Hammond Times, Volume 8, Number 121, Hammond, Lake County, 3 November 1913 — Page 4
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THE TIMES. Monday, Nov. 3, 1913. THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS By Tka Lake County Priatlag and PubUkl a ft- CaiT. A HAMMOND CANDIDATE p. i. Tooimv SEND HER A CARD. We sing praises for Mollie McBILLY HITT IS COMPLETING HANDSOME HOME IN WASHINGTON WHERE HE'LL LIVE WITH BRIDE; MILLIONAIRES FOR NEIGHBORS Cafferty, of Detroit, Mich., an em ploye of the HoffmakA -Hotel there. A big elocttic sign fifty feet in !he it was nearly completed when the 5 .-"-y wh'stle blew and the electricians The Lake County Tlmea Dally except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond. June 18. 1908. The Lake County Times Saturday end weekly edition. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond, February 4. 1911. The Gary Evening: Times Dally except Sunday. Entered at the postofflce In Gary, April 13. 1H. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Entered quit. The manager offered any of h'.s porters $25 to put the bulbs in for lighting, but each one refused. Miss Mollie, however, volunteered, climbed out on the structure and affixed three hundred bulbs, while a crowd cheered and then retreated safely before the illumination. We don't know whether or not Miss Mollie has a union card, but think the boys ought to send her one. 5 x I x
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at the postofflce in East Chicago, September 25, 913. All under the act of March 1. 1879, s second-class matter. roiueieiv ADvERTisixa omacs, 1! Rector Building - - Ohlcs.ro PUBLIC ATI OK OFF-ICES, Hammond Building, Hammond. Ind. TELEPHONES, Hammond (private exchange) ill (Call for department wanted.) Oary Ofnoe. .................. .TeL 1IT East Chicago OH lea Tel. 1 40 -J Indiana Harbor Tel. tlf-al; 169 witting Tel. 10-M Crewn Point.......... ...TaL Ugwl a :.Tal 1 Advertising- solicitors will be sent, or rates given on application.
If you have any trouble getting The Times notify the nearest office and have it promptly remedied. LARGER PAID IP CIRCULATION THAJf AST OTHER TWO NEWSPAPERS IJI THE CA LIT MET REGION. ANONYMOUS communications will not ha 'noticed, irt others will be printed at discretion, and should be addressed to The Editor. Tlmea, Hammond, Ind. 433 Stated meeting Garfield Lodge, No. 869. F. and A. XI., Friday, October 31st, 8 p. m., F. C. degree. Visitors welcome. R. S. Galer, Sec, E. M. Shanklin. W. M. Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M. Special meeting Wednesday, November B. Past Master degree. Visiting companions welcome. Hammond Council No. 10 R. & S. M. Stated assembly, first Tuesday each month. J. V Morthland, Recorder. Hammond Commandery No, 41, K. T. Regular stated meeting Monday. November S, Red Cross work. Visiting Sir Knights welcome. Political Announcements All political aotlc at whatever aatar aad fraaa whatever party trie tly c a Notice ot meetings. sauccaest mt caadidaeica. etc, atay be laacrted la tkcu eoiunajaa, Hammond. Haatautaa si, Oct .IT, 1913. Editor TIMES I Please auraiM tkat I am a candidate for tke effice at Mayer oa the Indepeadeat Cltlacaa' ticket for the com. tag city clcctlaa. November 4, 1913. SAM ABALMAN. PLATFORM EQALL1ZATION. Let the Cltlaeaa af Hammond Rale, Whiting. Editor TIMES! , Plcaae aaaouaee that I asa m eaadlaate for the office f City Clerk of Whiting oa the Democratic ticket for the coming city electioa oa Nov. 4th. WILLIAM M. GREATRAKE. WHITING DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Mayor Beaumont Parks. For Clerk W. M. Greatrake. For Treasurer Andrew R. Keilman. For City Judge U, G. Swarts. For Councilman First Ward John P. Kostolnlk. For Councilman Second Ward J. J. Donegan. . For Councilman Third ward Thomas W. Eaton. For Councilman Fourth Ward Peter Uucckowskl., For Councilmen at Large Thomas F. Duggan, N. E. Miller. Adv. HAMMOND REPUBLICAN TICKET MAYOR. Peter Crumpacker. CLERK. Frank J. Dorse y. TREASURER. Charles W. Hubbard. JUDGE. Patrick J. Toomey. - COUNCILMEN-AT-LARGB. William Herkner. James E. Kennedy. James R. Graves. Osro B. Lloyd. William J. Hojnacki. COUNCILMEN. First Ward Clyde L. Fowler. Seeond Ward Albert F. Truhn. Third Ward Fred L. Wyman. Fourth Ward Henry Eggers. Fifth Ward William Kahl. Sixth Ward Joseph Trinkl. Seventh Ward Ernest E. Fricke. Eighth Ward Clarence M. Eder. Ninth Ward Brick Lund. Tenth Ward John Novak. (Advertisement)
