Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 11, Hammond, Lake County, 30 June 1913 — Page 4

THE T1MS&

Monday, June 30, 1913.

THE TIMES

FOR TREASURER,

Flense iimum to tke people of

Gar that I will m i.ilUia fca,

fV fi Ij feP a J B I J . I BmJtloH of city trarer, subject

L U W W M i Ika U I .

B7 Tk Lake Cotuitr Prtatiacr Fnb-

llahlag Ointr The Lake Countr Tiroes, daily except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 2t. 101"; The Lake County rimes, dally except Saturday sad Sunday, entered Feb. t. The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, nterd Oct. S: I?; re-entry of publU cation at Gary, Ind., April It. 113; Th

Lake County Times, Satuiaay and

weekly edition, entered Jan. 30, lllr

The Times, dally except Sunday, en

ured Jan. II. at the postoffice at Hammond, Indiana, all under the

act of March S. 1179.

Entered at the Fostofflces, Hammond and Gary, lad., as socond-class matte.

FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICES,

IS Rector Building- - - Chicago

te the decision of the republican-pro

gressive primaries.

W. D. HtNTER.

Editor TIMES i

Please announce to the people of

Gary that I will be n candidate for the nomination of ctty treasurer, subject to the decision of the nominating con

vention of the cltlsens ticket July IX

WILLIAM FEDER.

against "double-riding" are: ' (1)

the risk of life and limb; (2), It 1 indecent. There's no need to dwell

upon the dangers that attend the

FOR CLERK.

Editor TIMES i

You are authorised to announce that

I will be a candidate for ctty clerk, subject to the decision of the Gary republican and progressive primaries.

H. C. FRANCIS.

PUBLICATION OFFICES, Hammond Building. Hammond.

IndL

TELEPHONE S,

EuHMBd prlvete exchange) ...... tit

(Call for department wanted.)

Gary Office Tel. 1ST

East Chicago Office. TeL 1 40-J

FOR cotjxcii

Editor TIMES i

Please announce to the people of

Gary thst I am a candidate for the nomination for alderman of the flrat

ward, subject to the republican and

cltlsens' primaries or conventions.

THEODORE V. FREEBURY.

Editor TIMES t

Flea ir announce to the people of

Gary that I will be a candidate for the nomination of alderman from the third

ward, subject to the decision of the

Indiana Harbor......... TcL S49-M; 150 I cltlsens party convention.

Whiting; Tel. SO-M

Crown Point TcL S Hesrewiscn. TeL IS

Ad-rerUalner oMcttorw vriH te sent, or

rata given on application.

If you tonv any tremble cettln- Tbo

Tknea.notl.fr the nearest erfftce and

tsave tt promptly remedied.

XJLROER PAID UP COtCCXjaTIOIl

THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWS

PAPERS IX THE CAIAJMET REGION.

AJONThtOtra oemraunioatiens will Dot he noticed, feirt ethers will

printed at discretion, and should be

addressed te The Editor. Times, Kua-

TmnT I., i.

AROV KOLLI S.

FOR COUNCIL.

Editor TIMES

Please announce to the people of

Gary that I will be a candidate for the nomination for Kldenn&n-at-laxge,

subject to the convention of the cltl sens party.

BOLICE SZYMAVSKI..

PI. inri-Ji? Q FOR 1 AlH,

Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No.

BBS, F. and A. M., Friday, July 4, 8 p. m.

No work. Visitors welcome. It. S.

Galer, Sec, E. M. Shanklln, W. M.

THE SONG OF A DREAM.

I What have you done with the dream I

brought you

Late last night st the fall of the dew?

Over the brink of the world I sought

you And never paused and came to you,

A dream of golden and purple feather-

Let us follow Its flight together.

The fslrest dream that ever spread

In the moonlight, shining: wings.

Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. I It pearched In the blossom overhead

6pecl.il meeting: June SO. ' Red Cross. I Of the apple tree where my sout sings

LAZABUS AND DIVES, Despite much that has been said and written to the contrary, health conditions in American cities, as else-

travelling on a machine built for where ln civnizatlon are JmprovnR. one. especially when it is rushing on if dImlnished death-rate are a crlteran uncertain road at an express train lon. And yet health conditions in our

speea- great cities are lot good enough to Aside from this aspect there is the 8atlsfy the humanltaTiaI1 at any indecent attitude that most girls and rat-e those condlllon8 wbJch accom.

women are obliged to assume when on pany or follow the grayest social a motorcycle. With her skirts flying and economic diseases of the body pol-

rn me air, ner umus exposed, ana ,t, a -..o ..,

!e-.. avwMW TT vUiau W iUUUSkllkll exhibition were nlacards showing dl-

female rider offers a sorry spectacle. Bease-engendering conditions; obIndeed. she presents a suspicious one vously iE8anltary sweat-shops, in

wnen sne travels in tnis manner late wnch consumptives work on underat night. Yet how many. young girls wear. .hirtwuiata ad thi. nn.

in this region do this very same thing en, lace collars and other earments.

seemingly with parental approval. to be Bold on th h--a,n anri

It is high time that the practice be to be introduced with all their germ-

stopped and local legislation is the content into other homes. placard only way to accomplish it. If it is bore a doctor's statement: "I have

not the papers before long will print found i82 families, 179 with contagthe names of more victims. inns x, tvi- anamant

Last night in Hammond a girl I work."

was perched upon the handlebars of a N gs motorcycle going down Hohman st tWblu for the weIMOM, ln tMfJ . One of her escorts arms was around ...... ... . . ' . .

uiuiuuu were DnoioKrapna oi a

mother and two children in a squalid room cracking the nuts ,one of the children facilitating the work by using its teeth. By such poor women and little children Also fnften Ulesr-

JUST A 2 DOZEN.

Statictics of Princton College show put into hair-brushes artificial flow-

that, "although only nine are engag- ers made and paper cigarette tubes ed, 203 assert they have kissed girls, rolled and licked. Twenty-four men have had their pro- One of the melancholy aspects of

posals rejected." Surprised to see so our civilization, says The Journal of

many boasters in the graduating the American Medical Association, is

class. Twenty-four of "em appear tojthe pay for sweat-shop work: Jl a have been born under lucky stars. I dozen for skilled work at gloves for

which the retailer charged $3 a pair: 30 cents for four hours" crocheting of a hand-bag which sells for $1.50. In 20 Inspected homes, 25 per cent of the workers were between 5 and 10 years of age; nearly half were under 14; a fourth of the children worked five hous or more a day after school; three-fourth of these home-working

Scenes from Slavic Day Exercises at Grant Park Stad" mm.

T s.s --; i ic;

her waist to steady her, the other on

the handle bars. It was an edifying spectacle.

itm

1

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3

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SOMETHING ROTTEN IN

DENMARK. When "Wilson was elected president, this newspaper, though Republican in national politics, expressed its confidence in him and wished the democratic edmlnisimti on wpII

Since thatUme It has coramente(1 families earned less than 10 cents an

Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M. Regular stated meeting, July 9. Visit

ing companions welcome.

Visiting sir knights welcome.

Political Announcements

Whiting. FOR MAY OK. Editor TIMES I I announce herewith that I an

candidate for the democratic semina

tion for mayor of the city of "Whiting-, I Falling In desert places, or

subject to the decision of the party! Dellgrht no weariness comes after,

primaries, I Long waited for.

Sings to you. It came. It came

When through the dark, night no least

stsr shown. I knew not If 'twas star, or bird, or flame.

Bat stretched my hand out, and It per

ched thereon. - Sweet, sweet ah, sweet! See how its pinions fcllaten! All love, all joy Is ln their heat And in Its sultry pinions. Listen To its enchanting strainLike sorrow turned to laughter, I.Ike the sound of rain

J. J. DOVEGAS.

Hammond.

Which still renews itself, again. '

-Msrgaret Sackvllle, ln the London

Sphere.

FOR TREASl'REE, Editor TIMES I You are herewith authorised to announce that I will be a candidate for

the office of city treasurer of the city city chairman this evening.

oi Hianoia, muiana. ea uc demo-1 be

crane ucaei, suojeci 10 xae win oi the voters of this city, and I herewith ask the support of my friends at the democratic primary election. Signed. OTTO H. DIELKK.

