Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 14, Hammond, Lake County, 3 July 1913 — Page 4
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THE TIMES. Thursday, July 3, 1913.
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Br The Lake Canary PrlaMa til Fob. Uaalaa- Cosaaaay. The Lake County Tiroes, daily except Sunday, "entered as second-class matter June 2S, 1I0-; The Uk County
Times, daily except Saturday and Bun I iay, entered Feb. 8. , 1111; Th Gary Evening Times, dally except Sunday, j entered Oct. 8, 1SS: re-entry of publication at Gary. Ind., April 18, 111!; Th Lake County Timea. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 80, 1811 The Timea. daily except Sunday, entered Jan. 15. 1912. at the postofnes at Hammond, Indiana, all under the act of March 8. 1879. Entered at the Postofflces, Hammond and Gary, Ind.. aa aacood-claas matter. FOREIGN ADVERTISING OFFICE. 18 Retor Buildinr - - Chicago PUBLICATION OFFICES, Hammond Building. Hammond, Ind. TGLEPHOKBI, Hammond (private exchange) Ill (Call for department wanted.) Qary OlTlce Tel. 1ST East Chicago Office Tel. 540-J Irdlana Harbor TeL S49-M: 150 Whiting TeL 80-M Crown Point Tel. 83 Herevlfcn TeL IS Advertising- solicitors wM fee aent, or ratten given on application. If you have any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest face and Stave it promptly remedied.
FOR CLERK. Editor TIMESi You are herewith authorized to announce that 1 will he a candidate for the office of city clerk of the city of Hammond, Indiana, oa the democratic ticket, subject to the will of the voters of this city, and I herewith ask the support of my friends at the demon cratic primary election. Signed. WILLIAM KOLB.
LARGER PAID IT drlCUXJtTtON THAN ANY OTHER TWO NEWI
PAPERS IX THE CAU'MET REGION.
XNONTMOU3 communloaUons will not be noticed, but others will bs printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor, Times, Hammond. Ind.
Gary. FOR JUDGE.
mond. "The city la dead, blatted the croakers. They wagged their heads owlishly and prepared to give up the ghost. In two years Hammond sang the doxology because the packing plant had left the city. It was really the best thing that ever happened to it. Cheer up Laporte.
GOOD FOR SMA1LEY.
Irrespective of party or politics,
Editor TIMESi ' Please announce to the people of
Gary that I am a candidate for the Mayor Smalley deserves commenda-
aomination of city judge, aubject to I tion for his firm decision yesterday to
the decision of the citisena party con
vention. II. P. SHARAVSKY.
CITlf JUDGE.
Editor TIMES I I desire to announce that I shall he a candidate for Judge of the city court of Gary, subject to the republican and progressive primaries. JOHN W. WAKE.
go ahead with the deep sewer project. The majority members of the board acted in the matter, but they are the his appointees and he is held responsible for their action. The question is the biggest one that has come up in his administration and tie has answered it with the adoption of a
progressive policy.
At the present time Mayor Smal-
ley's chances for the campaign can not be' definitely figured and just be-
FOR CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMES t Please announce to the citizens that
I will be a candidate for judge of the cause he dared to follow his convic
city court of the city of Gary, and solicit their support at a primary election
to he held by the republican and progressive parties. ALBERT C. HUBER. Gary, Ind.. June 6. 1913.
FOIl MAYOR. Editor TIMESi You may announce that I am a can
didate for mayor of Gary, aubject to the decision of the republican and pro
tranlve primaries. A. R. HOOVER,
FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMESi
You may announce that I am a caadl-
tions in the matter without figuring
the political cost when a campaign is at the door, he deserves commendation.
As has been pointed out time and
again, the burden of the proof on. the deep sewer question did not lie with the petitioners, but rather with
the remonstrators. They mustered less than a thousand names in the entire city obviously not a representative remonstrance. On that score alone the administration was war
ranted to proceed, but as further ar-
NOTHING TO DO UNTIL TOMORROW. Great Ceasar! It's no wonder that they are flustered by the heat At Gary. Look what the people have to
go through! Just had a circus and : a hot spell. Today 2,000 members of!
the Polish Order of Military Falcons come to town under arms for three days' encampment. Tomorrow is the fourth of July. On Saturday maybe the grand jury will return it periodical grist of indictments. Next week the Indiana Municipal League will hold its convention in town and every Hoosier pooh-bah from Mayor Shank of Indianapolis to own Tom Knotts will be circulating among the common pe-pull. And right after this comes the fusion primaries of the bull moosers, republicans and dependent democrats. Then the curtain will ring up on a week's Chautauqua which will have to go some if It wants to rival the usual comic opera performance of Gary politics. In the meantime the monster Gary rail mill is working overtime and the coke ovens are using 9,000 tons of coal daily despite the heat. Battleaxe Castleman is quiet and the coun
cil investigating committee members
are too busy serving on other committees to make the excitement a"ny worse than it is.
