Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 291, Hammond, Lake County, 28 May 1913 — Page 4
THE TIMES.
Yednesday, May 28, 1913. "TWAS A WISE LITTLE GUY WHO PULLED THAT STUFF ABOUT THE YOUNG MAN'S FANCY," SAYS THE A. Y. M. R ANDOM TMIINQS AND RL.HVQS i:
f FOR THE 1 EM iDAY
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS By The Lake Cny Prlattac II Caatpaay. The Lake County Times, dally except Bund ay. "entered aa second-class matter June X, 1S"; The Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. 3. 111: The Gary Evening; Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 5. 190ft; re-entry of publication at Gary, Ind.. April It. 1913; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO. 1911; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. IS, 1912. at the pestoffice at Hammond. Indiana, all under the act of March t. 1ST9.
Entered at the Postofflcea, Hammond and Gary, Ind., as second-class aaatter.
rOREIQX ADVERTWIHa OFK1C1C, 12 Reotor Building: - - ChVcairo
Fi'BUCATl O V omCES, Hammond BuiVdins, Hammond.
Ind.
TBUtPHOIWI,
Hammond (irlreute excrtangpe) Ill
(Call for department wanted.)
Gary Office Tel. 137 East Chicago Office Tel. 640-J Indiana Harbor Tel. 349-M; 150
Whiting Tel. 80-M Tke thresholds of the four triads are.
Crown Point Tel. 3 Hegewisch ....Tel. 13
MAY IS Bl ILI(lfi II ICR HOME.
May la bulldlag; her house. With apple
hlouona
She la roofing over the gllramerinK
rooms) j
Of the oak. and the beech hath ike
bullded its Iieama,
Aad, aplaalaa: all day at her secret
looms.
With arras of leaves each wlnd-awayed
wall
She plctureth oyer, and peop-leth It all
With echoes and dreamM. And' singing of streams.
May Is building her house. Of petal
and blade.
Of the root of the oak la the flooring
made.
With a carpet of mosses and lichen
and clover.
Rack small miracle over anil over.
Aad tender, traveling green things
strayed.
Her windows, the morning and everlng
atar.
And her rustling doorways, ever ajar
With the earning and going
or fair things blowing.
HERE'S. hoping that T. R. doesn't Insist upon The recall of That Marquette judge In case the Libel Case Is decided against Him.
MAN who wrote "Ideals of Democracy" died suddenly a few days ago. Probably the shock of coming in contact with eome of the rough-neck work of the. Gary democracy was too much for him.
MOTHER'S
Headline.
It always is.
BREAD IS BEST."
May la building her house.
dust of things
From the
REDlTIMi THE HIC1I COST
OK GILLETTE BLADES. (From a dispatch.) Washington. May 2S. Patented articles sold under price restrictions by manufacturers may be re-sold by re
tailers at cut rates.
The supreme court so held today in the case of a newly patented nerve tonic. Safety razors, talking machines and thousands of other patented articles are affected by the decision.
the only matter of interest to citizens here today. The annual state G. A. R. encampment opens today, and that has brought hundreds of civil war veterans to Indianapolis to reunite with their comrades of fifty years ago. Not only the primaries and the Grand Army encampment are on hand, but the Barnum & Bailey circus is here for two performances, and the annual meeting of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows opens today.
STRAWBERRY colored skirt said to be the latest. Inasmuch as most of 'em are so short now days might as well call it the shortcake skirt.
MAN convicted in nearby city of stealing water. This is Hennery Coldbottle's idea of nothing to steal.
PROF. BOOK is the new assistant state' superintendent of public instruction. His name suggests that the school boys will have to study harder.
Advertising: solicitors wlH be sect, or she u making the songs and the flow-
rate given on application.
If you 'hav ny trcrutol artHn The Times notify the nearest fOce and have It promptly remedied.
KARGKH, rAIX) IP OTROIHUATIOH THAT! AWT OTHER TWO JTKWBpapbrs lit tbx cAixancrr region.
era and the wtngat
From October's tossed and trodden
gold
She la making the young year ont of
eld Yea! out of winter's flying Ieet
Is aaaaJng all . the summer
sweet.
WHAT'S become of the old-fashioned
fife and drum corps? Also, what's become of the old-fashioned woman that
used to have a blooming rose bush set
aside on Decoration day?
AFTER courting for 46 years a
New Jersey couple decides to wed
Our Hennery Coldbottle says that this
And the brown leaves spurned of Kg a gjgn the agd limit OUght to be eX
4 wn w mr& mmmnntMtlAii will lew- . , i .. icnucti
- - - ' i.mt mi9 v-uauK'UK KMI1 1 V pnng .
