Hammond Times, Volume 6, Number 236, Hammond, Lake County, 26 March 1912 — Page 4
Tuesday, April 26, 1912. THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Edlter TiHMt . X take tbl xnaaaa ta Gary -mills bid fair to obtain an encellent record for safety. Yet despite the beat of precautions and the einCHICAGO SOCIETY LEADER WHO HAS GONE IN FOR CLASSIC DANCING) advise the Republicans of Lake county that I am a candidate for th office, of BNtv n).lit in the wishes of tha Republican eouaty nominating conven-' cerest of efforts accidents will occur tln, and respectfully aoltcit their sup-land the past record of tne company 87 The Lake Coaaty Prtatlus; 4 Pobport It they find that my work for tha heave us to judge that the unfortunate llshfasr Cam pa ay. party in tha past is wormy 01 conaxaaffair was entirely unavoidable. ration. HENRY WHITAKKR The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered aa aecond-claaa mat Editor Timks: Please announce to ter June SI. Ur; Toe Lake County Time. daily except Saterday and Sun THUS SPAKE ZAUATHTJSTRA. I am for Presidential preference primaries in every State where I know I can't get them. toy frienaa over jusae county mas am a candidate for tha republican V !i day, entered Feb. S. 111; The Gary nomination for Sheriff, and that I ask '''."V 1 V- " Evening Tin, daily except Sunday. their support at tha Republican coun v'-:v"5 entered Oct. I, 19; The Lake County Times. Saturday and wkly edition. ty convention, whoae date la ta be an-I :P"Tt-r-r'A-, counced later. Presidential preference primaries that show a preference for anybody else than Me are the tyranny of an entered Jan. 89, 191U The Times, daily FRED FRIEDLEY. exeeDt Sunday. enterd Jan. 18. lilt, at the Bestoffica at Hammond. Indiana, COMMISSIOVER, 2nd DISTRICT. a:i under the aet of March 3, 1ST. unscrupulous minority over an hon-
THE THXE3.
if"""""' ' ' "L
t
Entered at the Posfofflce, Hammond.
Ind.. as second-class matter.
announce- that I will be a candidate forT"
the Republican renomination to the of-
There is but one absolutely trust-
Use of County commissioner from the worthy and wholly incorruptible
FOREIGN 1J Rector
ADVERTISING Building -
OFFICES, Chicago
Second district, subjoot to the wishes of the Republican primaries on March
28. LEVI HUTTON.
It
PUBLICATION OFFICE, HammoaJ Ruttdiag. Hammond.
Ind.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE. Editor Tnssa: Tou will please an
nounce my candidacy for the Repnbll-
Presidentlal preference primary:
is My Mind and My CkJunt. It Is as- much the duty of decent citizens to oppose a Presidential pref
erence primary that does not produce I A WORMY chestnut vendor In St
a Plurality for Me as to suonort anv Faul was st to Jail for 60 days. We
can nomination for Representative for district or other convention that pro-
TELKPFf ONES, Hammond (private eschanx-e) CCall for department wanted.)
Ill
Lake County, aubject to the Republi
can primaries March 18.
R. R. QVIIXAN.
Gary Office..... East Cfcieairo Office... Indiana Harbor....... Whltlnr f Crown Point.
.....Tel. 1ST ...Tel. 4T5-R
..TeW 5H-tt ...Te 10-U TeL
Editor Timus: Please announce that
II will be a candidate for the republican nomination for Repreaentatlve
from Lake county aubject to the de'clalon of the Republican primaries.
as. WIDHOLM. Gary, Ind.
Advertlalnc aoUcitors Will to aot ef
rataa erlren en application.
ir you have any troubla g-ettln The Ttipen notify the nearest office and
have It promptly remedied.
LARGER PAID CP CIRCtTl-ATIOTI
THAN AST OTtnCR TWO VKVVS-
PAPKttS IX THE CAttMET REGION.
AJJ0NTM0U9 communications will
not be noticed, but others will be
orinted at discretion, and should be
addressed to The Editor. Times, Ham'
tnond. Ind.
duces delegates for Me. '
I prefer the Ward system to the im
proper Presidential preferential State
primary. ,
The will of the people is defeated
whenever and whereever I am defeatled. . ' 1
The mathematics that counts Me
out Is a reactionary and a M. A. C. I
am the majority.
There is still an
can see that smile of rejoicing as you think, of the last one you bit into.
MINNESOTA woman is growing
her third set of teeth and second head
of hair. Dentists and friseurs are
kindly asked not to send flowers.