FOR CLERK. Editor TIMES i You are herewith authorised to an

nounce that I will ho candidate for the office of city clerk of the citr of

Hammond, Indiana, on the democratic hjuette for such an occasion. To cry ticket, subject to the will of the voters were to shed crocodile tears, and to

,a c,,y. - .erew, ..k the laugh were barbarism. But having to

AS TO THE OUTCOME.

Hammond democrats elect their

It will

a warm session, no doubt, and

that goes double.

We meant to abide by the hot

weather hints for comfort, and not

get excited, but when men who were brethren once, though no kinship of ours meet with malice aforethought to commit fratricide we get all "fussed

up" because we don't know the eti-

eratle primary election. Signed. WILLIAM COLB. Gary. CITY JUOGC Editor TIMES t

I desire to announce that X shall be a candidate for Judge of the elty court

of Gary, subject to the republican and booteth it the Common

progressive primaries. JOHN W. WAKE.

do something we will withdraw from the ghoulish looking throng and temporarily retreat to the height of the mountain to ponder the cause for the impending bloodshed.

We shall next ask ourselves, what

are the spoils of this war and what

tax payer

whether that man win or the other

prevail; for it appears that there are

those in the democratic house that

want to keep what they acquired with

the right hand and with the left

hand, whilst their brethren being

FOR CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMES i ' Please sunounce to the cltlsens that I will be a candidate for judge of the ctty court of the city of Gary, and so.

licit their support at a primary election empty handed are ready to use both

io oe neio oy lae repuDucan and pro- rights and lefts to take all that

gresstve parties.

ALBERT C. HLBER. Gary, Ind., June ft, 1013.

FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES I You may announce that I am a candidate for mayor of Gary, subject to the decision of the republican and progressive primaries. A. 11. HOOVER.

others have.

Were it not for the fact our flower

bed is being mussed up by the brothers' tussle, "we should worry."

favorably upon many of his official acts.

Just now, however, the Wilson ad

ministration is involved In a nasty mess known as the McNab-Reynolds scandal.

As is pointed out in the Fort

Wayne News, the facts of the scan

dal are these:

Two wealthy married men of California betrayed and took out of the state two silly little high school girls. The men werf. arrested Under the Mann white slave act. r, One of them, however, was the on of A. Camlnetti, a powerful roUtician of California, and tha intimate friend of William J. Bryan. . The elder Caminetti, who was recently appointed commissioner of inmigrration by President Wilson as as an acknowledgement of his political service, was greatly alarmed by the activity of District Attorney KcNab, who was intending tn bring the white slave cases to an early trial. He appealed to Attorney General McReynolds. who, falling in with this sugestion that he prostitute his office, ordered a postponement. District Attorney McNab protested that the delay was merely a part of a scheme to railroad the cases out of crfurt. McReynolds in reply curtly ordered the postponement. McNab resigned in his lamous telegram to the president, whereupon McReynolds remarked with a grin that he was glad that a republican had been gotten out of office so easily. Then came the storm of public protest and the sudden reversal of the administration's , policy. The facts are all there and they speak for themselves far more eloquently than any denunciatory words could do. We have it acknowledged that at least three

high officials of the federal government, two of them cabinet officers, employed their positions to protect criminals of the most offensive type, and no sensible man doubts but that for Mr. McNab's bold stand, which cost him his office, those contributors, to the delinquincy of little girls eventually woU have gone free. It s a nasty foul-smelling affair. We are surprise to find that so far President Wilson had not removed McReynolds from office. It looks as if some one is in rather a pickle.

hour altogether. In the end, however, the consumer not Infrequently must pay an awful price in sickness and in death for "bargains" prepared under

such pitiless and often pestilent con

ditions. Well Indeed has Dr. Solomon

Solis-Cohen observed that "the poverty of Lazarus makes itself felt in the house of Dives"; yes, and his in

fections also! .

