond

and Gary. Ind., as second-class matter.

roiusiasr It Rector

A9VBRTISIXO Bundle -

OFPICKS, Chioago

THE BRAVEST BATTLE. The bravent battle that ever vrna fought Shall I tell yon where and nbrnl On the ma pa of the world you will And it not It was fought by the mothers of men Nay, not Ttith eannon or battle shot. With nord or braver pen Kay. not with eloquent vrord or thought. From moutha of wonderful men.

INDIANA thieves used coffee grounds

to gas a watchman. They -were numane. Would have been a whole lot

worse to have given him a .cup of cof-

ee made by a bride.

a woman's walled-tip

FtrOLICATIOIf OFFICES, fiamcnond Building-, Hammond. lad. TELKFJIO-TES.

'r4v4U tuhun) ill

COftU fr dutartataot wanted)

Oary otao Tel. lit Cast Chlcai Office Tel. 140-J Indiana Harbor Tel. 141-11; II Wbltln ....Tel. 0-M Crown Point TeU Htftwiioa TeU It

Advertlirtr s; oltclters will seat, er rate firm on application.

If yeu bar's any trowbla getting The Tbbms notify the nearest otOce and kaMra it promptly remedied.

LARGER PAID VT CTrlCITLATIOJI THAW AWT OTHER TWO KIWI. PAFCRS IW THB CALTKmrT REGION.

AMONTMOU8 communications will not be notloed, but others will he printed at discretion, and haul be addresaod The Editor. Times, Ham. ftxond. Ind.

Butt deep in

heart Of woman that would not yield, Bnt patiently, silently bore her partLot there la that battlefield. No marshaling; troops, no bivouac aong Vo banners to gleam and wn ve ( And oh! these battles they last an long From babyhood to the grave!

Yet. faithful lit 111 as a bridge of stars. She lights In her walled-up townFights on and on In the endless wars, Then silent, anseen goes down. Joacauin Miller.

EDITOR of Aero says that Chlcag-o

usiness men will be going back and

forth from -work in Hying boats two

ears hence. Well, the tariff has a lot f 'em up In the air as It Is.

"SHOULD a husband consult his

wife on matters of business?" asks a subscriber. Our Hennery Coldbottle

says it is unnecessary except when he is going to mortgage the old home

stead, then he'll need tter signature.

CHICAGO woman says that If old

maids" imagine," that they'll get a nusband. Try awfully hard to Imagine

a bottle of Bud some warm afternoon.

Stated meeting Garfield Lodge. No. S69, F. and A. M. Friday, May 9, S p. m. E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. R. 8. Galer. Sec, E. SI Shanklin, W M.

Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M. Regular stated meeting Wednesday, May 14. Mark Master degree. Visiting companions welcome.

Hammond Council No. 90 R. and S. M. Etated Assembly first Tuesday each, month. Class of candidates Tuesday, June trd. J. W. Morthland. Rea, R. S. Galer. T. L M.

Hammond Commandery, No 41 X. T. Stated meeting May 6, 8 p. m. Red Cross degree. Visiting Sir Knights welcome.

HOW DID IT HAPPEN? There is a great ado In the navy,

The monitor Tallahassee in target practice fired a broadside that passed very near the Dolphin which was

carrying a lot of congressional In

spectors.

secretary uameis is very angry

now and insists that the Tallahassee

explain the shot.

Yes by all means, let's know how

the gunners came to miss.

the fads the healthier the child. Abe's father is a Roumanian Jew and he works In a tailor shop. The Idolowitz's live In a big tenement and this is what the prize baby's mother says about her formula for raising a perfect bab.v:"I just take the best care of Abe that I know how. I nurse him every two or three hours, take him out every day and let him sleep all he will. I put him to bed at night, whenever he gets sleepy, and if he wakes up during the night I nurse him once or twice. Generally he wakes up at 6 o'clock in the morning, and then he just lies and plays until we get up. I never give him any solid food or any medicine.

When he cries I see that he is all right and then let him cry it out. I keep the window open where he sleeps so he won't take cold from being in a close place. I drink a bottle of milk that I get at the milk station each day, and I drink a little beer. I eat Just as I did before I han nursing baby." This may not be in strict conform-

nee with the follow up rules of the

Eugenics society but It seems to de

liver the goods.

