Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 105, Hammond, Lake County, 14 October 1913 — Page 4
THE TIMES. Tuesday, Oct. 14, 1913. THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS UNCLE SAM HAS SPENT MORE THAN $80,000,000 ON IRRIGATION: 25 RESERVOIRS AND 7,566 MILES OF CANALS HAVE BEEN BUILT R ANDOM TMirsOS A IND RL-IISOS J By The Lak Coary Prfatlas mad Pub.
PAGE FOUR
C In for THE 1 Mj jDAYl
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 Oary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 6. 1909; re-entry of publication at Gary, Ind., April IS. 1911; 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 tecond-class matter.
13 Heritor
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OFVICTO.
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PVIWUICATIOW OVPICKS, Hsu 1 1 mm i id Ballaiag. Kaxajmend.
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Ifarmrtond ohwge) ....... Ill (Call tocr deywtmant wnajU'ed.)
Gary OfTlce. ....... , East Chlcage Oftte
Indiana Harbor. WhitingCrown Point....
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.-.r.... .Tel. 117 TeL 140..Tel. 819-M; 150 Tel. So-M -.Tel. 31
Hcewlek, ....Tel. 13 Adyrtlsrl-ay eHvtVors wtafj t. rate given n skirpttesvtAon. If yeu ta-r any treckls (MMaf lkl Time XKrtafy the rfayrest ; fOo and have It rnavtly-rime aled. LARGER PAID VP CmOCTUATIOH THAN AST OTHOBJl two rows. ParaiM ik tub CAiAmm JirauoJSi AJfOXTT:0Ja ssnwiOoatloas will ant be nsttoea, wt tArs wiU t tMrlirUd at Jart). and tbeoM m 4dTM4 to Tha Kdltsr, Ttiss. Sm
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433
HOPE.
I heard the walla of itrlef and shame Whu Prittm'a vralla were wrast In
flame I atood within the Forum places
When Vandal ax and Gothic mace
Battered tha pride from Caeaar's fare When IMaKue'a foul leclona tilled the
Wltk conitea, aad heatank the plain Of France, from Paris to Lorraine; When Flandera fell before the Kieite
That mad the Spanish fiend her li-ce When werwolves wronarht a sralllotlne
For Louis aad his fragile queen
Twas I who ataiced anew the scene.
'Twaa I who wiped away the sears And set the heaven with fresh stars.
By Herbert KauflTman. as your physician will tell you.
Cholera In a civilized country today Is no such social and national
menace as venereal disease. We ap
propriate great sums to fight certain
epidemic diseases and to maintain a rigid quarantine against them, but we are only now beginning to wage warfare against diseases which are
as dangerous as any epidemic disease and far more dangerous than many. There are various points of attack
in this problem -and various closely related problems. But there is one point of attack in combating the spread of venereal disease which is
Justly regarded by many experienced workers as the most vital and
strategic, and this is the education of the young. There has been an upheaval in pedagogic and social senti
ment in the last few years regarding
the question of sex-teaching in home,
school and college. Conventional
prejudice against such teaching is
giving way rapidly, and results are
already beginning to appear. Educators are coming to believe that
these subjects have a rational and
vital place in the educational system
JUDGING from the wireless reports
Capt. Inch of the Volturno is every Inch a man.
OTR that Jack Johnson nnd wife
are about to teach the tango to the
irlsinns. Thlt ouarht to make the
other tuiiaro teachers quit it If for no other reason.
CHINA has placed a reward of
$2.50 on the head of its former president, Dr. Sun. Appears that the
value of ex-presidents is getting
lower every day.
OUR Washington DIGNIFIED news Item states
VICE-PRESIDENT, that Mr. Marshall
threatens to buy
a motorcycle it congress aoesn i ouy
him an auto.
brarlans are realizing- that librarie much be brought to the people.
"MARSHALL MAY RETIRE FROM POLITICS." Washington dispatch. Grammar is wrong. "May" should read "will."
IT IS pretty tough when a man's wife has him hurry home early, giving him the Impression that he Is to get some extra for dinner and then have him find that she merely wanted him to hook up her dress.
SEEING that dynamite was used at the Panama canal to unite the waters of the Pacific and Atlantic the other day the Aetna Powder mills can't be blamed for feeling that they have
'teen of more use than some people
CHICAGO papers says that the dls-jWOllld give theni Credit
tllleries are making too much whiskey. But this is not half so Important as
the fact that some folks are drinking too much of It.
IF the reports of the various slug-
glngs are true It would seem that the Injection of the "Safety First" motto
Is needed in the Gary municipal campaign.
ALTHOUGH the corn crop has been
cut the official knife hasn't reacnea
the majority of the republican postmasters.