THE county candidates expect to
have little sleep this week and th?
overwhelming I family may as well kiss father good
for JTDce, lake siterior cocrt popular supply of Me on hand. New by and forget him until Saturday.
am a candidate for the office fivnrV R,m I
I
Judge of tha Lake Superior Court,
Room 3. aubject to the decision of the Republican primaries. March 21. 1912.
GEORGE II. MAKLOVE. Gary. Ind.
DO YOUR WORK FIRST.
HEAVENS do you suppose you will
be reading tomorrow morning that
l
they have been kicking Mr. Taft's
COMMERCIAL CLUB NEEDS.
A man who will break his neck to 1 dog around at Indianapolis.
get an official title before he will un
dertake to do the work that needs
Rut few nnnnTe hpptti to rmnatlan
Ithe need of a commercial club in t0 be done to &a,Q U- 13 u"7 not
Hammond. The great majority of the progressive citizens of Hammond are
now earnestly pledged to the work of
competent to do the work.
iNODoay is more ridiculous than a
man with a title that is bigger than
EVERY, once in a while you will
near Borne lenow start out and say.
"Yes I was always a hot admirer of
Col. Roosevelt but
securing members to the club which ne and tne P' w"h even-
435
TO CANDIDATES.
Articles tat tha latere eaaidl- i dates for office wtll net he printed la The Times except at rexolar ad
vert Uta rate. .
Political Announcements
for AiDrron.
Editor Timkj: I desire to announce that I ant a candidate for tha Republi
can nomination for County Auditor,
subject to the decision of the Republi
can primaries. The aupport and as
alatanee of the Republican voters pf
Lake country are respectfully solicited.
(Slffned) J OH A. RRKKKAK. Gar. Ind.
Editor Timks: Tou are hereby au
tnorlted to announce that I am a candidate for the Republican nomination
for Auditor of Lake county, and I ask the aupport of the Republican voters of Lake county at the primaries to be
held March 29.
ALEXANDER JAMIESON.
has already been tentatively or
ganlzed.
Some of the big things that a Ham
mond civic federation or commercial
club could take hold of would bo the
following:
1. The devefopment of rivers and
harbors by working In conjunction with the other commercial clubs of the region.
2. The laying out of parks and
boulevards around which superstruc
ture the city la to be built.
3. The building of homes to take
care of the men who are employed In
the nearby mills.
4. The furtherance of Mayor
Smalley's plans for the annexation of
new territory.
5. The extension of street car
lines to add to the purchasing power
of a nickel and the convenience of the
public. 6. The influencing of real estate
men to lay out their subdivisions ac
cording to modern ideas. 7. The development of civic pride an dthe city beautiful.
teen initials after his name usually! IP the boarding house garnishee is deserves three more that symbolize put out of commission, it Is not going
Missouri's favorite animal. to be such profitable work after all be-
Any man with an overdone title 1 ing a J. p
will get into the same trouble as
Abraham Lincoln's trifling little steamboat on the Sangamon, with a
overlooked. YOUNG people have given a prospective Greenfield brido a shower of chickens. In these days of practlbilltles would it not be a good idea to give an engaged girl a shower of eggs or a few
hundredweight of hard coal? NO doubt the purchaser of a spring
auto now feels that the weather permits him to run out to the garage and
take a peep at his new buy.
HENNERY COLDBOTTLE mourns the
happy days of yore when the ejection
aws did not prohibit ambitious candi
dates from spending a five epot over the bar. .
AT last the famous United Press
has done a good service. The 'steemed
Gary Trib.'s story on the explosion at the Gary blast furnaces has tha ear
marks of coming in over the wire. Nice
of the XT. P.. give you borne news that
has been wired from home earlier in
the day.
AMONG other gentlemen standing
for the recall of Judges are some very
prominent residents of the Michigan
City pen.
GREEN onions may come, spring
openings may be many, the price of
strawberries may be lowered, the bull
frog may croak, but
K.EEP 'em on yet!
THEY may look comfy but we hon-
; Broadway it is time to can the ear
tabs.
five foot boiler and a seven foot estly thInk in tbe vernacular of
whistle. Every time it whistled the
boat stopped
Titles amount to little in the eyes
o-- v-.c 1 countv sun reels that n.-
cllned honors without number that llttie old Columbus speech is going to
make her repudiate a president.
LOOKS as if our old friend Nick
Longworth is playing solitaire in
some cyclone cellar.
interfered with her work, and it is said that Victor Hugo refused to take
time from hi3 work to receive an em
peror. Washington could have been
made king if he had desired It.