T 2 s"' I II

A"'. -rX-r-S JJ

..'US'. . A; ;M M -TT&kVL KJi $?'' H'1 A

Xoutse 70s m 17

AdelimSkudera 3ylvia Tetru

LotsJU TfoIpucJt Irene Skudera. ,

"MURDER WILL OUT. The super-sensational stories, dealing with charges i against men high

in the nation, printed by a Chicago

newspaper, from a newspaper standpoint, are perhaps the greatest stories ever published. Just how much

truth is in them is of course known only to the paper that printed therd Some people will, certainly, accept them as gospel; others will have to be shown. That the stories should be sprung at this time when talks of national reconciliation between the republican and progressive parties are quite

common 13 just a bit strange. The

people of America will watch the

aftermath with intense interest and

if the stories are true it is good-bye to both democrats and republicans

implicated in the alleged scandal. One cannot help wondering, how

ever, why some of the progressives

ln this "Invisible government" Idea,

were landed high and dry.

VOICE OF

THE

P E O P L

E

A1NDOM THINGS AND FLIISQS

ARK YOU A TIMES READER t

ANOTHER COMPLAINT. ' A well-known Hammond lady writes to this paper on a topic whjch is worthy of much thought, and every word she says Is true. Hammond, June 15. Kditor Times: On your subscription card is a request that we tell you our troubles. Mine

is the alley. I live in constant fear

of fire. Quantities of newspapers and other loose trash blow around and into our yards for days between visits from the garbage man. Small trash

pilew are made in our alley every

week and though watched, a stray

spark might start a fire which would

weep from end to end, lined closely

as it is by coal sheds, barns and a house or two. This is a dry season and water is scarce, making the danger great. A family moved ln one pf our flats in November and deposited

the paper and straw from packing

. NEW YORK . dispatches J UNDERSTAND that the safety hoard have it that T. R. has taken j has ruled that there can be no Areout a permit to carry a gun. j works in Gary on July 4. Chances ara gun. Thus, If the Japs de- that the safety board considers that the clare war we can rest as- j various mayoralty candidates are ensured that our eastern coast ' plosive enough without rendering the is well protected. Teddy is people liable to further peril, a whole army ln himself. j 11 "HOHMAN STREET IS AGAIN IN IF yea feel tired t life take BO ! LIMELIGHT." Times' headline.

rents and go down to Cairo, 111.

neral only costs that muck there.

Fa-

Since when did Hohman street get its illumination?

"EUGENICS leave heritage of brawn

not brains," says a doctor. Looks that i

way. xn 7 l" . Up during June, which will be spent on heavy on eugenics, but In nearby At- : ' " .

GOODBYE- June brides, strawberry

, shortcake and all of the money saved

hrns they didn't know what it meant World remembers Athens, but it long ago forgot Sparta.

FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES I You may announce that I am candi

date for the nomination for mayor of Gary, subject to the decision ef the republican and progressive primaries.

. R. O. JOHNSON.

A FEW WORDS NEEDED. A young woman who stole some

clothes recently made the defense

that she stole so that she might be

well-dressed at a dance.

Dressed? At a dance? Will someone kindly explain?

FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES

msy announce ln your columns

DOUBLE MOTORCYCLING. In the death of a married woman

that i am a candidate for the nomina- of Gary due to a motorcycle accident

tlon for mayor of Gary subject to the

niiioi os i ,c rcpuDiiesn and progressive primaries, nnd I ask the sup

port of my friends. ln this way. . CHARLES E. GREEN WALD.

wnne "douDie-riqing there la re

called the numerous crusades that THE TIMES has conducted against

this pernicious practice. Billy Rugh,

the Gary newsboy, would be alive today had not a young woman gone

at. I "double-riding" on a motorcycle,

FOR MAYOR. Editor, TIMESi Please announce that I am i

date for the nomination for mayor of thereby receiving burns that nearly

:"" J . e cost her own life and which was only

ln July. " - 1V.F. PATTERSON.

saved when another gave up his. The two principal - arguments

DON'T MIND THE WEATHER. The weather's no better out in

Missouri, but they're a cheerful lot

and give grouchiness the go by every

day. Says the Joplin News-Herald:

"The Pittsburgh milkman who is

giving Angora cats to all his customers unquestionably has an eye for business, but how much more subtle

it would be for him to give water spaniels." Not bad, eh? And this from the

Wellsville Optic-News:

"He breathed the song Into the air, it fell to earth, he knew not where, and since that time farmers for ten miles around Bellflower have occasionally been struck dumb with mystification as the echo passed their way." Speaking of vanity," says the Bolivar Free Press, "did you ever notice the man who had the first mess of potatoes and peas from his garden?