It may not jibe with some of the

Ideas of the fancy doctors who weigh

cnua b iooa ana ieea it so many

ounces at specified intervals instead of giving it its fill when it is hungry

but it is great stuff for prize babies

It is rather hard on a mother to

have to feed the youngster every two or three hours, but if she has anv

mother love in her heart she won't

care and she'll get such results that

her offspring will be a well of Joy to

her.

We like Mrs. Abe Idolowitz's way

of bringing up babies.

ILLINOIS congressman worried eo

much as to how he would distriouie his patronage that he has become ill.

Up to the hour of going to press the

Hon. John B. Peterson was in better health than ever before.

FALL OF THE FARMER.

But a few short weeks ago we were blaming the middleman for the high

cost of living, but the blame has been shifted and 6orry the day that we

should ever have lived to learn the

truth.

The farmer, once the backbone of the country, once the honest, now dishonest farmer is the cause according

to Cyrus C. Miller, chairman of the

New York Market Commission, speak ing at a banquet in oB3ton.

"I know this to be a fact from my

personal market experience," Mr. Mil

ler said. "I have bought a bale of

hay with an old cooking stove in it

palls of butter sometimes contain bricks, and sacks of potatoes often

conceal stove pipes or other articles

As a result the dealer must advance

the price to defray his loss."

While apologizing to the middle

man for ever suspecting him we choke

back our sobs at the fall of the farm

er from his lofty estate. It's another case, probably of evil communications

corrupting. 'The guileless husband

man has been tainted by contact with the lightning rod contract, the gold brick manipulator, ' perchance the

green goods industry and kindred

pursuits.

Puzzle Find the ultimate sufferer.

DOING HIS BEST. The new vice president, Mr. Marshall, has no authority to issue formal messages from time to time, so he does the next best thing and delivers an address about five days a week on every subject under the sun. Kansas City Star.

It is Impossible to pick up a news

paper nowadays without finding pungent criticism of Vice President

Tom Marshall and the singular part

of It is that some of the most biting

are in democratic papers. Since he

has become a national character Indl ana people who know Marshall con

sider him more of a mental light

weight than ever.

A CINCH HE DOESN'T.

vice President Marshall evidently

knows what's coming to him. He

speaks of his entering upon four years

of silence. Milwaukee News. It' evident the Wisconsin brother doesn'

know "Tom" Marshall.

GREAT CAESAR! Mustn't let The State of Of California Be Divided so as to form two states. We have Enough trouble With one Callfornny.

the nest only for food and drink.

KAISER can't let out the cost of his daughter's trousseau for fear of a socialist atack. Pretty tough to be rich

and not be able to be extravagant.

torsi i mo

CASE in New York courts has been setled after fifty years. Now, who dares to say that our courts aren't improving?

DISTINGUISHED prof, of geology

predicts an epidemic of earthquakes.

Might tend to shake the nonsense out

of some of us.

SIGN on farm Near Laporte; "Keep out without Permission."

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ASIA ''V.

ANY day give us the good of bad people than the bad of good people.

manners

manners

WH BACHELORS SHOULD WORRY.

This is the time

of the year when the anxious head of a family begins

to wonder whether!

last year's hammock will do for

this sumer.

."!. i'-jj . v, -a Dr

-v-rv

"NOISE." line. Well keep

-Chicago Tribune head-

still.

Mrs. Hasting driving lh Coach Arrow. Piloting their horses through the maze of city traffic and the quiet of C3untry lanes with the skill ot veterans, members of the ladies' four-in-hand club officially opened the coaching ea,n in New Yrk a few days ago. The driver's seat was occupied in turn by Miss Alexander, Miss Lida Louise Fleitmann, Mis Angelica Gerry. Miss Marion Hollins, Miss Margaret Maxwell, Mrs. Thomas Hastings, Mrs. Oliver Iselin,

MARTHA WASHINGTON sewing tables are the latest. If the women sew

ed like Martha Washington did no one

would kick on the new fashion.

I'fHACA man was discharged from

a hospital In the morning as cured of

one disease and in the afternoon he

came back again with another one and

died. Chance for the editor of the Lake County Medical Bulletin to edi

torialize.

OP COURSE HE HAD TO HAi E A

DlUXlf. (From a Dispatch.) Columbus, Ind. Fred Ortel. caretaker at the city hospital, has a hen which seemed to want to sit, but she persisted In leaving her nest. Becoming disgusted with her unmoherly onduct, the rooster took the nest and proceeded to sit on It. Noting the rooster's steady habits. Ortel placed a setting of egga under It a few days ago, and so far It has proved faithful to Is trust, leaving

"FRESH PUG NEWS AND DOPE."