Mt be noticed, u others will b Richard Le Oalllenne. In Haroer'.i
printed at discretion, ajid should bet Magaclne.
addressed to The Editor, Time. Ham
Ind.
411
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge. No.
96S. F. and A. M. Friday, May S3, S p. m. F. C. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S.
Galer, Sec-, K. M Shanklin, W M.
fleet that the Job here is a "cinch" compared with that of some postmen
elsewhere, notwithstanding the fact
that a cruel public utilities law pass
ed by the recent inexplicable Indiana
legislatures took away their rights to ride on street cars without paying
fare.
WHY NOT ONE FOR WEST HAMMOND'S?
Notice that Mme. Sarah Bernhardt has written a pan-
egyric for
Jon of Arc. This la too
much in favor
of Orleans' Joan.
get the
THEY made "September Morn" draped, in Chicago. Considering
cool weather we've been having it's a wonder that S. M. didn't ask for a blanket long ago.
SHERIFF out in Elk County, Kan,
is 100 years old. Well, you just give
Mr. Whitaker time.
MRS. RIDDLE Is a member of the Colorado legislature. These women senators always have the men guessing.
ROME talk that the German ambassador has asked the kaiser to re-call him. What's the matter? Too much grape juice and no Bud?
IN the event that T. R. loses his libel
suit great Question win be wnetner
In the Sahara, for instance, the Bud or half and half is his favorite
man with the mail goes humping over
Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M.
nocrul&r stated meeting Wednesday.
May 28. Fast Master degree, visiting the hot sand on a camel, a prey to
companions welcome, I wild tribes; in Switzerland some of
th nnst nffirM am at
Ktated Assembly first Tuesday each height of 7,000 feet and the men risk
month. Class of candidates Tuesday, being overwhelmed by avalanches in June Srd. J. W. Morthland. Rec, R. &the valleys and carried off by eagles
Galer, T. I. M. lOTf the elffhts while In Tnrfia within
i - i i . .
Hammond Commandery. No. 41 K. T. I ear "ue """area ana imy were
Stated meeting June 2. 8 p. m. K. T. I Killed Dy snake bites and twenty.
degree. Visiting Sir Knights welcome, seven eaten by tigers.
Cheer up. Things might
Bl'SV DAY IX HOOSUER CITADEL. (From the Indianapolis Star.) While the primaries are holding the attention of citizens who are interested in politics, they will not be
"COMIX THROUGH THE RYE. Probably very few persons understand the expression "Comin' Through the Rye." There Is in Scotland a small stream called the Rye. The girls forded It going to church,
school and to market and as the wat
er was a foot or two deep they had to hold their skirts up. The boys
would meet them In mid-stream and kiss them without any difficulty, as the girls couldn't drop their skirts
to make any resistance. That's what
the poet meant when he wrote "Com
in' Through the Rye," but most people think he meant a field of rye.
"Isn't it a pity." we were sayins.
"that one has to be indoors this kind of weather "
"Ou-o-oo!" came from the Average
Young Man, and he piled a few books
and an Inkwell or so within handy
reach and went on. "The next guy that
pulls that hoary wheeze on me gets these right In the pazazz. I've been hearing that the whole day and it's
bout as welcome as a rainy holiday.
Where's your fetching-upT
'Terhaps you are familiar, Mr. A. Y.
M.," we continued, "with the words of
the Immortal Tennyson, when he says
that the young man's fancy turns lightly at this beauteous season of the year In the general direction of thoughts of love. The chances are that Mr. Tennyson was right about It, but we feel that we had better discuss the thing with you before coming to any rash and ill-judged conclusions. Will you spill a little chatter on the subject?" The A. Y. M. is so slangy in his speech that, we sometimes slip Into the ver-nacular. "Mr. (Tennyson," said the A. Y. M.. "was not only a rhymster of repute but he was also a real wise little guy.
When he sprung that one about the young man's fancy he said a mouthful. He certainly doped it right. These aro the days when the love-bug can't fill all his orders. A young fellow goes out walking with a girl friend, the lovebug buszeB up and hands him a wallop on the bean and. goodnight nurse! he's got it. He suddenly realizes that the girl with him is the most wonderful thing In the world. Oh, It's great stuff, I ought to know, I " "Average Young Man, not you!" "She, really lissen she's the only one I " ' We beat it hastily.
comes with a big smile, takes a big breath and starts anew. He Is never
still a moment. When not beating
on the pulpit, he is shaking his fist la
the faces of his audience, hurling warnings and denunciations, until almost black in the face; or he will seize a chair like a straw and hurl it high in the air, will rush with it to the pulpit, spring on it and with one foot on the seat and the other on the pulpit hurl forth his denies.
