Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 133, Hammond, Lake County, 11 November 1913 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE TIMES. Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1913. T E TIMES FORT SHERIDAN SOLDIERS ENTRAINING FOR RUSH TO MEXICAN BORDER. andom THirsGis a ISO FLiiNaa NEWSPAPERS Or Th Lake County Printing aad Publis at a g Company. L"

1

o 5 h q if P

r fi h tl t vi ei ri pi it a 5

The Time East Chicago-Indiana

Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofnce tn East Chicago. September 25. 1 913.

The Lake County Times Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Hammond. Jane 8, 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 post office in Gary. April 13, llt. All under the act of March . 1879. as second -class matter.

St'LTAX f Morocco la said to have Just married kU fortieth vr i f e. Mont fce trylag to outdo t Goodwin.

COAL, men aay that coal won't go up In price this winter. Well, this wort't help us out any. Landlord will he Just as stinpy as ever about the steam heat.

rOREIO ADTEJITISIHO 11 Rector BviUtng

OFFICIOS. Chicago

ALL eyes are on Argentine wheat crop, says a cable. Bat just the same T. It. thinks that he will command the bulk of the attention while he is

at that end of the world.

TKI.KJPTHO-KKS, HJtmnnxvd (private achaAga) . . . . . .111 (Call for department wanted.) Gary O trice .... Tal. Ill Eaat Chicago OS lea. ........ .Tel. 140-J Indiana. Harbor.. ....... TeL SI9-M; IS Waiting ..TeL SO-M Crown Point Tel. jtwl Tal II

Advertlaiag solicitors Will te sent, or

rats given on application. If you tiavn any trouble getting Tba

Times notify the nearest fflc have it promptly remedied.

LARGER PAID CP CIUCITUATIOM THAW AJtY OTHE TWO KBW. PAPERS IN THE CAI.TJlHrr KSMCS. ANONTMOU3 communloatlans wii not fc "noticed, tout, other will be printed at discretion, on4 ahold to drossd to'Tha EdHor, Ttmoa, Ifamtnond. Ind.

ASTRONOMERS at Harvard are quarreling: over whether .Mara is inhabited. If they were newly-married

they would be kicking about steam in the house and would be quarreling with the laundress instead.

were ordered to Indianapolis on strike duty their mothers, wives, sisters and

sweethearts were at the depot to bid them weeping forewells. And when they arrived at the scene Of action the boys complained that, they had to steep in a steam-heated basement with no other beds than blankets and straw ticks. Bhades of the suffering men at Valley Forge!

UP in Wisconsin farmers shoot careless hunters who wing them in mistake for a deer. Now if the foolkiller who rocks the boat and the "didn't know It was loaded" person who points a pistol at people could meet a similar fate this world would be better off.

QUAIL season opened yesterday. Men assert your rights and demand That The missus Have quail on toast.

FRENCH scientist declares that some flowers feel pain. No question but that some modest violets weep

when they behold the modesty of

soma statesman.

WAR is certainly hell. Last week; when the brave Indiana militia boys

FATTEST man in Seattle has gone to the tropics to try a mosquito treatment to reduce his flesh. Better to be stung by the mosquitoes than by some of the quack doctors that the

Chicago Tribune speaks of.

TX

433

Stated meeting- Garfield Lodge, No. 669, F. and A. 11., Friday, November 14,

8 p. m.. E. A. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S. GaJer, Sec. E. M. Ehanklln. W. M.

EMi DAY

Hammond Chapter No. 117. R. A. II. Regular stated meeting Wednesday, November 11, Moat Excellent degree. Visiting companions welcome-

Hammond Council No. 90 R. & S. M.

Btated assembly, first Tuesday each

month. J. W Morthland, Recorder.

Hammond Commander; No. 41, K. T. Regular Btated meeting Monday, November 17, Red Cross work. Visiting Sir Knights welcome.

HOW THE LEAVES CAME DOWN. Til tell you bow the leaves came dowu,"

Ta arreat traa tm bin rhlltlrra aald. "leu're netting aleepy. Yellow and

Brown. Yea, very aleepy. little Heat It fa quite time to so to bed." "A!" begged each silly, pointing leaf. "Let oa a little longer wtay.

