Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 104, Hammond, Lake County, 13 October 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE TIMES. Mondav, Oct 13. 1913. would give them more wholesome sur SCULPTURE WILL EXALT AMERICA'S WORK AT PANAMA-PACIFIC EXPOSITION; COLOSSAL GROUPS OF STATUARY DESIGNED BY WORLD'S NOTED SCULPTORS roundings and a better chance for health and lng life as well aa independence, and their children would also gain by the new environment NEWSPAPERS and surer opportunities for comfort Or The Lake Connfj Printing aad FobrWlT3 and thrift. Uahlntr Company.
-- I It, FOR THE I EMi iDAY
it
The Like County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 28. 1908"; The 'Lake County Times, dally except Saturday and Sunday, entered Feb. 3, Till; The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday,
entered Oct. B. 1909; re-entry of publl-I cation at Gary, Ind., April 13. 191S; The Lake County Times, Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. SO, 1911; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, 1912. re-entry of publica
tion at East Chicago, Ind.. Sept. 25. 191S, all under the act of March S, 1879. . Entered at the Postofflces, Hammond. Oary, and East Chicago. Ind.. aa second-class matter. FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICIT. IS Rector Bulldinr - - Chlcar
THK HOISEWIFE.
It la
PVBLICATIOr OFFICES, Bawmtnood BulVdlnjr. Hammond.
Ind.
he who makes ready the army
when the day la at hand. When the bugle of labor la blowing itn mighty command. Oh fierce are the feet of the workfru nho anmver the call. But awtfler and fiercer the toll that hath rreaponed them all. Do we boast of their bravrn f Do we trumpet the cauae of the flsjhter Who marches at rlite of the vat
Lo! look to the woman! The heat of
her labor Is whither! Ere the work of the world has bearan
She Is up. and her banners are flying
from yard and from alley.
The roofs are flutter with eloquent
streamers of snow.
Oh. not for n moment her passionate
fingers may dally.
Till the soldier Is shod and la fed and
made ready to go.
TcixraoiiEi, Tamrmond (prlra-ts axchjuirs) . . . .111 Cail tor department -wanted. ) Oary Office TeL 111 East Chlcaxa Off loo Tel. 140-J
Indiana Harbor TeL I-M: 110 Waiting; TeL 10-M Crown Point TeL (1 kUgewts-s. Tel. IS AdTSrtlsIng solicitors will asnt. of rate given on application. If you tiava any trouble getting Tba
Thnaa notify the nearest office kaye It promptly remediedL
A WARM CAMPAIGN. The campaign in Hammond has
reached an interesting stage. The
democrats have accused Mr. Crumpacker the republican nominee of being a corporation man, while Mr. Crumpacker shows that John Gavit, a democratic bulwark, city attorney etc., is attorney for the New York Central lines through the efforts of Congressman Peterson. Simons the progressive candidate for mayor Is accused of being a strike breaker and stones are being pegged now and then at the socialist candidate. Taken by and large, the last three weeks of the campaign promises to wax exceedingly heated.
Oh, weary the heart of the host when
the battle Is done.
But the w-omsn Is laboring still with
the set of the sun.
Doea the worker return? She Is able
and eager with bread.
Doea he faint f There Is cheer for his
soul and delight for his bead. Do we trumpet oar galnf Do we sing of our land and Ita thunder Of factory, quarry and mlllf Lo! look to the woman! Her love. It hath compassed the wonder. And the army swinge on st her will.
For hers la the whip, and her apur Is day
the fighter's salvation In the strength of Jehovah ahe comes, Her faith is the sword and her thrift li
the shield of the nation.
THE scientists who are predicting
another eruption of Vesuvius may be wrong. Perhaps the symptoms were caused by Uncle Joe Cannon's deci
sion to get back into congress.
LARGER PAID CP CIRCVLATIOJI
THAN AWT OTHER TWO HEWI. And her courage Is greater than drums
PAPRBJI IX TUB CALUMET WEOION.
