Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 100, Hammond, Lake County, 8 October 1913 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TIMES. Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1913.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br The Lake County Printing and Publishing Company.

The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 28. 1906"; The Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. S, 1911: The Gary Evening; Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 5. 1909; re-entry of publication at Gary, Ind., April 13, 1913; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 30, 1911; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, 1912, re-entry of publication at East Chicago, Ind., Sept. 25. 1913. all under the act of March 3. 1879. Entered at the Postofflces, Hammond. Gary, and East Chicago, Ind.. as second-class matter. rORJGIGX ADVERTISING 12 Reotor BaikilnaT Oh triage WBUOATlOll OOTICBS, BulMl&a;. Hs-mraond. lad. TBUBFBONKS, Mammond (private Mohtscs) , (Call tor daaaiWrnnt unajitetL) 111 Gary Office . Tel. 117 Bast Chicago Off lea Tel. HO -J Indiana Harbor Tel. II9-M; II Whit in Tel. 10-M Crown Point TeL ! Hsgewlsch ..TaL It JLavertlalaer oltators wiM t mtmU rat rtren on aapiloatioB. If roa am Mr tiwal,U!tnc TIM Tka notify ihe tiaaraat mt Hoe aad bar It piwmaitlr rame-iled. larger I aid xnr ontcv&ATTON tbax imr other two kewWATsma ix tub caxatbcbt ajecuox. AXc NTMOTJS ooomsmloa4iB win te n4load, u others will fee Btrltrtel at discretion, aad ahowld he awadrod to The Bdttar, Tinas, Haaa aaaaa. lad.' 433 Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. 669, F. and A. M., Friday, October 10th, 8 p. m., E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S. Galer, Sec, E. M. Shanklln, W. M. Hammond Chaoter No. 117. R. A. m. Regular stated meeting Wednesday, October 8. Royal Area degree win be lunch. All member, and visiting companlona Invited to participate. Hammond Council No. 90 R. and 8. M. Stated assembly, first Tuesday each month. Next class Oct. 7. 1913. J. W. Morthland, Rec Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. tober 20, Temple degree. Visiting Sir Knights welcome. Political Announcements NOTICE. All political notices of whatever nature and from whatever party art strictly caafc. Notices of meetings, mmnonacemcnt of candidacies, etc. may be Inserted In these columns. NOTICE. a meeting of the republican voters of the town of Munstera win bo held

u. nn.h , m .,w .Jstormed at because he gets hold of

nominate candidatea for trustee of the third and fourth wards, one clerk, I one treasurer ana one marahaii, to be , iuru on ai me luniopai election to be held November 4. 1013. All votera are Invited to attend. II. F. KASKE, Chairman, aaaumw me new democratic tariff is not supposced to tax the necessaries of life; only luxuries. let we note that there is to be a ten per cent increase on diamonds. which are listed as luxuries. Any young man who is about to be eneraeed reerarda a diamond a. - necessary of life and if the democratic party doesn't want to lose several Vi ii n rl Tcr1 t rinon n A ir- am I V. V.n.. ;emovrairmonds from he v list. HAS no one had the enterprise to poll the residents of Matteawan on the Giants' chances against the Ath letics? THE miner who was burled a week would have no need to go back to i.. ....,,0 & lurao "CIC Ilia VJailHy A r, . V, .11. ... ua;a ui luc unuo UiUBCUUl. HOPE TOR BEEF EATERS, Some recent' statistics afford evl dence that the high prices prevailing in the markets of the world for cat tie and beef are beginning to have their natural effect upon the supply of both. There Is reason to expect

further changes ln this direction, inlmates, "I don't make any more mismany countries. takes in my music." This little boy

In Cuba, for instance, the number! of cattle increased about 21 per cent from 1911 to 1912. That island has nearly 3,000,000 head of cattle and room for many more. Such a gain In the Cuban herds points to encour -

