Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 129, Hammond, Lake County, 6 November 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE TIMES. Thursday, Nov. G, 1913.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS By The Lake Coaaty Printing and I'ub. lLsh!na Comp7.
Th. Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the poatofflce in Hammond, June 28, 1906. The Lake County Times Saturday and weekly edition. Entered at the poatofflce in Hammond, February 4, 1911. The Gary Evening Times Daily except Sunday. Entered at the postoffice in Gary, April 13r 1913. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, daily except Sunday. Entered t the postofflce in East Chicago, September 25. J918. All under the act of March S. 1879, as second-class matter.
On for lxlJC 1 emPiDAY
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If you tiave any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest office and have it promptly remedied.
THK KIM.DOM OF OOI. V "! No Strange Land.") O world Invisible, we -vlevr tier, O world Intangible, we touch thee. O world uukaonable, we know thee, la apprehensible, we clutch thee! Doe. the fiah sear to Bad the ocean. The eagle plunge to find the air That we ask. of the atara In motion If they have rumor of Thee theref
Xot where the wheeling aysteme dark
en.
And our beautiful conceiving roara!
The drift of pinion, would we hearken,
Iteata at our own clay-Mhuttered doors. The angels keep their ancient placeni
Turn but a atone and atart a wing! TI ye, 'tin your estranged facea.
That mlm the many-nplendored thing.
But (when ao bad then canst not sad
der)
Cryt and upon thy ao aore loan
Shall ahiae the traffic of Jaeob'a ladder
Pitched betwlat Heaven a ad Charing
Croaa.
lea, la the night, my Seal, my daugh
ter.
Cry, clinging Heaven by the hems;
And In, Chrlat walking en the water
Not of Genneaareth, but Thamea!
From the collected worka of Francis
Thompson.
LARGER PAID VP CIRCX'LATIOX THAJI ASir OTHER TWO HEWSPAPERS IN THK CALUMET REGIOX.
ANONYMOUS communications wil not te notice J, but others will te printed at discretion, and should be addressed, io The Editor, Times, Hammond. Ind.
433
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. 669, F. and A. it., Friday November 7, t p. in., E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. E, S. Galer. Sec, E. M. Shanklin. W. M.
Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M. Regular stated meeting Wednesday,
November 12, Most Excellent degree. Visiting companions welcome.
Hammond Council No. 99 R. A 8. M.
Stated assembly, first Tuesday each
month. J. W Morthland. Recorder.
Hammond Commatidery No. 41, K. T,
Regular stated meeting Monday,
November 17, Red Cross work. Visit ing Sir Knights welcome.
MAYOR JOHNSON'S OPPORTUNITY
Mayor-elect Roswell O. Johnson of Gary has a wonderful opportunity
before him in the next four years.
Mr. Johnson has been elected by
the fusionlsts of the city and this
non-partisaa tribute is a treat honor. One of the first problems that will
confront Mayor Johnson when he takes office in January is that of
public improvements. Without doubt the same old thieving and cut-throating contracting gang that has stolen
hundreds of thousands of dollars from taxpayers will try to make Mr. Johnson's official career one that will not be a bed of roses. If at the outset of his administration he kicks out these unscrupulous pirates he will rid Gary of one its greatest blights and he will fctrengthen non-partisanship amazingly. As a rule it is only a nonparty man who can buck these municipal pests to a fare-you-well.
wage worker in the eity will cash in
the savings sooner or later.
R1
ANDOM THirNCiiS A IND RL.IINCJS
J
1
BEN HAMPTON ENTERS NEW
I State Federation of Labor. j One of the funniest arrangements
DIFFERENCE between Mr. Sulzer
and Col. Roosevelt being in the bull moose party la that the former was
able to come back again.
TO all Intents and pur
poses the workers aiding Mayor Knotts were afflicted with the hook worm.
AND THEN THEY SAY MEXICO. ' IS BAD.
Without doubt President Huerta must have wondered when he read of the bloody election doings In Gary.
CHRISTMAS ON THE WAY."
Times.
-A welcome relief from politics.
The
"WISCONSIN DEATH RATE HIGHER." Headline. Thought that the LaFollette policies precluded anything like this.
NEWSPAPER says that I. C. engines are the noisiest in the world. Guess the writer of that statement never slept in a Hammond hotel and heard an Erie passenger locomotive go by.
AFTER having gone through a
Gary election the government should
engage Sheriff Whitaker s services in case any move is made to quell the Mexican rebellion.
IT appears that at East Chicago
Mayor Schlieker wasn't so slick as some of his followers thought htm to
be.
