Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 307, Hammond, Lake County, 16 June 1913 — Page 4
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THE TIMES. Monday, June 16, 1913.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br The Lake Comtj Printta- mm Fb . Ilshlag Cempaay.
The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered aa second-class matter June 2. l06"; The lk County Timea, dally except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. S. 111; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. B, 1901; re-entry of publication at Gary. Ind., April 18. ltll; The Lake .County Tlmea, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 1111; The Tlmea, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. 15. 112. at the poatAffice at Hammond, Indiana, all under the act of March S. 1T. Entered at the Poatofficea, Hammond and Gary, Ind., aa aecond-claaa matter. FOREIGN ADVERTISING OF"fICKS, II Reotor Building- - - Chlcag-o PUBLICATION OFFICES, Hammond Building-, Hammond. Ind TELEPHONES, Hammond (private exchange) 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 Crown Point Tel. OS Hegewlscb. TeL 13 Advertising solicitors will te sent, or rate given on application. If you have any trouble getting Tlx Tlmea notify the nearest office and have It promptly remedied. LARGBR PAID VP CIRCULATION THAN ANY. OTHER TWO KHWSPAPERS IN TUB CALUSfETT RE6IOK. A.VONTJIOU3 communications will not ba noticed, lmt other will "b printed at discretion, and should ba addrewd to The Editor. Time, Ham mond, ind. 4U Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. 569, F. & A. M.. Friday. June 20, p.m. F. C. degree. Vlsltora welcome. K. S. Galer. Sea, E. M. Shanklln, W L Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M. Regular stated meeting June 25, Royal Arch, degree. Visiting companions wel come. Befreshmenta. Hammond Commandery, No. 41 K. T, Stated meeting- June 16, 8 p. m. Order of the Temple. Visiting Sir Knight welcome. Whiting.' FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES I I announce herewith that I candidate for the deanoeratle tloa for mayor of the elty of Whiting, object to the declaloa of the party primaries. J. J. DO X EG AN. Hammond. FOR TREASURER. Editor TIMES t You are herewith authorised to an. Bounce that I will be candidate for the of flee of city treasurer of the City of Hammond, Indiana, on the demo cratic ticket, subject to the will of the voter of thla city, and I herewith ask the support of my friends at the democratic primary election. Signed, OTTO H. DIELKE. Gary. CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMES! I desire to announce that I shall be a candidate for Judg-e of the elty court of Gary, Subject to the republican and proamwlTe primaries. JOHN W. WAKE. FOR CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMES i Plcaae announce to the cltlsena that I will be candidate for Judge of the city court of the city of Gary, and solicit their support at a primary election to he held by the republican and pro gressive partlea. ALBERT C. Hl'BER. Gary, Ind., Jane 6, 1913. FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES t You may announce that I am a can dldate for mayor of Gary, subject to the decision of the republican and pro. grcHirive primaries. A. R. HOOVER. FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES I You may announce that I am a eaadi date for the nomination for mayor of Gary, subject to the decision of the republican and proa-reaHlve primaries. R. O. JOHNSON. FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES You may announce la your columaa that am a candidate for the nomlna tlon for mayor of Gary subject to the decision of the republican and pro Creative primaries, and I ask the sup port of my friends In this way. CHARLES E. GREEN WALD. FOR TREASURER. Editor TIMES I I'leaMe announce to the people of Gary that I will he a candidate for the nomination of dty treasurer, subject to the decision of the rrpubUcan-pro-arresalve primaries. W. D. HUNTER. FOR CLERK. Editor TIMES I Yon are authorised to announce tha I will he a candidate for elty clerk. object to the decision of the Gary re publican and progressive primaries. II. C. FRANCIS,
Political Announcements
FOR COUNCIL.
