Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 41, Hammond, Lake County, 8 November 1913 — Page 8
1'AGE EIGHT
THE TIMES. November 8, 1913
Where to Worship Meetlngs at Various Himmond Cburcbes
Flret Splrltunllat Society. The First Spiritualist society of Hamsiond will meet Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock at Wels' ball. 98 Stat street On .Wednesday evening of each week, a Circle will be held at the home of Mrs. Emma Kroer, .292 Truman avenue.
Flnt Preebytertaa Caurck, Soatb Hohman street. Rev. A. W. Hoffman, pastor. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m Preaching service at 10:45 a. m. Christian Kndeavor at 6:30 p. m. Evening service at 7:39 p. m.
Ladles Aid Society Wednesday at 12 j oe-loe.k. I Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:43 p.,m. j Senior Social club Thursday at 8 j p. m. !
First Congregational Church. Goat 11b street. Malcolm J. Cameron, pastor. Residence, 131 Sheffield avenue. M. E. Zuver, Sunday school superintendent. Residence 109 Hohman at. Sumiay school at 9:45 a. m. - Morning service at 11 a. m. Music by chorus club. Junior Endeavor at 2 p. m. Evening Service at 7:30 p. m. Music by Chorus Club. Weekly meetings: Young men's chorus rehearsal, with Mr. Griffith Jones as director Monday evening at 7:30. Boy's Club, Tuesday evening at 7:30. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:S0. Ladies Aid Society Thursday at 3 p. m. Chorus Cluh rehearsal, Mr. ( Griffith Jones, director Thursday evening at 7:30. North Side Ladies Industrial Club meets the first Friday of every month. We cordially invite ' the public to attend all services.
711. Floyd H. Adams, pastor, residence 15 William st., phone 1131J. Mornng service, theme. "The Bible as Our Guide." 2:30 p. m. Mission at East Hammond 6:30 Baptist Young People's Union. 7:30 Evening service theme, "The Eighth Commandment."
Tuesday evening Baptist Brother
hood.
Ftrat Methodist Hplseopal church, j R'assel street. Frank O. Frailey, pastor. . Residence, 93 Russell st. Phone 1141M.
idence, 94 Russell street. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. LB. TChitezell, superintendent. Morning worship at 10:15. Sermon, "Spiritual Parasites." Special music by choir. Prof. Clark Learning director. Junior league at 2:30; the meeting for boys and girls Epworth League at 6:30, Mrs. Fraley. leader; Mr. Baksh of India will speak. Evening service at 7:30: Address, "The Religions of India," by Victor M. Ilahl-Baksh of Evanston, 111., a native of India. The Epworth League will also hold special meetings on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. W. F. M. S. meeting Tuesday at 2:30 p. m.. with Mrs. F. D. Hix. 765 Claude street. Choir rehearsal, Thursday, 8:00 p. m.
Pentecostal Church of the Naaareaet corner Michigan and Calumet avenues. Carrie L. Falmlee. pastor. SaDbath school at 9:46 a. m. Preaching service at 10:45 a. m. Praise meeting at p. m. . . Evening song service and preaching T:S0 m. Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. Bible study Friday, 7:45 p. m. All are welcome. Saturday, street meeting, corner Slbiey and Hohman streets. 8 p. income thou with us, we will do the good.
Evangelical Immannel Chorea, S4M Sibley street. 'Phone 1186-W. M. GHoefer, pastor; residence, 361 Sibley street. Plylne service at 10 a. m. Bible school at 2 p. m. German branch meets in church hall. English branch meets In church auditorium. Monthly session of Evangelical League, Friday at 7:30 p. m. , , Meeting of Men's League (a week earlier than usual on account of annual autumn market) Wednesday', 7:30 p. m. Choir rehearsal Tuesday at 8 p. m. St. Paul'e Lntheraa church, 65 CIIbm ton street. Rev. Theodore Claus, pastor. German service at 10 a. m. Special meeting of voting members after morning service. English Sunday school at 1:80 p. m. English service at 7:30 p. m. St. Paul's Lutheran League Wednesday at 8 p. m. Ladies' Aid Society Thursday at 2:30 p. m.