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THE THINKER. Back of he beating; hammer By Tt-hlch the steel Is Mrronght, Back of the workthopa clamor The serker may find the Thoutcbt, The Thought that Is ever master Of Iron and steam and steel. That rise above disaster And tramples It loader heel: The drudge may fret and tinker Or labor wrlth dusty blows. But back of him stands the Thinker, The elar-eyed man who knows For Into each plow or nahre. Each piece and part and whole. Must ro the Bralna of Labor, Which icrlves the work a Soul I Bark of the motor's hamming;, Back of the belts that sin. Back of the hammer's drumming. Bark of the crane that swing. There 1m the eye that acana them. Watching; through stress and strain There Is the mind which plans them Back of the brawn the Brain! Might of the roaring; boiler. Force of the engine's thrnst. Strength of the sweating; toller. Greatly in these we trust, But back of them stands the schemer The tinker who drives thtags through Back of the Job the Dreamer Who's making the dream come true! Bertoa Braley. aging possibilities in other parts ox the West Indies and still more in Mexico, If peace and tolerable gov ernment can be restored in that country. In Canada, in the year from the end of Junef j 91 2 to the correspond lng date last summer, there was a gain of over 103,000 head of cattle, other than milch cows. That in crease is not Large, but it is encour aging and Its points to greater changes in the same direction Similar evidence of the effect of the high prices paid for beef comes rom the British Isles, where the con arg yery different from those existing In Cuba or in Canada. There the number of horses, mules, asses, sheep, swine and goats decreased slightly In the twelve months ending last June, but there was a gain of 84,000, in round figures, in cattle. All of these facts look hopeful for beef eaters. They indicate that the price of cattle has risen to a level which invites and Insures a material increase in the suddIv. The natural CUr6 haS beeU 8l0W ln ItS PP"tl0ll I to this case, but it is doing its work THE doctrine that it is no crime for an Individual to attempt to steal public property has not yet been firmly established. KEEPING IT OUT 'Keep it out of the paper" is the cry which the local newspaper pub Usher daily hears, says an exchange To oblige often costs considerable, though the party who makes the request thinks the granting scarcely worth saying "Thank you" for. A newspaper is a peculiar thing in the public eye. The newsgatherer is one ltem and is abused because he does not get another. Young men and young women, as well as older persons, perform acts which become legitimate items for publicatoin and and then rush to the newspaper office and beg the editor not to notice their escapades. The next day they con l d TT ft tria O l r--i e nana 1 r nr4- nnnlnir published another party doing the same thing they were guilty of, for getting apparently their late visit to the nrlntine office THt. Baltimore fireman who saved $30000 on a salary of $1,150 a year aeservea to nave Deen a New YorR policeman THE INCOME TAX Must be terribly disconcerting for Alderman Tim Knglehart these days. What with an aldermanic cam paign on and the demands of the new income tax law Big Tim certainly has an elephant on his hands. Perhaps wth the assistance of a squad of ac countants and a half dozen electric adding machines the Ridge road statesman may be able to tabulate his I - . , . . , i , I" "'-"M"-"- rvo "cvi. AN earlier Thanksgiving would also have the advantage of removing the turkey a little farther from the Christmas present zone JUST THIN K0F IT. A little boy once said to his school i - had such poor eyesight that he could not read letters three and one-half inches square more than six feet away from him, and yet he had been repeatedly punished by his violin J teacher for making mistakes while