Indianapolis News headline.

Who would have thought that the literary News would have descended to

the conversation of a Jack Johnson?

edifi to kleart

Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTON

Trial Calendar

GETTING to be so now that it is more dangerous to cross an anto-traveled street than it is to cross the briny Atlantic.

DECK hands on a steel trust steamer went on a strtke because of the in-

competen cooking. Think how much

more Datience many husbands have

than deck hands.

SERVICE.

There is but one true basis for ei

ther wealth or fame.

It Is service.

Any weaitn we gam for wnicn we

have not rendered an equivalent serv

ice Is tainted.

Any fame we enjoy that has not

been earned by service is false fame

that will turn to dispraise.

The Greatest of the Oreat said he

came not to be ministered nnto, but to

minister.

His life was one of service.

The otd motto of the nobility was Ich dien" (I serve). The first meaning of service 1b that

It is something we do for others

He who does any useful work is ben

efiting others. It may be the raising of a crop that others may have food.

.... I . F .1.. 1. ...1.1... V4AHI .... .

familiar words "Liberty and union, aoing me wur& quu.-er uu ucun tney in turn paying an equivalent

now and forever, one and insepara- than the horse ever did. pric.

DON'T get so springy that you think that you can give a look of contempt

to your overcoat.

HENNERY COLDBOTTLE

Wants to put a bounty on flies, such

As there used to be on Wolves. Thinks he can make some money That way.

ble!" Daniel Webster siooa dciuic rsow norses eat nay, n our memory

the world," as Carl Schurz put it, us Berve3 us and with elimination of

the first of llvlag Americans,' the horse in the cities and on the

Twenty years later. Inflamed with farms one would naturally suppose

the desire to become President of the that hay would become very plentiful.

United States, in his disgraceful itn It look8 as th0ugh the price of hay

of March speech," eager for boutnern ought to be re,iucej. on the con

trary hay in recent years has cost us

$20 to $22 a ton' and we all remem

ber when the finest of hay could be

bought for $8 and $10 a ton.

Say who repealed that law of sup

ply and demand anyway.

x i .n.sirilDiii annlneizffri. re-

VOioa, uc i;uuiv,umi,,vu . tracted and conceded until be fell like Lucifer.

Of the Southern votes he expected,

he received not one; tne ionu reproached him with Indignation, and

In the agony of despair he openly

complained of bis defeat and abused

his succetul rival.

What happened to Webster has

happened often. It happens in one

form or another whenever men forsake principles for power; and tho unfortunate patriarch who sold his

birthright for a mess of pottage Is no

whit different from tne Beu-EeeKer who deserts the inside for the outside

and sacrifices character on the altar of ambition.

EICH MEN SCARCE.

One of the facts brought out m

jTokio in the dispute over the owner

ship of land by Japanese in California

is that there are comparatively few

I rich men in Japan. Statistics just 'gather show that in the entire

country there are only two men who

pay taxes on an Income of over $125,

000 a year. There are thirteen men

jwho pay on $19,500; sixty-seven who pay on $12,000; ninety-six who pay

'on $8,500. and 140 who nay on $3.-

LAW OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND. 500. Out of every 1,000 people there

There is a very ancient Idea to the are seven who make at least $1,350 a

effect that when there Is a surplus year. i tie daily wages oi workmen

of things the price of them goes down average as follows:

and that when there is a shortage of , Weaver,

ALMOST.

wa PTiincr rraTv"

Are we going crazy : poouts an

esteemed contemporary not a thousand miles away from here. Well, it's a wonder we don't, after taking a hurried glance at the con-temp.

THE PERFECT BABY.

' New York's most perfect baby is Abe Idolowitz. His only nurse is his

mother. Plenty of mother's milk and

freBh air are the chief fads applied to

the child's bringing up. The fewer

THE WRONG KIND OF AMBITION

Ambition, when It overleaps Itself,

becomes a terrible disease, a scourge

and a pitiful drawback to characte

Moscow, burned to the ground, was

an eloquent witness to the superiority of patriotism to the desire for power; Richelieu will ever remain in history detested because of a vindictive am

bition, who might otherwise be admired for surpassing ability, and many a blottd page of history contains the name of a Benedict Arnold

who has bartered undying glory for a

tinseled coat.