Christina Cbnrch, Calumet avenue
and Summer street. Phone 658. C. J. Sharp, pastor. Residence 520 Summer street, phone 1045J. Sunday services: Bible school at 9:30 a. m.
Communion and preaching service at
11:00 a. m. Junior Endeavor at 4:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor at 6:80 p. m. Evening- service at 7:30 p. m.
All are cordially invited to attend
any or all' services.
51 on roe Street Methodist Chapel.
The Rev. Purdy, pastor. Sunday school at 10:00 a. m. Preaching service at 11:00 a. m. Epwtfrth League at 6:80 p. m. Evening service at 7:30 p. m.
St. Joaeph'a chorea.
Sunday, 1st mass. 6; 2nd, 8; 3rd,
10:15.
Holy days, 1st mass, 5; 2nd, 7:30. 3rd
9:30.
Vespers, instructions and benedic
tion at 3 p. m.
Week day masses at 6 and 8 o'clock.
Christian Science Society, Hammond Build---Sunday morning services at 10:30. Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at 8 o'clock, Sunday school at 11:30 a. m. A free reading room is open (in (he same building) to ha public every week day from 2 to 5 p. m. Also on Tuesday and Friday evenings from 7:30 to 9. All are cordially welcome to our serricea and to visit the reading rooms.
!on Germaa M. E. Chorea, 2r3 Traman avenue. Residence, 204 Truman
venue.
Rev. F. Karnopp. minister. Phone
1193M.
Sunday School at 9:30 a. m. William
Lau, Supt.
Preaching service at 10:30 a. m.
Theme, "The Word of God." Epworth League at 7 p. m. F. Sle grist, leader. Preaching service at 7:30 p. m.
Revival meetings Monday evening at
7:45 and every evening of this week,
except Saturday evening. Gospel sing
ing and music is expected. Rev. J. A. Jandre of Beaver Dam, Wis., will be the preacher of this week,
Come and hear the simple gospel - of
Jesus Chirst.
Friday evening at 9:00 p. m., practice
of the choir.
Saturday at 9:30 a. m. German school
free for all.
Our German friends are most
heartily Invited to attend any or all
of these services.
First Baptist Church) Services In
Baptist hall over the Lion store. Phone
BAM
WITH TUB
Citizens German National Bank U. S, Governmont Depositary
OUR MOTTO? No Deposit too Large for lT to Protect, Or too Small for us to Appreciate.
. Wa Pay Ycu 'ntsrest on Your Savings Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent.
SHOCKING
STREET SCENE
Continued from page one.)
ii if av r jt -s-k- t a r a JW r a
ran imi
i-J las'
official position as a pres reporter, and a teacher In the public night schools.
With her husband she came to Hammond at the beginning of tne 1912 term of school. Prior to that Mr. Tillman was in the faculty of the Lebanon high school where he had established the department of science. Mrs. Till
man was twenty-eight years of age.
She was born on the fifteenth of Febru
ary, 1885.
WILL PROSECUTE DRIVER. The team which ran wild causing the
fatality had been left to stand in front of the Helmke grocery store, 230 State street. They ran away but did not become wild until at the corner of State and Oakley they swerved suddenly, frightened at a car. Mrs. Tillman was crossing from the west side of Oakley avenue to the east when caught half
way between curbs. She was knocked to the pavement and dragged for a few feet and then, falling prostrate.
the wagon passed over her. At the
time Mrs. Elisabeth Daugherty was walking towards the corner from the
north. She barely escaped.
HAD A PRESENTMENT.
Mrs. Tillman was lifted from under
the wagon by Mrs. Daugherty and a man. whose name is not obtainable. Mrs.
