Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 119, Hammond, Lake County, 30 October 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE TIMES. Thursday, 'Oct. 30, 1;U3.
E TI
NEWSPAPERS
Br Tb Lake County Printing and Pub. Uahlaa; Company. The Lake County Times Dally ex;ept Saturday and Sunday. Entered at :he postofflce In Hammond, June 8, 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday tnd weekly edition. Entered at the jostofflce In Hammond, February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Daily except Sunday. Entered at the postfflce In Gary. April IS. 191S. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered it the postofflce In East Chics go, September 26. 1913. All under the act of March 3. 18T9, s second-class matter.
ESil, . r 1
P0ElVrHTHE
R
ANDOM Tt-IUNQS AISD RUIINQO
I
1
THE TWILIGHT WITCH.
The twilight wltrh romti nllh her
tarn And strewn them through the blue; Then breathes be low the sunset bara A bresth of meadow met She trails her veil acroK the skies And mutters to the trees. And In the nood. vrlth firefly eyea. She wiikea the mysteries. The twilight wlt-U. with c-lf and fay. Is eosnlaa down the ttlnmber Tray, ! Sleep, my dearie, sleep.
IF Gl'ILTV PLEASE STAND VP.
Editor Random:
Any man who will wear the new
green clothes Is capable of pushing
little chickens in the creek if a favorable opportunity offers.
P. P. R. "Well, what's the answer? We
i cannot afford a new suit.
The
rOJUUOIV ADVBHTTSIJta omota, tit Keotor Building - - Chicago
PUBLIC A TIO-N OKFICKS, Hammond BitlMing, Hammond, Ind.
TB LOVONI 9, HiTHond (vrlTaA exohange) Ill (CaUl fer department wanted. ) sjary Offloa. ! lit East Chicago Oft loo TeL HO-J Indiana Harbor TeL tit-at; lit Whiting TnL 10-M Crown Point.... ..TeL laogetrtaak ...M.M....M.M....ai. It
Advertising saltertors win be seat, rate given on apoltaatlon.
or
If you . any trooblo casting The Tanas notify the nasxeat office and hneo It aromfHly romodled.
PAID UP CUW7VL ATI O X
THAN AJTT OTHER TWO JHBVTS-
TH3D ClUMDT aUKUOK.
ANONTMCTUa commwnttnrtlons wrf
not Botftoed, ut otoora win fee
print at tfieoretVon. od ahouad he dsnSo1 The Xdfaor. Tlmaa, Ham-
anc4iMTn1.
433
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No.
((9. 7. and A. M., Friday. October Slat,
t a. m., F. G. degro. Vlsitora welcome.
R. 8. Galer, Sec- ZL M. Bhanklln. W. M.
Hammond Chapter No. 11T, R. A. M.
Special meeting Wednesday, October 89, Mark Master degree. Visiting companions welcome.
Hammond Council No.' SO R. at 8. M
Stated assembly, first Tuesday each
month. J. W Morthland. Recorder.
Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting Monday,
November t, Red Cross work. Visiting
Sir Knights welcome.
Political AnnQuncemsnts
NOTICE.
AU political notices of whatever na-
tore and from whatever party vtrletly eaab. Netlews ol moettaga.
aoaacemeat az aaaatoaalea. etc, ho laacrted la these colosaao.
Hamzaond. Btauuoaa ,In- Oet .17, 1918. Editor TIMKgl Pleaee annoonee that I aaa a eaaal
AVato for the oftce ef Uayor oa the Independent Ctlses ticket for the com
ing etry elcetlea. Iroveaabor 4, 118. SAM ABAXMAN. PLATFORM BQ.ALL.IZATION.
Let the CitUenn of Ham mood Hale.
rith crescent
twilight witch.
moon. Stoop on the wooded bill ;
She answers to the owlet tune.
And to the whlppoorwlll.
She leans above the reedy pool
And wakes the drowsy rroa.
And with the toadstool, dim and cool.
RIbm gray the old dead log.
The twilight witch comes stealing
down
To take yon off to slumber town,
Sleep, my dearie, sleep.
The twilight witch, with wladllke
tread. Has entered In the room
She steals around your trundle-bed
And whispers In the gloom.
he sayoi "I brought my steed along, My faery steed of gleams. To bear yon. like a breath of song,
Into the land of dreams.