Beyond these few things, life is
quiet in Gary and if the natives be
stir themselves July may be account
ed as a month of action.
On the Gettysburg Battlefield Fifty Years After.
Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. E9, F. and A. M.. Friday, July 4, 8 p. m. No work. Visitors welcome. R- S. Galer, Sec, E. M. Shanklin, V. M. Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M. Regular stated meeting, July 9. Visiting companions welcome.
date for the nomination for mayor of gument, it was presented with a pe
tition of more than four hundred names favoring the sewer, which the
oretically off sets the remonstrators
to just that extent. When it is borne in mind that the petitioners represent
Gary, aubject to the decision of the republican and progressive primaries.
R. O. JOHNSON.
Hammond Commandery No. 41, K. T. Special meeting June SO. Red Cross. Visiting sir knights welcome.
Political Announcements
NOTICE.
All political notices of whatever nature and from whatever party are strictly cash. Notices of meetings, announcement of candidacies, etc., may be InKerted in these columns.
FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMES J
You may announce tn your coiumna property interests Wny more times
mat i am a ranaiuaie lor tae aomina- , . . . . , , . .. larger than the remonstrators and tion for miTor of Garv sublect to the I
decision of the republican and ro- that they are willing to be assessed
grestdve primaries, and i ask the sup- accordingly another argument is add
port of my friends In this way. CHARLES E. GREEN WALD.
led.
The remonstrators have been un
able to produce the oly valid argument on their side, namely, that the project is scientifically Incorrect, and not practical. Their principal mistake
FOR MAYOR. Editor, TIMESi
pleaae announce hat I ana m candidate for the nomination for mayor of Cirr. smblect to the decision of the
republican and progressive primaries was that they were divided among
In July.
W.P. PATTERSON.
themselves on the grounds for opposi tion.
THE TIMES, which in the past has
been free to criticise the administra
tion adversely when it though this
FOR TREASURER. Editor TIMES I
1 a a n .... n - n , V A . nn1 .1
Gary that I win be . candidate for the best ln the Public's interest, is equally nomination of city treasurer, aubject as tree to commend and approve, and
to the decision of the republican-pro- I is particularly pleased, to d the latter
gresslve primaries.
W. D. HUNTER,
now because it has for a long time
advocated the deep sewer system.
Whiting. FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMESi I announce herewith that I am a candidate for the democratic nomination for mayor of the city of Whiting, subject to the decision of the party primaries. J. J. DONEGAN.
Hammond. FOR MAYOR. Editor TIMESi After having consulted myself, I wlMh you would pleawe announce my name for a candidate for mayor of the city of Hammond, Indiana, subject to the decision of the democratic primary election to be held August 2nd, 1913. WILLIAM W. M'MAHON. Dated at Hammond, Ind., July 3, 1913.
CLERK. Editor TIMESi
Please announce that I will be a candidate for the nomination of city clerk on the democratic ticket, subject to the primary convention held August 2. I rnpectfully solicit the support of my friends and take this means of apprising those whom 1 may not see that I am out for the nomination. NICHOLAS LAUER.
Edltor TIMESi
Please announce to the people of Gary that I will be n candidate for the nomination of city treasurer, subject
to the decision of the nominating convention of the citizens ticket July 12.
WILLIAM FEDER.
FOR CLERK. Editor TIMES I
You are authorised to announce that
I will be a candidate for city clerk, aubject to the decision of the Gary re
publican and progressive primaries. II. C. FRANCIS.
FOR COUNCIL. Editor TIMESi
Please announce to the people of Gary that I will be a 'candidate for the
nomination of alderman-at-large, aubject to the decision of the dticens tick
et convention. A. H. HALE.
LEAVE IT TO CHICAGO.
Chicago sportsmen have invited
Mr. Thomas Lipton to race as fol lows:
Chicago sportsmen, speaking for American sentiment, invite you to compete for the America's Cup and pledge you fairness in the contest and congratulations if you win.