The world would be poorer If tha
accompiisnments or vain men were
stricken from its sum total of good
things. We would be without Stephen A. Douglaa, Richard Mansfield, Kaiser William, and a host of other good
men and true; but the peanut-brain
ed specimen who will not turn over A MAN who has a government job
his hand until he has had his name doesn't always have to be a worker.
and title printed on a plate glass door
ABOUT the only real tangible ap
parel worn by there barefoot dances
is a furred tongue.
and at the top of a letter head, is never likely to deserve the title to
which he aspires.
uu jour worn emcientiy and if a
title is appropriate you will eet it
FOR RECORDER. Editor T:xks: Tou are authorized to announce that I am a candidate on the Republican ticket for Recorder of Lake county, aubject to the will of the Republican primaries, and I hale the support ef the voters. EDWARD C GLOVER.
Editor Tim b: Please announce to the voters of Lake county that I will be a candidate for Recorder of Lake county on the Republican ticket.' subject to the decision of the Republican primaries. Api-il i H. VT. JOHNSON.
Editor Times: Tou are authorlEtd to announce that I am a candidate on the Republican ticket for Recorder of Lake
county, subject to the wlil of the Re
pulilli-an primaries, and I ask the aup
port of the voters. W. A. JORDAN.
LEARN TO COOK. Although housekeeping and home
making are the most important of all ln duft tlme; but tne fact yet remaiHs things, yet they are sought after the that the greatest men of earth ara
"'J ' ina gei married wno ao fcnrtwn to th imhli. t.
not know how to make a loaf of bread namea onlv. with no initial, h-fnr.
or oou a potato, expecting eomenowi behind.
that these things will take care of
themselves, and they can live happy
w1Vn a man m tnia ignorance, Know- COL. Tim Enelehart av h wn-t
Ing, too, that the heart and stomach I ko
w v a vuuuiuuiv x. w a LUD UU 11 r: ail Miiiiiiiir
of man are so friendly that they can- on the democratic countv tick v.,
not be separated. Ignorance cannot thats all right Tim but once there be made bliss in housekeeping, and was a president of the U. S. States
luerc ,s uo Bur5r war lo ,ose tne re- who declared he would not accept an
speci oi a nusoanu man xo spoil ms other nomination.
dinner. He cannot thrive long on
purely
Pharos.
MARCH denies that he Is ever go
Ing to eat out of Spring's hand.
COMMISSIONER, FIRST DISTRICT.
Editor Tiscr-a-. rae state that
will he a candidate for renomination
to the offle of County Commissioner from the first district, subject to tha
lK Republican nominating convention. RICHARD SCHAAF. SR.
FOR COT.-XTY Sl'RVETOR.
Editor TiMfc: Please announce to
the votrs of Lake county that I am
candidate for renomination to the office
of County Purveyor, aubject to the wl!
of the Republican primaries. RAT SEELT.
FOR COt'.XTT TREASURER.
Editor timks: Fleas announce In
the columns oi your paper that I will be a csndldate for renomination to the
Coun'y Treasurers hip, subject to the decision of the Republican nominating
convention, March 30. ALBERT 3. EWAKSON.
FOR COROXER.
Miter iisiEs: Fieasa announce tha
1 will be a candidate for renomination
for the ernee f County Coroner, sub
jeet to the will of the Republican
nominating convention, March 81. DR. FRANK SMITH.
FOR SHERIFF. Editor, Times:
Please announce that I will be a can
dldato for sheriff of Lake county, sub
ject to the decision ot the republican
county convention. WU. KtTNERT. Tolleatoa. lad.
IT is about time for the gay lambs
to be frisking around.
love diet. Logansport
STEEL MILL ACCIDENTS. It was a shocking accident that oc
curred at the Gary steel work the other night. "When a vessel contain
ing twenty-five tons of molten ron upset the fiery stream engulfed and
Incinerated to a crlsD one unfortu-
i NOT only is Mr. Widholm's hat In the ring but he persists in kicking it around so that everybody can Bee that
It Is still in the ring. Mr. WIdholm U our notion of Pome game little fighter.
THE Tenth district always sets the
pace in Indiana and Lake County al
ways sets the pace for the Tenth dis
nate, it painfully burned the chief of tr,ct whlIe EajBt Chicago always sets
the blast furnaces and It caused In- tne Pace for Lake County
juries to many others. Much proper
ty was damaged and It was only a miracle that many instead of one did
not meet a horrlblo death.