Tillman died in the arms of the woman.
who not until today, learned her identi
ty. It develops that Mrs. Tillman and
Mrs. Daugherty were once acquainted
at Rensselaer, the latter's home town. That Mrs. Daugherty did not recognise
the other during the minutes following the accident indicates the excited state of her mind. Mrs. Tillman was carried
into a. nearby drug store. She was
pronounced dead by a doctor and taken to Stewart's morgue in the police pa
trol.
HAD A PRESENTIMENT. At the home of Lewis L. Daugherty,
195 Logan street, the house wife said that her guest, Mrs. Elizabeth Daugh
erty had told of having a presentiment
early yesterday which kept her from
keeping an appointment In . Chicago. "She said," Mrs. Daughtery told a reporter, "that she saw a commotion, a crowd, and gained the Impression that someone had been hurt. She was to have taken the nine o'clock train on the Erie for Chicago on which friends were traveling. Thought in good health and spirits her feeling of dread had held her back. At twenty minutes of four she started for town to shop and a few minutes later had a narrow escape from death." HAS HAD DIRE EXPERIENCES. Mrs. Elisabeth Daugherty is a widow who has spent the last few years o( her life traveling. She states that it has been her lot to see tragic sights and have narrow escapes, especially while traveling by railorad.. "I have been in a number of disastrous wrecks." she said. ON WAY TO POSTOrriCB, Mrs. Tillman was on her way to the postoffice when the runaway horses charged upon her. Tillman was waiting at Central school for her company to a supper in the Russell street Methodist church. She was in the best of health and spirits. Mrs. Daugherty, the most reliable
witness owing to the fact that she
watched Mrs. Tillman every minute.
states that the team did not run wildly down State street. Mrs: Tillman in
turn had her attention centered on a couple of children who were crossing the street and appeared in danger. The team forged ahead and turned at the corner giving no one a chance to escape. An active man would have probably been caught under the same conditions. ' COMPANY MAKES INQUIRIES. Officer James Trost secured the ar
rest of the driver, John Gehrke, and has sufficient witnesses to convict him of violating a city ordinance. The Inlander and Stelndler company today made inquiries into the case.- Public sentiment demands that the carelessness of horse drivers aa well as motorists cease. Officers have been instructed to rigidly enforce the trafTic laws, a matter in which the chief of police is particularly strict. The police were at a loss for means of identification after the body had been removed to the morgue. A purse containing Mrs. Tillman's card was found however in the rear of A. E. Kepert's drug store where it had been taken together with an umbrella be
longing to her.
Someone recognized the wavy brown
hair, still beautiful in death. "She is a teacher In the night school, 'the party told the police. "There can be no mistake, the hair identifies her."
CALL ON SECRETARY. Miss Bertha Hansen, secretary to C.
M. McDaniel at the board of education, was called by police sergeant Borchert. She hurried to the morgue and recog
nised Mrs. Tillman at once.
Thb Times was on the street by that time carrying a bulletin of the acci
dent. When the news became general
scores of friends hurried to do what
they could in consoling and aiding Mr. Tillman. The flowers that were taker to Stewarfs morgue today are most
beautiful and profuse. At the services this morning the chapel was packed
with members of the Woman's Club teachers and other friends.
Dr. Chldlaw, deputy coroner will hold
an inquest at four o'clock Monday. Other witnesses are Fred Siiger and Ben Depaoli.
condition the first few days of the street car strike. Mobs overran the streets. The city police force was absolutely demoralized and failed to handle the situation. It was Just before the city election. It was practically certain that the Democrats would carry the election, and this would mean a change of administration the first of the year. The members of the police department were impressed with the idea that they had better not do much In the strike, for fear that they might offend those who will compose the Incoming administration. The city administration did not give the police any definite orders to stop the disorders, because It was afraid that such action would hurt the Republican ticket at the city election. The result was that nobody did anything. Politics of the rottenest character was played by both sides. Got Beyond Control. Finally the city administration announced that it could not control the situation and put down disorder. Tt said that the sheriff must take charge. The city administration is Republican and the, sheriff is a Democrat. The eherlff then began to sidestep the issue by picking out about 150 of the leading business men, manufacturers and professional men of the city for
service as deputy sheriffs, and it was ' noticeable that most of the men were j Republicans and many of them active In politics. Charges of political manipulations were made against the sheriff but he denied it.
