Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 116, Hammond, Lake County, 27 October 1913 — Page 4

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THE TIMES. Monday, Oct. 27. 1913.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br Th Lake County Printing and Pub. Uihlaa- Company. The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond, June ZS. 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond, February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Daily except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in Gary. Aorll 18, 1913. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, daily except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in East Chicago, September 25. 1 913. All under the act of March 3. 1879, as second-class matter.

rOKBtOir ADVERTISING OmOBI, It Reor Building . . Chicago PUBLICATION OmCGS, Heunrnorva Building-. Hamnaana. In4. TELEFBONBS, Hannmond (private exeh&nga) (Oall for department wanted.) Ill Gary Office .....,.,.,.. TaL IIT East Chlcage 091o TaL 140-J ihqwm fiarDor . ....... .xei. ii-m; in Waiting TeL 10-M Crswn Point TaL $ Ungnwlena, ............ ..... .Tel. 11 Advertising solicitors will be sent, or ratna given on application. It you tisvve mt trol cetMnar The Ttsnea notify the naarsst otfflce gad MP II promptly remedied. I LAMHR PAID VP CIRCULATION THAU AJfT OTBBS TWO XKWS PAfKM lit TlUt CALCMET RKHON. AlfONTMOUS communications wilt not Ts noctoea, (but other wilt printed mt diacratten. ajid should be AirasstwS Km The Editor, Times, Ila-ra-433 Stated meeting: Garfield Lodge. No. (69. F. and A. M., Friday. October 24th, S p. m E. A. degree. Visitor welcome. R. 6. Oaler, Sec. E. M. Shanklin, W. M. Hammond Chapter No. 117. R. A. M. Special meeting; Wednesday, October 29, Mark Master degree. Visiting; companions welcome. Hammond Council No. 90 PL Ac 8. M. Stated assembly, first Tuesday each month. J. W Morthland. Recorder. Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting; Monday, November I, Red Cross work. Visiting Sir Knights welcome. Political Announceots NOi'ICE. All political notlca of whatever aa tore and from whatever party a strictly eaah. Netleea at meetlnga, aa. atouncement of candidacies, etc.. may be laeerted la these columns. Hammond. Hammonu ,Iad-, Oct .17, IB 13. Editor TIMES I Please announce that I am a candidate for the offl.ee of Mayor oa the Independent Cltlaena ticket for the com ing city election. November 4, 1913. SAM A BALM AN. PLATFORM EQACLIZATTON. Let the Cltlaena ol Hammond Rule. Whiting. Editor TIMES i Pieaae announce that I am a candi date for the office of City Clerk of Whiting oa the Democratle ticket for the coming dry election en Nov. 4th, WILLIAM M. GRKATRAKB. WHITING DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Mayor Beaumont Parks. For Clerk W. M. Oreatrake. For Treasurer Andrew R. Keilman. I For City Judge U. Q. Swarta. For Councilman First Ward John P. Kostolnlk. For Councilman Second Ward J. J. Donegan. , For Councilman Third ward Thomas W. Eaton. For Councilman Fourth Ward Peter Buczkowaki., For Councllmen at Iarge Thomas F. Dugg-sn. N. E. Miller. Adr. Hammond Repub lican Ticket. MAYOR Peter Crumpacker. CLERK Frank J. Dorsey. TREASURER Charles W. Hubbard. JtXDGB Patrick J. Toomey. COUNCILMEN-AT -LARGE. William Herkner, ' James E. Kennedy. James R. Graves. Ozro B. Lloyd. William J. Hojnacki. COUNCILiiEN. First Ward Clyde L. Fowler. Second Ward Albert F. Truhn. Third Ward Fred L. Wyman. Fourth Ward Henry Eggers. Fifth Ward William Kahl. Sixth Ward Joseph Trlnkl. Seventh Ward Ernest E. Fricke. Eighth Ward Clarence M. Eder. Ninth Ward Erick Lund. Tenth Ward John Novak. Adv,

