Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 12, Hammond, Lake County, 1 July 1913 — Page 6

THE TIMEO.

Tuesday, Jtilv 1, 1913.

E TIMES

NEWSPAPERS Br Thm Lake Ceaatr Prtatlaa; mnt rua, lias, la Camaaay. The Lake County Times, dally except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June It. HOC"; The Ilce County Times, daily except Saturday and Sunlay, entered Feb. I. ltll: The Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, intered Oct. 6, 1B0K; re-entry of publication at Gary. Ind., April 18. 1111; The Lake County Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 10, ltll; The Times, dally except Sunday, entered Jan. IS. ltll, at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, all under the act of March S. Il7t.

Entered at the postoMces. Hammond and Gary, Ind., aa second-class matter.

rORF.IGN ADVERTISING 112 Rector Building

OFFICES,

Chicago

PtBLICATIOJi OFFICES, Kammond Building-, Hammond.

Ind,

TELKPHOXEJ, Hammond (private exchange) Ill (Call tor department wanted.)

Giry OfTlce Tel. 137

Est Chicago Office Tel. 640-J Indiana Harbor.... Tel. J49-M; 15

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Advertising; solicitors will be sent, or

rates (riven on application.

. If you have any trouble retting The Times notify the nearest office and

have it promptly remedied.

LARGEn PAID X-'P CIRCULATION

T1IAX ANY OTHER TWO XEWI-

PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION,

ANONYMOUS communications will

not be noticed, but others will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor, Times, Ham

nond.Jnd. . ;'.

-

4S

Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No.

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

No work. Visitors welcome, R. S.

Galer. Sec. F- M. Shanklin, W, M.

Hammond Chapter No. 117 II. A. M Ilt.uiar stated meeting, July 9. Visitin's companions welcome.

Hammond Commandery No. 41,-K. T. Special meeting June 30. Red Cross,

Visiting sir knights welcome.

Gary, subject to the decision of the republican and progreuive primaries.

R. O. JOUOX.

FOR MAYOR.

Editor TIMKSi

You may announce la your columns

that I am a candidate for the semination for mayor of Gary subject to the decision of the republican and yroirtMrlvt primaries, and I ask the support of my friends In this way.

CHARLES E. GREEN WALD.

FOK JIAVOR.

Editor, TIMES t

Please announce that I nm a candi

date for the nomination for mayor of Gary, subject to the decision of the republican nnd proKrenaive primaries In July.

W.P. PATTERSON.

FOR TREASURER. Editor TIMES: Pleas aaaonneo to th people of Gary that I will be a candidate for the nomination of city treasurer, subject to the decision of the republican-progressive primaries. IV. D. HUNTER.

Editor TIMES I Please announce to the people of Gary that I will be a candidate for the nomination of city treasurer, subject to the dectwion of the nominating; contention of the citizens ticket July 12. WILLIAM FEDER.

doesn't care a rap whether John Doa,not In excess of $100. The fee, 10 nihtlate error, to bring the national or Richard Roe is mayor. It never has cents, is to affixed by tha sender, ill tear for great misfortunes and the or expects to have any political pap '.parcel post stamps and "'-will insure national laugh at ereat foolishness

the p.frcel for no more than $50, "For doing all this tome editors The collection feature was not pro- get as much as $200 a month." I

,vided when the parcel post system "An editor can lower a tariff, head

was put in operation, because it was off war, harness the wrath of the desired to simplify the work of post- whole people and raise a million dol-l

masters as much as possibly in the lars for flood sufferer.

served to it. It is published in the interests of the people and no one else.

WHAT ARE WE COMING TO? It was a shocking Sunday. "Six

R

L

ANDOM TH1NQS A.IND PLINQS

t

day shajt thou rest," is passe. Look , first day of the service

at the terrible record of death and

casualty in the calumet region as that it pays to take real pains in

THEATRICAL, promoter ia searching i for a i'trta in hn ,,.1 H n!-1 a t i

"And some editors are so powerful for his irranrt onera trnM ou

Uncle Sam is beginning to realize that they can raise their own salaries' propriate. judging from grand opera

told in headlines on one page, of jres- serving the people.

terday's TIMES: 1. "SUNDAY AGAIN DAY OF DEATH AND DISASTER JUNE MONTH OF VIOLENT TRAGEDY RATHER THAN ROSES."

$10 a week. "Editors are seldom

I' j v they do not mind that. If the redfaced man who is seeking an editor

CAHii 15 JMJfci.i;-lJ. ; fails to find him and has to lick the!

A Washington banker slapped a janitor instead, the editor is well

congressman recently and was Baiisnea wita life.

threr npnwM at i.iKPS publicly reprimanded. He was told1

prices most of those connected wl(h the

business are more or less bandits.