Editor TIMi;S Please announce to the people of Gnry thnt I am a candidate for the nomination for alderman of the first ward, subject to the republican nnd citizens primaries or conventions. THKODORE V. FREEBURY. TO THE MOON. moonlight dear, then contest new And with thy soft wUlte hand Indent round valley, stream and a-rove Thy shining silver band. Now Miles In a bevy rise From cryMnl mansions brlfcht. And wash their long: and silky locks Beneath thy glittering light. In looks of love tbon canst not match Thy sister's glowing grace. Vet over-rich In beauty's charm We find thy noble face. Into thy deep eyes every one Delights to arnse, like me. And secrets In the heart that sleep We can confide to tbre. Our wish thou ne'er will tell again Thy oft-miIr on It falli Thon movMl on from house to house. Bringing sweet rest to all. And when we Bleep thou art avrakej Thrqueh craaalea creep thy beams) And In thy mantle thou dost bear A host of lovely dreams. Therefore to thee, above all else, O moon, my love In alvea. So calm and pore thou fioatest there, A little boat In heaven! And when my latent eve draws night. And earth-life grows remote, O faithful comrade, take me then Into thy little boat! From the German of Johanna AmI Atice sioue macKweii. i GREAT RESTRAINT. When you think it over you must concede that the sealqus followers of lorn Knotts. the mayor, ehowed great restraint in the Gary democratic primaries, iney oniy let trie mayor win nis victory ny four tlmea the .muuuk m ,u:. rrubmeui ttusua got
PI Inrui? On for 1 aIH' 1 EMFiDAY sasssMssassssssssssnsssasssBsssnsaassi
in the city. There was nothing to rank8 of martyrdom by sickly sentiprevent hizzoner's victory being an mentalists should be Drotested savs
avaiancne ten times mat or Wilsons ana no one appreciates it more than hizzoner. GREAT THING FOR COUNTY. If the bill pending in congress pro "lcllv"a" waiaujyn Beiv as traveling bazars to boom the products of this great and glorious country is passed Lake county will have a varied assortment to be represented. There 11 be- coke, rails, billets. bolts, nuts, sheet steel, bridges, and cement from the mills of Gary and Indiana Harbor. John Fitzgerald's distillery and Fred Carter's brewery will testify to our varied industries by goodly exhibits. Hammond will furnish books, beds, pianos, surgical instruments, milking machines, pota to-planters and glucose products. All kinds of oil, axle, grease, and auto lubricants will come from Whiting and we mustn't leave out any of the Highland and Hessville pickles, the Miller torpedo sand, and the farming products from the Creek townships. " whatever dreadnought is assigned to ..... , , exhibit the Lake county wares will balk at taking on a few tons of Aetna dynamite, nitroglycerine and gun cotton unless he can keep the stuff under lock and key in the ship's magazine. IT IS POSSIBLE ANYWAY. The lady said to be 98 per cent hcontif.,! A-a f -v, . .t.tv u. gagement to a French count. Maybe the count is only about 2 per cent TTTf T)T)T'T7TTr-T TTT1 I ixiium.. "The blow that killed McCarthy," says the Edmonton Bulletin editorially commenting upon the tragedy at Calgary on Victoria Day, "ought to be the death-blow to prizefighting in Alberta. Prizefighting is a brutal and brutalizing occupation. It con - sists of pounding another man's constitution into ruin, or having one's own constitution battered into ruin, for money. "It is also a business by which the fight promoter amasses wealth at the physical cost of men who are. willing to pummel each other for a share in the dollars which can be extracted from those who are willing to pay to witness the exhibition. "It Is likewise the means by which a raft of bums and loafers pick up a living which they are too lazy to work for. "The basis of the business is the fact that people will flock to see a fight, just as they will flock to see a battle not that the majority of them approve either a fight or a battle, but that they 'want to see what la going on' and that the fight or the battle takes the place of some other and more wholesome form of entertainment. "Albert can get along without the prizefighter, the fight promoter and
the hanger-on, and the majority of
the people in the province would like to see this trio sent elsewhere. If the laws provide the legal scope necessary to put a stop to these so-called 'boxing contests,' it is up to the offi cers of the law to exercise their power. If the law does not give the officers this power it is time the law was changed." . YOU THINK IT ISN'T? Tom Knotts, of Gary has been re nominated for mayor again. The score in the renomination league shows that Tom and our own mayor are now tied for first honors. Evidently Mr. Knotts also has a machine. In the primary that made a return of his renominatlon he received more votes than were cast for Wilson, Taft, Roosevelt and Debs at the last election. The Knotts machine is one of the best counting machines on the market. Lafayette Journal. NO MAUDLIN MARTYRDOM. Emily Wilding Davison did what the militants have been enaeavorIng to do for years. She got the King's eye for an act of self-im molation and destruction In testi mony to the cause by stopping the King's horse In the race most thought of by the King. Thus she has acquired merit," demonstrating that no sacrifice, whether of life or health, could be considered too great If it served the cause. Chicago Tribune. It is hard to look upon a woman who had met death by violence, even if Belf-sought. It Is hard to conceive of any healthy mind picturing an act ' Self-destruction as meritorious itareiy. it ever, nas tnere Deen a case where a womans' passing has aroused less sympathy than in the case of Miss Davison. Probably few have thought that! Jna(i Deen held for attempt to murder Jockey Jones, or for the graver