March, march, march, to your victories.
ANONYM0U3 communloatlona will O ManI
not be noticed.' but others will be -ig, ngni. ngai, as you ve iougui
printed at discretion, sod should be ddniwd to The Editor, Times, Hjub
a oiid. Ind.
435
since time began.
IS TJ. S. BEHIND THE TIMES?
Oscar Strauss, with his wife and
son sailed for America from Paris to-
Mr. Strauss has been making a
study of social conditions in England and he says from all that he has seen
he thinks the United States is about twenty-five years behind Great Bri
tain in all matters pertaining to so
cial Justice. Germany perhaps is
more advanced than England, but Americans must not look to German
But woe who hath wed you and fed you speaking countries for models for so-
and sped you, cial reforms because German demo-
FulfiUIng Eternity's laws. ,
viaio ncic icsa DL'UUiailcuua I II il 11
lit is ahe who hath soldiered the Causel
Aneria Biorgan in The Designer. English and American ones; there
fore, their schemes for social better
those surviving. Naturally,
that would be eliminated would bo
those ment were not adapted to American
uses. Sir. Strauss adds that he Is
pleased with the new Washington ad-
stated meeting- Garfield Lodge, No. 669, F. and A. M., Friday, October 17th,
8 n m.. E. A. decree. Visitors welcome, the lOW dives, and their disaPDear
R. S. Galer. Sec. E. M. Shanklin. W. M. I ance could not but im orove material- ministration, believing it progressive.
ly the llauor business in Fort Wayne
Ilammona Chapter no. 117, k. a. m.
Special meeting Wednesday, October THROUGH Mrs. Peixotto the New 15. Mark Master degree, visiting nance so long as the breweries and Y . . . f -dlltfnn ha ,A.
companions welcomi
wholesalers dominate conditions as j they do today. As it now is, those
saloonkeepers, who would like to
J drive the undesirables out of town
ana thus mveBt the business with a
Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Isort of respectability ,are afraid to
Hammond Council No. 90 R. & S. M. Stated assembly, first Tuesday each month. J. W Morthland, Recorder.
a lot of free advertising, but not as a
mother's friend. "
Regular stated meeting tober 20, Temple degree. Knights welcome.
Monday, Oc-
Vlsiting Sir
turn a hand. They must kow-tow to the bosses of the business, and the
bosses find the larger profit In the
greater number of drinking places."
NOTICE.
All political notices of whatever nature and from whatever party are strictly cash. Notices of meetings, aouncemeat of candidacies, etc. May be Inserted Iq these columns).
NEWSPAPER SPACE.
Every line in a newspaper costs
its publisher something. If it is to
benefit some individual he may fairly expect to say something. You do not
go into a grocery and ask the pro
prietor to hand you 10 pounds of
AND all of a sudden nobody seems suSar or nothing, even though the
to be caring a tinker's obstruction erocer oe a Personat iriena ana
I . ... . . ... .
what Harrv Thaw savs and does. even tnougn tne girt might not be a
i - - i
large one.
If the beneficiary of advertising
OUTSIDE OF THAT IT'S AIL RIGHT does not Pav for lt the proprietor has
to settle the bill. Nevertheless many
Whiting. Rditor TIMES I Pleasw announce that I am a candidate for the office at (It, ci.vb
Whiting on the Democratic ticket for NOR PARTY.
the coming city election on Nov. 4th WILLIAM 91. GREATRAKE.
The Hammond Progressive in order to mislead the people of Hammond
says that "THE CAUSE OF THE! PROGRESSIVES IS BARRED FROM
THE USE OF 'THE LAKE COUNTY
TIMES' A REPUBLICAN ORGAN.'
THE TIMES is not a republican!
organ. It is the organ of JJQ MAN
people cannot seem to learn that
newspaper pay3 its expenses by rent
ing space and that it is just as much
entitled to collect rent for each week
that space is occupied as you are for
the house you rent to the tenant. Grantville Times.