WHILE this In a free country jiiftt now It resembles the

BYE and bye the widows and orphans of auto death victims be more in num-

Editors do not often ride in auto-' " ,than the kin of 6oldler" sIaln ln

NE4RBY IX MAD SERCH FOR that he hat nsulte4 the dignity of mobiles and if they save any money

. . t Vi TTaiiqa TVion on-oln iVia li nl-on tha hllRiriACQ rffln fonlu r V.nn ' IT mil Q hp Tirpttv tmiirtl t CiV ft tr rl fn

iuv i iu;v -i. a j. v. ij. again vn- " ivrin no v 11 Co it 1 " n - r

PLEASURE PEOPLE PIE AND, OTHERS MPP.T WITH INJURY." j

3. "TERRIBLE TRAGEDY AT WHITING THREE BURNED." 4. "CHINAMAN MANGLED BY TRAIN." 5. "HEAD IS SEVERED FROM BODY."

6. CRAZED BY HEAT

might have hurt his hand. Can't be about it as if It had paid too much too careful about some of those for printer's ink.

things.

WHY EDITOES EDIT. George Fitch, the well-known hum-

DRINKS orous writer, has written a vest pock

"Some men are born editors, but more of them die at the job."

CARBOLIC ACID; MAY LIVE." 7 "ONE BURNED TO DEATH;

jet essay on "The Editor." Fitch be-

AN0THER WAY OUT. It is hard sometimes for a banker to know just whether he is safe in

fall into tha waltr and than be rescued by another girl.

LATEST expose indicates that you can buy a good many congressmen for a $10 bill. If you can't afford an auto take a trip down to Washington an4 buy up a few senators and representatives.

Probably some of the lobbyists "In

Washington are now doubting the

FOR CLEKK. Editor TIMES j You are authorised to announce that I will be a candidate for city clerk, subject to the derision of the tiary republican and prosrreBMive primaries. If. C. FRANCIS.

FOR COVXCIU Editor TIMES I Pleas announce to the people of Umrj- that I will be a candidate for the nomination of aldermnn-at-larare, subject to the decision of the citizens ticket convention. A. H. HALF.

FOR COCSCII Editor TIMES t Please announce to the people of Gary that I am a candidate for tha nomination for alderman of the first ward, subject to the republican and citizens' primaries or conventions. THEODORES V. KREEHIRV,

Editor TIMESt Please announce to the people of Gsry that I will be a candidate for the nomination of alderman from the third ward, subject to the declMlon of the citizens party convention. AKOX KOLLUS.

Political Announcements

Whiting. FOR MAYOR,

Editor TIMES I I announce herewith that I ' am a candidate for the democratic Dentins? tlon for mayor of the city- of Whtlna subject to the decision of the' party ariina ries, - 4. J. PON EGAS.

Hammond.

FOR tOl .MIL. Editor TIMESt Please announce to the people of tisry that I will be a candidate for the nomination for r.ldcruicn-at-larB, subject to the convention of the eitfsens party. ' BOLICE SZYMAWSKI.. .

CITY J I DOE. Editor TIMES! r 5 5 I hereby announce my candidacy far city Judas 9f Hammond en tha democratic ticket, subject to the choice of aid party at Its primary to be held on August 2. 1013. FRED HARNETT.

FOR TRKASLRER. Editor TIMESt Yes) are herewith authorised to announce that I will be a candidate for the office of city treasurer of the City of Hammond, Indiana, on th democratic ticket, subject. to .tha nlU of the voters of this city, and I herewith ask the support of my friends at the democratic primary election. Signed, OTTO II. DtLLKE.

FOR tXEHK. Editor TIMESt Yon are herewith authorised to announce that J will be a candidate for the ofttce of city clerk of the city of Hammond, Indiana, on the democratic ticket, subject to the will of the voters of this city, and I herewith ask the support of my friends at the democratic primary election. - Signed, WILLIAM HOLD.

gan his newspaper career as a report-)iKin a loan out me journal, of wisdom of having permitted the de

FOTTFt TtlTRT ivnuvA tt a p hot? er at S 6 a week, but today is a litter- : ,umius' A"u-. B " manea ror

TRAGEDY ADDS HORROR, etc." ateur at many time $50 a week. '"s nicunuu iu me iati mac uie

8. "FIRE DOES BIG DAM AGE." , The last sentence of his observations, DanKB ln nopKins nave decided to 9. "GARY MAN IS DROWNED." which are printed below, probably adopt a new method In discovering 10. "CANAL TAKES N E W explains why Mr. Fitch gave up edit-; whether applications for Joans are

TOLL."

11. "FIRE DOES BIG DAMAGE." 12. "STABBED SIX TIMES;

LIVES."

13. NEW VICTIM OF

HEAT."

