Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 14, Hammond, Lake County, 4 May 1912 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS 87 Th Lake County Printing aad Pate. Uahlna; Cmp7,

The Lka County Times, dai'.y except Sunday, 'Entered aa second-class matter June 28. 1906"; The Lake County Times, da'ly except Saturday and Sunday. enteied Feb. I. 111; The Gary Evening- Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. 5, 10I: The Lake County Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 10, 111; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, ltll. at the pcstoffloe at Hammond. Indiana, all under the act of March t. 117. Entered at the Postoffleo, Hammond. Xnd.. as second-class matter.

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Advertising solicitors will be sent, or

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If you baft any trouble getting The

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have It promptly remedied ,

LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION

THAN ANY OTHXR TWO WEW.

PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.

ANONYMOUS communications will

not be noticed, but others wltl be minted at discretion, and shoved be

addressed to The Editor. Times. Ham mond, Ind..

bridge over the Little Calumet river

nd Hohman street will become the

show residential street of the city.

And while the property owners along Hohman stfeet have been doing these

acts of city building Calumet avenue

has done nothing.

While a great many of its property

owners are progressive there are a

few who have attempted to balk

every progressive step that has been

taken. The street has not yet been opened across the Little Calumet river and instead of being an import

ant thoroughfare it starts nowhere

and ends nowhere.

A great many people who want to

see the improvement of Calumet ave

nue go through are so afraid that

they will not get as much damages out of the public funds as ' their neighbor that they are endangering

the whole project.

Calumet avenue is being put to the

acid test. Its future is to be determined in the next few months. It is either going to be a great business thoroughfare connecting Rob'ertsdale

with the north side, the north side with the south side and the south

side with the country districts, or it

Is going to be a Becond rate, cheap John, South State 6treet (Chicago)

sort of a business district.

The only way the situation can be

saved is for every property owner on

the street who is in favor of the improvement (at any cost) to go to his neighbor and argue with him in favor

of his withdrawing his remonstrance.

In some cases the best way to handle unreasonable remonstrators is to use

club. It has been discovered that

Calumet avenue, too, needs a few

funerals and with what glee the pro

gressives would prance behind the hearse.

MASONIC CALENDAR,

Hammond Chapter. No." 117, meets Second and fourth Wednesday of each

month.

Hammond Commandery, No. 41. Reg

ular meeting first and third Monday of

each month.

Political Announcements

FOR AUDITOR.

Editor Times: Kindly announce my

name as a candidate for the office of Auditor of Lake County, subject to the will of the Democretio nominating con

vention. ED. SIMON.

FOR RECORDER.

Editor Times: You are authorised to

announce to your readers that I am

candidate for the nomination of County

Recordor, subject to the wishes of the

Democratic nominating convention, to

be held at a date to be decided upon.

JACOB FRIEDMAN.

FOR SHERIFF.

Editor Times: Kindly announce my

name as a candidate for the office of Sheriff of Lake County, subject to the decision of the Democratic nominating

convention. MARTIN a GILL.

TIME IS UP.

Unless the street car question in

East Chicago is settled in the .nex

few days the BALDWIN ; LOCOMOTIVE WORKS WILL NOT BUILD

THIS YEAR.

Unless the street car question in

East Chicago is settled within a few

days, the reasons for the dilly-dally

ing over the moot franchises will be

made public.

Unless the street car question In

East Chicago is settled within a few days the people of the Calumet

rgion will be told' why.

THEY WILL BE MIGHTILY SUR

PRISED.

May 4, 1912.

brought to the State House for adjustments and sealing." Vermilion County has had a set for years and years. It was never used and the weights are being used for paper weights. We do not see the need of this in counties like Vermilion and it seems to the Hoosler State that this is another one of the many grafts enacted by the last Legislature. Newport (Ind.) Hoosler State.

VOICE OF FM5 O F lTb

STORK WORKS IN SHIFTS. Gary, so the education trustees'

census shows, has 1,000 more children of school age than it did last year. For the benefit of those who

may think the stork has been worl;

ing triple shifts, like they do in the

steel mills, we will say that births in Gary last year were something aboye the 300 mark. To immigration from

such populous centers as East Chi

cago, Homestead, Youngstown, Val

paraiso and Pittsburg rather than to

any Rooseveltian policies the in creases should be attributed to.