IT Is about time for Gary's reform wave to subside.
be so
Political Announcements
much worse.
was talked of in all the European to protest. But if you would be near courts. He delivered an address in the hinges of the world, if you want Latin. before the King and Queen of to feel your own hand upon the lever
Denmark when four years old. He that lifts, moves, changes and re-
died the following year. This is a forms, you must ply your paddle up
striking instance of the folly of fore-. the stream.
ing education.
SHOW GOOD SENSE.
Mr. Hodges, the chairman, and the
other members of the bull moose cen
tral commitee of Gary are to be con
FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES
I err a tula tarl nn t n a crrwtrt ea-n on thaw lm-n
that I a am candidate for the rcpabll- "ev" -j enn nomination for Mayor of Gary auh- snowi1 n declaring for amalgamation
ject to th 4eciaion of the republican I with the republicans in the forthcom
ing city election,
If the amalgamation is carried out
there is no reason why Knottlsm
shouldn't end this fall
support of ssy friends la this way. CHARLES E. GREEN WALD.
FOR MAYOR. Gary, Indiana, May 33, 1S1.1.
I desire to announce my candidacy aa
a candidate for Mayor on the Demo
cratle ticket of the City f Gary, Lake
County, Indiana, subject, however, to
the remit of the Democratic Primary. the father of a bouncing baby in this
juie a a, jvij, am dv dhh - oy lie
name, nrotddlac there la no nollce ae
tlvlty connected therewith.
WHAT IT WAS.
A PLACE AT THE PIE COUNTER. Trnhahiv th wprtdini? festivities in
Our neighbor, the Gary Tribune, Berlin were only temporarily disturd-
speaks of the need of good govern- ed by the noise which Bounded like a ment in Gary, referring to a continu-jsiag blast in Lake Michigan. ance of it. It was only a party of valets prying
To the Tribune competent govern- the czar out of the bombproof Pull-
ment is to be found in that great and man palace car he had travelled in
good reformer, hizzoner, the Hon.
Tom Knotts.
Ever since hizzoner admitted the
Tribune to a place at the city printing
trough his government has been ex-
W0NDERS WILL NEVER CEASE Suffragetteism in England is ex
tending even to the barnyard. A
two-and-a-half-year-old speckled Sus
sex hen which, at the end of her first
ear was in appearance a hen, laid a
quantity of eggs, sat and reared a
brood of chickens. Last year she did not lay, but moulted into a rooster's
plumage, with the exception of the
headgear which is normally a pul
let's. A Wyandotte hen behaves similarly, continuing to lay, though
her eggs wouldn't hatch, and a Blue
Leghorn hen with a male's headgear
scorned to lay at all.
SWING OF THE PENDULUM.
For a century the American people made a god of success. If a man had
country he is Just shunted aside like
an old disused freight car.
There is no credit or honor In it in
this half of the hemisphere.
But down in Venezuela it is decid
edly different, so differfnt inHtrl that
The Indiana Society of Chicaeo 1 ..
. . " - masculine emigration tnuner mav
pounded as unusually gooa. it, is not made nia way in tne world particu-
WHEN SHALL WE MOVE? so long since the Tribune referred to larly If he nad made m0ney that
When a man is married or becomes ItS patron as "Gary's worst -tumbling jwas taken aa prima facle evidence
DlocK. I that he was a nersnn to be looked un
What a change doth a hand in the
printing pap make!
Slcnedt MORRIS 3V. CASTLEMAN.
OUR GUESTS TO BE.
to be entertained in Lake county nextjs00n tart
UP-STREAM.
For most people it is always easy'eration
to believe what others believe.
to. Reversely, if failure had been
his portion, no matter under how
many handicaps he may have labored
he was by common consent regarded
as a man unworthy of serious consid
Having carried this sort of
i thing to an extreme, it was inevitable
The rule of the maioritv is stronger that sooner or later a reaction would
month at Cedar Lake during the day when triolets are hnm t n9tk.Jn matters of nuhlic. sentiment than'come, perhaps to carry us to an equal-
enroute from that place to Hammond Indian woman down there the father, in anything else, and to do in Romely ridiculous extreme in the other dt-
luo 1410 in accordance with custom is placed as the Romans do is the natural and rection says the Cincinnati Times
iiiuuu m uio evening. tin n h.mmnrt th k .t. I .Star
ww.f v n; uc ten J IX lilt" tan; n tx j v. i, uav&&c,. .