THANKS to some one Gary has the unique distinction Of being the only American city where rioting, bloodshed, and rowdyism took place on election day. AFTER the first Monday "in January the mayor of Gary will know how it feels to be a private citizen.
TIGERS reported to have howled in Chicago zoo the other night. But their howls were nothing like those of the Tammany tiger. NEW YORK structural iron worker
was awarded $25,000 by a jury because he was Injured in such a manner that he can't laugh. Lucky fellow! Won't have to laugh at some of these aged jokes that his friends will spring.
CHICAGO has a new chief of police. Well Chicago isn't the only one. Some other nearby cities will have the same experience in January.
a yi''' I rail sun mr ii !.. an. aa. i,
NOW that some of the candidates have been decapitated the Thanksgiving turkey is the next to be lead to the block.
AS another inducement to get married bachelors having an income of 3.999 can be made immune to the
income tax by making some maiden happy. .
as bcu made for the flying machine
FIELD NOW man' even funTlier than bi goggles and
armurrs. It is a bottle with a tube, much like, the one baby feeds from. The rubber tube hangs down where the aviator can drink out of it while his hands are busy steering the machine. The
bottle is in cylinder over his head and is kept hot by water from the engine. Switzerland expect. a great increase in the business of its 80 silk mills, as a result of the V. S. tariff. German-American citizens of New York city are considering a plan to raise funds to help 50,000 unemployed of Berlin. In order that they may buy their fuel at better rates, the coal consumers of Manila have organised a cooperative association. London policemen earn a maximum of 8.96 per week. Including lodging allowances. A London fireman's maximum is $S.4Q a week, leas lodging charges.
The city of San Antonio, Tex., has raised the rate of pay for street laborers from a $1.50 rate per day to $1.75, and the teamsters from $3.25 to $3.50 per day.
Motions and Orders
Katrira In Room 2. 8573 Diamond Rubber Co. vs. Fred I Heinta etc., plaintiff dismisses at Its own costs. 8910 Atwood Lumber & Mfg. Co. vs. Calumet Contracting Co. et al. Finding for deft. U. S. Lumber Co. Finding for plft. against deft. Calumet Cont. Co. $3S2,22 judgment, j 9682 Independent Brewing Ass'n. vs. Herman Gadler et al. Made returnable Stb. Friday, November term, 191$. 8792 Mlhalovitch Co. vs. Solomon Goldsmith et al. Deft. Abraham Goldsmith files motion and aff. to eet aside default.
THE EEAL TAXPAYER. "Taxes don't bother me any," said a laborer recently, "I don't have to pay any." This is an error under which many voters are laboring. The Tery man who pays the most taxes is the man who is not taxed at all. He pays rent, grocery bills, interest on loans, coal, light, gas, water bills, etc. And when he pays these bills he pays taxes says an exchange. After the grocer has paid his taxes he includes them in the price of groceries. After the water works has
paid its assessment the price is injected into the price of water. After the coal dealer has paid his he passes them on in the price of coal. After the doctor has paid his he must make his fees cover them and so passes on the cost. The ultimate consumer pays all the bills and that includes all the taxes. If taxes are deceased living expenses will go down. When employers and merchants
can't get back their taxes by increasing prices they secure them by decreasing wages. The laborer who works for a factory that pays increased taxes will receive a decrease in wages in the long run. He who works for a store that has an increased assessment will find his income shrink. All of which Is but to say that as taxes go up the price of living follows and it is the ultimate consumer who pays the bills. And because more taxes mean heightened prices and shrunken wagns every wage worker has the most immediate interest in the question of city economy. If an adminis
tration is wasting money, if it keeps the tax rate unnecessarily high it is the wage worker who pays for the
waste.
FEAS.
Fear is one of the deadliest
enemies of success. In selecting a business the fear of failure prevents thousands from choosing what they
are bet suited to by nature.
The dread of hardship is educa
tion's foe. The fear of competition
bars many man from the path be would choose; and the horror of
death drives unnumbered millions
early into his clutches.
Fear palsies the body that should be courageously struggling. The horse wild with the fright of fire, rushes back Into the flames from which he has been led away. The
man terrified by a disease that
threatens him, falls a victim to it,
and insane asylums are filled with
nervous people who feared insanity
The power of confidence in aiding
accomplishment, and the power of
fear in retarding it, are manifestations of the same mental condition. Mind controls matter. Fear, is a manifestation of hatred, cowardice, vice or incompetence. The brain that fears, cannot originate. The hand that fears cannot perform skillfully. In all religions hell is a place of fear. Even the ancient's knew that the most extreme punishment possi
ble to imagine is fear without hope.