I am the witch who takes jour hand
And leads you off to faeryland.
The far-off land of sleep." Madison Caweln.
SOMK men manage
To
Keep as busy
Around the
House as the Serretary Of state does at Washington.
BRITAIN "WITH U. S. ON MEXICO."
-Headline.
Well, we haven't lost any sleep over
it.
BEANS were once used ascurrency
in this country. Well if any one
should give us an old-fashioned pie
we would give em fifty cents in change.
GXRT newspaper says that Mayor
Knotts has taken the trail looking for mud. Considering that everything around Gary is sand hia honor will
make a Valuable scientific find should he run across any mud.
PRICE of false hair Is go.
ing up. This Is awful! Jawn D. will not be able to afford
new wig next year.
MORALIST says that tango should
be danced six inches apart. Better six miles apart says Hazel Nutt who thinks it is Lent.
GOVKRNMENT expert urges that skim milk be used more generally. Guess that he never put up at a boarding house.
PROBABLY President Wilson made
that speech about the IT. S. not going to grab any more territory because he was afraid that the South American republicans might be, alarmed at the
money-grabbing tendencies of Socre tary Bryan.
ANOTHER SCOURCE OF
CONSOLATION.
THE CITIZENS' TICKET OF EAST CHICAGO
One good thing about Katherine Elkins getting married that we won't
have to read any more dispatches that the duke of Abruxzi might and mightn't.
INDIANA club women have declined
to have Mrs. Pankhurst address them.
Always said that our ladies were un
usually clever.
PHOTOGRAPHERS report that it is hard to get bankers to smile these days. ,
WHILE the Income tax
will be paid by the large fish it will be the minnows who will have to bear the burden.
VOTERS OF EAST CHICAGO!
Voters, attention' Would you vote for a man for the high office of mayor who was in court on impeachment proceedings? ' Suppose by chance you elect him and within thirty days he is tried and ousted from office what would the state and this country think of that town? Would thejr think that you showed good judgment or would they think that the people preferred to be vice and graft ridden rather than use the free gift of the ballot ? Suppose you think that the courts will discharge him. Even so, take our advice, put some one into the office who is clean, of good name, and free from suspicion choose a man upon whom no grand jury indictment now rests try out a new slate take the best chance if you make a mistake, make it with a man whose past record is clear. Remember that even in'the heat of this aggressive campaign, not one single breath of any accusation whatever has been whispered against "the name of one man for whom you may cast a clean vote. Put this man in, and at least you will be doing the best that you can. On November Fourth, place a cross where you find the emblem of a STAR. Look for the star as did the wise men of oldl CITIZENS' PARTY COMMITTEE. (Advertisement)
esse
O.NK good thing about the campaign this fall that the straw vote pest isn't as active as formerly.
COUNTY engineer reports that the republicans will win in Hammond. No doubt he has taken an accurate survey of the situation.
MILLIONAIRE, Chicago newspaper reports, spent $5,000 to be in, Chicago for five minutes. Maybe he did it so
as not be in Chicago any longer than
that.
I writer on record. At the door of the well-prepared man opportunity
knocks a thousand times; at the door of the unprepared, not at all.
FRANK CALLAHAN.
Whiting. BdHor TIMESi Please announce that I am candidate for the office of City Clerk of Whiting oa the Democratic ticket for the coming dtjr election, oa Nov. 4th. WILLIAM M. CRBATRAKB.
WHITING DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Mayor Beaumont Parka. For Clerk W. M. Greatrake. For Treasurer Andrew R. Keilmaa. For City Judge U, Q. Swart. For Councilman First Ward John P. Kostolnik. For Councilman Second Ward J. J. Donegan. ,
' For Councilman Third ward Thomas
W. Eaton.
For Councilman Fourth Ward Peter Bucskowskl., For Councilmen at Large Thomas F. Duggsn, N. E. Miller. Adv.
FOR MAYOR. Frank Callahan. FOR CITY JUDGE. Win. 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.
THANKS FOR THE LOBSTER. Farewell I should worry! Another catch word is here. "Thanks for the lobster" is the new
catch phrase which the Parisians
have brought back from their holidays, and now when, a city man sends a postcard to a friend at the seaside he always adds that phrase.
If two Parisians are saying "good
bye" one of them is certain, as he shakes hands, to thank for the othor
for the lobster ,and every day people
are being rung up on the telephone only to hear an unknown voice re
peating the irritating phrase, "Mercl pour la langouste."
