Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 110, Hammond, Lake County, 20 October 1913 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TIMES. Monday, October 20, 1913.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Dy The Lak County Printing ud Pub. Making: Conpur-

Mrs. Pankhurst in Trouble: Now U. S. Refuses to Let Her Int FOR 'THE ANDOM TI-IIINGJ3 AIND FLINQS

Mr iDAY

The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Hammond. June 18, 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the postofflce In Hammond, February 4. 1911. The Gary Evening Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Gary, April 13. 1913. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, daily except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in East Chicago, September 25, 3913. All under the act of March 8. 1879. as second-class matter.

FOREIGN ADVERTISING 912 Rector Buildlnr OFFICES, .Chlcaro PVBLICATIOX OFFICES, Hammond Building. Hammond. In4. TEUErBOKKI, Hammond (pri-e,te exchange). ..111 (Call for department -wanted.) Gexy Office TeL 1ST East CMctft Office Tel. 140Indiana Harbor ...Tel. II9-M; 11 Waiting TeL 10-1 Crown Point ...............TeL J Ugewtaee. Tel. 11 Advertising solicitors will be sent, rates given on application. If you ave any trouble retting The Times notify the nearest office and hare U promptly remedied. LARGE3R PAID UP CIRC1DLATIO! THAN ANT OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IN THE CAJUCMKT REGION. ANONYMOUS communications nffl rot be noticed, 'but others -will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor, Times. Ham mond, Ind. 435 Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. 669, P. and A. M., Friday, October 17th, 8 p. m., E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S. Galer, Sec. E. M. Shanklin, W. M. Hammond Chapter No. -117, R. A. II. Regular meeting "Wednesday, October 22, Mark Master degree. Visiting companions -welcomeHammond Council No. 90 R. & S. M. Stated assembly, first Tuesday each month. J. V Morthland, Recorder. Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting Monday, October 10, Temple degree. Visiting Sir Knights welcome. Political Announcements ftOXIUB. All political notices of what eves an. tare ana from whatever party are strictly cash. Metiers at meetings, as. aaaacentat ef candidacies, etc. may he Inserted Is these eetamma.Hammond. Hammond fInL, Oct .17. 18-13. Editor TIMES I Please announce that f am a candidate for the office ef Mayor en the Independent Cltlsena' ticket for the coming city election, November 4, 1913. SAM ABALMA.V PLATfORM EftAVLIZATION. Let the Citlsene of Hammond Rale. Whiting. Editor TIJlESt Please announce that I am a candidate for the office of City Clerk ef Whiting on the Democratic ticket for the coming city election en Nov. 4th. WILLIAM SI. GRBATRAKB. Hammond Republican Ticket. MAYOR Peter Crumpacker. CLERK Frank J. Dorsey. TREASURER Charles W. Hubbard, JUDGE Patrick J. Toomey. COUNCILMEN-AT-LARGB. William Herknev. James E. Kennedy. James R. Graves. Ozro B. Lloyd. Walter J. Hojnacki. COUNCILMEN. First Ward Clyde L. Fowler. Second Ward Albert F. Truhn. Third Ward Frsd L. Wyman. Fourth Ward Henry Eggera. Fifth Ward-r-William Kahl. Sixth Ward Joseph TrinkL Seventh Ward Ernest E. Frlcke. Eighth Ward Clarence M. Eder. Ninth Ward Ertck Lund. Tenth Ward John Novak. Ad. CAT'S HOMING INSTINCTS. Distance through unknown parts to which cats will travel are well known. But the record Is probably held by the cat which form3 the sub Ject of the following letter, which appeared in Country Life: "Our chauffeur's daughter recently came by railway from her home in Cardiff to visit her father here (Ripon). She brought with her, a basket, an ordinary Tom cat, which she has had four years, intending to leave him with her father. After the first day in his new home, while his mistress was still here, Tom dis

WOMAN'S LIFE.