No virtue dovetails into a vice more

readily than the proper desire for at

tainment can be cheapened into self-

seeking; for ambition unrestrained by

character is a foe to every noble Instinct.

In 1830 Daniel W'ebster reached a pinnacle of power and fame which few Americans have ever occupied.

South Carolina, in her "nullification movement," threatened to disrupt the

spirit of national unity which had become, since the War of 1812, the most Inspiring and glowing sentiment in American heart3. In his wonderful

repiy to nayne, wun tnose now

them the price increases. Now the genial A. J. Burk. the local representative of the Standard Oil Company tells us that the big auto truck with which his product is distributed does the work of three teams of horses at no greater cost than the feeding of .one of them.

This suggests the idea that the auto trucks and pleasure automobiles must have replaced hundreds of thousands of horses. When people all

over the country are turning Dobbin out into the pasture and are riding about in automobiles it would look as though there would be a tremendous surplus of horses and a corresponding

reduction in the cost of them.

The exact reverse Is the case. The

price of horses ha8 steadily Increased

until today it takes $300 to purchase just an ordinary animal. Ope might think, "Well the farm haB absorbed the horses and thousands of them are needed where automobiles can not be used."

But the farmer too is dispensing with the horse as fast as possible.

Thousands of them have discarded the "team of bays'' which used to be kept for pleasure driving and have purchased the more practical automobile. The oil pull tractor plows up the field, the width of the street at a time, and tkes the place of thousands of horses. The gasoline engine replaces horse power for other kinds of . 1, irnaftllfia tt

iarm worn.. uicijivucio joouiiuo

male $0.22

Weaver, female .13 Tailor, native dress 27 Tailor, foreign 40 Shoemaker 33 Confectioner 22 Carpenter 40 Plasterer 41 Stonecutter 47 Sawyer 39 Tile roofer 47 Bricklayer B Shlplawyer 41

Cabinet maker 37 Cartmaker ' 32 Harnepsbaker 35 Iacquerer .30 Jeweller 31 ' Blacksmith 33 Totter 32 Gardener 36 Fisherman 24 Farm laborer 19 Papprmaker 21 PrlntOT 25 Iay laborer 26 Maid servant monthly 1.48 Man servant monthly 2.1 S Great place to live. Man could have a valet, his wife a waiting woman, chauffeur, cook butler and two maids for the price of what he has to pay now for one American hired girl.

Whether he recognizes It or not, his

task is altruistic. He may think that

he works only for the selfish reward, but as a matter of fact he feeds the hungry.

Perhaps his work is ministering to

the sick. The vulgar idea Is that the doctor works only for his fee. Tet no

fee can measure the easing of pain,

the saving of life. Whatever we may say of the doctor, he works for others.

The one who serves may be a writer. He entertains, comforts. Instructs or inspires others. We may say that he does It only for the money or reputa

tion It will bring him, yet that is but

a small part of the truth. He is mln isterlng to his fellow men.

Or he may be an artist saying, as true artists do, that be does not work alone for what he may gain in return.

but rather, for the very work's sake.

Yet even this falls abort of the whole

truth. He is adding to the world's beauty and so Is serving countless

thousands in the highest way.

So it Is throughout life. If we are

worth our salt we are serving others

The reward we receive Is but the sauce on the dish. The solid, sub

stantial thing la the service we are

rendering.

Moreover, our importance in the

scheme of things depends on this serv

ice. It is the rock on which is build ed the temple of our civilization.

One other point The important thing is the service and not the re

ward.

The man who works from that end is the man who wins In a big way. The absolute scientific basis of success Is not how much 1 can get from others, but how much 1 can do for others.

Court Room 'So. 3. S159. Jos. Grupel vs. Joseph Bernstein, a widower, et al. Deft. Gordon files motion to require pltf. to file

cost bond and ordered to do so by May 9. i13. 8535. Henry Sheppard vs. William Cain and Cain Construction Co.

Reached for trial and dismissed for want of prosecution. 8733. Frederick Borman vs. Fred Stewart, et al. All defts. except! Kerl and Kerl defaulted, Kerl & Kerl file ans. submitted to court and find for plft. $613 and $75 atty. fees without relief. Judgment. 879ft. I'lft. files amended compt making John Ratchlnets and wife new parties deft. (Clarence C. Smith vs. John Toth et al). S844. Charles Gluth vs. August Gluth et al. Submitted to court. 9140. Knoblock & Gins Milling Co. vs. John Bayert. Motion to set aside default sustained. Judgment vacated.