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS OFTEN
One of the world's champion
chuckle-heads is the man who orlgi
nated the statement that this age In
which we live is one of equal oppor
tunity for all. He should have been
operated on by the doctors for dis-
cloeation of the cerebrum or treated
for emptiness of the brain-pan.
The fact is that there never has been a time in the history of the
world when there was less oppor tunity for the soft, sappy, simple
minded sport, the Ignoramus, or the
dawdllfi: idler, than there is now
This is an age of rapid fire guns;
DESTINY OF THE FROCK COAT.
The long coat with the tails en
joyed a long period of popularity.
It marked for years the man who was doing the correct thing from the
point of view of dress, whether he were at a wedding or a funeral, aa
afternoon reception or a college com
mencement. The change in men's
fashions that drove the frock coat
out of it3 exclusive place was par
ticularly discouraging to owners of this enduring garment. Fiock coats have been known to pass from one generation to another sayB the New
York Sun.
There has now been created by far
seeing tailors such a compromise that the frock is not after all destined to disappear from the wardrobe of the well dressed man. It will, however,
be regarded only as the appropriate
coat of well dressed men of a certain
class. The stock broker or the real
estate magnate ,if they would follow
fashion, must be seen in the coat described abroad as the morning coat and here as the cutaway. It is to a
much more serious class of men the
frock is dedicated.
Statesmen, bankers, lawyers and
ministers, in the words of the dls
laws by which areas deposits of building stone are dlposed of by the
government. Under the law pros
pectors can locate and secure title to mineral deposits on the national for
ests just as they can on the open pub
11c domain. The marble company which owns the quarries is a larger user of national forest timber in the working of its properties, situated
near Marble, Col.
The history of the company is said
to be of .considerable interest, as representing indomitable enterprise against difficulties. The country in
which the marble deposits occur is
extremely rough and precipitous, and
for a long time was Inaccessible be
cause of a lack of transportation fa duties. Large sums had to be ex
pended before the stone ,ould' be got
out and brought to market. lp to
1907, when the product first began
to attract attention, it lu said that
$1, 200, 000 had been expended in de
veloping the property.
Hammond Eepublican Ticket.
MAYOR Peter Crumpacker. CLERK Frank J. Dorsey. TREASURER Charles W. Hubbard. JUDGE Patrick J. Toomey. COUNCILMEN-AT-LARGBS. WU11 am Herkner. James E. Kennedy. James R. Graves. Osro B. Lloyd. William J. Hojaaeki. COUNCILMEN. First Ward Clyde L. Fowler. Second Ward Albert F. Truhn, Third Ward Frad X. Wyman. Fourth Ward Henry Eggers. Fifth .Ward William Kahl. Blxth Ward Joseph Trlnkl. Seventh Ward Ernest E. Frlcka. Eighth Ward Clarence M. Edsr. Ninth Ward Erick Lund. Tenth Ward John Novak. Adv.
P. J. J&OW3EV A s x y j
fit some individual he may fairly ex- ' pect to pay something. You do not
go into a grocery and ask the proprietor to hand you ten pounds of sugar for nothing even though the grocer may be a personal friend and even though the gift might not be a large one. If the beneficiary of advertising does not pay for it the proprietor has to settle the bill. Nevertheless many people cannot' seem to learn that a
newspaper pays its expenses by rent
ing space and that It is just as much
entitled to collect rent for each weed
that space is occupied as you are foi the house you rent to the tenant lays a contemporary.
SOME DO. It Is a penal offence in India te read William Jenniigs Bryan's boo! on "British Rule in India. Newi item. There are those who heartily wlsi it were a penal offence in this country to attend one of his yodling accompanied lectures. Xew York Sua
Republics Candidate for
Adv.