ELWOOD In this state has a smok
ing room in its library. Gradually 11-
LIFE in merrie old England these days is a succession of strikes, suffragette bombs, fearing bad news from the north of Ireland, and wondering whether the German army will invade the Island over night.
WHILE it is well to erect a 35,000,000 piece of sculpture and architecture in honor of Abraham Lincoln, think of how many hospitals it would build.
CHICAGO business man uses a hydro-aeroplane to travel from his home
to his office. But don't yearn to have a luxury like this. He is John D's son-in-law.
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No.
(S9, F. and A. M., Friday, October 17th,
8 p. m., E. A. degree. Visitors welcome.
R. S. GsJer, Sec, E. M. Khanklln, W. L
Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M.
Special meeting Wednesday, October 15. Mark Master degree. Visiting companions welcome.
WAKE UP. Chicago Inter-Ocean
13, printed
of Mon-
this dis-
The
day, October
patch: T. R. GIVES THIRD DEGREE.
Hammond Council No. 90 R. & S. M.
Stated assembly, first Tuesday each.
month. J. VT Morthland, Recorder.
Hammond Commandery No. 41. K. T. Regular stated meeting Monday, October 20, Temple degree. Visiting Sir Knights welcome.
Political Atinouncemonts
NOTICE.
All political Batlcea of whatever aatare man from whatever party are strictly eaak. Natlcea af meeting. mmm aaaaeeaaeat of eanaldacfes. etc. nmay ba Insert la these ealnntaa.
Visits Cell of Former Bntlrr Charged With $10,000 Gem Theft. (By the Associated Press.) Mineola, N. Y., Oct. 12. Theodore Roosevelt administered what the police call the third degree to his former butler, George R. Parker, In a cell in the county Jail here today. Parker Is awaiting grand jury action on the charge of having stolen $10,000 worth of Jewelry from the Roosevelt home.
j The doughty colonel Is on the broad
bosom of the South Atlantic bound
for South America.
Either T. R. has the faculty of
omnipresence or else the Inter-Ocean
editors are so rock-ribbed republican
that they don't know that he sailed
from New York several days ago.
Armageddon, who would yearn for a word of courage from the master himself.
And so he left this amulet as a
charm against all evil and wicked beings:
"We and we alone represent the
people."
With this lodestar ever in the
skies there can be no doubt ana darkness in the voting booths. And
how it must warm and make glow all the grand army to hear once more the
old royal prerogative: e and we alone."
"We and we alone" are guaranteed
under the political pure food act.
We and we alone" are the legiti
mate children of light, the pure, the authentic, the genuine, the nuda Veritas. And conversely the Repub
licans of New York county are the
adulterated article, green goods, cheap counterfeits, the false and the
apocryphal; In a word, wilful and misrepresentations.
In view of the fact that the Hon.
John Purroy Mitchel's sole shadow of
a chance of election rests upon the support of these shams and wicked humbugs, we wonder if he does not regret that the Great Protector did
not keep his amulet in his pocket. New York Sun.
larly in relating school work to farm needs, but side by side with this improvement has gone the movement for consolidation, until there are now several thousand consolidated schools in the United States. '
The Day in
ISTOR Y
Whiting. EdJitor TIMES I Please announce that I am a candidate for the office of City Clerk of Whiting on the Democratic ticket for the eomina; city election on Nor. 4th. WILLIAM M. GREATKAKE.
THE GOOD OLD DAYS. Old fashioned man says the modern family clothesline on wash day doesn't look nearly as human when the wind blows as It did in the good old days. Cleveland Plain Dealer.
No, it certainly does not. We re
member distinctly when a little lad
mother would always jerk us the other way If we passed a clothesline
THE REASON WHY.
Do you know It keeps folks busy
keeping up with the laws in this
blessed country says a Shelbyville editor. The last legislature passed a
law that has this to say in regard to
motorcycles and autos: "No part of
the machinery of any motor vehicle or motor bicycle shall be left running
while such motor vehicle or motor bicycle is left standing without an attendant on any public place or high-
. ..mta:; . a i
way in the state. A violation of this
BE OF GOOD CHEER. other way If we passed a clothesline statute is punishable by a fine of $25
Once in a while men of sour aspect with her especially when the wind for the first offense- The men who
and gloomy thought emit what they was ballooninsr thines out. Nowadavs 1Ike to hunt wiU have to spend Oc-
mistake for Ideas to the effect that! you can't tell whose they are. In
the country is going to the bow-wows fact you very seldom see any.
largely because of the decadence of the press and the fact that real edi
tors don't exist any more. They don't, eh? Notice that although Brlnley D. Sleigh, editor of the Sag Harbor (L.