POu for THE 1 emPiDAy

A MOINTAIS CiATEWAV. I know a vnle whrrr I would aro one day, Wkea June romen bark and all the world once more la clad with summer. Deep with shade It Ilea. A anta-nty eleft tn the a-reen bosoxnlnsr hill. A cool, dim arateway to the mountains' heart. Oa either aide the wooded slopes come down. Hemlock and beech and chestnut; here and there Throna-h the deep, forest laurel spreads and gleam. Plak-whlte n Daphne In her lo veilThat still perfestloa from the world withdrawn, Aa If the wood (rods had arrested there Immortal beauty la her breathless flight. Par overhead aaalant the arching blue Gray ledges overhang from dlssy hlghts. Scarred by a thouaand winters and un tamed. The road winds in from the broad rlverlanda. Luring the happy traveler, turn by turn. lip to the lofty mountains of the sky, And where the road runs In the valley's foot. Through the dark woods the mountain stream cornea down. Staging; and danelag all Ita youth away Among the bouldera and the shallow runs. Where sunbeams pierce and mossy tree truaka hang. Drenched all day long with murmuring sound and spray, There, light of heart and foot free, I would go I I'p to my home among the lasting hllln, And la my cabin doorway sit me down. Companioned In that leafy aolltude By the wood ghoata of twilight and of peace. f And In that sweet seclusion I should hear. Among the cool-leafed beeehea la the dusk. The ealm-voleed thrushes at their even ing hymn So andlatraught, ao rapturous, no pure. It well might be. In wtitdum and In Joy, I The seraphs stinging at the birth of time The unworn ritual of eternal thing. Bllsa Carman, In Smart Set. THE CITIZENS' TICKET OF EAST CHICAGO FRANK CALLAHAN. FOR MAYOR. Frank Callahan. FOR CITY JUDGE. Wm. A. Fuzy. FOR TREASURER. Walter 0. Harmon. CITY CLERK. Thos. Y. Richards. ALDERMEN. . First Ward Wm. Babcock. Second Ward Mike Kula. Third Ward Clyde Bieddinger. Fourth Ward John Tankely. Fifth Ward Theo. F. Heim. Sixth Ward Stanley Raczkowski. Seventh Ward J. W. Galvin. ALDERMEN-AT-LARGE. John H. Steele. Joseph Karmilowicz. J. W. Maxwell. Adv. BELIEVE IN YOURSELF. Believe In yourself. It means courage and fortune. It means confidence at a time when belief In your own powers is valuable It means life to the blood and sparkle to tho eye when your vigor and sin cerlty are under the microscopic test of hostile examination. The poise of the orator, the self trust of the swimmer, the vim and aggressiveness of the good fighter, come from self-reliance; and no man who believes in himself Is ever afraid of losing his job. Fear Is the arch-enemy of power; and fear of circumstances and of men Is simply another name for lack of confidence in self. To get others to believe in you, first believe In yourself, not as a matter of logic, but through pure self-cona dence; for the world knows that no man can accomplish anything with out faith, and faith begins In the soul before it finds Its way into the mind To believe that you can do a thing before you have done It is necessary

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to growth. The mind of the man who has no faith that he can do a thing unless he has done it before it doomed to perpetual Lilliputianism and decay. And he who even limits his faith to what others have done, will never add much to the real progress of the world. The lion-hearted man is he who has the courage to attempt what has never been done before and the faith to believe he can do it. To enroll, among the immortals it Is necessary to do a new thing only once. But the man who accomplishes the untried once never stops; for lie