"DEATH OF CHILD." "JUNE'S GRIM RECORD." "CORONER RETURNS VEF

14. 15. 16.

DICT.

17.

CAPE

etc."

18. 'CORONER

ED RIGHT." 19. "THREE HURT IN RIOT ?0. "CAR CATCHES FIRE."

j trust worthy. When a man comes in

to ask for a loan the cashier will step to the telephone and find out from the newspaper office whether he has paid his subscription. "If he has," says the Journal, "he can borrow trip limit at the hant

antique desk entirely surrounded by' fK,. . . ., ,,, . . . otherwise his application, will need

ing for contributing: "An editor is a tired, nervous man who decides what' (Shall go into a newspaper and explains why it got In

T II E afterwards

"The editor works upstairs at an

Don't forget this.

THEY HAD A NARROW ES--AUTO HURDLES DITCH,

SMITH GUESS-

Gary. FOR Jl DUE. Editor TIMESt I'leane announce to the people of Gary that I am a candidate for the nomination of city Juda-e, subject to the decision of the cltlsenn party convention. H. P. SHARAVSKY.

CITY JIUGE. , . Editor TIMES I I desire te announce that I shall be a candidate for Judge of the city court of Gary, subject to the republican and progressive, primaries, JOHN W. WAKE.

FOR CITY, JLPGE. Editor TIMES; ',i . .J Please announce to the citizens that I will be candidate for judge of tha city court of the city of Gary, nnd solicit their support at a primary election to be held its th .republican and progressive parties. - ALBERT C Hl'HER.Gary, Ind- June , 113.

FOR MAYORS -'dlter TIMESt ou may announce that I am a cane for mayor of Gary, subject to

- cisloj of the republican and pro

e primaries. A. R- HOOVBR.

FOR MAYOR.

MESt Tin.onnee that 1 nm i

he nomination for mayor of I live newspaper is for grac uaua.

. ABOUT HAMMOND GAKBAGE. Mr. John E. Kuhlman, street com missioner of Hammond, a very con

Bcientloua and industrious gentleman,

called upon the editor of the paper

yesterday regarding the expose it has

made of the garbage conditions in

Hammond which are very bad. Mr,

Kuhlman volunteered the informa

tion inai ne naa Deen asked ror a

statement by the city administration's

official excuser, the Daily News, and

sad that he "had told them to go

ahead and say what they wanted to

Last night they did. They not only ssjd what they wanted to but they wrote an open letter giving the Impression that Kuhlman had written It and addressed it lo the editor of this paper thanking him for the grpat assistance lent Kuhlman and hoping that he would keep it up etcetera, etcetera. The article asks u.i to devise some means to dispose of the Columbia Park garbage and criticises us for not suggesting a better plan or place. We hasten to assure Mr. Kuhlman and his official excuser that it is up to them to see that the garbage ia properly disposed of. Mr. Kuhlman and hia employers are paid by the taxpayers of this city to look after

the garbage. Wre are not in the garbage business. If Mr. Kuhlman, as

he is made to say in his letter, be

lieves we are the only one capable

of handling the matter right, it is

time for him to hand in his resigna

tion. We do not, however, wholly blame Mr. Kuhlman for the shame

ful way In which the garbage question is handled by the city administration. Ve believe he does. the best he can.. His- superiors are- however too busy playing politics and neglect

ing things which the taxpayers of this city pay them to look after. If the

city administration believes that this

paper is the only institution-that Is criticizing it, let its officials and supporters get busy and put their collective ear to the, ground , apd they .will be amazed. If they could see the letters received, the-oral complaints

rnide about this question Of garbage

thty would :com to the i?pn elusion that something. 4 dead wrong somewhere., . . "c,-... And again many people ln Hammond are as much to blame for the conditions as anyone ele for as Mr. Kuhlman has said, they by no means live up to the ordinance regarding its disposition. This paper has no further interest in the matter than that of any public guardian. It is the voice of the people. We are glad they make it the medium by which

ndi- jtbey can complain. That 1s -what any

THE TIMES

A NEW FEATURE. The collect-on-delivery feature waa added to the Parcel post Department of the postal service today. Under the new regulations a parcel bearing the required amount of parcel post stamps may be sent anywhere in the country, and the amount due from the purchaser collected and remitted by the postoff ice department. The parcel must bear the amount due from the addressee,, an $ the collection will be made if the amount is

old papers, and produces the results tQ be Dackea

which enables tne business manager to sit down stairs in a room fitted

with mahogany furniture and a Per- SCIENCE AND FANTASY.