The peacock isn't in the same class j with him." 1

THE ONLY WAY TO KEEP COOL.

1 Jf

1

1 f'FWJ

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1

1

GOVERNOR RALSTON has gone down east to tread on the Gettysburg

battlefield. His excellency had better be back in this state for the battl of Min

eral Springs on July 3.

the Fourth of July.

WOODROW IS TAKING NO CHANCES WITH BILL BRYAN.

Note tht while President Wilson will have a summer capltol he intends to stick to his post in Washington.

POSTOFFICE department has ruled that "September Morn" can go through the mails. But in view of the rough

ANOTHER auto driver has been kill.

ed on the Indianapolis motor speedway.

it tney Stan puu.n ....... . aM that attends all mall now encircling the track in memory of each j be Jugt weU M yQU

ariver KUiea iney win n.yc

fence around It bye and bya.

encase miss a. ji j1-"-

"WITH neither Clprlano Castro nor

THEN again, considering

the hot weather, you can't

Doc Cook ln action, this promise, to be .SeDtember Mor- for

a dull summer." i ., .. , or

Should worry around here. We have . ' ' our Battleaxe Cattleman. J . . I ELKHART TRUTH makes note of the THEY Say that 110 autOS are al- Kega;.L4vengood wedding. Their wedIowed in Odder, Denmark. After all, ded life ought to be one liquid stream

those Danes are a pretty wise lot. of joy-

about three feet from my house. Our two bad boys left for school at noon. Soon after a man told us the stuff was on fire. A few buckets of water extinguished it. It was started at the round in a hole which had been made

from the top. When they, came from' school they stopped and looked at it, v, o ..rh nthur and irrinned. - The I

many, many children around us play j U15 Allied army from the heights of in the allev every day. In the amount Belleville, commenced their attacks

The Day in HISTORY

JUNE 30 IV HISTORY.

on Paris-

vnriPtv : of trash nlaced In It by

different tenants this place has been 1864 A mine was exploded under tho

the greatest offense of all. Why should the children play there at all? (They have plenty of nicer " places.) You can not tell what they will do, as it is little misphlevous tricks occur to them. In many places the alleys are so clean they 'are often used as a "short cut." Our alley usually is a sight. Why should not broken bottles, dishes, etc., be placed in a box or some

such receptacle and the garbage man

Confederate defenses in fropt of Petersburg, Va., and an attempt

made by the Federals to carry entrenchment during the confusion than ensued. 1864 Battle of Franklin between 30,000 Federals under Gen- Schofield, and 40,000 Confederates under . Gen. Hood. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Congressman William Schley How-

' rv: ..jLii ;-aUv'-

7 ir'

J KQirZJ -p?-&str Zsozrr ZzS- Jfe-z-zr

.1 . n.,t,tn limei' i v 9 r DfmopraL of Decatur, 111., was

all have sheds to place such a recept- born at Kirkwood, DeKalb County, Qs, acle in except when the man is due.) June 30, 1875; attended Necl's AcadThere have been times when it . was.emy until twelve years of age; went dangerous to walk through because to work for himself; studied law at there was so mueh broken glass. The nights and was admitted to the bar at garbage man complains bitterly of , Wrightsville, Ga., 1895; enlisted in the when anything which is not strictly ' Third Georgia Volunteer Infantry en garbage is left ir him.- The general July 2, 1898, serving during the Spanu v, t tn vi-American war as serseant; on his

iOOKS buuuiu nrt v ic a v- . - - - - - pay him extra to take some trash left return from the war he moved back by tenants, but he refused. Please do to Dekalb County and began the pracnot print my name. Indeed, it would tice of his profession; was elected to be better not to print this at alL The the House of Representatives ut boys' mother remarked recently, "That Georgia In 1899; introduced what Is house, ought to be burned." "That now known as the Howard franchise wish might be father to the thought," j tax act, the first of its kind introduced or intention, as she must leave. jln the South; was elected to the SixtyRespectfully second Congress and re-elected to the R. S. I Sixty-third Congress.

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