ouo out THU CUD nuuiU UaVC!T,c rmrw m a rata a rn
charge shouid be succumb to nls ln jurie8 Elevation of the woman t.o th an exchange in answer to the above BULLY FOR MO. Again has Missouri Bet her sister commonwealths an admirable ex - ample. She is teaching her Judges Qot to wrlte their decisions in ad Vance of the trials THE C00K-WHALLEY WEDDING Doubtless the Whaley-Cookes feel a great deal safer now that they have been wed after six years of Illicit .... . . iuvb. vi neu sixteen year oia a loreiia ran away with Jere Cooke the young Hempstead rector, there were many who believed that either Jere or Floreta would find it irksome to be true to one another. They have wed to legitimize their two children ac-
cording to public report, but as theug loosed the natural currents if
Fort Wayne News points out there may be other reasons. It remarks: Floreta Whaley Cooke Cooke since yesterday celebrates her mar - riage with the man with whom she lnnd ft! r vonra asm hr ndv cine tn . . , lyoung girls not to do as she and run off with married men. That is ex cellent advice and it is given added emphasis by coming from the one woman in ten thousand not deserted by the man after her physical attrac tlon has lost, its charm. Mrs. Cooke states that she is happy, but broad ly intimates that if she had her life to live over she would observe the convent inns rthr thar. ntn to !.... . . . tne soul call- an aarnission which is calculated to give her declaration of happiness the lie. No doubt she husband and children, but oven this cannot rfmnvn tVin sswlal hranri which stings and sears every day of her life. She realizes that not all the marriage ceremonies in the world will lift the stain from the life of her innocent children, and in her hours of sober reflection her thoughts are doubtless burdened by bitterness and J remorse. There is no such thing as real happiness for those women who transgress the moral law and the real poignancy of their atonement comes in the later years of better under standing, when the prickings of con science are not relieved by the enjoy ment of the apples of error.ORGANIZATION. DOES NOT. INCREASE INITIATIVE IT GIVES IT A CHANCE. Every new step in industrial deveolpment ha3 met with the bitter opposition of those who suffered un der the old system; and there is no sadder commentary upon progress than this that, those who noed it most cannot be roused by argument or education, but by suffering. Machinery . was looked on as a curse by the early hand workers, and still is by many. One time and an other millions of dollars worth of machinery has been thrown into the river, smashed, voted against and burned by hand workers who feared
R1
ANDOM THlINGiS A IND RUIINQS
LET'S see. Aren't theae the Ides of June? NOTE by the Manila cables that the datto of Joo, who Is on the warpath, is about to become quiet. That's the dif ference between the datto of Jolo and the Datto of Gary. EVEN though women get the right to vote in this state most of them will cast the ballots as their husbands tell them. A LOT of Alaska Indians have noth ing but seal meat to eat. says a dispatch. Well, that's a whole lot better than many faithful democrats who think that they have to eat crow because Woodrow is only appointing doc tors, editors and novelists to office. UNDERSTAND that Secretary Bryan Is carrying his lunch with him to his I office every day. Wonder if Mrs. Bryan slips In a flask of grape Juice when she packs Wlllum's basket? KENTUCKY LIGHTS. (From the Eddyvllle Herald.) During our nearly three years in Eddyville we have never failed to stie a big bright light In the front window of Senator ITtley's nice home, placed there of dark nights by his thoughtful wife to guide those trav eling this street at any hour of the night. And Just across the street Mrs. Lucy Childers hangs a lantern on the corner of her nice yard fence every dark night to guide those going to church, prayer meeting and the lodge. NEW YORK WORLD reporter who was picked up dying in a railway wreck first saw to it that his paper got the story and then he cashed ln. Yet some folks won't believe that newspaper men never get a rest M. a a a. a a b.j v nj.n, a. a a IS RATHER WARM. (Jollet Herald.) Miss Edna Mathlas. a graduate of the Jollet high school, was captain of the winning canoe crew at LaSalle Seminary. The Blues won out by a large margin. The