AY BECOMING UNPOPULAR. May although one of the prettiest months of the year is not all lilacs by any means. To paraphrase another noted word-twister, May is not all beer and skuttles. A great many fast-calculating individuals take advantage of the

month. The fraud ranges all the

way from the saloonmen who spring diluted and grape-colored alcohol

upon us in the way of May wine to

the conservatory that insists upon

holding an annual May festival of

music.

In addition to this dance halls run

no end of. May parties. Then, too,

labor unions have the annoying habit

of striking about May 1 and this coupled with moving time and spring

taxes and assess sometimes makes us wish that May was cut off the calendar altogether.

THE irony of fate was never better illustrated than it was yesterday. On Wednesday the Chicago papers announced: "The Chicago Socialists

Suspends." The next day the Chicago papers had a strike on. , None of them were printed except the Daily Socialist. It came out In glaring

hearlines, "All Chicago Papers But

Socialist Suspend."

THEY are indulging In a grand

little guessing contest down at Crown

Point and if you can guess who El

more is you have the same chance as

you would have in a 000 ticket in the

New Orleans lottery.

THE trouble is that the majority

of the people who are eternally yap

ping about the-back-to-therfarm movement don't know the difference

between a gooseoerry busn ana a

guinea hen.

TAKE NOTICE, CALUMET AVE. It may be illuminating to some of the property owners along Calumet avenue who are kicking so hard to squeeze the last dollar of damages out of the city to know how things are done on South Hohman street, Hammond's finest residential thoroughfare. The Hammond & Suburban Realty Co. has just subdivided all of the remaining property to the south limits of the city. In order that Hohman street might be straightened it was necessary for the company to give the city a strip of land 54 feet In width for a quarter of a mile along the west side of Hohman street. The land the company lost is ac

tually worth about $4,000. Moving

the street will entail grading that

will cost several hundred dollars

more. But when the job is complet ed and Hohman street extends south

ward in a straight line it will be as

splendid a thoroughfare as there is in

the city. South of the city limits of Ham

mond the property owners, all of the way to the Little Calumet river.

deeded an 84 foot strip of land for

the continuation of this street.

Next year the county will build a

OLD GLORY? NO. There is nothing to show that the

loss of the Titanic was due, in anv measure worthy of consideration, to Its Immense size. Had it been t.

smaller ship its fate would have been

the same. In fact, the bigger the

vessel the better it can withstand not only storms, but collisions. The in

creased slowness in answering to the helm is not - so great as may be Imagined, owing to the gain in power and in the size of the rudder.

It is reasonable to suppose that the

building of ocean liners as large as the Titanic and even larger will con

tinue as long as they can be operated profitably. A new French liner. La

France, is 732 feet long, only 153 feet

shorter than the Titanic. And the splendid ship which has gone to the bottom off the Newfoundland banks

would not long have held the title of

the greatest giant of the deep.

A ship that is larger is now being built for the Cunard Line. The Im-

perator, even longer, is under construction for the Hamburg-American

fleet. And now comes the announce

ment that the German Lloyd Com

pany has ordered a steamer which

will be 950 feet in length.

All these magnificent ships will be devoted to the traffic between Europe

and America. They will carry

American passengers and freight coming to America. Yet over not one

of them will fly the Stars and Stripes.

They will be under the flags of Eng

land, Germany and France. Is there

not something in ' this to humble

American pride? Will Congress never

awake to the necessity of re-estab

lishing American shipping . on 'the

seas?

The

passed

IN the meantime the Chicago Cubs

can rest assured that just as soon as the strike business is over with, the

attention of the country will be di

rected to their utterly reprehensible

conduct.

MEXICO is another country where

constitutions and courts don't

amount to a hill of beans and every body down there is puncturing some body's carcass with a bayonet.

ACCORDING to a fashion authori

ty women's hat styles are going to be

very sensihle this season. Looks as

though some of them were being used

to raise "garden truck" on.

PERHAPS it will get so after

while if some people have their way

that when a judge rules that they

really owe somebody money, he will

be recalled.