ANDOM THINGS AND RL.IISQS

NOW that China has elected Yuan as her regular president no doubt he will be careful In selecting; his secretary of state. ' WITH a big religious Conference going on in New York That Town will now give us a rest With fewer stories about Sulzer, Charles Murphy, Gunmen, Thaw, and Wall street. HARD to tell whether Mayor Kaotts Is wondering whether nie more city printing or one of those Maxim silencers will be cheaper la dealing with he Gary Tribune. HAPPILY most of our readers have no worries over the new income tax. PART of Virginia is said to be wild. But blame Virginia not ! Look at the Chautauqua lectures her natives have to Listen to. COLLECTION agency advertising in want ad columns of Thb Times says that It makes character reports. Here's a chance for father to look up sister's now out of town beau. TIMES DO CHANGE. In the Roosevelt administration the malefactor of great wealth was the villain. Now it is the insidious lobbyist. OLD LYMAN ZEA, the Rensselaer patent medicine man has headed for taking his lessons. Just think of it; punished for making mistakes when he could not see his notes plainly! How did he find out that his eyes were weak? His schoolteacher had been making tests of the sight of her pupils and had discovered that this boy could not see well. She resorted the fact to his parents, who got glasses that made him the happiest boy in the school, saved him many undeserved punishments and caused him to say, "I don't make any more mistakes in my music." This boy did not know, nor did his parents know, but that he saw as well as every other boy, and his mistakes were thought to be from carelessness and inattention. Thi3 same boy afterwards became a noted violinist, was educated abroad and played before royalty. His glasses enabled him to see his notes plainly and he made no more mistakes in his reading music says the American Journal of Medicine. . There have been thousands of just such boys and girls in our public schools in the past, who have been stumbling along, hating their lessons, scolded and punished by their teach ers and parents. Just because they had a defect of vision of which they and their parents and teacher were ignorant. Parents, do you know that your children have good eyesight? Do you know that they are not "loneTsighted," "near-sighted," or color blind? Do they often complain of being tired, or of having a headache when they return home from school? Do they dislike school? Are they sleepy and dull when trying to learn their home tasks? Is It hard for them to keep up with their class? Are they inclined to "play hookey"? Then do not punish and scold them, until you first find out if there Is not some physical cause behind it all, so that you may not regret later and blame yourself for neglect or injustice to one of your own. Ignorance of the law is no excuse to the lawbreaker in court. Ignor ance is no excuse or neglect of your children. Fifty per cent, of the blindness caused by separation of the retina (the sight seeing membrane within the eye) occurs in people who are near-sighted. Many of the headaches of children and others are the result of eye-strain caused by the at tempt of the delicate eye muscles to overcome the defect. This overtaxing of them strains the eye muscles, then the letters blur or run together, the child feels tired and the eyes pain or headache follows Do not neglect your cnuaren a eyes! THE report that Americans are be ing systematically robbed in Paris hotels by thieves from outside indicates that Paris hotelkeepers are get ting lav in their business methods. THE SOLEMN TRUTH. That was a terrible indictment of official autborithy and private greed wheh William T. Jerome made the other day ln hi3 argument in the Thaw case, when he said: "From the hour that Stanford White lay dead on the roof garden in the city of New York his life taken either by a murderer or a lunatic to this minute It has been said repeatedly that in the end Thaw money would defeat the end of justice. So far it has not entirely accomplished it, but wherever this case

Gary with 600 bottles of his pain killer. Ly evidently thinks that the readers of some of the Gary newspapers need a counter-irritant until they quit printing city campaign nonsense.

FRENCH fashion dictator visiting in Chicago says that one's clothing should match the feelngs of the soul. In this case all of the democratic office-seekers would wear blue underwear: THAT Boston artist who spent two months in the woods depending on the ways of the primitive man to show we can live like our aboriginal ancestors may have felt that the high cost of living will evidently drive th moat of us to this condition and he wants to be ready when the trusts finally gobble up everything. POOR FILIPINOS! Wilson administration says that they can have independence in the course of several years. But what about a change of administration in the meantime and another president with different ideas. MANY folks would have no objection at all ln paying the income tax if they could have a $3,000 income. "FOR he that hath, to him shall be given." Mark iv:25. A bill for his income tax. CURRENT number of Atlantic Monthly has an article on "Science and Mystery." Don't know what it's about but it might refer to hoarding' house hash. has gone and wherever it has rested, it has left a train of ignominy, disgrace, filth and scandal behind it that has been absolutely appalling; and the state of New ork, sir, will not permit its Justice to be defeated by the corrupt use of money If it can prevent it." The solemn truth. Conscienceless use of money by Thaw's relatives has been a greater and more wide-reach ing scandal than the murder itself.Washington Herald. THE group plan of life insurance may yet be tried on some army aviation corps, if any government can stand the premiums. WORSE THAN CONGRESS. Some of the Gary aldermen have sprung another joke n the way of having an investigating committee named to look Into the "abduction" of two of the aldermen. Now who the dickens wants to kidnap one of those dear little Gary alderman? IN declaring his intention to "go down the middle of the road," Governor Sulzer must count on some body to show him the unfamiliar way. WHY NOT HIRE HIM? That man Spencer is either a fiend or such a monumental liar that he would make a star reporter on a newspaper located not far away. Hammond Daily News. Yes he'd be a dinger to get up dope about Hammond being "headquarters for the white slave traffic." "Saharet the dancer being In Hammond," missing North Judson priest "running away with a girl" and others too numerous to mention. DEPORTATION on the eve of a lucrative American tour would be more of a publicity trick than any comedienne would relish. WHO WAS THE JOKER? A number of young Smart Alecks in Hammond in the early morning hours, held up as a Joke an express wagon driver wishing to see what metal he was made of. They had neard he was a coward and they thought it would be great fun. ine driver on being accosted roughly by the S. A.'s whipped out a revolver and began Dumoine lead at them. He had lashed his horse and the sudden Jump made by the animal probably kept some of the would-be Jokers from beine " nlunsred into eternity. They ran helter-skelter their hearts ln their mouths. How they escaped death and being riddled with bullet holes is a miracle So far the bonehcads have succeeded in escaping publicity but they won't try to play any more jokes for a long time. WE COULD NAME ONE. Journalism has been added to the curriculum at the New York University. Oh glory be! The Chancellor has warned against dilettanteism That's the stuff. The name of tho fluent professor who will emit beautlflul language over the young gentleman who falls down on an assignment until the culprit stops his ears is not given.