Probably have an idea in the
Windy City that a yacht Is some
kind of a whaleback running to Milwaukee or one of those George Fitch i motor boats running from Hammond
to Riverdale on the smelly Calumet.
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ONE PAUIT SHE HADN'T. "A long life and a merry one,"
was evidently the motto of Frau Johanna Saresz, who recently died at the age of 102. "No one who knew her ever saw her sober," says a Vienna report coldly.
Well the good frau didn't attain
her longevity through pulling at a dudheen so we will have to give her some credit.
So
r
HAS NO NEED FOR FEAR.
CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMESi You are herewith authorised to announce that I will be a candidate for the office of city judge of the city of Hammond, Indiana, on the democratic ticket, subject to the will of the voters of this city, and I herewith nsk the support of my frlenda at the democratic primary election to be held on August 2, 1813. JAMES O. KOONTZ. . July 2, 113. I CITY JUDGE. Editor TIMESi
I hereby announce my candidacy for city Judge of Hammond on the demo
cratic ticket, aubject to the choice of
said party at its primary to be held on
August 2, 1913. FRED HARNETT.
CITY TREASURER. Editor TIMESi You are authorised to announce that I am a candidate for city treasurer, aubject to the will of the democratic voters as expressed' at the primaries to be held August 2nd, 1913. J. D. BRUSEL.
FOR COUNCIL. Editor TIMESi Please announce to the people
Gary that I am a candidate for the nomination for alderman of the first ward, subject to the republican and
citisena' primaries or conventions.
THEODORE V. FREED CRY,
The interview by Jacob Schroeter,
member of the board of public works
of Hammond in this paper giving his
of reasons for casting friendship aside
and voting for a deep sewer system injuring his political future as enemies of the proposition say he will is
classic. He said:
THE FOURTH OF JULY FOOL. The Fourth of July idiots are with
ns. They make nieht hideous with
the various hellish noise-making ap
paratus they buy and use despite
civic ordinance.
They shoot off' giant firecrackers.
they terrorize women with the explosion of blank cartridges, they scare horses and frighten children and
laugh at criticism and warnings. Nothing would please the commun
ity better than to see some husky
cop club one of these assinine offen
ders against public order and health
As the Fort Wayne News so well
puts it: If there Is one thing above another calculated to inspire contempt and disgust. It is the spectacle of young men from sixteen to twenty-one years of age walking along the streets or loaflngf on the corners, recklessly tossing about the largest firecrackers they can purchase. Entirely aside from tho "idiocy they display in making nuisances of themselves, they by their noise call attention to themselves
as wasting money their parents need to help cloth and feed them for it may always be safely assumed that those who engage in such puerile pastimes are not in any sense self-supporting. Four chances out of five they filched from the pocketbooks of their tired and overworked mothers the funds they thus lavish on loud noise and disagreeable odors.
Editor TIMESi
Please 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
citisena party convention. ARON KOLLUS.
FOR COUNCIL. Editor TIMESi
Please announce to the people of Gary thal will be a candidate for the nomlnatlAt for alderman-at-large,
subject to the convention of the citi
sena party.
DOLICE SZYMANSKI..
FOR TREASURER. Editor TIMESi You are herewith authorised te announce that I will be a candidate for the office of city treasurer 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. fcitfBcd, OTTO H. DIELK&
LAPORTE'S PROGRESS.
Laporte Is jumping up In the air
and cracking her heels over a new
$250,000 hotel and right well she
may. If there is anything that gives a city confidence ln itself and makes
it hold up its chin it is a splendid
hotel. A good hotel is one of the best
assets and advertisements a city has;
a poor one is a black eye.
Incidentally Laporte has completed
and has under construction so far thi3 year a half million dollars worth
of business blocks and public build
ings showing that she is riding the high tide. Laporte suffered recently because of the fact that the reorganization of the Rumely Company was responsible for all sorts of shamelessly magnified reports sent out from that city. It wasn't so much that the outside world felt that there was anything wrong in Laporte, but rather that Laporte's own people had cold feet. Several years ago the G. H. Ham-
mond Packing Company left Ham-
"I have given the study of the needs of this city in regard to a sewer system all my life for several weeks. I have considered the matter pro and con and while I know I have lost friends by it, for thi sake of Hammond I feel that I would be violating a sacred trust did I not vote for the deep sewer system. I have traveled over all this country and other countries and I have never seen a city amount to anything that was not properly provided for in the matter of sewage. "I feel very deeply about this matter. It is hard to be criticised by friends for doing your duty. But that duty is to the children of this city and to unborn generations. Personally I could get along without a sewer, but our children
and their children can't. We must build for the future needs of the city. In five years those who condemn Mr. Swanton and I for voting for It now will be glad that we did. If I wanted to cater to politics I would have voted it down, but as a loyal patriotic Hammond man I had to vote for It." All honor to Messrs. Swanton and Schroeter who have made it possible for Hammond to get rid of its sewage in a proper and modern manner! Their motives were expressed min
utely by Mr. Schroeter in his inter
view and put in a nutshell are "for
the future of Hammond and its un
born." We doubt seriously that either member of the board of public works.