THE DISCOVERERS.
There was a parade held in Gary T
yesterday in honor of Tom Knotts. I '
. hie; timks is giving the news
about
it wears no party collar. LITTLE girls in training at Bryn
u.wc.lc mo iiammguu Mawr to Decome superwomen are gressive says something which It from "prominent families" and all
knows is not true when it says that the other families are not a bit envi
the progressive cause Is barred from ious.
Columbus.
Columbus discovered America. They made a great fuss over him but later on he was consigned to the Down and Out club.
the progressive party as it is
all the other parties and it is barring
none.
YES WE HAVE THE LONGING,
It s an eloquent tribute paid to
woman by the philosopher Luke Mc
Luke in the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Festival Hall, Sculptors 1 work and Figaro "Rain." , The acDlptrrr of the PmnaranPaciP.c erpotrftior will carry oat the) T3t of the exposition In celebrating opening; oS iht Panama canal The spirit of aehierement as axferaplifled by America's work at Panama will be Ideslfeea thromrh the works of a nmaber of America' greatest sculptors, who hav completed many of the models. Tbeee litre sow rjemewlirfrcdtoprodlsioTis size In the sculptors warehooses on the exposition grounds. The ststnaxy Is being executed itrpon a vast and wosderfol scale. In
cvinyMfis uieseuxanon oi me plastic art, it win carry forward the isrork of the ereat expositions of the past, each of which has marked a distinct adranfl in the popular apJwpciation of Bcnrptcre. The seulptuTe is desijrned to form
sequence from the moment the visitor enters the grounds. The dominating architectural feature of
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Uie exposition, the 430-foot Tower of i character, as well as the repeated Jewels, will be decorated with rooch figure of an armored borsemao. acuipture of a rxireij omrfwintai 1 Terminatiiia 'At open colauwde on
eaca side of tha tower gate, mural fountains will be created by two talented worn in, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney and M'-s Edith Woodman Burroughs. Groups of the Seasons, is plastic form, will occupy positions in fountain basins placed in the corners of the Couri of Four Seasons. The figure of "Rain' is one of those that will be placed over the otranceway to the Court of Four Seasons. Various figures will adorn the buildings, aie of the most beautiful of which iE to be Festival Hall, 380x200 feet, .rhere the conventions of tfcevwld will be &ela
E
ANDOM TMI1NQ45 VIND FL1NQS
WOMAN suffrag-e exists in Utah and
in Hayti. In Utah they have polygamy and in Haytl countless revolutions. If there is any one else In the house in
favor of lovely woman ivotlng .please
stand ud.
MOTTO FOR TOM KXOTTS.
"In counting the ballots there is strength." Adapted from an old cartoon.
NOTE that an Illinois author has moved into this county. If there is one crop that never decreases it Is
the crop of Indlanny authors.
PRESIDENT Huerta has locked up
the Mexican national legislature
without a doubt a great work would be done if many of our legislatures
were given similar treatment.
ALTHOUGH OovernorSuler always had the reputation of speaking at all times and places he wouldn't the other day when asked to go one witness stand.
net when the premier member of the administration is gadding about the country with a tent full of ordinary yodlers?
BASEBALL, language is bad enough but when sporting editors degenerate to such an extent that they will permit poems on baseball things have come to a sorry state.
SPEAKER Champ Clark got bumped in a railway accident the other day. As Champ has been bumped before this accounts for the easy way in which he overlooked the affair.
TANGO has been introduced into Italy. Well, the sunny Italians have been used to lemons and this won't upset them.
NEWSPAPER says that Mayor Knotts has let most of the millions in Gary public works contracts to his enemies. This is a lie. Hisszoner's enemies never got more than being left.
Either Luke hasn't recovered from
A DISPATCH savs captured Mexi-U,
Tom divnvoi- no irMi t,.- . . . summer vacation or nas run into
. "iic mcio Can rebels will he tried or drumhead
BVUJO UIOUULC LUUUL LUIS Rll Will I s-rn . tvinsHol V. -A T-.