has learned the secret of growth. Those who never grow are the helpless and inanimate who are not willing to believe that they can -do a thing once. STB IKING STATISTICS. Last year 2,033,000 builders, masons, carpenters, ironworkers, bricklayers and other tradesmen were killed or injured pursuing their trades. In money this means a loss to the Industrial world of the great sum of $250,000,000. Statistics show that a workman is killed every fifteen minutes of the day an devery sixteen seconds ticked off by the clock a mechanic is maimed many times so se verely that his use to his work is at an end. OPEN AIR COLD CURE. Surgeon General Ruckman of the United States public health service, speaking of the cold weather, repeated the warning against sleeping Sn stuffy rooms and declared the open window was always a foe to colds and pneumonia. He also gave the following advice on how to cure a cod in Its early stages: "When you feel a cold coming on go into a room, open all the windows and disrobe. The cold air won't hurt you. Take a stiff brush and rub your body until it glows al lover. The cold will go away. "Slit skirts and shadow gowns are not menaces to health in cold weath er," he continued. "On the contrary, the women who wear the present day styles will be less liable (o catch cold than the woman who crowds her body with heavy woolens." THE POOR TANGO. Instead of calling the police they summoned the fire company when a couple began dancing the tango in a New Jersey dance hall. Way the tango is being generally danced it Is a wonder that the fuses on the auto matlc water sprinklers don't melt, thereby obviating the necessity of getting out the fire department. They are dancing the tango at the Hammond Country Club now and the stokers find they only need to provide about half as much heat as they did last winter. MAN'S RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEJ SCARLET LETTER. Dr. Katherine Bement Davis, in a speech before the prison congress, declared the double standard of morals to be the chief cause of vice and crime among women. Just so long as the woman and not the man is punished, both by society and the law, for an offense of which both are guilty, ust so long will man prey upon and victimize her. Dr. Davis' experience as the head of woman's reformatory In New York and In social work previously makes her an authority on the subject. But she is not the first one to advance the same opinion. Though not one ventures to dispute its truth, however. It Is noticeable that it Is never taken up with enthusiasm by reform ers In general as offering a practical remedy for a great evil. "Upllfters" of all classes are much given to deal ing with the problem of fallen women as if it were one for which women were themselves responsible and the futility of many of the solutions they offer would be amusing If the subject were less serious. They skirt around the simple proposition that If men would lead decent lives there would be no social evil and no white slave question .taking the attitude, many very frankly ,that such a thing Is not a possibility. Even good men will agree that universal clean and decent living can not be ,not realizing what a blistering indictment of the male of the human species this assumption la. In a recent magazine is a short story which it would be well for all men to read, though the periodical is meant especially for women. In It a young woman, deeply affected by the evil of the world, of which she was only becoming fairly conscious. Inno cently laid .before her brother and her lover a plan for doing away with vlca. Her proposition was very simple and her logic unassailable. How could there be any white slaves If there were no social evil, and how could there be any social evil If chastity were aa much the ideal of men as of women? If men as a sex decided to end the evil, If a movement toward a great moral awakening were started.

U. S. CAVALRY POLICES MEXICAN BORDER,

The picture shows the Fifth Uftitedl States cavalry; which'-' is camiped on the plains of Arizona at Nogales, the United States side of the Mexican border hne. The troops are-in readiness to take caro of 'any o utbreak in Mexico which may threaten American lives, property or interfltfta. Many thousands of Ainericjr.trooDS-.re-'scaltered all'alonKith'i e Mexican border line, from the Gulf of Mexico to tho Pacific ocean.

R1

ANDOM TmiNQJ AIND RHINOS

c THIRTY BABIES ARE BORN IN CHICAGO STREET CARS EVERY year, mercy! must the poor traction companies be compel.I.ED TQ INSTALL. DOCTORS AND ! NURSES ON ALL. CARS? PEXXSVLVASU railroad la In market to borrow a fclllion dollars. Better do your borrow lag now. HAMMOND department store advertises "baby doll" shoes. Baby doll with a number eight foot would look fine in a pair of these. MOHAMMED never trimmed his beard. This would Indicate that Mohammed was boss n his own house. NEARBY health board has set out to get better ventilation in the moving picture theatres. When the health of ficers get through with this they won't insult the Lord any by looking into me ventilation of a few churches. IT Pullman porters WILL. MAKE are talking of orTRAVEL. gitnixing a union SAFER. with 20,000 members. Good Idea! Energy the whisk broom wielders use in terrifying luckless passengers will now now be spent in other directions. NO little talk of making George Washington a patron saint. Suppose then that the small boys who hack furniture as a moans of forestalling the spanking will Invoke him as their patron saint. T ntsmON scientist announces that a female bacteria can produce 100 billion Pennants in 43 hours, if there could be a pledge that seemed to her a practical idea. Her very mention of the subject created a shock; she was told that she did not know what she was talking about and her plan was ridiculed. But though silenced she was not convinced, still believing that "God never made necessary and normal to one eex what can be secured only at such incomparable horror to the other." The old order changes. Women In many positions in life are thinking of problems that their mothers and grandmothers refused to consider. The time may come when they will solve thi3 one by Insisting upon one moral standard for both men and women. The matter is largely In their hands. Indianapolis btar. SYMPATHY for a young woman who has been feloniously stabbed gets sort of stalled when she offers to call it square for $5,000. A PORTRAIT of Sam Houston has been replaced in the capital of Texas with one of Joseph W. Bailey. The latter, of course, is done In oil. A REAL COMMERCIAL CLUB. In arranging for a social program for this fall and winter the Gary Commercial club has done something that other clubs in this region could profitably copy. The Gary organiza tion will have a series or concerts and entertainments, furnished by a lyceum bureau, for the members, their families, and friends. A business organization that isn't all business represents the most effective commercial club. STLLL TAKES DEADLY TOLL. Bichloride of mercury ,or corrosive sublimate, continues to take its deadly toll of lives through its resemblance to headache tablets, the list

having been increased by two moreiers, editors, officers of granges, instipersons during the month. A move-jtute lecturers and other persons who ment is on foot to prevent ita sale ex- occupy positions of leadership and in