These deputies were sworn In. Some of the wealthiest men in town were among them, including big bankers. Then it began to dawn on the sheriff's party that this move had been a boomerang. It had been thought that the business men would decline to serve and that the sheriff could then say that he had done all he could and the whole
business would be shoved off his hands to the governor. Everybody was trying to get out from under the responsibility in the matter. But the business men responded and were sworn in and were ready for serlce as deputies. Governor Got Busy. It was about this time that the outlook become so threatening as to induce the governor to call out the state troops. Agitators were threatening a general strike all over the state. Ther were threats of a general strike of all trades in this city, and it looked as If they might carry out the threat. Attempts were made to run cars and mobs prevented it, and three men were killed and scores hurt. Then the governor quietly called out the troops and they were at the gates of the city before the strike leaders knew of it. The, governor made it plain that the troops were here only to preserve order but that they would preserve order, regardless of eerythlng. It was then that negotiations for a settlement of the strike were started. The strikers had been demanding arbitration and the company said there was nothing to arbitrate. But' it was here that the governor got in his work. He acted as' the intermediary and passed the propositions and counter-propositions back and forth. He even cut some pro visions out'of the propositions himself, which' he said had no business to be there. He showed a firm hand but a desire for peaceful settlement, and after several hours of bickering back and forth, in which both sides haggled over minor details, the governor himself prepared a written proposition and said to' the conference that they had foo'e- rround until he was tired of it. He told them that a settlement must be made, and that the proposition which he prepared must be accepted by both sides. There was no more, following around. He brought them to time with a sudden Jerk. The whole dispute is submitted to the public service commission as a board of arbitration.
In all of this time not a soldier was
seen on the streets. They were kept in the armories and in the state house. They will return home without having
turned out once on the streets. The
governor's strategy did the work, and he is being congratulated.
mm
RALSTON'S ATTITUDE
PRAISED
(Continued from page one.)
lfifl aclrfo All nf hi. own rtnllttcn.1 rn
nMftrfttlnna a.nd rone abnvA that 1 vol
and it is this fact that has brought to him-the congratulations of many citizens. CWy In Bad Shape. Indianapolis was' to a deplorable
CLUB PUTS BAN OH THE
TANGOING
(Special to TtB Times.) Whiting. Ind., Nov. 8. The tan and the tang in tango as it is danced in
Whiting Is barred. The tango will
find no welcome at the Owl Club in Whiting, which for the past several years has been the leading pleasure organization in this city. The question, "Shall we dance the tango?" has been discussed pro and con by the members since this dance came into popularity. The annual meeting of the organization was held at the club's headquarters this week, at which this was one of the Important features. The question was put to a vote and the side against the tango won by a large majority. As a result those in favor of having the dance are much peved, but will have to abide by the decision nevertheless. The election of officers for the ensuing year was another important transaction of the annual meeting, the new officers being as follows: President James M. Stover.
Vice President Alvin Meldahl. Secretary and Treasurer Harry F. Etter. Executive Committee Ray Whitmer, Roy E. Green and R. C. Harris. The club is contemplating the installation of a new swimming pool of which is to be added by an addition to the rear of the building, next to the dance hall.
NOTHING IS OF GREATER 1HPOR. TAJs'CE TO YOTT THAN TO KEEP POSTED ON PASSING EVENT 8 IN FOUR LOCALITY BY READING! TUB TIMES EACH EVENING.'
tor Smmolkeirs aedfl
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Thi3 Premium List Will Be Good And In Effect Until Dec. 31st, 1914.
H1E-SG0TTEN
00.
12th and Porter Sts.
Detroit, Michigan.