Here Is the calm love. Jeers the boon Of bushing baby cries, of borne life weft i Hern Is the round of duty, all In tune With childhood's laugh and tiny toddling feet. Yet in the twilight an Khe sits at rest. ller heart -with unformed longing still la rife; The thought of made love, strange lands, stirs her breast I She (tighs and naurraurai "That, perchance. Is life!" Hers Is the -irlld love, hers the thrill of lew world, cities iight-bedecked and gay Hera are the dancing feet, the song, until The Jeweled night has faded into day. Yet In the da-wn soft echoes call apart And, musing on her years of fame and strife She feels a baby hand tug at her heart, And ponders sadly t "That, perchance. la life!" Faith Baldwin in Mnnsey's. appeared and could not be found. In quiries, however, elicited the fact that a black cat had been seen on the railway line which passes near the house. Ten days later a letter arrived from aCrdiff saying that Tom had come home! "He was in an exhausted state with all his .claws worn off and the flesh pf his toes abraded. The distance between Ripon and Cardiff is fully two hundred and fifty miles The cat must, therefore, have travelled nearly thirty miles a day. Physically, that is a fairlv erood feat. But if he returned by the way by which hp, ram how did h travel? "Did he choose a route across country, or did he retrace his way through the busy junctions through which he passed, but had never seen, Or did he choose his train and escape the vigilant eyes of guard and ticket collector? Any explanation seems impossible, but the fact is incontrovertible. He left Ripon; he arrived in Cardiff worn and travel stained. I am glad to say he soon recovered." WE WERE QUITE EIGHT, When the dethroned Sulzer was a candidate for the democratic nomina - i tion for the presidency last year, this paper called mm a poseur and a mountebank: and ridiculed his candidacy. A certain democratic papeF not a I thousand miles away from this section, we recall, answered the editorial and bitterly attacked THE TIMES for its opinion on Sulzer We do not observe the c. d. p. hurrying to the defense of Sulzer. He WAS a poseur and mountebank. He 13. I A bXAlXj JrAltJi. Once more an effort is being made to start a sentiment in favor of a state park to be located In the Northern Indiana sand dunes, along Lake Michigan. This time the project has the enthusiastic endorsement of the

Rev. Eric H- LJndh, a new arrival Utlsometlmes made us frown, until he

Gary. Rev. Lindh who has quite a I reputation as a mountain climber and lover of all out door life, states that in all of his travel he has not come across a region of such wild, appealing beauty as the dune country. In pursuance of his plans the minister

is writing to the various states in thi 'em 'cause large cities have 'm nowunion for Information regarding state days. But we put him out 6' business parka. when he tried to make a hit and get

THE TIMES was the first news-la paper in Indiana to point out the glorious opportunity for a state park along the southern tip of Lake Michigan. If but a few square miles of the virgin dunes were acquired ay the state and nothing more than protection affored to them the cost would be very little. But will it be done before it is too late? LITERATURE FOR THE MAGGOTMINDED. It might have been supposed that the Cosmopolitan Magazine in its offerings for the last two or three years ha! run the gamuet of sugges-

tiveness, salaciousness and smut, but whole family took the matter up colits enterprising publishers prove con- lectively and individually, clusively in the current number that What could mother possibly want

there are new fields to be opened for the delight of prurient minds. The particular yarn indicating this fact is one In which the hero is a young male creature whose genesis was attributable to a flirtation which his mother, a rather informal lady, enjoyed one day while strolling in a

bosky dell, the Individual upon whom had time to listen to grievances, or which she pinned the rose of her mother who never was known to talk affection being a hairy Id gorilla, about what she was going to wear, The fact that she had come a cropper mother who waited up for you so r.3 of this sort was sedulously concealed to unhook you, patient, loving, preciand the young man, who took the ous little nondescript mother with veneer of civilization as a duck takes $100. The situation was unparallelto water, grew up to be a social fa- ed. vorite, the physical suggestion of hi3 Son said he wished he had a mopapa being more than counterbalanc- torcycle; he knew where he could ed by intellectual and social graces, get one Becond hand for $100. He even won the love of a fair and Daughter said she wished she could