girls were attired prettily in white middy Jackets and blue hair ribbons. APPARENTLY Greece, Bulgaria and Servia have at last heard that Andrew Carnegie has abolished war and that Tom Knotts is renominated for mayor of Gary. it. But we know now that it takes in telligent men to run machinery, and that machinery cultivates the power of the andividal. ' : I The entrance of woman into the field of industry did not decrease man's opportunity. It put him hard . .. . v.I to It to maiuuiia ui yiai ou has meant greater intelligence The organization of big business and the consequent division of labor I naa met with intense opposition from those who did not understand it, and stin does; but the division of labor initiative in the lives of thousands of mPn who under the old system,' had too many things' to do to bring the fnrr or ingenuity to bear upon any thing. Initiative is doing a thing in a new ... . . t inij Way Without being tOld. It is not CUStOltary among ignorant people, Tn hava lr,itiatlve it is necessary to know something about what you are doing, and the man who does a hundred things has no knowledge of of them Sufficient to give a y him new ideas Initiative comes through concentratlnn and sneclal Skill. " . " aA nt To laKe a man uu a v juuo uu f - him on one is to give his initiative a chance. Organization incseases initiative, and that is why organization has become the greatest word in industry and commence. The need of the underpaid today Is to understand organization, to stop fighting it and to begin to seize lti advantage. The Day in HISTORY JCJiG 1 IX HISTORY. 1819 Earthquake near I'oonah. in the East Indies swallowed up Z.oou sons. 1830 Eight villages destroyea oy eruption or mi. mh. 1852 Sultan of Turkey granted new rights and privileges to Christian subjects. 1S57 Riot In New York City, growing out of dispute over public offices. 1876 Governor Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio, nominated for rresldetit by the Republicans. Iggg Sampsons fleet again shelled forts at Santiago harbor. 19000 News received of the killing of the German minister. Baron Von Ketteler, by the Chinese. 1904 Russian Vladlvostock squadron I returned to that harbor after having sunk three Japanese transports in the Japan tea. tn dock strike ended. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY' HOXORS. Ex-Congressman Jesse JU Hartmaa, J
GREAT Caewar! If these English suffragettes keep hurling themselves at the king's race horses It will be necessary for his majesty's Jockeys to provide fenders in front of the animals.
QUEEN of Spain expects the stork, says a dispatch. That's nice. TEE HEE! President Wilson called over at the senate office building to see 28 senators and only found seven of them. Doesn't Woodrow appreciate that the senators are busy men? A I.I, IP WITH D AD. (Detroit Free Press.) TO EXCHANGE Full dress suit and Tuxedo, practically new, Bize 34. for first-class gocart, or what have you? Address Box 0-6. INASMUCH as the new administration contemplates sending many authors abroad as ambassadors it will be pleasing to note that American litera ture will be very much Improved during the next four years COLONEL. ROOSEVELT went down to Andovcr academy to see one of his sons finish. That's nice of pa. All of the boys saw him get finished last November. WHY IS IT When a Young Man marries that they Never any be Leave bin boyhood Daya forever f THAT'S ALL HE IS WORTH. Do you know that the poet-laureate of England only gets $485 a year. Since Secretary Bryan announced that he was fond of white radishes, bushels of them hare been sent to him by admiring friends. Now he is sorry he didn't mention beefsteak also. IT has been found that N. W. univer sity graduates only get on an average of $25 a week ten years after graduation. Had they learned to be plumbers they all would own autos now. FANS have been Installed in the senate to keep the members cool. Considering that the upper house has to put up with fire-eating Ben Tillman, Wildcat Bob'LaFollette and J. Ham Lewis' flaming whiskers you can't blame the senators for demanding their rights. -r of Pennsylvania, is sixty. He was born in Pennsylvania and received his education ln the public and academic. He has been prominently engaged in business since 1878, being connected with the Iron Industry. He has served as a delegate to State and national Republi can conventions and as Congressman, but was defeated for re-election to tne Sixty-third Congress. VOICE OF RE O F U E TO THE VOTERS AND WOMEN
OF GARY! GREETING! ' performed, 1 herewith ask the These are times that try our souls, I and energetic women of Gary, to because of the existing Incongruities ktndly assist mevin securing signatures in our local affairs. Small men mayof legal voters In their several and shirk their duties, but the upright and ( partiCular preclncta, on blanks of petlJust, impelled to resultful actions by,tions. which will be cheerfully mailed
the good women here, will rise In their
mis mi, io i iumj "",worK, tnus neiping 10 insure gooa nu Indiana sand dunes! Nor!, tnsl rvernm.nt.