RAILS TO HUDSON BAY

BUILDING NEW OUTLET FOR GRAIN

I 1 V -iff -j. Ak-S --v T sy UNITED QtatIC CHICAGO Graders and track-layers are a hundred miles on their way to Hudson Bay. This great railroad project, for years the dream of the Dominion, is beccming real. Nelson will be a town of 1,500 people by New Year's, government grain warehouses will be rising. The soli

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1THE (PfBLOTlKBAB. WODffilLlW BR! 0RI HDD & R A ; (FROM THE TIMES' OWN INDIANAPOLIS BUREAU)

TIMES BUREAU AT STATE CAPITAL. Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 7. Persons who have been in Washington recently bring- back the information that Vice President Marshall has realized his political ambition and that he will not run , again for the nomination for President. They say that he is well pleased with his political career, and that he is willing to permit It to come : to a close, as far as office holding is concerned, at the end of his present term as Vice President. They say that he will return to Indiana and locate in Indianapolis for the practice of law at the expiration of his term. In this connection It is also said that there Is more substance than ever in the talk about an effort to land the nomination for President for Governor Samuel M. Ralston. This probably will not be attempted ln 1916, for it things continue to go as they are going now, no one could beat Woodrow Wilson for renomination in 1916. But If he should happen to be re-elected In 1916 'Gov ernor Ralston will probably be brought forward as a candidate for the nomination in 1920, for Wilson would not be eligible to more than two terms. It has been known for some time that a quiet boom was under way to make Governor Ralston a presidential possibility. There has been no open campaign along tkis line, but it is known that some of the Democratic leaders, especially in Indiana, have been scheming around to get things in shape so they could spring his name some day and have it taken up over the country. Governor Ralston is a party organiration man. lie believes implicitly in the value of party organizations and party loyalty, and this is one of the most important qualifications In a Presidential candidate as far as the powerful political interests are concerned. In this particular he is different from Marshall, on whom organization ties do not hang as heavily, although he is a strict party man. Marshall his fought the party organi Up and Down in INDIANA NEW CLEW TO -WINTERS' GIRL. What is regarded as a clew in the case of Catherine Winters, the 9-year-old daughter of Dr. W. A. Winters of Newcastle who disappeared March 20, was discovered yesterday when A. G. McMillan, a local angler, fished severa lstrands of brown hair from Blue River. FOUND GUILTV, OF BIGAMY. John W. Argenbright, 26 years old, was yesterday convicted in the Clark Circuit Court at JefTersonville of glbamy. Sentence was deferred by Judge H. C. Montgomery. The penalty Is from one to five years imprisonment.