wot an me memoers oi me society delicacies of the season for iT wi,a r,,stnm and stvle are tvrants. but t This reaction la now with us. To-
are indigenous to Indiana, but that If it ls twin3 he can have only a tonrso ar aa -getting along" is concern-'day we are bent on the great task of
mey an iuvb 10 come oacn mj ims weeks' vacation, and one rhihi Mm erf. thev are benevolent tvrants: for. making a god of failure. If a man
state now and anon and live on the a man a rest of two weeks. He is fed the man who goes not far astray from has worked hard and saved money un-
idi oi iue idiia wnue enjoying me on Doa constrictor st eaks. what ia usual can slide alone com-. til he owns a business, or a house, or
real Old-fashioned, all-WOOl-and-a- - Jt a ta-ar Kharoa rr ct-V that la nnr
I I I I 1 1 I 1 I I I V fill H II I 1 1 1 ! ! ! rl V illLItlll II I. u. - ' - - " v. . u .u
yard-wide hospitality goes without
saying. i JCUxtljlrJtr LKLLUKEN. r v, .ri'o rmroDo HontnHs meanness of his character. Corres-
The proposition is a big one for Tb.e young nowadays read ten nnnn men and women who are not 1 pondingly, the man who has made a
the people or Lake County to tackle much. content to follow the fashions. ' failure in life, whether through acfor It is a notable society, given to Tney are enfeebled in mind and Mammon and Baal are not the gods 'cident, misfortune or downright shiftbig entertainments and notable func- )0dyi by pouring over story books and of the ambitious, and the thing that lessness, is now regarded by many
uons, iuncuons wnose iame is not magazines. Better for them to stroll makes for progress is the Minority .emotional and well meaning persons
circumscnoea oy me oounaanes or and sit and dream if they cannot ruu Report.
iu u." lUu.mUu.,aaa ttUu it ue- and jump and play. A wise parent hooves the neonle of the emintv tn u -n , .
wuuiu anow oniy me ciass dooks, trie
take prompt advantage and early op- Bile and a few of the great poots and
t"'""1"' w ouwuiucio i.u nistorlans to lie within reach of the
me wneei. - children. A book may make or mar
it win De tne Dest advertisement jthem for life.
luc tuuuij cyKl Uttu. muuons oi ao;- There lived in Lubeck, in the lars will be represented by the visi- eighteenth century, a teacher of much tors. They will expect genuine learning, Heinecken by name, who, Hoosier hospitality and will pay tor having long desired and received a
lc by good words of Lake County. SOn, turned his whole attention to hi
uuies ngnt ior me nonor or enter- education. He taught him to speak talning the Chlcagoans at these sum- before he was eight months old rn... T 1- - t . . .. ..... '
iuci icdi.to.io ouu v,vuui,y snowing tne little creature various greatly honroed in having them. objects, giving at the same time the
iets give , mem me Best we nave, I name of each, which he repeated ten
something they will long remember, or fifteen times. When he was two
And the time to bgin preparing years old the young Heinecken knew
for these visitors Is NOW. the stories of the nlrf Tptamonr
two months later he read the gospels. His father spoke Latin and Greek to him and his mother German. He could answer all question concerning the principal events of ancient and modern history. He, of course, attracted public attention and
las having a monopoly of all the vir
The earnest young man shines in tues
society like a camel in a parlor.
Benjamin Franklin eating a bun in
the streets of Philadelphia, Abraham j
MAY SS.IW HISTORY.
"97 French royalists surrendered
Toulon to convention troops.
810 Crown Prince Of Sweden killed
In fall from horse. Accident led to Barnadotte's elevation.
1853 France restored capital punish
ment.
861 Savannah blockaded by Union
squadron.
878 John Earl Russell died. b9S Spanish reserve fleet left Cardiz
for practice cruise.
1003 Presbyterian assembly formally
enacted amendments to the Confession of Faith. 910 Glenn Curtlss made final prepa
rations for airship flight from New
York to Albany. , 912 Friends of President Taft positively deny rumors of his retirement from Presidential race in favor Of Roosevelt.