Fear comes through ignorance. We are afraid when we do not understand. What we can analyze and resist we cease to fear greatly, for we know that what we thoroughly understand we can eventually control. Ignorant people are most easily controlled by fear. Knowledge through labor brings light, heat, food. Insurance, and health. These things drive out fear, for fear is darkness, cold, want, uncertainty and disease acting upon the mind.
basket, and they are saved a lot of time and worry. That is not the root of the evil, and the republicans who are trying hard to save the protected interests will have to give a better excuse for the defeat of the bill. Marketing by telephone has come to stay. If Senator Bradley's wife wants to put on her mackintosh and goloshes and sprint eight or nine blocks after a box of matches and a cake of soap she's Quite welcome to do so.
SINGULAR PRINZ ADELBERT. Prince Adelbert of Germany, fourth son of the Kaiser, is likely to go down In history as-a woman hater. His aversion to the feminine sex became known, however only by accident a few days ago. Since he has been of age Adelbert has been wearing a beard which makes him resemble his uncle, Prince Henry of
Prussia, greatly His mother protest
ed against the hirsute adornment, de
claring that it made the prince look ten years older, so he shaved it off to oblige her. Asked why he liked a
beard, Prince Adelbert replied that he wanted to make himself so homely
that no woman would look at him.
His uncle does not seem to catch the
spirit of his illustrious nephew's ambi
tion, for Prince Henry has always re
garded his looks as highly satisfac
tory to himself, at least.
to
BRAVE MR. FTNKLESTEIN Our sincere congratulations
Lazarus Finkelsten of Chcago. Lazarus Flnkelstein, celebrated his 105th birthday and Yom Kippur to
gether. Ilia immediate family, consisting of sixty-five children, grand
children and great-grandchildren, as sembled to do him honor. Flnkel
stein is active and healthy, and takes
interest in politics, baseball, the fash
ons and pleasures of the young.
He talked of the changes he has
been since he was born in Poland
"I'm not behind the times because
I'm old; no, sir," he said. "I love to see the girls tango, and I'm for votes for women. I don't think much of
the slit skirt and those English ladies
who throw bombs at policemen and churches. When I was a boy but.
say, what's the score?"
Mr. Finkelstein keeps in close touch
with the standing of both Chcago
teams, and can give a complete his
tory of many of the players. He is neither a Sox nor Cub man. He's for
both of them.
By his sayings we can see that Mr.
Flnkelstein has reached the age of discretion and we hope he will live to be quoted ten years hence on the
practices then existent.
SHOPPING BY TELEPHONE.
Senator Bradley'a charge, made In
the Senate at the tariff debate, that the high cost of living is due largely
to housewives using the telephone o
order supplies, which are delivered
in automobiles, will find very little
support from the general public.
Women who market in this way
Vice versa if more economical do not pay any more for food than
methods are used every laborer and those who go out with a market
THE woman who wants a divorce because her husband has sulky fits and morose moods recalls the doctor who gave up his practice because
folks kept on getting sick.
SECRETARY Bryan Is quite right
in refusing to tell where his money goes. It is only reasonable to expect every man to find his own
places.
STILL it may be just as well to
keep the matches out of the reach of Mrs. Pankhurst during her sojourn here.
THERE probably won't be any out
cry against the turkey trot due to
begin in the barnyards in a few weeks.
HUERTA says he is willing to turn
his office over to a successor. Under
the same conditions Madero did?
Ben Hampton. Benjamin B. Hampton, who was recently elected a vice president of the American Tobacco company, entered the tobacco business through the field of journalism and advertising. In many ways his career has been typical of the hustling 9uccess-getting American life of today. At an early age Mr.
Hampton was proprietor and editor of his own paper. Leaving the field of Illinois journalism, he came to Xew York and worked with Charles Austin Bates iri the advertising business. Soon he had established an advertising agency of his own and this he rapidly built up until it was the foremost of its kind in the country. It was in this connection that Mr. Hampton first got his knowledge of the tobacco business, for the largest advertising account which his firm handled was that of the American Tobacco company. Later he established Hampton's Magazine and while editor of that periodical commissioned a special writer who gave the first true, impartial and complete report of the "Night Rider" situation. Since Mr. Hampton has been with the American Tobacco company he has specialized particularly on the "Tuxedo" brand of smoking tobacco and has mapped out the advertising campaign of personal testimonials to that brand which has proved so popular.
P "X t si ' '
t1
10
A COLORADO man has had his stomach removed. Ha ought to be able to get a job as a theatrical manager in New York now.
The Day in HISTORY
THE FLUELESS GAS-HEATER.