921S. John Kowalkowskl vs. John

Olzenskl. Appeal dismissed for want of prosecution, ordered certified to J. r. Court

9350. Martin Powers vs. Titus, et aL

Pltf. files affl. for change of venue from county. Granted. Porter C C. ten days.

9S87. Northern State Bank vs. Max

Bernstein, et al. Defts. dismissed their appeal, ordered certified to J. P,

9958. A. C. Torbett Co. vs. Interstate

Construction Co. et al. Deft, files

motion to require plft. to produce

certain letters and papers at trial.

9963. The Farquher Furnace Co. vs.

Ida Kieselbach. Plft. files interroa.

Peft. ordered to ans. same by May

12.

10178. Mary Ondo vs. Samuel Mocko

et al. Defts. defaulted, sub to court, find for .plft. $1,091.30 plus

$100 atty. fees without relief.

Judgment over against Samuel Mocko. Deft, moved to set aside

default and judgment.

9286. Ethel M. Klrsey vs. William F.

C. Peters. C. B. Tlnkham withdraws appearance for deft. Deft, defaulted.

9602. Manhattan Lumber Co. vs. Peter

Plsarskl et al. Plft. dismisses as to Union National Saving & Loan Ass'n. other defts. defaulted, submitted to court finding for plft. $155 plus $25 atty. fees without relief, judgment.

9623. Alvln Green ve. Wallace H.

Jaques et al. Submitted to court find for jlft. $217 plus $21.70 atty. fees without relief, find that deft. Stein is surety: that execution should belevied first on goods of Jaques, judgment. 10116. John Schloer vs. Fred A. Haw-

ley et al. Shows service on deft. A. W. Warren, default as to him. 19235. Thomas L. Neft vs. Harbor Building Co. et al. Deft, files affl. for change from county, granted. Porter C. C, 10 days. 10304. Edmund Bals vs. William Parry et al. Plft. files motion for change of venue, granted Porter C C, 10 day. 6258. Finding for plft $245.28. Judgment. Harry Natenberg vs. Lawrence Starlasak. 92S6. Ethel M. Klrsey vs. William F. C. Peters. Finding for plft. $2,000. Judgment.

939. Joe Ladar vs. Max Hlrsch. Deft.

files supplemental motion for new trial.

8688. Dalton Coal Company vs. Wm.

MacNelll et al. Finding for plft. against deft. Wm. Wm. MacNeil $334. Judgment. Find for deft. Mrs. Maggie MacNelll Judgment.

AT HAMMOND

THEATER WITH GERMAN PLAYERS

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Conrad Bolton.

LIGHT FOOTED SONGSTRESS. Miss Felice Lyne sang in Kirksville last week. The Graces stod at her cradle and breathed their airy bless

ings upon her. She should tread skyward upon a strain of viewless gossamer, wear sandals of rose leavea and make the butterflies seem like an

awkward' squad. Kirksville Journal.

The Day in HISTORY

MAV 13 IX HISTORY.

1S29 Demand for higher wases caused

several Massachusetts factories to close. !

1S54 New slave capitation tax decreed

In Cuba. 1864 Fighting continues at Spottsylvania between forces of Grant and Lee. 1S84 Alaska granted civil government. 18S9 Johnstown flood. 1898 "Flying Squadron," under Capt. Schley, sailed from Hampton Roads. 1905 J. J. Hill secured control of the Kansas Southern RailroaC. 1912 Senate resolution for the direct electio nof United States senators, passed the House. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Congressman Robert E. Lee of the Twelfth Pennsylvania district, is fortytwo. He was born in Schuykill County, Pa.; educated in the common schools of Pottsville and engaged in business, at an early age. He is considered wealthy and is ono of the most promi-

. . iiif'nt ineu in nis uisinci, is a ueinocrHi laio.j janj jS serving his second term In Con-Jgress.

I COMING TO THE ORPHEUM '" ' Vwb'w "I t ' !

!

kV t y , . ?:)'r: ; r. v - v . ; X iv-.ydir- v" - .'-i

Miss Blossom Robinson , at the Orplieum.