Yet steel mill accidents are not as
they were ten or twenty years a?o. In those days hardly a month went by
unless an accident of this kind oc
curred. Now they are very rare. Thanks to modern safety devices and a sincere efforts on the part of cor
porations to promote the safety of their employes accidents have steadily
decreased. The South Chicago Bteel works which at one time had the reputation of killing a man a day In now one of the model industrial institutions in the world as far as safety to concerned.
ONE advantage that the Gary real
estate dealers have is that they don't have to scrapo any clay and muck o.T their heels when they are showing
their prospectors around.
WE can't help but feel that Miss
Spring shows considerable flirtatious
feeling for old winter after all and
the way she persists in sitting in' his
lap is simply scandalous.
ISN'T It a fact too that a lot o
these so-called progressives are Just
chaps who persist in calling for
nw ilssl svtrvtlmA the fards Eton
it umi ue Biaiea mat sacety thai-
is vuti wsiuuwurtt me viary steel works. Hanging right over the en
trance to the Gary works is a sign, THE idea of teaching every girl to prominent in the day time, and more! thump the piano and every boy to be
so at night because it is illuminated, a bookkeeper wil lmake potatoes $8 a
cautioning employes to be careful. Aslbarrel and torn $5 a, bushel in 20
far as operations are concerned the I years.
HEARD BY HUB E
i
f Ik
mm:0mr0M-f ......
-ft
The Day in HISTORY
THE world isn't blue, kid. it's the
sky!
MAT DELAY GARY CASES, POLI
TICO INTERFERES." Newspaper headlines, if cases Interferes with poli
tics cut out the cases.
A WESTERN judge has decided that
two ounces Is the legal requirement of a highball. See that you get this much
the next time. i
MILLER and East Gary people are
seeing wolves, but happily they are of the timber and not of the gray variety.
PAY your wife a salaryT This is
what an eastern professor wants. As
it Is, 90 per cent of the wives now get
the pay checks Intact.
SOMETHING to drink out Of: Mar
riage license 530,447 nas Been issuea in
Chicago to Joseph Brownsteln and Mary
Glass.
THEN again could you call the
Brownstein-Glass ceremony a cystal wedding?
IP there was less preaching about Give to the poor," and more about
"atop taking i much from the poor." 8t. Peter'a golden book would be a great deal larger.
THE make-up man on the 'stemmed Record-Herald is also a facetious Individual. Yesterday hn ran the story of the Allen courthouse feud on the sporting pags. NECESSITY is the mother of Inven
tion, but at tlmea it looks as If necessity Is the mother ot intervention. AN eastern librarian is dead, and during her life time she read 6.000 novels, but we will bat you five yen that she never spent any time on the "Common Law." "HAND of Italy raised for blow at Turkey, ald the Chicago News, and if this were thanksgiving time the headlines would be quite misleading. WHILE the undertaker isn't wishing that any Of us die, yet he. trusts that if there is anything doing he'U not be
THIS DATE IN HISTORY" Mrch 20.
178S Slave-trade prohibited ln Massa
chusetts.
97 James Hutton, one of the great founders of geological science, died in Scotland. Born there June : S,
1726.
180 FIrat United States land office
opened in Detroit, under act of
Congress.
18J7 Ludwlgr von Beethoven, relebrat
ed composer, died ln Vienna. Born
in Bonn. Dec 16. 1770.
1838 Gen. William H. Ashley, who was
the first . lieutenant-governor ot
Missouri, djed near Boonevlle, Mo,
Born in Virginia about 1778.
1840 Royal Agricultural Society of England Incorporated. 1861 Alfred B. Kittredgn. 17. 8. aenatofrom South Dakota, born in New Hampshire. Died at Hot Springs, Ark., May t. 1911. 1874 House of Representatives passed the first interstate commerce bill. 18SS Saskatchewan rebellion began with an attack of half-breeds upon the Northwest Mounted Police. 1892 Walt Whitman, celebrated poe, died In Camden, N. J. Born at West Hills, L. I, May SL 1819.