AGRICULTURAL college advises

people to eat cheese to reduce the high cost of living. This coupled with the advice of the government eat popcorn ought to stir up business for the fellows who make indigestion remedies. DIFFERENCE between Indians and newspaper men is that the former have feathers in their head while we hold 'em In our hands. SEE that Gary players condescend ed to let the Cubs win on Saturday, Always did say that those Gary players are a generous lot. DESPITE the fact that the farmer

boy can have an auto, steam heat, el- wno are y.arning for mounectric lights. Ice cream freezer, cabaret ta!n climbing went And mov-

songs on the graphaphone, etc., ne i Imply won't stay on the farm. j i DIFFERENCE! between some fans j and that New York telephone girl who went crazy as result of countless inr ! quiries for the world series score is that she Just got that way while most of those that asked her the questions have been tha way for some time. WHILE the New York legislature treated Governor Sulzer very coldly it sent a man named Mustard to notify him of the fact -that he was ousted. T. R-'s injunction that women i should stay at home and raise babies doesn't seem to be minded by the lady bull moose orators in the Illinois Judicial election. HUSBANDS. PETITION YOUR Woman down in Cincinnati who always kept her beauteous maiden and undoubtedly would have led her blushing to the altar but for an unfortunate slip. e was aiscoverea uy uii.u.u, wno called at hl3 apartments, in the act of adjusting his dinner tie with his toes, a trifling contretemps, which served as an effectual rrosi or love s young dream. Ana on sucu pauu.u.u as this is the neurasthenia of our age regaled! Fort "Wayne News. A GOOD IDEA. In certain provinces of Canada hunters must wear white suits, in some American states they must wear a red cap But best of all the hunter in Manitoba who accidentally shoots a human being can be fined from $600 to $1,000 or be given a six month's prison sentence 'SAIL POLITICS NOW. Air's full of crispness and politics. People breathe it, talk it and sing It Witness this from the . ashington Star; "A boss rose up among us down to Pohick on the Crick. W stood in admiration of his methods smooth an' nuick. He run the town elections an' he dealt positions out an' gave us heaps of interestin things to talk about. When he went out a-walkin' we was kind o' proud to note the way he wore a high silk hat and a Prince Albert coat. We put up with his methods, though they showed his picture with a halo and a crown. We stood for all his diamonds and his eight-ounce watch and chain. We didn't mind his fancy clothes, although our own was plain. We couldn't quite approve of all his bossy little ways, and yet we stood firmer footing as he played the hypocrite. A little graft we don't resent, provided it's done slick, but crowns and halos must be earned at Pohick on the Crick." HER OWN MONEY. The play, "Hjer Own Money," has been bringing out the Btories. This time It is about mother. It happened "im state." Mother, who had Lever had anv money before In her life, all at once became the amazed possessor of $100, paid to her in the settlement of her great-uicle'a estate, a crisp, new $100 bill all her own. What to do with it? Tho with a hundred dollars? When had

mother ever had anything which shejand deatn among your neighbor's

was not eager to share witn tne nrsi one who came along? Here was mother who loved to get up nights to mix mustard plasters, mother who always had a piece of string at hand when anyone needed it, mother who