THE Laporte Herald says that "anybody can get nominated." We

cheerfully refer this to Bill Kunert of Tolleston and Sandy Jamieson of

Griffith.

GIVE it to this butcher. He ad

vertises sausages made from "little

pigs who died happy.",- Oh happy

bultwurst! Oh Joyous summer sau

sage!

THEY are trying to bar married

men from being drivers at the speed

way races. They ought to bar some

married men from being spectators

COUNTY SEALERS.

last Democratic Legislature

a law providing for , county

and city sealers at salaries of not less

than $1,500 nor more than $1,800 a year. Fortunately the law says the

county commissioners "may" appoint

a sealer. At the first meeting after

the board of this county changed political complexion there was an applicant here for the Job, but the commissioners thought the office unnecessary and refused to make the appoint. Now the State Board of Health, which Dr. Hurty is the secretary, is urging the appointment of these sealers all over the state at a big expense. The state board in its letter to the county auditor says "the 1852 law is still in force and if your county is not already provided with a set of accurate standard weights and measures, or if you have no county sealer, you should procure one. If your county already has a, set of weights and measure they must be

THERE are two ways to beat the

shoe string trust. One is to go bare footed and the other is to wear but

ton. shoes.

OF course if you didn't have time

to participate in a clean-up day to

day, there are plenty of other days

coming.

MY word but the patience the

Twin City people are exercising over

the street car franchise problem!

WELL anyway the pivot has been

moved body and breeches from Indl

ana which is some consolation.

IF you think that summer isn

coming read that a thief stole $8,00

worth of hats recently.

IT is gradually dawning that some

body is playing a deep game of poll

tics.

FIVE MEN IMPLICATED IN HILLSVILLE COURTHOUSE MURDER . MAKE HARD FICHT TO SAVE LIVES; CHANCE OF VENUE SECURED

THAT HEARING. Editor Times: Having noticed in your paper that only senators' wives and families were admitted to the Titanic inquiry, would like to ask if we

re to understand from that that they re the only ones -who know how to

conduct themselves properly? What

right have senators' wives and families

to be ther if the e-eneral public are

arred? Isn't it the taxpayers that

give the United States senators their

positions? They why are taxpayers

barred from a thing of this kind, in

eference to senators' wives and fami

lies? INQUIRER.

As we understand it, the hearing was

not a public hearing, but the taxpayers had just as much right there as

he senators' wives if there was room

nough for them. (Editor.)

Whiting, Ind., May 1. ABOl'T TUB DOGS. Editor Times: I should like to In

quire why it is that the same bunch of

autious warnings and threats are

made by the city authorities of Hammond every year about unlicensed and

nmuzzied dogs. It is positively nau-

eating. First the newspapers will call he attention of the officials to the tray dogs. Then the chief of police

will say what he Is going to do. Noth

ing is done. Then there will be an

ther howl. Then th police will make

another threat. Nothing doing. . Then

somebody will have a leg chewed up.

Police again give ten days' notice to

dogowners. Nothing doing. It is this

way year after year. I know It to be a positive fact that there are owners

of dogs in Hammond who never pay a cent of license money. They br.ag about it. There are scores and scores

of dogs running around the city today without license tags. Next July and August you will see. the same dogs running around unmuzzled. Why do

the police favor these dog-owners?

SOREHEAD. Hammond, May 2. IS FOR ROOSEVELT. East Chicago, Ind., May 4. Editor Times: Am a regular reader

of The Times. It seems to me for many months that it was .easy to see that the masses of our people are not for Mr. Taft. As this years issue is. I

think, one of greater interest to the

masses than that in Lincoln's time. The question then was, as you know, slavery or non-slavery, whereas the

question now is, "Shall the political

machine bosses continue to rule or shall the people rule?" - In a few states the people as you know were given a. chance to express themselves and no

one can know better than . you, Mr. Editor, as to the peoples' expression

as far as given a fair chance.- Had

the people of this state had a chance.