(.an tnese m,n do it alone, but mustj 'call on the assistance of that glorious i womanhood here, to help puruy tne - k u n ft 1 a r t ntisre0 recently experienced. We all men itn0w this despicable modus operandi, the thing that did it! We all wish for Ooa governments, national, siaie ana munir uaL a lie idM iiiiric-b us nicx most for the oresent. Shall we have It Dy personal exertion, or shall we sub,mit to others to hnd It to us, buttered the wrong side up? This is a free county, and I verily believe the whole humanity occupying It. to be one family. Rich or poor to be . equal before the supreme law! If
Suffrage Delegation Going to Celebration at Springfield.
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CHINESE AIRMAN GIVES UP LOVE FOR DUTY; TO RETURN, THO, FOR LILLY TONG
Tom D. Gunn and Lilly Tong. Tom D. Gunn, the young Chinese aviator of the Pacific coast, is on hia way to Shanghai, where he will establish a military flying school for the new republic. Gunn, r-ho recently received the commission from the Chinese government, had to choose between love and duty. Accomplishing the latter, he hopes to return to San Francisco within a few months to wed Miss Lilly Tonjr, daughter of a prominent Chinese merchant of that city, who, like himself, is a native of California.
they are not, why not? Wa all came to the world endowed with Inalienable rights, entitled to all the blessings and resulting happiness, and as we march along the time's weary path, approaching the dark valley of the shadow of death, we all will make our final exit as poor, as whence we came at the birth. The hoarded riches soma do possess, avail them nothing ln their last leap to the eternity! It Is not his riches, that should be prime Quality of a candidate public office, but rather the honesty and efficiency should make up the keystone of qualification. Having these only, should make him eligible; lacking , them and possessing but riches, shouyld disqualify, because otj the temptations to get and hava more, which allurements prove to enticing. Progressive party well discerned tha proper qualifications of the candidate, tabooing mere.riche?. That Is why bo many of us, tired of tha government f the machine, by tha machine and for the machine banded together to vigorously oppose all Inequalities so predominating ln the old parties. Some thera are, who desire to fight these evieting discrepancies, masked, to this procedure I most respectfully, but em phatically, oppose, hence my present I announcement as candidate for Pro gressive mayor of Gary (since contemplated If not already consummat'cd fusing will eliminate Progressives at convention or primaries (?) nominating candidates) seeking henceforIward to secure my standing on the 'official ballot by petition. Being an ardent believer ln equality of man and woman (and what true son. .hat?, ftn, v.r wlsh to have clean to ajj requesting to do this patriotic! The premeditated, if not already concocted coup de etat, must of needs be ;nlet by timely and promptly coup de tory Can be won only by Indefatlcable exertions! Your obedient servant, j max KIRCHMAN, (P. O. B. 678.) I'rogressive canaiaaie lor mayor 01 . rt I v Resident here alnce March 7, 1907 THET ARB ALL VJttOTt MADE. Scrap lTnloa scoot. Country Clab long cnt, for chew or smoke. Pores plug cut, and Sweet Loot fine cut. Manufactured from the choicest leaf tobacco. McHle-Seotten Tobacem C. f lit 1
- -i , ' - j 5 if I A"1 If - I
FROCK SUITABLE -FOR CREPE METEOR Frock suitable for crepe meteor 6? charmeuse. Medici collar of black chiffon and lace. Picot edjre ribbon passes under tab sections on bodice, and forms lone frinpe weighted sash. The front t-bs pass through stitched slits and have bright hoed embroidered ends. The Ion sleeves are wider at elbows and are set In with corded drop shoulder seams. Lace and buttons trim them. Empire skirt has corded, button trimmed seam down front end is draped from point in center front below blouse.
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