- i-i Accorniner to Mr TCinline tno ia

great banquets in olemn btate and . . . . , , . , . . , . phant obtained his trunk because the a dress bu t. crocodile In. the Limpopo rjver gave, "It is the editor's duty to feel the nis -bulgy nose" a mighty pull. The pulse of the world and hold the steth- CXpianation given by Professor Woodoscope to business; to assist at the, ward at the Roya1 institution rebirth of history, to translate the pre- centiy is that the elephant, originent, refute the past and arrange the Rly a small animal, found its legs

future; to illuminate ignorance, re

ward merit, put the spotlight on villany and the pulmotor on reform; to make statesmen and dessicate demagogues, to elect presidents, crown heroes and secure bigger salaries for baseball pitchers; to act as an alarm clock for public opinion, as nn elevator for political candidates, and as a goat for every man who says something in a careless moment and who repents later by declaring that he was misquoted; to embalm truth, an-

gradually increasing in length and as the neck did not it was forced to grow a trunk to reach its food. The scientific version may be correct, but we prefer that give in the "Just-So Stories."

partment of commerce to be created

MUCH fun has been made of American shirt sleeve dipomacy but after a spell of this hot weather one must admit that our diplomats at least know how to be comfortable.

Sweet are the uses of baseball adver

sity to communities whose teams prof.

it thereby.

ONLY difference between some murderers and reckless auto speeders Is that the latter have been lucky enough not to bit atiy one.

THIS column would be a little longer but the heat has melted it down.

BESIDES one of our best, frlsnds aya it always makes him hot to read it.

SO we'll Jet it go at tijat.

"THANK you.- The linotype man.

new. cigar is named "The At torney General." Probably It "is intended 'for the no-trust dealers

REAP that If they had a pulmotor at Flint or Cedar Lakes on gunday four lives might have been saved. Wonder that the bathing: beach proprietors wouldn't loosen up a bit and install a couple of these needed devices?

A BOSTON MAN IS" LECTURING UPON "HOW TO BEJ A CHRISTIAN ATHLETE." MEANING ONE WHO CAN EASILY JUMP FROM ONE DENOMINATION TO ANOTHER?

It Is reported that the king of Slam has an English suffragist In his harem. That beats the hunger strike six city blocks. '

NEWSPAPER Item makes mention that a contractor has landed two big heating contractors, He ought. t9 be exiled as a public malefactor.

A chimpanzee in the New York zoo has been trained to act like a woman. But ordinarily It doesn't take any longer than five minutes to Induce a man to act like a monkey.

The Day in. HISTORY

TOUR MO!EY BC Of yonr good Judgment and 70a will Say, sob, fill that pipe of mlac with Forei or Country Club- Tber onion made. Barb, package roptslns premiss tickets. McBlv-Seottea Tobacco Cm,

JILY 1 IX WIHTORV. 1626 Chaplains first appointed lu each ship in the British navy. 1810 Louts Bonaparte abdicated the throne of Holland and retired to Austria as a private indicidual. 1814 Presque Isle surprised by the United States troops under Lieutenant Gregory. 1832 Rite of Suttee abolished In Hindoostan by the British authorities. 1864 A fire supposed to be Incendiary destroyed the government storehorse for hospital supplies and other buildings In Louisville, Ky.. with a loss of $1,000,000. 1898 Battle of El Caney (Spanish-American War). 1903 Thunder storms in Indiana destroyed many houses and jrpndered 250 families homeless.

1911 The Interstate Commerce Commission ordered a sweeping Investigation of express companies engaged in Interstate business. TOPAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Former Representative Edwin Wartar Hlggins of Connetlcut, was born July 1. 1874, at Clinton, Conn; was educated in the schools of Norwich, and graduated from the Yale Law School in 1897 .received the , degree of bachelor of laws; has been engaged ln the active practic of law since his admission to the bar In 1897. In 1899 ha represented Norwich ln the general assembly and served on the committee ca Judiciary; has been corporation counsel of Norwich, a deputy judge ot Ua city court, and was health officer for tha county of New London; served on tha Republican State Central Committee, and as prosecuting attorney for tha city if Norwich; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention of 1904; waa elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses and re-elected t the Sixty-second Congress. ,

SUBSCRIBE! FOB TUB TIMES.

if

Ifi9 ' Tnme to Buy Tttuaitt Mew

Sunlit

Sot

ffltue FdDimirflltn

To Thoroughly Enjoy the Glorious Fourth You Should Have a New Suit Everyone else will be well dressed, and you want to be just as well dressed as anybody, AND This is a shop where fastidious men may select their clothes with the absolute assurance that they are getting the latest in style the best in quality and the most for their money that it is possible to secure. Quality is the Backbone of Our Clothes Investigate the qualities we are offering at the following prices:

FIFTEEN and TWENTY DOlUIwARS

A NEW HAT FOR THE FOURTH And our big Hat Stock is ready with the very newest of the new things in Soft Hats, Derbies ' and Straws. Priced from 50c to $5

II S3 East State Street!

ml

rim

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Hammond, Indiana

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