Heart to Heart Talks By JAMES A. EDGERTOM
I
Lincoln lying on his stomach reading;
MODERN REVIVALISM. Where all the dynamic vitality that
a book and John Wanamaker pushing Billy Sunday possesses comes from is a handcart, are unconventional fig- a mystery to all who have seen him. ures; and we have little doubt that He is extremely frail of body. His James A. Garfield, barefooted, driving legs are like pipe stems, while the a mule, presented an absurd appear- rest of his body is not of that bullance. ' like build usually found in an athlete. Following the rule of the majority, which Sunday is is the way the North these men would have stayed where Liberty News puts It. But once on they were put. But they were not the platform he is a veritable human
IT MIGHT BE WORSE. . We have sympathized with our letter carriers as a faithful and not too well remunerated body of public servants, but It may comfort them to re
born to simply "get along."
Drifting is pleasant, but always down stream. The men and women who count are those who struggle upstream, for at the head of the stream is the mountain peak. To be sleek and well-fed for a while make no original effort, fall in with the rest, approve everything, second the motion, never "throw
dynamo. Time after time he works himself to an almost frenzied pitch, shouting at the top of his voice. In
the meantime plunging and whirling
about the stage. His voice grows almost to a whisper in his tierce denunciations, blood vessels stick out like chords in his temples and neck, while perspiration pours from bim in streams. When you expect him to diop from exhaustion or succumb to
away your vote" and be careful not an attack of heart failure, back he
THE LAW IS LIBERTY.
That sounds like a paradox. But
some seeming paradoxes are the most profound truths. The only man who Is truly free ls he who so wholly lives within the law that he does not feel it
and is scarcely conscious of Its ex
lstence.
This ls true of the moral law. of the
natural law and of the human law.
True liberty is the freedom from
lawless desires.
Transgression of the moral and nat
ural law means destruction for ourselves individually. Transgression of the human law means Interference
with society and the rights of others.
This also reacts on ourselves. Thus by seeking a liberty outside the law
we bring ourselves into boudage.
The only true freedom is within the law. The law marks the boundaries
of liberty.
We talk of breaking the law, but such a thing Is Impossible. We only
break ourselves.
The jaw is exactly as it was before.
but we are not.
If we have broken a moral law we are troubled in our consciences. If we
have broken a natural law we are
troubled In our bodies, and If we have broken a human law we are troubled in our social relations. The law Is our best friend, for, while It conditions us. It also protects us. We know that within It we are safe. The man who transgresses the moral law is in bondage to an invisible Nemesis, to his own sense of guilt and to the disesteem of all who know his fault. The man who transgresses the natural law is in bondage to bodily injury or ills, to impaired functions and to pain. The man who transgresses the hnman law is In bondage to fear of detection and. If found out. to deprival of life, liberty or property and to social ostracism. If lawlessness is bondage then lawfulness Is liberty. The man who lives in harmony with all law ls the only true freeman. He is at peace with God and man. with his own body and his own soul. We have been -seeking a definition for liberty, not knowing it was at our very band. The law Is liberty-
The Day in HISTORY
UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A
TODAY'S BIP.THn.1V HONORS. Morris Sheppard of Texas, was born
May 28, 1875. in Texas; was educated
n common schools of Dangrerfleld,
Pittsburg-, Cum by, Austin and Linden, and at the TTniversity of Texas and
Yale University. He ls a lawyer by
profession and one of the foremost
members of the World. Has figured
prominently in state and national campaigns, and serving five terms In Congress.
SK.RIOI J.LY WOt'SDS MOTHER. Mrs. Elizabeth A. Lavelle, (8 years
old, was shot and seriously wounded by her son, William A. Lavelle, a school
teacher at Washington. The accident happened while Mr. Lavelle was exhibiting a revolver to his brother, who contemplated purchasing the weapon. While he was handling the gun. It was accidentally discharged, and the bullet struck Mrs. Lavelle, who was standingnearby. In the chest near the left breast. An examanation by a physician who was hurriedly summoned disclosed that the bullet had failed to penetrate the lung cavity. GETS $200 FOR A KISS. The suit for $1,000 damages for a kiss alleged to have been stolen from Mrs. Mayme Fisher, wife of Irvin Fisher, by Herman Schilling, a Shelby
street florist, was dismissed by Mrs.
Fisher when it was called for. trial in Superior Court, Room 5, at Indianapolis, yesterday. Her attorney, Ira M. Holmes, said the case had been settled out of court, the plaintiff receiving $200. The order of court imposes the cost on Mrs. Fisher. Mrs. Fisher alleged the kiss was stolen when she entered Schilling's place of business, and as a result of the humiliation and worry she was made ill and suffered greatly. The suit was filed several months ago.
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE TIWKS.
Honored by Art Critic for Her Beauty.
1 1 M It 1 I? v: i S. 3 . K" 4 - , V t . -; Vv - f . -
1