OCTOBER 14 IX HISTORV. 1S06 French defeated the Prussians at battle of Jena.
1829 Separation of Veneiuela from
Colombia occurred.
1842, Grand celebration in New Tork
of completion of the Croton Water Works.
1S43 Daniel O'Connel arrested and
cluck put on progress of Irish agitation.
1894 Golden jubilee of Johann Strauss,
the waltz king, celebrated at Vienna. 1904 Russians and Japanese fighting within twelve miles of Mukden; gloom in St. Petersburg over heavy Russian losses, j.,,, . 1908 PI Yu proclarmed " emperor of
China upon the death of Kuang Hus. 1911 President Taft broke ground at San Francisco for the Panama-Pacific Exposition of 1915. 1912 Col. Roosevelt shot in the breast by John Schrank, lunatic, at Milwaukee. President Taft reviewed a beet of 123 battleships in the Hudson River, New York. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY IIOSORS. Congressman William Patterson Borland, of Missouri, was born in Leavenworth,' Kan?., October 14, 1567; went to Kansas City in 1880; attended ward and high schools; graduated from
law department of the University of Michigan In 1892; has practised law ever since; In 1S95 he helped organise
the Kansas City School of Law; was elected and served fourteen years; served on the "Municipal Lobby" of
Kansas City and has helped draft many
laws for the city's management. He
is serving his third term In Congress.
Roosevelt dam, Axizpna; an irrigated orange grove; Director Frederick H. Newell. According to a recent atateaaeut of Director F. HNewtJl of-the jw'enuint Teclajnavtioo aervice, . Uncle Earn has already spent more than $80,000,000 in buQdihg Wrgfe raserTOua la the -nwunttina of the vnt to hold the f.ood waters and in constructing; canals to .distribute this water to the dry lands. Twenty-five gTeat reservoirs have been built, andlhe canals already dxxg total 7, 66 znUas-ia length.
called to the Circuit Court and the verdict was read in open court about 8:30.
The verdict came as a surprise, since the long time the jury was out was taken to indicate a disagreement. According to C. C. "U'hitlock, attorney for the defendant, an appeal will be made immediately for a retrial. FALL FIFTY FF.ET. " Horace Davitt and Joseph Sweet narrowly escape. death, at Shelbyville when an elevator at the Schmoe furni
ture factory dropped fifty feet with them Into tho basement. Both were painfully cut and bruised, but their condition is not serious.
POLITICS AD POLITICIANS.
Although the government denies that it Is alarmed at the turn events have taken in TJlater county over the Home Rule bill, it is known that measures are under way to cope with the situation should an attempt be made
to establish a seperate government In Ulster a tier the passing of tha Home Rule bill. Mora than 180 Socialists have signed a statement declaring their intention to violate an order. Issued by Judge Humphreys in Seattle, Waetu, preventing tbem from making addresses on the street.
USED THINGS THAT TOTJ DOJTV WANT CAN BE GOLD 17 TOII AT VERT1SR fN TUB TIMES.
tober reading up on the hunting laws
and digging around for the money
with which to pay for a hunting 11
cense. These democratic legislatures
THE REAL JOURNALIST. Just keep on passing laws that raise
A newspaper man is a newspaper ine taxes, add license ana inspection
... t p , . . . ivi i j.
I man. m order to appreciate this lccs lul auuui eeijiuiuB auu mt-u
story you must realize this patent claim to represent the people that
I.) Corrector, is in the Southampton I fact, and you must let it sink into they tax to death. One of these days
(L. I.) Hospital, after beine beaten vour intelHeenca that writers for the fool legislature will pass a law
up, his paper will be Issued as usual. newspapers call themselves news-
He will read proof and write his edi- paper men. That is their class name
curiam proppea up in nis nospitai cot. isvery time a person wltn an un-
Mr. Sleigh purchased his paper in naturally enlarged head and a brain
.looo, aiter Deing graduated irom that looks like a peanut struck by a
Yale, and has edited it since. blight pops up and parades the
The ailing brother, his readers and! streets accosting people and introduc
1 requiring a man to take out a license
if he does not want to be fined for kissing his wife.
ABOLISH CROSS ROADS SCHOOL.
Abolishing the crossroads one room
the pessimists can all cheer up to- Ing himself as a Journalist, every real scb-ool and establishing consolidated
UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-.-A-N-A
gether.
newspaper man considers himself fit lor centralized schools is advocated in
for the receiving ward of some third a bulletin just issued by the United
class lunatic, asvlum declares thu States Bureau of Education. The bu
Popular Magazine. ,
disintegrating existing communities.