LI

j CONGRESSMAN! money in her j stocking the other j day found that she had lost 8700. This is one national bank that ought to be regulated by congress when it passes the banking bill. MRS. Panklwrt has been barred from the U. S. Even the most rabid opponent of the Wilson administration must concede that it acts wisely at times. FOOD prices to soar says the government. "Well, then let's all get aeroplanes and keep up with them. IF some of these fellowe ed into the third floor of an apartment house they would soon be cured. IT must be galling to the ordinary democrats to see that Mr. Wilson has named one professor as governor of Porto Rico and another as minister to Greece. Only hope for the Job hunters to be placed is for them to disguise themselves as professors. ALTHOUGH Ex-Governor Sulzer has been put out at the peoples' house he can console himself with the tltought that he is how one of the people. LETS throw up our hats that the campaign is only (wo weeks wore. HAVING nothing else to throw up, No matter who gets the persimmons in November they are picking straw berries today in Southhampton, I I. Easy pickin'. take a course of efficiency lectures, beginning next week and costing $100. Aunt Caroline said mother should get herself something decent to wear before some one got the $100 away from her. Grandma said she didn't know where mother kept her money, but or her part she didn't think it was safe to keep so much money in the house. Uncle John said you could never tell much about folk till you saw how they would act when they had money. Father wanted her to put it in the bank. And all the while mother maintained a dignified silence as became a person of opulence, kept her own counsel and began to demon strate traits of character no one had suspected her of. The neighbors said she was getting . stuck up, the county paper published news of the legacy and the hired man loaded the gun so as to be ready for looters. Now for the psychological value of becoming an heiress. Mother was invited to join the Woman's Improvement Society and to serve on the board of managers of the new orphanage. Her name was solicited as a patroness of art and printed on the program. She let off wearing an apron afternoons, began to dress her hair like the women managers, wore her shoes with the medium high heels every day and maniested something like dominion of spirit that walled her all the way round. Probably she had the $100 In her pocket, Nobody knew. Nobody knows to this day what she did with it. She went brazenly about her own business and had secrets from the family. Father put up cupboards where she had for years been trying to get them, added an L to the kitchen, mended the leaky roof and had the surrey painted. The hired man began to lift hi3 hat to mother. Talk about the psychology of her own money! Mother bought her development with $100! The story is too long for here!-New York Evening Sun. 3 DON'T BURN THE LEAVES. Why people persist in burning leaves late in the evening this time of year when they are being warned almost daily by health authorities ehat nothing so tends to spread diph theria and other throat diseases than this pernicious practice is hard to un derstand. We feel that it Is sheer thoughtlessness. If one while burning trash in this way will ponder over how many young children will be infected with diphtheria and may die as the result of his act he might come to himself and postpone the burning until morning and not do even re motely allow yourself to lay under the I h of he,Dlnjr to BDread disease children Tnat ,g the bumane policy. Washington, Ind., Democrat. AN UNCALLED FOR ATTACK. Prof. DaPTon the Hammond dancing master seems to have come out on top after the savage attack made on his character by ScovIUe the evangelist, Scovllle's denunciation pf DaPron was Indefensibly personal. Had the loud-shouting evangelist denounced the system Instead of the man, he would have satisfied some of his auditors, but to jump on the man with both feet was unfair. The dancing master points out that by refraining from giving Sunday afternoon

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TIMES IllREAU AT STATU CAPITAL. Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. IS. It is now two weeks since Senator Kern came to Indianapolis and gave out the word that within the next couple of weeks the Indiana plum tree would be 'shook,' and that some of the impor tant appointments for this state would be announced. Even since his visit the patriots have been standing with their paces toward the east and their ears glued to the telegraph, waiting for the happy tidings that something has been "did." But there has been no such word, and grave doubt has again taken the place of the joy than prevailed then. To add to the uncertainty again, Senator Shively, who has as -much to do with picking the Democrats for fed eral positions in Indiana as has sen ator Kern is laid up at his home in South Bend with a sore foot, and there is not telling when he will be able to return to Washington, according to news received here from South Bend, Without Senator Shively there will be nothing done at Washington along this line. It Is up to Shively to select the man for the position of internal rev enue collector for the Indianapolis dis dances which he could do because he! believes in keeping the Sabbath holy, he deserves some credit. He does. It is something When a man deliberately throws away a hundred dollars every Sunday, Few evangelists throw money away. WOMEN GET BUSY. The women have entered the mayoralty campaign in New York and from now until the first Tuesday In November things are going to hum. In fact women are much in the news this week. Mrs. Pankhurst arrives from Europe today to begin her lecture in America and the "pros" and "antis" are in a merry war as to the treatment the British1 Militant lader Khali rPceive dnrine .... , her stay on this side of the Atlantic Mrs. Pankhurst declares that she does not intend to nreach militancy. but there are those who say that her very presence is detrimental to the cause of women's votes; so the discussion was warm. The question is what will they do with Mrs. Pankhurst? UP AND DOWN IN 1-N-D-I-A-N-A NEW PESSiO.V BOARD NAMED. Representative John B. Peterson of the Tenth District sent a message to Drs. S. S. Washburn, E. 13. Ruschll and R. H. WetheriU of Lafayette that they bad been appointed members of the