it would have been even more decisive than in our neighbor' 'state and Lake

County would , not iiifre been found wanting. It has for,Jong time seemed to me- to be easyttt'see and every passing day seems to make It the more

plain that Colonel .Tbeodore Roosevelt

will be our next president, for the

people are rising up as it were as one

man demanding ,it, as they are tired of the Slavery of political machine bosB

rule and the people ' know that in

Colonel Rosevelt, we have, of all, the man to rid us of that slavery and see

that the people get a square -deal, so

they can live at a reasonable cost of

living which we can fnot now as you

know. Had not The Times better take its side for and with its people before it is too late? Colonel Roosevelt know

ing that he owes his election to both

parties he will no doubt in making up

his cabinet do so with the best men of both parties as the servants of and for the people, and it need not be wondered at finding Williams Jenniftgs Bryan among them, It being known that the people are for him only second to Colonel Roosevelt, antf it will be seen

to that the people get a square deal.

and I predict that the next administra

tion will go down In history to Abraham Lincoln's.

A. WICKET.

" A f W " I f 1

Left to right, standing are: Victor Allen, Bird Merrlan and Sldna Edwards; sitting lft to right) a.-e Claude Allen . and Freel Allen. fmi.Vi,Ct2r fll?Z EVMe.T,rUli; Sid? Edwards. Claude Allen and Free! Allen, the five outlaws who wr , Implicated In the HillavlU Courthouso murder, have employed some of tha t ;st lega- talent In Virginia andwlll make every effort to regain their freedom. After being arraigi.ed In the seU tit- courtroom at Hlllsvlllc where the shatnples took place, they asked for a chargre of venue on the ground that a fair trial could not be guaranteed them In Carroll county, where public feeling ia very high. A changa of venuo was sranted and the were all taken to Wytheville where on April 30 their trial commenced.

hard telling what might have happened had the birds been ducks or storks. AN iron fence is being built around

the Gary city halL Mayor Knotts is wise in having this done. In these days of the plunder-bund there's no telling who would get away with the city hall

and then, too, it might happen that some time when the cops are too busy getting ready for their ' annual ball some measly villains might kidnap Tom. WELLESLEY college girls celebrated May day by wielding the scrub brush. This ought to Induce some of those wealthy retired Crown Point farmers to let their daughters go in for higher education. '8TEEMED Gary Post speaks of a flog being in a rabid state. The territorial description is vague, but we presume that Illinois is meant somewhere over the state line, probably around West Hammond. HOT air has been discovered to be a diphtheria anti-toxin so most of ps now know why they were never bothered with disease down around South Bend. AUTO bandits held up a baker in Chicago and got $1.00. In other words, 4they got away with some real dough. OUR special correspondent, Hennery Coldbottle .has purchased a lot down at Miller and for $233 he expects to put a pretty bungalow. Hennery recently sent 233 postal cards to different dealers requesting samples of roofing, bricks, lathing, - plaster, wiring, paint and -calcimine. He now has enough materials on hand to build a pretty little four-r.oom home and a nice icebox in the basement. While the house will look rather odd and piecemeal-like when It Is finished, its cheapness offsets these considerations. Hennery will have an art gallery with some of the

beauties, whose pictures appear in Thb

Times, as the basis of his collection. J AT our boarding house the missus says that she'll have a mess of dandelions on the table In a few weeks and that the stars will have to go out and

gather them in. Just where she is

doing this to give us an appetizer or whether she wants to Improve the appearance of the lawn hasn't been deter

mined.

AFTER getting married a Laporte

couple found that they had given all of their ready cash to the parson so

they had to walk thirty miles to get

home and the bride Is sore because her

new silk stockings were ruined. This

shatters the old belief that Laporte

girls wore home-made woolen ones.

NEARLY the hour for the regular

S. N. bath.

HEARD BY R U BE

TWO deaf mutes have married in New York. If ever hubby ought to be happy this ia one. . SOME of the oaths sworn to in the Lake county courts are like the antldrlnk pledges. EMINENT surgeons in the east are worried over whether Ua a waste of time to take baths. They claim that you hare all the more microbes after a splash in the tub. To be sure, we have more microbes' after you kiss a pretty girl, but somehow or other we manage to get along with them. , THE graft at the colleges: At Vassar they give a "V" to ail of the girls who-go In for athletics. GEE! whoever wrote this must have loved a telephone operator and was then jited by her: ;"If there is one thing that is worse than another in South Chicago, it is the telephone service. It is In a class by itself; there is nothing can reach the rte.pths of rottenness that the tele

phone service has descended to. It would be a disgrace in darkest Africa

or, any portion of the globe on which

the light of so-called civilization has as yet failed to dawn." South Chicago

Calumet.