Heaumont Turks.
of high candle power perceptive criminating sartorial journal which faculties; of violent explosives; of has suggested this new and dignified lightning and of fire; or pruning- use of the frock coat are the men
hooks and big sticks; qf sky-scrap- who will ln the future find it the last ing and ocean-joining; of immovable word in Btyle. Thus ig the frock not objects of irresistible forces; of only pre3erved to mankind but it s Augean stables and Interstate com- destined to a more distinguished and
merce commissions. glorified fate. No more will its im
By what inconceivable workings of Ipresslve folds be wasted on any fop
the human mind can anyone think or frivolous struggler after the latest
that there are equal opportunities for variation in clothes. After years of
all? 13 it to be imagined that an in- service for all sorts and conditions of
consequential peewee of vacant brain men It has earned its present dignity.
can be on the same footing with the
strong? That the uneducated can
complete on equal terms with the MARBLE FOR LINCOLN MEMORIAL
skilled of mind? That a pampered! The white marble of which tha scion of silk-stockinged ancestry can great $2,000,000 Lincoln memorial
DISINTERESTED. Mrs. Parkhurst probably thinks wc
are a cold blooded lot, but we are not. She and her vargarlea and her theories evidently don't appeal to the
people in New York at least, which is the reason for the beggarly array of
empty benches that greeted her on
the other night.
We were surely courteous admitting
her without bond and bidding her go her way in peace lecturing or do
whatsoever she pleased within the law.
Her daughter, Miss Sylvia Pank
hurst, who Is "following In mother'3
footsteps," on the other hand, achieved a victory in London ,'being released yesterday from Holloway jail after a
week's hunger strike. According to the cable, she has arrived at the proud "enfeebled and emaciated" condition. It is clear that London appreciates this peculiar form of amusement more than we do. Why, it will be remembered that we even refused to take old Dr. Dowie seriously, and he. departed threatening to come again and wipe us out. But he didn't. By the way the "heroine" of a hunger strike is permitted to wear a bar. In course of time some suffragettes will be wearing strings of bars like the old time century bicycle riders. But they will have to earn them in London.
Here the frost Is on destructiveness
freakishness and the coin is in the
BOCk.
not too old at forty for love or any
thing else. "A woman," she declares, "should keep as young as she can as long as she can. "But I do not approve of women trying to be young girls. "When , a . woman of. more than forty tries to play the ingenue it is nearly always a pathetic sight, and is certain to lead to heartaches and disappointments.
"It is no us trying to ignore the years that are passing relentlesslyover one's head; but, at the same time, one need not lot them snow her under.
"Can a woman love at forty, do i
you say? Certainly she can. "She loves as long as breath is left
ln her body, so long as she can find ; the man to love. But she should love as a woman loves, and not with the love of a mere girl in her teens. "I don't see why the fact of having a son twenty years of age should compel a woman to give up all the enjoyments of life. But if a woman goes too far I think that it would be bound to wear her out, and that she
would be glad to go back for the
sake of rest." "To be young is to live. When youth is finally lost and one accepts the fact that one is really old, then hope and courage and thrills and the day after tomorrow are all taken away and one is really dead long before the funeral."
successfully rival the big-boned prod- temple Is to be built on the banks of
uct of the farm? That the youth the Potomac in Washington is to whose schooling has been pounded! come from the Sopris national forest.
Into him by a tutor through the Colorado. medium of a maul and wedge can This is said to be the first great rival the mighty-brained self-educat- building in the east to be constructed
ed? of this stone, known to the building This is not an age of equal oppor- trades as Denver marble, though tunity for all. It is an age of oppor- much of it has been used as an Intunity for the well-equipped. terior finish in public buildings. In When Senator Ingalls, impersonat- the west a notable example of its use ing Opportunity, wrote, "I knock but is found in the new federal building once and I return no more," he at Denver. should have been given a medal for While the marble quarries are in
making more people believe a mis-j the midst of the national forest, they J ventures
pleading statement than any other (are on private land secured under the says emphatically that a-woman
MIDDLE AGE AND YOUTH. Suppose we get away from politics
at least long enough to give the
ladies a chance and deal with an interesting phase of life. Is a woman too old at forty? Here is a romantic variant to the old problem which used to worry all the middle aged men.
W7hat does it matter, some one may cynically say, since no woman owns up to forty if she can possibly help it? But there is no harm in being forty, fair and lovable, If you only know how.. A well known actress charmingly pointing a lesson worth learning in a play dealing with the romantic ad-
of a middle aged woman
is
VALUE OF NEWSPAPER SPACE.
Every line in a newspaper costs its publisher something. If it is to bene-
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Candidate For Re-election For Mayor of Whiting On The Democratic Ticket. Advertisement.)
Charle s G. Gates' Minneapolis Residence, Work on WhicK Has Been
Stopped
i