Schroeter or Swanton, have done any thing which will hurt them politi cally. They have stood for progress.
People do not generally turn down
ervants who stand for progress.
POOR JUNE BRIDES! There is not so much glory of be
ing a June bride as one would
think.
First of all most June brides are
forgotten by July; and the June
brides of yesterday are now grap
pling with the brass tacks of life. Ro
mance is no more with them. And what's more, the girls who became
brides during the hot June spell cer talnly deserve sympathy.
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AINDOIV1 THIINQ3 AISD FLINQS
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fflre chief were ordered
LORDY! If these suffragettes Start wearing Trousers the Men will have to don Kilties To distinguish Them from The females.
congress. Why not on the beach at Atlantic City? As It Is most of the congressmen are more or less In deep water.
GREECE and Bulgaria have gone to
the mat, a. fine example for the Christian nations to be giving to the Turks.
"ENGLAND urge U. S. to move on Mexico," says a dispatch. John Bull Is much mistaken. It's hot enough north of the Ohio without getting below the Rio Grande.
' SOME EFFECS OF THE
And every time they start a new 1 v iiir.iv.
peace conference at The Hague
war breaks out.
One hideoui injustice of the silly
season is tnat every ooay can eex
away with an alibi except a baseball team.
SEE by The Times that they haven't
got ice enough to go round In East j
Chicago and Hammond. Well, if the I
Hammond people will drink theirs out of a keg instead of wanting crushed I
ice around each Individual bottle may- 1 NOTICE that there is a great kick be they will be able to pull through about leaving out the "h" in Pittsthe crisis. . I burgh. Well, "h" may be left out ln the
spelling, but anyone that knows Pittsburg very well knows that It la ever there.
UNDERSTAND that the superior court judges of Massachusetts now wear elaborate gowns. This is all right but we won't insist that local judges be gowned thusly. Great danger that they would want slit gowns with the slash clear up to the knees.
EXCHANGE states "no trick known to man since the stone age will be overlooked during the coming campaign" in Gary. Anyone who has been In a Gary election and who has been hit by some of the things that the Knotts men throw around will say that Gary is ln passing through the brick age.
WISE WOMEN OF PL0NA.
Opponents of the foaming amber
and advocates of arid regions gener
ally are invited to take a little tip
from Switzerland along the local op
tion line. Men of the village of Fiona petitioned the local authorities to open
a cheap public cafe where they couid
spend their , evenings. The wives and
daughters objected and the petition was refused.
The sturdy sons of William Tell
resented this tyranny by going to
neighboring villages of the wet per
suasion, yodeling merrily home at all hours.
Weary of Plona being an Adamless
Eden the greater part of the time, the women organized a syndicate for the
purpose of establishing a cafe of
their own .where refreshments are sole at little more than costs, and
tne women take turns in acting as
waitresses. Peace reigns in Plona.
Such a display of wisdom will make
many men admit that woman de serves the ballot in Plona. .
"SHEEP TO CUT JOHN D.'S GRASS." Headline. To be sure John D. will have a herd ot mutton trimming his grass and thus save several dimes that he might have to give small boys for operating his lawn mower.