The writers of the bulletin en
deavor to show that most of the defects complained of by the school pa-
EDUCATION IN SEX HYGIENE.
Recognition of their responsibility! "These 'journalists' are a great
has resulted in a marked awakening tribes," said Col. Charlie Edwards 1 ! I . ..... I .
pujuicians io tneir oongatons as one day. "ifou can note their pe-
leaders and teachers in the science of culiarites if you nerve yourself up to
keeping well. The essence of pre-1 the point of observing them. I have
ventive medicine is education, and found this out- The diffprpnrA h.
pnysicians, by virtue of their train- tween a journalist and a newspaper trons poor teaching, low salaries,
ing, experience and Ideals, ought to mat i3 that a journalist is a fellow lack of thoroughness in the common
be leaders and teachers. Yet until who wears a high hat and a cane and branches, few special subjects, work
wtnin a lew years their responsibili-J borrows money from newspaper not advanced enough are inherent
I men." in a system of one room country
schools and that the way to remedy
the situation Is to have fewer and
THE AMULET. better schools, with- transportation
On the eve of his departure for the furnished to pupils living at a dis
SHOOTS INTRUDER IX FOOT.
William Hauk was shot in the left foot early yesterday morning by Faye
Williams, a resort keeper at Shelby
ville. The woman says that Hauk and Ira Thomas came to her house about 2
o'clock and demanded that they be al
lowed to stop for the night. She re
fused them admission and they at
tempted to force their way in when she fired four shots, one taking effect in
Hauk's foot. Hauk leave cash bond
and Thomas was fined for Intoxication
The Williams woman and Grace Waller, who was with her, are held on charges of respectively keeping and be
ing an inmate of a resort. ASK SECT TO LEAVE CITY. On complaint of neighbors, a religl
ous sect, known as "Holy Ghosters,"
J conducting services in a tent, at Evans-
reau recommends this wherever it'ville, have been asked to leave the city
ran flnro uMtTinut inn. oroj ov. "y Lim police, IMlOWing -"" uiotuTn,
pense and without breaking up or
ties were not recognized in the pre
vention of secret disease and educa
tion in the hygiene of sex.
The earlier policy of silence and
repression In regard to these matters
Is fast changing not only on our parti land of the parrakeets and the cocka- tance.
but on the part of parents and edu-ltoos the Great Protector of the plain To make the one room rural cators. The sinister menace of thisiDeonle left an amulet for them to use schools As efficient as nossible. but to
disease can hardly be overestimated. I in time of stress or doubtful misglv-
Hasten the day when newspapers will ings during the present campaign in be permitted to call a spade a spade this town. He knew, as only a
and not roundly abused for telling j Father of the People can know, that
these truths. It Is not men alone J there would be some who might who suffer but the women and babies If alter, feeble veterans of the Field of,
do away with them by consolidation
wherever practicable, is the motto the rural - school improvers have adopted. Constant improvement is reported in the facilities offered by
the
of all night services and an alleged
practice of submitting women devotees to the influence of a drug that brings
on a stupor. CEI-EDRATES 80TH BIRTHDAY.
Dr. John H. Martin, former president
of Moores Hill College, celebrated his
eightieth birth anniversary yesterday
at the home of his son, Roscoe, at Hope, where he Is living in quiet retirement after a long career of conspicuous suc
cess. The service of Dr. Martin to
Moores Hill College is universally recognized. He was thrice president of this Institution. To him, perhaps more than any other man, the college owes its life, especially in the critical
periods in which its "existence seemed
hanging n the balance. RECORD I POISD GUILTY. After deliberation of more than nin
hours, the Jury in the case of William
Records, of Terra Haute, charged with
the murder of Joseph H. Gilbert. April
27, returned a verdict of guilty of sec
ond degree murder, with a penalty of life imprisonment. An agreement was
1
!
f 1
ft'
Uiv J y
i i
Which Is Your Store Why don't you secure the trade of the crowds of people that are on the streets at night? Place an Electric Sign in front of your establishment. You will be surprised to find how it will attract customers. People blocks away will be drawn to your store when they see your Electric Sign. And you can easily make these transient customers premanent ones. USE AN ELECTRIC SIGN IT COSTS VERY LITTLE In fact, the cost is hardly anything when you consider the increased amount of business an Electric Sign will bring you. We will gladly give you further particulars. Why not inquire today? You assume no obligation.
reached About 4:30 n'rlnrk this morn -
one room rural school, partlcu-ins. Judge Charles M. Fortune was
NORTHERN INDIANA GAS & ELECTRIC COMPANY Hammond, Whiting, E. Chicago, Ind. Harbor Phone 10 Phone 273 Phone 86 Phone 620