Dear Fatber Tree, bebold onr grief! Tta rack a very pleasant day, Wa do not want to go away." So, for Jnst one more merry day To tb great tree t he leaflets clang. Frolicked and daaeed and bad their way. Upon tbe autumn breesea awnng,

Wblaperlng all their sports among.

uPtrtp tbe great tree will forget And let na atay until tbe spring

If we all beg, and coax, and fret.". ,

Bat tbe great tree did no such thing:)

Ha smiled to bear their wblaperlng,

Help this town

Votes for Worn- NatX? , t Vw l.fl

L f , ,., - i ' i trvJ? ' --v - ri -- x w- ' x - . .s. t i jrjHssbnManasaaBanaas aanjannnsaaanwannia" M"nICvVr"'ewannvasasrwaHa

IiONnON evolutionist who just died made ferewell statement that the world hasn't progressed any since the days of the Egyptians. Chances are that if the tango hadn't sprung up Just before ha passed away he wouldn't have become such a pessimist.

IF we get war with Mexico it will be up to some one to write a poem about "All is quiet along the Eio Grande tonight."

ter way to go? If your neighbor had a truck farm from which he planned to sell you and your other neighbors his produce, and you and your neighbors sent to the city for your veget-

and Mrs. Frederick William PethlckLawrence, who left the militant or-

ables, could the truck gardener con-1 ganization ,at the request of Mrs. tlnue to raise produce? If your Emmeline Pankhurst, and took with

home merchants have purchased goods and brought them here for your

convenience and you send to the city

for the very same articles which the

home merchant carries, can he con

sistently continue in his efforts to

serve you?

healthy;

them their paper.

en." To the world this looks like sur render, but Great Britain probably knows her own' business best. Next question is whether Mrs. Pankhurst, who has fought, bled and been forcibly fed for the cause, will

contribute your share toward the im- consent to be ignored in the final re-

be cried, urge their

"Come, children, all to bed!" And ere the lea-vea could

prayer He shook bis bead, and far and wide, Flntterlag and rastllng everywhere, Down aped tbe leaflets through tbe air.

I Mir them on the ground they lay, Golden and red. a huddled swarm. Waiting till one from far away. White bedclotbes beaped upon ber

VALE, JACK! Jack Dorland is dead. Jack was a tramp printer and only to newspaper men Is It really known what a tramp printer is. Belonging to the old school when hand composi

tion was an art, this day was not his day. The tramp printers accept It philosophically. They never complain. There may be a hollow ; in their stomachs and the seat of their unmentionables may be out, but they smile Just the same. They know how to grin and bear and to give of their bit when they have It to their still more unfortunate brother. Some times we envy them In their free and easy Vagabondia. They are not tied

down in life. When the call comes in spring they can wander. Of these Jack Dorland was one. Proud? Why Jack fought in the great civil war attached to a general's staff! He carried a bullet in his body to the day of his death. He wouldn't take a king's ransom for his war experience and he was Just a tramp printer. It was the Open Way he loved.

n u . . I back yard and the sewers of the

shOD of today with his head ud in reon

the air, pass a clicking whirring bat- The linking water as it is now tery of high-strung linotypes as if wl11 P'obably cause a lot of sickness they were nothing and stride into the in Hamraond' Tnere Is o course no comnosine room where he could smell means of knowing Just what sickness

occurring in tne city witnin tne next

few weeks may be attributed either

provements necesary to make this

town a beacon light a leader instead of a trailer. If this town is good enough for you to live in it is unworthy of you to refuse to help in keeping it healthy.

suit, or become the Sir Edward Carson of an Ulster revolution or suffra-

igettes and keep fighting anyway.

Should come to wrap them, safe and warm.

be

The great hare Tree looked down smiled.

Good-nIgbt, dear little leaTea," aald, And from below each aleepy child

Replied. "Good-night," and mar-

mured t "It Is so nice to go to bed!" Susan Coolyidge.

IT'S TWO HEADED NOW. When the progressives nominated William Sulzer for the assembly in

the Sixth district, George W. Perkins

said this to Francis Bird: "You had better cable to Col

Roosevelt that .tne, progressives are

longer " a ; e-man-arty.M-"New

CLEAN HANDS. The assertion Is sometimes made that it is alone the "filthy habits" of the typhoid carrier that .make him ,a

public danger. If he could be made no

to wash his hand3, it is alleged, I York Evening Post.

transference of infection would be Drevented. Those who rc?aril hap.

terial cleanliness as simply a matter! NOW ISN'T IT.

of careful hand-washing says the Two men rougnt desperately in a

American Journal of Medicine are Hammond restaurant the other day

likely to obtain disappointing results because Bome peas rolled off the knife

if n rcrant oTnormc f r-e,. Kwiof one into the coffee or another s

Cummins is at all indicative of what dinner. Foolish thing to fight-about

may occur under ordinary conditions Most coffee is largely dried peas

of life. This observer, after dipping

the printer's ink. He would lean on an old stand of type, ask for a chew of tobacco and be happy. He was

greeted with a smile and had a word of good cheer for everybody. It was an event when Jack dropped in the shop. Things might be going wrong while everything was going top speed and it would be dangerous for an intruder to step into that "holy of holies," a modern print shop five minutes before press time but Jack could always get in.