THE heroism on the part of seventy

Gary saloonkeepers in bowing down to the law should result in a tub full of

Carnegie medals being ent post haste

to Lake county. !

, WE also want to mention that when that nest of sparrows clogged up a chimney and resulted in a Are alarm at Dyer, the village blacksmith and an

undertaker responded to the alarm. It's

Up and Down in INDIANA

This Week's News orecat

Washington, D. C, May 4. A presidential preference primary for both

parties In Maryland on Monday will staft the political ball a-rolling for the

week. Lnblased critics agree that the situation. In Maryland is confused and that the result of the primaries, on the Democratic and Republican sides alike, cannot be predicted with any great degree of certainty. Both the Taft and Roosevelt managers appear sanguine of success. Clark and Wilson are fighting hard for the Democratic indorsement, while there Is believed, to

be an underlying sentiment for Harmon that may upset the calculations. Of

the two leaders. y Roosevelt's success in the recent Republican primaries in Kansas is expected to result in a victory for him in the State convention, which will meet'

at Independence Wednesday to name delegates to the Chicago convention. The anti-Taft wing of the Republican party in Alahama will hold a convention In Birmingham Saturday to name Roosevelt delegates to Chicago. The Taft managers count upon victory in Nevada and Arkansas, both of

which will hold their State conventions during the week. The State convention of Pennsylvania Democrats, which will meet In Harrisburg Tuesday, is expected to be. marked by a lively contest between the rival factions for control of the party organization and the selection of a national committeeman. A Democratic presidential preference primary will be held in Mississippi Tuesday and State conventions to name delegates to the Baltimore gathering will be held in Iowa and Washington. Hearings for -the taking of evidence before the examiner in the case of the Government's suit for the dissolution of the United States Steel Corporation 'will begin Monday In New York City. The examiner is Henry P. Brown of Philadelphia. A question that has stirred Oanfeda to its depths will be aired in the supreme court at Ottawa Tuesday, when arguments will be heard as to the right of the Canadian parliament to pass a federal marriage law. Heretofore the provinces alone have legislated on marriage." Various Protestant bodies,, however, have recently urged Dominion law to overcome the marriage customs in certain sections, particularly. Quebec, where the law is especially distasteful to the Protestants. ,. The President and Mrs. Taft are to attend the Cincinnati music festival, which is to have its opening Tuesday evening. -Later in .the week the, President expects to go to Princeton to attend the inauguration of Dr. John Orler Hibben as president of Princeton University.

eral government. JAIL LOCKED PRISONER OUT. With Albert Mull it 1 a case of being out "again" and in "agin, without knowing just how it happened, and he can not be enlinghtened by the Richmond police. Mull was arrested on a charge of Intoxication Wednesday morning. He was placed in a cell and t,he door locked, according to the jailer, but in the afternoon the same man was again arrested in the north end of Richmond, and again on a charge of being drunk. When tie arrived at headquarters the police asked his name. He told them it was Mull. They were uncertain, because they knew one man named Mull was locked up. They searched his cell ad it was empty. Mull doesn't know how he got out, nor do the police, but both are certain he did get away, and both are equally certain he is in "again," and there will be no more disappearing acts, the police say. HELD UP BY WOMEN. John Behnen. a contracting carpenter, reported to the Richmond police yesterday that, while in the north end of the city, he was accosted by several

young colored women who held him up and relieved him of nearly $300. Behnen gave a good description of the

women, and when Mrs. Delia Cluxton i

STANDING OF RACE FOR DELEGATES

REPUBLICAN.

X -o o

HEAR FROM MISSINO SON. Charles Monroe, of Indianapolis, is

not dead, nor will his parents collect

$1,000 life insurance. It was the inten

tion of his parents to ask that he be

declared dead by the courts, as he hai

been missing the required seven years. An advertisement stating the intention

of the parents was placed in several In

dianapolis newspaper. Monroe saw it

and he hastened to notify those most

concerned that he had not yet bads this world adieu.