1 w ut i uiauiai auu uiucitu suui. lui
agree that he was the frnrt one to Why BO much formality?
aiscover mat tne uary mayoralty has fat pickings. While thorns have
been many wreaths of rosea more LAND FOR IMMIGRANTS
flowers than prickers. But, in dodg-
Agrlculture will be taueht in the
lng the roses Tom should recall that public night schoola of Chicago this
the world is often ungrateful to dis- year. An effort will be made to give
,c.cto u yeupie oi ary are the pupils, many of whom are well no different from the rest. beyond the ordinary school age. a
xue court astrologers say that fair knowledge of the principles of
ovemoer is a common month for lrom,in
people to discover that they have for getten their discoverers.
a revival tent somewhere. He says:
"Every good husband has often
longed to be wealthy. Not so much from selfish motives, but jut to be able to take about ten thousand dollars and toss it into his wife's lap and say: 'Here, dog gone your old heart,
go buy all the things you have been
wanting ever since we settled down. And when you get them let's go and have another honeymoon." If is wasn't for his wife a man would
never know that one of the neighbors
had a nephew, whose wife's brother
This is done because of the de
mand from foreign-born pupils for married a girl whose father's uncle such instruction. They want to learn had been divorced from a woman who
be on that how to u8e land while they are work- was the daughter of a man whose
at the age of
THE joke seems to
Democrat who has resigned his new lnS ln the cltv to Ret money enough mother was married
postmaster job In Virginia because his salary is based on the receipts of the office, which average only a little over two cents a day.
BREWERY DOMINATION. Brewery domination of saloons is something which saloonmen should consider most seriously. The Fort Wayne News puts it pretty strongly when it says: "The supreme court has declared
valid tie Gary saloon license fee ordinance by which liquor dealers are forced to pay $500. Fort Wayne should have such an ordinance or one
even more drastic in its financial ex
actions. The effect would be to reduce the number of saloons and to make conditions much easier for
to ouy mue places in tne country, or fourteen and who had a brother who
make first payments on farms. They married a eirl whose mother had
ask that the public authorities give twins four times and one of the twins
them such help in getting out on the
soil where they can produce food in
stead f only consuming it.
Here is a field worthy of cultiva
tion. Many thousands of immigrants who have strength and Btamlna
enough to win success anywhere on
farms are crowded into the city tenements only because they do not know how to get a start ln the country. If thy can be instructed along agricultural lines while they are saving a
little money they can be trusted to take care of everything else they
need. In many cases a change for such
foreign-born residents of big cities would be the best of good fortune. It
marnea a man wnose sister had a
half brother who married a girl who
was born when her mother was forty-
eight yeas old." Hence these tears.
PRESIDENT Wilson has ordered
that there be no regular cabinet days. Probably he is ln despair. How can he have any attendance at the cabl-
TALK of building a tunnel under the English channel to connect England and France. Great mercantile possibilities seen in it. Then why not one running from Gary to Milwaukee? It would lower the freight tariff on tha stuff that comes in kegs.
IONDON psychologist after two years of experimenting has found out that man is more clever than a woman. Ten to one that he isn't married.
that party are grooming him for the presidential nomination in 1916. This has become apparents from the word that comes from the east and the amount of attention that has been
showered on him recently. None of
the Progressive leaders here are figuring on Roosevelt as a candidate again. They say the plum is sure to
call to Bsverldge.
The only two names ffentioned thus
far for the Republican nomination for Senator from Indiana next year are
High T. Miller, of Columbus, and Frank
C. Ball, of Muncle. These names were
discussed in these dispatches some time ago, and friends are said to be lining
up behind each man.
When the Republican national com-
fittee meets in Washington in December to discuss the advisability of call
ing a national convention to change the party rules regarding representation in national conventions where
nominations for president and vice pres
ident are made, Indiana will be found
to favor calling the convention. Jas.