ALMOST A REALITY AT

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Scenes on Hudson Bay route: Relics of Franklin expedition, cutting" wood ic winter and shack for use of travellers or Split Lake.

tudes are sounding to blows that foretell the opening of the transportation route from western provinces by which the .glut, of grain will be relieved and millions' of dollars in transportation costs be saved to the growers. Nearly fifty miles of the grade has been made from the terminus at Ce Pas Mission, Manitoba, o the Canadian Northers railway, across the Saskatchewan toward the great inland sea, discovered in 1610, which the Hudson Bay Company exclusive zation at times ln a various fashion so vigorous, in fact, that he go-t In bad ! with the powers. But he continued to j rise in public favor until he landed the nomination for Vice President, while the organization which he fought so strenuously failed to get anything in the national administration. Vice President Marshall always took the position that if the people wanted him to be Governor thep would elect him, and if they di l not want him they would not elect Mm. Ha took the same position in regard to the Presidency. He said that if th. Democrats wanted Mm as their candidate thsy would nominate him, and if ;i-y did not want him they would not nominate him. Well, they did not nominate Mm, and It is said that he assumes that ther do not want him for President There is talk to the effect that when his term as Vice President has expired he will come back here and that he might some day stand for election as United States Senator," but whether there !s any foundation for this talk is not known. It is admitted, however, that if he were to take this shot at the Senatorship he would he a dangerous competitor for the rest of the candidates and that he would give them a horse race. He has already demonstrated his running powers to the party bosses of Indiana. Joseph F. Cox, of Columbus, is said to be a new entry into the race for the Democratic nomination for secre tary of state next year. Cos was the nominee for this office in 1906 and 1P0S and was defeated both times with the rest of the ticket, and his friends say that this gives him the right to the nomination next year. His enry Into the race, may mix things up considerably, for the state machine is understood to be behind Homer I Cook, speaker of the House of Representatives at the Legislative session of last winter. Cox also Is a machine man, and it will be up to the machine manager to determine which of ths two shall have the place. Two wives faced Argenbright when he was arraigned, one from Augusta County, Virginia, and the other from Louisville. All doubt as to his guilt was dismissed when the two women whose love the man had won took the stand and told of their wrongs. Throughout the trial the accused man hung his head. WAS NOT MURDKRED. Daniel Perkins, 80 years old. who lived alone about six miles north of Fort Wayne, was yesterday afternoon found dead on the floor near his bed in a pool of blood, by his son. The son immediately took it for granted that his father had bee ncnurdered and notified the sheriff to that effect An examination showed that death was due to hemorrhage. ENGINE DIES, THIEVES TAKEN. Thomas O'Connor. 25 years old, of Washington; Arthur Helpin, 21 years old, of Covington, Ky., and Charles Hughes, 25 years old, of Sedan, W. V,

LAST,

ON ANCIENT ROUTE V"jrfch- v 44c- kui it s . ly used for two centuries as a regular route of transportation. The total cost of. the completed road will be somewhat more than the 125,000,000 when harbor and terminals are included. No engineering obstacles were discovered wken the route was surveyed and in fact the first .section of th? line is over comparatively level country with limestone rock at the surface for foundation. Where swamps were encountered bottom was found at a depth of three or four feet. are under arrest at Shelbyville charged with the atempted theft of an automobile from Oscar Williams, saloonkeeper. The car wa sparked in front of William's place of business and the young men came along, jumped ln and started away with it. They had gone but a few yards when the engine "went dead" on them. GIRL REPUDIATES EVIDENCE. After going on the stand yesterday morning in Circuit at Evansvllle and. swearing that testimony she had given in City Court and before the grand Jury concerning llegal relations of her father with her little sister and herself was untrue, 16. years-old Betty Ross again took the witness chair in the afternoon, after Judge Given had ordered her indicted for perjury and affirmed her previous testimony. The other daughter whom the father, WitHam Ross, is said to have criminally abused, is 14 years old. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING will "make" your business enterprise If tt Is one that oujrM to be "made." PRETTY DRESS OF PLAID WORSTED This dress is made of plaid worsted and whita crepe de china. The blouse of crepo de chine is fastened down the front with linkbuttons and is finished at the neck and cuffs by frills of crepe de chine. A section of plaid worsted extends from either side of the front of the belt over the shoulders, forming the deep collar in back. The skirt is in two pieces, the upper one wrapping around the figure, simulating a yoke at th right aide and a tunic at the left.

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