Monroe disappeared from his home in

Indianapolis seven years ago. The last seen of him was when a dime was given him by his parents to attend a motion picture show. The boy disappeared and later obtained employment on

the farm of Norman Clinger. of Whitestown. He is now employed by a farmer named Shockley at Fayette, Boone county. His parents are gratified to learn that hes is still living. PASSES WORTHLESS CHECKS. Because he had mortar on his clothes, wore a cheap cotton shirt and battered hat, all giving the appearance of one who was telling the truth and because, also, he said he was engaged In tearing down a building to make way for the proposed Young Men's Christian Association building, a negro, giving his name as Ben Jackson, of Muncie had no difficulty in cashing worthless checks all over Muncle yesterday. After garnering $200 or $300 the negro escaped. POSTOFFU'E SCALES WROXG. John C. Wallenmeyer, of Evansville, deputy state inspector of weights and measures, found that the scales in the

postoffice at Lake, Spencer county, are incorrect and has been cheating tha public. He ordered the scales taken out at once, and says if this is not done ha will file a charge against the fed-

i o a & T STATE. I t Alabama 24 22 Alaaka 2 2 Colorado .12 10 Dint. Colombia.. 2 2 Florida 12 12 .Georgia 28 26 'North Dakota... 10 '.Oklahoma 20 4 j Philippine 2 2 Sooth Carolina . . IN id Tennenae e 24 16 Iowa .....26 16 Virginia 24 24 New Mexico 8 7 ; Sew Hnmpahlre. N H Maaaarhuaetta . .Sit IS Mlaaouri . SO 14 Michigan 30 20 Mlaataalppl .....20 20 Indiana ...30 20 iXw York 00 S3

3 i 1 i

r

i5 s B

10 14

10

10 14 2

10 12

something of the affair the police ! Whrosuls

The police say she admitted the theft. ROOSTER ATTACKS BOY. A one-sided fight beetweeVi a big

ruusitr nu u ulu ft I Pennaylvanla

nave rvsuueu sci iuuoij ncuncauoj t Hawaii

not me ciinu inwni,

Burns, of Bloomington. arrived In time to beat the bird away. The rooster attacked the boy while he was playing.

beat him aown to me gruunu nu ( jSorf,ta 18 digging its spurs into the prostrate ,.,a''d.' .' ! ! 10

form when tne momer urnveu, anu,

after a contest, drove the rooster away

20 12

Kentucky" 26 I.oalntana 20 Vermont ....... S

IUInola 08

.70 . 6

Delaware 6 Kanaaa SO Connecticut ....14 Oregon 10

LABOR NEWS

20 e 2 11 6 a 14

10

10 7 12 3

66 415

26

6 12

Porto Rico.

Totala 444 218 36 10

The labor council of Stockton, Calif., has purchased a $50,000 site for a new labor "mple. . Edmonton, Alta.. is believed to be the first city to adopt the minimum wag as applicable to all municipal work and contracts. The Canadian government proposes to restrict the working hours of the street railway men to six days of ten hours each day. The Pittsburgh Typographical Union

ia circulating a petition to repeal the new mortuary law, which was adopted in November of last year. The entire State of Illinois reports but 8,077 children under sixteen years at work; in all Ohio there are only 9,01 chtldren regularly at work. The total amount paid in sick, dls ability and death benefits by the Boot and Shoe Workers' International Union during the last year was about $90,000. To assist the San Francisco, California, Labor Council in building a $250,000 labor temple, the Alaska Fishermen's Union will buy $5,000 worth of bonds.

DEMOCRATIC.

3 e

a r

STATE.

Alaska Alabama 24 Delaware O IUInola 58 'Indiana 30 Kansas .' ..20 Maine ..........13 Mlaaouri 36 -North Dakota. 10 Nw York ..80 Oklahoma 20 Pennaylvanta ..76 Wlaeoaaln 20 Oregon .10 Nebraska 16

? 1

24

20 1 30

10 2 6 13

6 2

DO

10 2 10 6

Total 143 110 4 24 00 Instructed for Governor Marshall. Instructed for Governor John Burke.

La Vendor Cigars are pronounced ceptlonally good by all smokers.