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Think of the worries the mother.in. 1q , . . . , . , law eim of keeping track of her many son-in-laws. HOTELS AS THEY ARE IN" SOUTH CHICAGO. (From the South Chicago Calumet.) Ray Tonic came home to his hotel last night and found Phillip Sezera in hla bed and started to cut him up. Phillip says It is his bed at night and Ray's bed in the day time. The hotel is at 10812 Torrence avenue. The police arrested Tonic. DOC COOK'S book about the attainment of the pole is being ottered as premium by some newspapers. Yes, some newspapers always did hand out g-old bricks in the way of phony clocks and breakable furniture. "John D. Rockefeller will not lose a cent. The loss will fall on the company." News item. Jawn might not have been able to afford a new wig if he had lost a few : coppers. THE old sour pickle! Los Angeles judge has provided covering for feminine witnesses' ankles so that they won't influence the Jury. LAST year we had the hobble skirt and the progressive party; this year: the slit skirt and the citizens' ticket. NO doubt President Wilson's anxiety in hurrying the legislation that will procure us more elastic currency is due to the fact that he soon will have a wedding in his family. NEW story out about a man who was a sheep. That's a whole lot better than being a lamb in Wall street cept on, the prescription of a physi cian; then the tablets must be put up in triangular or other odd shapes and colored blue in order to guard against accidents. It Is argued that there is no good reason for its common use. As a disinfectant it is unsuitable because It destroys almost any metallic substance with which it comes in contact, such as plumbing fixtures. It poisons every from of animal life and its usefulness in medicine is confined to narrow bounds. For every ordinary and proper service In the household there are other better and cheaper germicides and disinfectants. READ AND LEARN. Reed B. Freeman, whose factory in Binghamton, N. Y., was burned, causing the death of thirty girls, after paying all his debts has divided the remainder of his $3,000,000 fortune among families of those who perished. Mr. Freeman ,who Is sixty-six years of age, will start life anew. "I haven't a dollar today," he said, "but I have lots of good friends. Tomorrow I start out as a clothing salesman in New York city, and with my first commissions I will send to Binghamton for my wife and our daughter, who Is nine years old." Pessimists who put no faith in conscience and world betterment have something to think over. LEADERSHIP IN COUNTRY LIFE. At Cornell University a unique course has been established in the summer school, which has for its purpose the preparation of young people for leadership in country life. It is announced that there will be a three-year graded course and training will be provided for all classes of rural leaders, such as rural ministers, secretaries of young men's and young women's Christian associations, officers of men's brotherhoods, boy scout masters, school superintendent, teach-

READY TO DASH BELOW

TUBE ip&imim&ME. w & zl an BR IRIIBIIAMM (FROM THE HUES' OWN KDL'KAI'CLIS BUREAU)

TIMES BUREAU i AT STATE CAPITAL, Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 27. The suspense for the waiting horde of Hoosier willing Democrats is about to be broken by the industry of Senators Kern and Shively. Within the next day or two, according to best Informations obtainable now. it is thought that the senators will announce the names of the men they have decided on for some of the important federal" positions in Indiana. This list is expected to include the two internal revenue collectors, the district attorney, the United States marshal and propably a man for appointment on the Philippine commission to take the place of Newton W. Gilbert, of Indiana, who has resigned a comralssioner8hlp after having held It for several years. It is now learned that before Senator Shively left Washington for his home In South Bend a short time ago he and Senator Kern had a conference at which the names of the men for the various places were practically agreed on, but they have not been made publie. ' It was arranged, that on Senator Shively's return from South Bend to Washington another conference would be held and this time the announcements were to be made public. This conference is expected to be held either today or Monday. The resignation of Gilbert as a member of the Philippine commission has given the senators an additional place to fill. This Job belongs to Indiana, because Gilbert is an Indiana man. It pays a salary of $15,000 a year, and is one of the very best political plums in the gift of the government. This Is the place that Congressman Cullop, of Vincennes, has had his eye on for some time and for which he has been making a campaign. But it la known that Senators Kern and Shively are not at all enthusiastic over Cullop and it Is not believed they will recommend him unless things get to a point where they can't help themselves. Another Job that will be at the disposal of the senators is a place on the commission that will settle all claims resulting from the construction of the Panama canal. This position is expected to last about ten months and the members will be paid $25 a day. It is understood that the senators are considering a northern Indian democratic editor for a place on fluence throughout the open country. There has also been granted to Cornell by the Legislature the sum of $334,000 for the construction of buildings in the Agricultural Col lege, . ThA will provide for the comple tion of the auditorium, forestry. building, animal husbandry building, heating plant and additional small buildings for the poultry department, and for the erection of barn for hogs and sheep, a hothouse and a new rural schoolhouse. The Day in HISTORY OCTOBER 27 IN HISTORY. 1795 Spain and the United States concluded a treaty defining the Louisiana boundary. 1856 Opehtng of Railway communication between Toronto and Montreal. 1858 Theodore Roosevelt bern. 1862 Mexico Congress assembled and protested against the French invasion. ! 18G4 Federals repulsed at the battle of Hatcher's Run, Va. 1894 Sixteen perished in a Are in Seattl1895 Main building of the University of Virginia destroyed by fire. 1904 New York subway opened to traffic. 1912 Gen. Felix Diaz was condemned to death by a court martial at Vera Cru. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Kx-President Roosevelt is celebrating his fifty-third birthday in South America. Stephen B. Ayres, former Congress