Good old Jack Dorland! Our last wish for him is that he got Into Heaven as easy as he got into the composing room and we'll wager everything that's coming to us next Saturday that when old St. Peter saw Jack at the golden gate, he said, "Hello Jack, come in, how's tricks?" And Jack answered, "Oh, so-so."

directly or Indirectly to the water,

but there will no doubt be plenty of It. We'd feel sorry for a boiler that had to be fed with Hammond's drinking water now let alone a human

stomach. ,

the right index-finger in a solution containng typhod baclll, proceeded to carry out measures of cleansng as follows: 1. Rinsend In cresol solution. 2. Then hold the finder under the tap, rinsing first in cold, then in very hot water. 3. Washed very carefully in about 0.5 c.c. of sterile water, in a watch-glass, and plated the whole of the water used for

this purpose. Result: Three hundred and thirteen colonies of Bacillus typhosus on the piate. 4. After the washing in sterile water mentioned, the tip of the finger was thoroughly soaked In absolute alcohol, allowed . to dry, and the

washing in sterile water repeated. The "washings'" were again "plated." Result: Four colonies of B. typhosus. " Even when the fingers are thoroughly rubbed with a towel and

BILL SHOULDN'T WORRY.

Our news columns carried a story

yesterday from Cincinnati something

like this: "William Doolan, a political employe of this city, wants to know what is growing out of one of his fingers. A growth which began today resembles hair, and in one hour grew twenty Inches. X-ray examination ahows that Dolan's full of It.'

. We 6hould be greatly alarmed were

we Bill. Let it grow. 'Tis a human

gold mine. If Bill keeps on he can

be used for skin grafting on sensi

tive bald heads, belonging to editors and others of their ilk.

Maj. Mm McSmm mtudying thm mp of Mexico,

The Day in HISTORY

NOVEMBER Jit IJT HIsTOIWV r

1620 Pilgrims elected John Carver

governor of th enew colony.

194 Treaty concluded at Canadaluga

between the United States and the Six Nations.

1835 Many vessels and lives lost In a

tempest on Lake Erie.

18S0 Lueretta Mott, labolltlonist and

pioneer advocate of woman's rights, died in Philadelphia. Born

In Nantucket, . Mass., January 3 . 1793.

1889 State of Washington admitted to

the Union by proclamation of

President Harrison.

1911 King George and Queen Mary

sailed for India to attend the Dur bar. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HOXORS.

Alfred Fried, the noted Austrian peace advocate, who last year was one of the two recipients of , the Nobel Teace prUe, was born in Vienna, November, 11. 1864. In early life he

was prominent as a publisher. Later

he became editor of "The Journal

Friedens-Warto." Since 1891, he has

devoted himself almost exclusively to

the International peace movement. He was founder of the German Peace so

ciety, and has published a great many

articles on books on -the peace question. In the distribution of the Nobl awards In 1910, Dr. Fried shared the

prise with Prof. T. M. C. Asser of Th Netherlands.

UP AND DOWN IN -N-D-I-A-N-A

SEEKS TOO MANY HCSBANDS. Mrs. Julia Smith, a waitress of Columbus, was prevented from com-miting-bigamy late Saturday afternoon by Deputy County Clerk Joseph Houk, when he refused a marriage license to her and John Shtreman. While filling out her marriage blank, the deputy clerk recalled that an untriedsult for divorce, in which she was the plaintiff, was pending In the Circuit Court at Columbus. Mrs. Smith insisted that she ought to know that she was di

vorced, saying she was in court when the decree was granted, but the records failed to verify her statement, as did also her attorney. JAIL. BREAKER RECAPTURED. Floyd Mullen, who escaped from jail at Brookville, Ind.. yesterday morning and stole a hors and bug-gj- belonging to Charles Stinger, a, farmer living east

of Brookville, was traced to Liberty,

Ind., where he was arrested. He had the rig with him. He was returned to Brookville.