At this time of the year, when
many feel that it is not cold enough
to use the general heating system of
the house but is too cool to be en
tirely without heat, the use of porta
ble gas or oil-heating apparatus is a
great convenience. Cleanliness and
comparative low cost of operation
make this type of heating deservedly
popular. Unfortunately, many of
these heaters are used without a flue
pipe to carry oft the products of combustion. The use of such heaters is to be deprecated. This is especially true of those deylce's of low efficiency
that make it practically Imperative that the doors and windows be kept
closed if the object sought that of raising the temperature of the room is to be obtained. These heaters put a premium on insufficient ventil
ation. The current issue of a highclass monthly magazine carries a
full-page advertisement of a gasheater that is specifically recommended for use in the children's play
room, it is advertised as ' the ideal
heat for the nursery," and in heavy
type the claim is made that it "will
not vitiate the air." Such advertise
ments are dangerous, says The Journal of the American Medical Association. There may be times when one is willing to sacrifice health for com
fort for a short time; when an in
crease of temperature in the room is
sought even at the expense of vitiated air. When this is done with a
full knowledge of possible dangers, it is not bad but have ventilation in the room when you use the flueless
heater and better yet buy one supplied with a flue. ,
NOVEMBER IN HISTORY. 1519 Spaniards entered Jklexico, under Cortez. 1809 British Minister, Francis James Jackson, debarred from all intercouse with the American government by President Madison. 1S29 British government opened West India trade to the United States. 1835 New Tork and Erie railroad begun. 1861 Great slaughter on both sides at Battle of Belmont, Mo. 1904 Russians succeeded In making slight check on Japanese advance toward Port Arthur. ' 190$ President Roosevelt informed
prominent Jews who appealed to
him of his inability to prevent the slaughter of their coreligionists In Russia. 1912Presldent-elect Woodrow Wilson
receives congratulations from all
parts of the world. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS.
Congressman Horace Mann Towner of Iowa, is forty-siv; he Is a native of
Illinois and a lawyer by profession Has served aa judge of the third district of Iowa and is a lecturer on con
stitutional law at the State University of Iowa; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and re-elected to the
Sixty-third Congress.
LABOR NEWS
A GEORGIA man under sentence to be hanged next month has been re-elected president of his lodge. Per-
-haps the real contest was for the vice
presidency.
IT is said the tailors are deciding upon a new waist line for men. Will it be the Taft or the Wrilson model?
HARRY Thaw says he is on the water wagon. Tied oh, so to speak.
Negroes of New York and other
states are agitating the raising a fund for a memorial to be established in acknowledgement of the work done on the Panama Canal by members ef their
race.
Labor unions in France say that the
lot of French seamstresses will be considerably brightened by the Invention,
by a Frenchman, of a machine which
also plays a tune while the work Is
being done. Tie Industrial Commission of Wis
coneln has adopted a rule which Is designed to prevent the application of expert knowledge, gained In the state
service, for private benefit, as result of the resignation of one of its deputies in the free employment service to accept service with a large mining corporation. Miss Charlotte Smith, head of the Woman's Trade Broad of Boston, is so anxious to send BOO New England women and gtrla out west to find husbands, that she would send them by parcel post. If she eould. Falling in that she has asked James J. Hill of the Northern Pacofic Railroad to give them free transportation. There is some talk of manufacturers
including shoe firms, moving from Massachuetts on account of the many laws restricting their business and the close supervision of their business by government Inspectors. A vigorous protest against the importation of large numbers of Hindu laborers into California has been reg
istered with the immigration authorities at Washington by the California
-&.--sOSB.'""Varj
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Aluminum Ware
:is
a
Wagner's Cast Aluminum UUare Bemonstration at J. J. RUFFS Hardware Store 630 SOUTH HOHMAN ST. Every day this week and Friday and Saturday evenings by mms cut r.jcttERrjRiu an expert demonstrator from the factory. Ladies are invited to attend this particularly interesting demonstration. See our window display.
.X.Sv v :f.-i , ' r '$K I s tN, ' X ', iff- . . . - ..vfft.V- r .v ' ' r Y? UV 'it tKo flr! I - ? ' i ' jjrT' I I J . , " - I'vwli .-'1 . . :::. :::.:: - ; ---"----:&---'---- -. ... Vj:-i.:::'. .:iXiiL" - ! I Pabst Brewing Co. f ' i'V," y'-J Telephone 934-M l - - - ! Oakley and Fayette Street Hammond, Inri f - i ' 'Copyright 1913, Pabst Brewing Co A . v - 'xigi'Kf umi n . . .1 niiihhiih