"THIS IS MT 2ND BIRTHDAY Sfsae. Ma reheat. Mme. Mathilda Marches!, probably the most celebrated singing teacher the world has ever known, waa born March 26, 1820. At an early age she became a pupil of the late Manuel Carcla In Paris. Afterwards In London she attained fame as a concert singer. But In 185 4
she went to the Vienna Conservatory ! Except for some years that he spent in
Paris, and at Cologne, where she held
a professorship, Mme. Marches! was at Vienna until 1878. During this period
she made many great singers, amontr them the famous Etelka Gerster. In
1881 the teacher returned to Paris and
during the next decade or so she pro
duced such phenomenal singers as Emma Calve, Melba. Emma Eames, Sybil Snaderson, Emma Nevada and Felice Lyne. Mme. Marches! is spending her decllnig years In London at the home of her daughter, who also is a well known singer. In iite of her advanced age, the famous teacher Is still alert and vigorous. Congratulations to: Lee McClung, Treasurer of the Cnited States, 43 years old today. Anselm J. McLaurln, former IT. S. senator from Mississippi. 64 years old today. Dr. James K. Patterson, for -more
I than 40 years president of Kentucky
State University, 79 years old today.
Flavel S. Luther, president of Trinity
Colege, Hartford, 62 years old today.
! i
iw., ' J x ; RJ' M
' I, rT , , il l I I
Mx lis (5
Up and Down in INDIANA
INSIST OX PI Nearly all of Elkhart's factories were found to bo living up to the requirements of the state factory laws, by Deputy State Factory Inspector Keyser of South Bend, who paid Ell;-
hart a visit last week, but he warned owners of a number of business blocks and other buildings to properly equip
their properties with fire escapes r.r take their chances of having thera condemned and closed to tenants. Mr. Kcyser insists upon th strict compliance with the building statuses and he states he Intends to see that they are enforced or the violators punished. HOOSIER AltTIST UWS FAME.
In the April issue of the Woman's
Home Companion there appears a full
page insert of a coupy of a portrait In colors from the brush of Miss . Olive Rush of Fairmount, together with an extensive review of her life and wort on the opposite page. The portrait is that of a girl chum, who passed last summer with Miss Rush at Wilmington, Del. Miss Rush is a daughter of the Rev. Nixon Rush of Fairmount. ADMITS CHICKEN THEFTS.
For several months past the Ander
son police have had complaints from
farmers near Anderson of having their
chickens stolen. They .arrested George
Ashby on suspicion and after a severs
sweating Saturday he admitted that he
has been making his living stealing
chickens and had robbed more than
flftv farmers within a short radius of
Anderson. Ha also admlted stealing' about $10 worth from his father and about $20 worth from his grandfather.
James L. Webb, who lives Just west of
Anderson. He said he sold the fowls to
Anderson grocers. THREE HIT BY TRAIV.
- Charles Zerkel, a Lake Shore gang
foreman, and two aslstants, I. Squires and Michael Gwander. were struck by
a string of cars while passing through
the yard Thursday midnight at Elkhart
and Zerkel and Squires were severely! injured. Walking with their heads down because of the storm, they did not see the cars aproaching them. Mr. Zerkel, whose right collar bone was fractured, received his injury by being knocked down when struck by Squires, who had been bumped by the cars. Squires' Injuries consist of bruises and sprains to his back and left hip and left knee.- After their injuries received attention the men went to their homes In Waterloo.
Careless with license. The most novel "find" ever made by
Gus Kramer, doorman and custodian, of
a Muncie vaudeville theater, was a marriage license, picked up from th floor of the theater at the conclusion or a performance last week. Two young people whose names Kramer does not give went to the theater after obtaining A license and before being married, their marriage being planned for that evening. When they mlsed their license they rushed back to the; theater. The paper was restored to- them and the marriage took place on time.
CLOTHES CATCH FIRE. Mrs. Bella Isrell. 60 years old. ws probably fatally burned Friday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James Parr at Lafayette, She was sitting in th parlor of the house near a small gas heater, when her clothes caught fire. Her dausrhter heard her screams, , and
when4 she reached her she was
pletely enveloped in flames. Mrs. Isre'.l was burned from head to foot. She waa taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital.
THERE ARE MORE THAN THRET3 TIMES MORE TIMES CIRCULATED EVERY DAY THAN ALL THE OTHER DAILY PAPERS IN LAKE COUNTY PUT TOGETHER-
Times Pattern Department
DAILY FASHION HINT.
?; 'bL -Jf
mm
11 j
3065
Men's Pajamas, The great majority of men to-day prefer pajamas as a night garment to the old time night shirt. The suit illustrated has the trousers made with a fly and a front closing, and tbe Jacket without a collar and leaving the aeck a trifle open. Madras is both soft and warm for palamas, and gingham, wash silk, ponge and outing flannel are also nsed. The pattern, 1,609, Is cut in sixes 32, 86, 40, 44 and 4S inches chest measure. Sine 36 requires 6 yards of 27 inch material. The above pattern can be obtained by sending 10 cents to the o3jcc of him
com PaPer.,