trict. As is well known, he intends to recommend Peter J. Kryer, of Sotuh Bend, for that job, but there are such grave doubts about the Kruyer appointment going through that it may yet settle down to come other man. But, tinder any circumstances, there will be nothing dona until Shively gets back to Washington. Much amusement has been caused here by the dispatches from Washing-, ton about the ruction stirred up by the proposition to spend $7,800 for an automobile, for Vice President Marshall. The Indiana delegation in Congress, although unanimously Democratic, Is divided on the question of spending that much money for the buzz-wagon, and some of the Democrats here are saying that this does not look well. They say it gives the opposition a fine chance to make trouble. The Republicans are saying

that it would be straying a long ways from his old form of Jeffersonian simplicity for the vice president to accept a $7,000 automobile for his private use, and they do not believe that Mar shall was behind the proposition of having the government buy one for htm at any such price as that.There was an alarming shortage in the registration of Democratio voters pension board of medical examiners In Tippecanoe County. The new members ati . duties Oct. 23. Drs. Washburn and 'Ruschli are Democrats and Dr. Wetherill is a Republican. They will succeed Dr. J. S, Morrison of Lafayette, Dr. O. E. Throckmorton of Battle Ground and Dr. W. F. McBride of Day ton, appointed eight years ago. WILL TEST WATER SUPPLY. Ccfunty Health Commissioner Ziliak received word today at Princeton that representatives of the state board of health would be in Princeton Tuesday to make tests of Princeton's water aup ply from the Patoka River. Their visit is in response to a request by th eaIth nicer that ?uch, 'nvestigation be made on account of the town of Jasper dumping. lts sewage Into the strea mfifty miles above Pripceton. ( lafayettk elks buy home. Lafayette Elks today purchased the "William M. Reynolds residence prop. erty near the central part of the city ' for a permanent home. The purchase includes half a block of ground bound ' ed. by Fifth, Sixth and South streets. It is understood tbe purchase pric was $9,000, and the purchasers wtll spen dabout $35,000 in enlarging and fitting the property for their uses. SICK GIHI, FATALLY HIRXEO. Emma Mulvany, 18 years old, of Winamac, was fatally and her sister Josephine seriously burned yesterday when a gasoline iron exploded. Emma who is an invalid, was lyln on a couch and. her sister was standing at the ironing board between her and the door. When the explosion occurred the sick girl attempted to get out of the room and received most of the blazing fluid on the upper part of her body. Her sister was badly burned about the hands and arms. A WANT AD IN THE TIMES IS rCRTH TWO IN ANT OTHER PA-?ER

in this city, and this has given the Democratic city campaign managers a scare- Te Republicans got their voters out and registere most of them in Sep-ti tember, and so did the Progressives, so that both of these parties are well satisfied with the situation. But the Democrats failed seriously to get their vote registered. This has put fresh life into the Republican campaign for mayor, because the Republicans figure that with the shortage In the Demo cratic registration the Democrats stand a good chance to lose what has appeared up to this time to be a cinch at the city election. It is estimated.' that the total registration will be from 10,000 to 12,000 short of the total vote of the cly as shown by the poll books. and It is estimated that fully 75 per cent of the shortage is Democratic Poll takers for both the Progressive and Republican organization also say that fully 85 per cent of the large number of voters who declare themselves as doubtfuls have been traced down and found to be former Democrats. This makes it look bad. they say, for the Democrats, and the Republicans and Progressives alike are working hard to hammer down the Democratio line. It is admitted that the Democratic candidate for mayor, Jos. tC, Bell, Is slipping backward, but whether he will slip far enough to be defeated is still a question. He still has the advantage of a divided opposition. If the Republican and Progressive sttength were consolidated there seems to be little doubt that Bell would be defeated. Popular Actress Now in Chicago

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