MUCH talk of a summer capital for
torn down
within thirty days. Ten are in th , heart of the business district and seven are owned by prominent citizens. In only a few instances were the owners given permission to rebuild. The build
ings were ordered destroyed because they are not fit, from a sanitary standpoint, for human occupancy or because they present unreasonable firo hazards. CLOUDBURST CAUSES DAMAGE. There was a cloudburst over the southeastern part of Hamilton county and in the vicinity of Fortville this
afternoon. Farmers in those localities
declare four inches of water fell ln an hour, the measurement being made by that amount being caught( ln vessels left in the open. Thousands of acres cf corn were flooded and much wheat was ruined by being blown down. The oats crop was seriously damaged. The drainage along the roads .was -Inadequate and as a result many ' miles of the highways were covered with water, there being large washouts In many places. MUST IRTTIiE FOR NEW ROAD. A Jury in the Jay circuit court decided that Blackford and Jay Counties must pay Wright Erothers, contractors at Hartford City, for the coritructlon of the Taylor road on the county line. The road was completed but not accepted when the March floods destroyed a portion of it. The contractors brought suit, when the boards refused to accept it until repaired, aserting that the boards were slow In taking the road olt their hands. AUTO TURNS TURTLE j KILLS ONE. Wycoft Cregor, 11 years old, son of
WHAT WONDERFUL EYES IDA HAS! Dr. Frank Cregor, former state sena-
(From the Gary Tribune.) tor of Indianapolis, was killed in an Mrs. Tarbell yesterday looked automobile accident at L.wisville. through all of the schools and other south of New Castle about S o'clock places of interest about the city....She ( this evening when an automobile in is above the average heighth of wo-:whlch he had an uncle, James Baird, men and has a disMnct masculine ap- j who lives south of Lewlsville, were pears nee. Being near middle age, her , driving, upset and pinned him underhalr is slightly streaked with grayjneath the car. Baird was slightly
bruised.
FISH INTOXIQATED IN RIVER OF BEER." "GUINEAS MOTHERED BY COON." "WATER PIPE FOZEN ON HOTTEST DAY." DECLARE IT RAINED WORMS." "FLOWERS UPSE A RAILROAD." "THIS CAT GOES TO ALL FIRES." "LION TRIMS ITS OWN TOENAILS." "RATS FISH WITH TAILS"; GET BARBER'S LEECHES."
and her keen eye take in every ) (
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The Ohio bride who was made deathly sick by chicken salad with pimento dressing may never again care for salad like mother used to make. WAS BURSTED AT ARMAGEDDON. Philadelphia Record) Teddy has obtained a police permit to carry a gun. What's the matter with the Big Stick? THE best past of July 4 is July t. TIE on Willie's fingers godo and stout.
UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A
GIKL FATALLY STABS AUNT.
FILES S12.500 DAMAGE SUIT. As the result of the alleged neglect of a former city attorney at . South Bend to follow out the orders of the council in 1907 in preparing a certain ordinance suit for $12,600 damages was today filed against the Chicago, Indiana & Southern railway Company py Toustyn and Victoria Merzydowskl, owners
of a grocery store upjao n ...
Josephine Sacco, 20 years old. is be- .intaind the defendants. The
lieved to be dying at Hope hospital at DroDOSed ordinance, which It la de-
Fort vayne as ie irun clared f0rmer City Attorney mnx
knife wounds inflicted snortiy alter Dunahoo wag to have drawn, was to noon today by her niece, Josephine La- et forth that the roundhouse was a Rosa, IS years old. The LaRosa girl's nulMnCf3 and ghould be moved out of attack on her victim is said to have closely settled neighborhood in
been vindication of her honor, whicli whIch u ,tands. The ordinance, It is was aspersed by the other woman. The eaid wag never prepared and the round
Popular Actress Now in Chicago
ffvv fn owed a QlsturDance in
Italian colony in which an old leua was revived. The LaRosa girl is under arrest. At the jail she was shown the knife and ead: "You bet, that's my knife and I've killed her.ILLINOIS GIR. BEST SPELLER.
house never moved.
CARTRIDGE EXPLODES. Thomas Lowery. 25 years old, porter
at the Hotel Ray at Shelbyville may lost the eight of his right eye, the result of a revolver containing a blank cartridge being f.red at him as a joke
T.1.1 111 n.nn -"w."'"
A11SS jviary otai" vl x .., . . nf m-n on Ini
the high honor! in the annual spelling ' whom he knew. His match at Winona Lake today. Mrs fcurned th Henry L. Ward of Lehanon was second;"1" and Miss Alice Browning of Evansville ae - V was third. At the beginning of the MANY BUILDINGS CONDEMNED, event there were fifty contestants rep- Twentyone brick and frame buildings resenting many section of the country, j of one to two stories were today con-
r-i.- a K-n I President J. KlDaon OI w inona mnege ; aerancu uy - "i"-""- .
tmH,'. ain it ii,hi..iMi.. T.k. r. dcclired the- spellera the best he ever mittee at Fort Wayne, consisting of
A.av, IkMarda. the mayor, the board of safct and the.
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