PROPOSES WINTER "FlY WAR." Kokomo's flies are to have no peace. Dr. Will J. Martin, city health officer, proposes to organize the school children to carry on an all-winter "swat the fly" campaign. "One dead fly now means that 6,000,000 of his posterity will not be born next summer," says Dr. Martin. The health officer hopes to offer cash inducement to boys and girls to search cellars, attics and all the other winter hiding places of the flies and to effect a thorough cleanup of fly-breeding places In Kokomo.

THERE ARB MORIS THAN THREB TIMES MORE TIMES CIRCULATED EVERY DAPY THAN ALL THE OTHER DAILY PAPERS IN LAKE COTJNTY PUT TOGETHER.

(BtQWRILHD us. dDlHUEl BY MORT Mm BURGER. Oliver Wins The Girl This Time. "Oswalds" Turn Next.

NO SYMPATHY FOR THEM.

Parbleu! and various other foreign

the danger of finger infection there- expletives. Is it not terreeble what

by lesened, it is obvious that the

towel in its turn may become infected. .

OUTRAGEOUS WATER. Hammond's water supply 13 nothing short of shameful. Since the gale of Sunday the drinking water resembles nothing more than plain

liquid mud. The Almighty only knows what manner of disease and

filth there is In it, but it Is outrage

ous that people have to drink it.

Some day the people of Hammond

will get their water from a point far

out in the lake through a tunnel

which will provide them with pure

water and plenty of It. It won't be

sucked out of a beach laden with

KEEP THE TOWN HEALTHY.

The life of thi3 town, like the life, of a human being, well says the Joliet News, should be held sacred by everyone who calls it home. This town, like the human being, needs nourishment and care if it is to be

come a factor In things material. A

town is as likely to become ill, so to speak, as a man, woman or child.

Who is to help it regain a healthy

and vigorous condition, if not those

who make it their home? The ills of a town are, for the most part, of

such a nature that they can be pre

vented, and those which are not can

be cured. There is a remedy for every disease likely to inocculate a

town. Physiology teaches that cleanliness is a necessary adjunct to the health of the human body. This is true of this town. How about refuse and garbage? Is your backyard or alley such that you are not ashamed of either? Disease and sickness lurk in unclean places. How about the

streets.' would you travel over a

FULL OF MILK AND THINGS. One of our exchanges advertises a

cow for sale as follows: "Fullblooded cow for sale, giving milk, three

tons of hay, a lot of chickens and

several stoves." While we have al

ways had the greatest respect for

gentle, meek-eyed bossy, we never

suspected for a moment that she

would branch out into the Junk shop business. And she full-blooded, too'. No "yaller" dog or posthole in her make-up. Too bad! too bad! Hazel Green (Ky.) Herald.

Impurity and filth from Chicago's bad stret or road If there were a bet

"THROWN DOWN." Conciliation, compromise, forbear

ance, reciprocity, give and take, you-

scratch - my - back - and - I'll - scratch-

yours are the main props of politics, but Great Britain is Just now considering a deal that distances anything

along that line. , The government is said to be entertaining a proposition to grant women suffrage on the unqualified

repudiation by $ta advocates of the Women's Social and Political Union and all its militant methods. This means recognition of the constitutional suffragists headed by Mr.

they do to les chapeaux these customs inspectors? One cannot have

the aigrettes nor yet the feathers ut the pheasant or grouse in one's hat but they request one to take them

out when one arrives en vapeur and

if one does not pout! they take

away the hat and all. Zut alors! and

then again, Donner und Blitzen!

Such are the sentiments of the fair

opera singers and their less tuneful sisters who arriving from Europe almost daily on the great transatlantic liners. It is estimated that over $20,000 worth of fine feathers have been destroyed since the new law, went In

to effect permitting passengers to

land in the United States wearing plumage on their headgear or Includ

ing it In their baggage. Pretty hard to squeeze out any sympathy for aigrette wearers how

ever when you think of the cruelty

practiced In getting them. ' r $25.00O FIRET AT AlDtSY.

The three-story brick building at 606 and BOS Pear street. New Albany was destroyed by fire of unknown origin

yesterday morning, entailing a loss of J25.000. The building was occupied by

the New Albany Furniture Company

as a wareroom and by M. T. Enos for a

mill The entire contents were de Btroyed.

Smoke MeHIe Canadian Club Mix

tore, for pip or cigarette, beat that

leaf and skill a produce. Adv. -

Blwftfrt KC TO MEET I Vwo) 2 TfRT"'frc I

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what W) s-r-WLM,T5 M ( T GOO. IUFTVJI ja J4ftlt.!?B&V. 1 &J) "wmA

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