P. Goodrich already has stated that he
Is in favor of making the change in the rules. He believes that such a change, which would reduce the rep
resentation of the southern states ln Republican national conventions, would
work greatly to the advantage of the party throughout the country and wipe
out fuch of the bitterness that results
from the present system. Mr. Good
rich has not hesitated to express his opinion on this subject.
KANSAS wanst eugenics, says a dispatch. Sunflower state raised good corn until its natives started raising hades with autos. Raising babies may sidetrack them from the auto craze.
IF jou see any Italian section
hands today think of them twice
This is Columbus day and if it hadn't been for that good Italian the most of us would be wooden-shoe peasants in
Europe.
TIME PBtUnTBQM. (FROM THE TIMES' OWN INDIANAPOLIS BUREAU)
SPARE US MARY. Dr. Mary Murdoch, speaking in
Hull, England, says man ought to do the cooking in the household because
he can stand the heat better! Help! There's a woman who would kick on the proposed celebration of Tathers day. In fact when we start to celebrate on fathers' day we shall pipe the
corner carefully to see whether or
not Doc Mary is to windward.
flMKS RJHEAU AT STATE CAPITAL. Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 13. It will not be necessary for Governor Ralston to call a special session of the Indiana legislature to provide a law for the nomination of candidates for United States Senator if a bill prepared for introduction in the Senator by Sena
tor A'alsh, of Montana, is passed, as it
is expected it will be. Tis bill pro
vides that where candidates for Lnited
States Senators are to be nominated the nominations shall be made in the
same manner that candidates for mem
bers of Congress at large are nominated. But in states where the candidates for Congress are not nominated at large the nominations for Senator shall be made in the same manner as nominations for state offices are made. Indiana would come under the latter heading, because the candidates for Congress in this states, are not nominated at large.
This would mean that the state conventions next summer would make the nominations for Senator, as has
been the Intention all along. But there
HOTEL FOR BIRDS. Charles Seydell. one of the prominent citizens of East Gary, is a great lover of birds and for fourteen years
has maintained a bird house on his premises for the use of martins. In this house there is room for twenty pairs of martins and it is filled every season. The forty old birds and numerous birdlets make an interesting sight during the summer. Mr. Seydell says that the same birds come back to him year after year. Ha caught a martin one year and placed, a. brass riner around its lea:. That was
the first martin to return the following year and for four years he noticed It around the place during the summer. Mr. Seydell says the martins feed on insects altogether, refusing other food that may be offered to them, and they are among the first birds to leave for the south. The attractive birdhouse at E.ast Gary was vacated several weeks ago for the annual pilgrimage. The Calumet.
Save 9 coupons and sret aafety r-
r with McIIIe'a Citnadlaa Club Adv.
WELL PUMPS OIL AND WATER Rochester, Ind., Oct. 11. Kewanna. a small town near here, is excited over what is thought to be the striking of an oil well. John G. Barnett suddenly discovered that his well 13 yielding oil as well as water. The liquid burns like crue oil. It has not yet been determined whether a well has been struck or whether the liquid is seepage from oil lands from nearby.
PROMINENT
THEATRICAL FIGURES IN
CHICAGO PLAYS.
illi Mi
it.
1
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war. i vj
VIIIMM
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has been some doubt whether, under
the Indiana laws, anything could be found that would provide for the nomination of senatorial candidates. This
was why it was believed that a spec
ial session of the legislature might
have to be called for the purpose of
amending the law so as to include
Senators. The Governor has not, however, giv
en much attention to the possibility of having to call the special session, beraiia he h felt that Congress would
provide a method for taking care of! the matter. But some . of the patty leaders have been of the opinion that
something would have to be done in this direction, because if the nominations were made under tha present state laws there might be a rjuestlon aa to their regularity. No candidates for the Democratic nomination for Senator against Senaor Shlvely ahve been heard of. There does not now appear to be any likelihood of his having opposition. Albert J. Beveridge will undoubtedly be the Progressive candidate, but it is known that the national leaders of
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