BOUNDARY LINE

this commission, but his name has not been made known. It Is practically settled that the Indiana senators wil make the follow lng recommendations: Internal revenue collector for the Indiana district, Peter J. Kryer, of South Bend. Internal revenue collector for the Terre Haute district, Isaac R. Strouse, of Rockvllle. United States district attorney, Frank C. Daily, of Bluffton. United States marshal, Mark Storen, of Scottsburg. Kruyer is the choice of Senator Shively and Strouse is the selection of Senator Kern. The on'.y question is whether President Wilson will appoint Kruyer. There appears to be somedoubt about it, although the nomination may go through. Daily and Storen are to be taken care of for two reasons. One Is that Daily will be a candidate for the nomination for attorney general if he fails to land the appointment as district attorney. The other reason la unless Storen is given the marshalahlp he will be a candidate for a place on the state ticket, and all of these places have practically been decided on by the democratic state organisation. It is understood about the stata house that Charles A. Greathause will be a candidate for renominatlon for state superintendent of public Instruction, and that he will not go into the fight for governor. This will leave State Auditor O'Brien as the only candidate for the machine to support for that nomination as against Congressman Adair, of the Eighth district, who If a candidate for the place. Greathouse Is a young man and can afford to wait, and it is said that he will try to continue in his present office until after O'Brien has had a term as gov ernor. An offensive and defensive combination has been formed by Dale J. Crittenebergev of Anderson, candidate for the democratic nomination for state auditor, and Homer L. Cook, of this city, candidate for the democratic nomination for secretary of state. They are working together in their canvass for votes, and this fact has caused a good deal of indignation among other candidates who are opposed to combinations of this kinJ. They thing it la unfair to the rest of the bunch. man from New York, business man and author. Is fifty-two today. Or. Victor C. Vajighn, dean of tha department of medicine of the university of Michigan for nearly twenty years, is stxty-two years bid. He was born In Missouri and served in the Santiago campaign of the Spanish-American war. REAL ESTATE TRAI1SFERB WHITING. Lot SO, blk 2, Davidson's 7th add, Henry. S. Davidson to John H. Roney 1 TOLLESTON. Lot 10, blk 23, Oak Park add. City & Harbor Land Co. to Hugh Watson 450 HAMMOND. ' Lot 48. blk 6. Morris add, Harry Meyerhoff to Gostlin, Meyn & Co 225 E lot S3, blk 14, Eschenberg's State Line add, George A. Carpenter to Fred Hau 275 Lots S6, 37, blk 16, e part North Side add, H. J. William Leimbach to Richard Jenkins. ..... 3,200 Lot 3?, blk 14, Eschenburg's State Line add, William Tamm to Fred Rau 1 GARY. Lot 18, blk 1, Grant Park add. Peter Magdos to Ingram F. Pritchard 1 Lot 82, Rundell's add, Gary Bond & Mtg. Co. to Alfred P. Shepard 300 Lot 6, blk 1, Douglas Park add, Gary Securities Co. to Julius Neimont 450 C heenr.fc i houg While mourning the w the present age, it is we ter th.it if we had 'ived age v.c would be d-id no of m-