X'.-'v'v - Ozro B .Lloyd. Candidate for councilman-at-large, was born in Martin county, Indiana, in 1876. Mr. Lloyd has been a resident of Hammond several years, having come here to work for the Indiana Harbor Belt railroad, for which railroad he holds a responsible position as assistant general yard master for the entire Calumet district. He is a man of education, having had the advantages of a common school education, and being also a graduate of Vlncennes university, of Yincennes, Indiana, from which istitution he graduated in 1S93. He lives at 8S2 Erie street, with his wife and two boys. This is the first time he has sought a public office, and he is entitled to the support of every voter in Hammond. He Is Interested generally in the welfare of the city. Adv. THE CITIZENS' TICKET OF EAST CHICAGO PRANK CALLAHAN. FOR MAYOR. Frank Callahan. FOR CITY JUDGE. Wm. A. Fuzy. FOR TREASURER. Walter 0. Harmon. CITY CLERK. Thos. Y. Richards. ALDERMEN. First Ward Wm. Babcock. Second Ward Mike Kula. Third Ward Clyde Bieddinger. Fourth Ward John Tankely. Fifth Ward Theo. F. Heim. Sixth Ward Stanley Raczkowski. Seventh Ward J. W. Galvin. ALDERMEN-AT-LARGE. John H. Steele. Joseph Karmilowicz. J. W. Maxwell. Adv. AXEL KAIDING WHITING CANDIDATE. '-4 t - ! - : :"":.:.::.: i s Candidate for Alderman in the Second Ward on the Progressive Ticket, Is Making a Strong Canvas and Expects to Win. . adv
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Adv. THE BOSK I'XFADIXO. All waa deserted and mo very nt 111, I knew that autumn nut have entered there 1 The iodic of bird, the hum of bee. The low virlnil moving; muMlas;ly, The VThlsperlaic leaves, the rosea talr. Had fled with rammer from the garden t-hlll. Aad where heart npoke to heart with tender word, Aad vown were made that mocked the might of yearn. The vines, frail b hoots of glories fled. An If liy phantom finger led. Cling to the lattice in their fears Of ruthlenn wind from northern slum ber stirred. Their whirling forma down garden alnlen go by. Where walked the orient summer la her pride; The last dance of the leaven In o'er, The fountain' Rong In heard no aorri Here earthly roses all have died. Bat in the heart love's rose shall never die. Arthur Wallace reach la New York Sua. THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY. In twenty-four hours it will be all oei but tb.3 shouting in Gary, Kit Chicago, Hammond and Whiting. May the best man win! It makes no difference who is elect ed in any of the cities, insofar as his future political status is concerned. The day is dawning when a new municipal order of things is coming. Four years hence, mark the prediction, partisan candidates for the chief executive ships in WIDE-A-WAKE cities will be as scarce as hens' teeth. The people will align themselves with non-partisan candidates. it will be the man who can show busi ness efficiency who will win. The American people are sick and tired of allowing politics to interfere with their business. A city is a business institution. The day is coming when politicians will be forced to recognize it. FRED BARNETT Democratic Candidate for City Judge I ask your support on my record while serving you as your city judge, and my pledge for the same conduct
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BR-ER BOWSER REACHES 050. The editor of this paper passed another milestone in his life last Tuesday. He first saw the light of day in Valparaiso, and was born during that period in the country's history when war was raging over the land. If ne lives until next March he will have run The Tribune a full thirty years, and when he arrived in this town he was just a full fledged voter. How old was Ann? Chesterton Tribune.
THE NEW JERSEY FIGHT. One of the most interesting political fights in the country tomorrow is in the state of New Jersey. Thither let us turn an eye for a minute. "Ex-Gov. Edward Casper Stokes will be elected Governor of New Jersey by a plurality of at least 20,000," said Newton A. Bugbee, chairman -.-f the Republican state committee. Acting Governor James Fielder will be elected by anywhere from 23,000 to 400,000 plurality,", says Democratic national committeeman Robert S. Hudspeth. The Progressive nominee is State Senator Everett oClby, who has been outline a erpa t swath rlnrins' the campaign, making whirlwind trip3, with speeches on street corners, fromi wagons, halls, at factories and every-1 where. His managers think he stands a splendid chance. Well they are just as confident as we are. CHILD BEAMING A CRIME? It certainly Is a queer world. The Board of Education of New York, by diligent inquiry, has discovered that since the first of last January, fifteen public teachers have committed the crime of child-bearing. But as respects the effect '"of maternity on their efficiency the board could reach no conclusion. There are 15,150 women teachers In the elementaiy schools of Greater New York and public sentiment seems to be that if the Board of Education believes that mother teachers consitute a menace to the efficiency of the school room, it should dismiss from the service teachers In whom marriage causse deterioration rather than making child-benring presumptive evidence of incapacity. BABOONS IN AN ART GALLERY. Within a short time the lady who claims the credit for the Indiana housing law will speak in Gary. No doubt the law was well meant by its promoters; it possesses some good points. But it has been very harmful to this region. In the first place the law was promoted by idealists who have succeeded in foisting New York building regulations upon small communities. In the second place the law was passed by a legislature notorious for its inefficiency. With a combination like this it, is no wonder that some municipality are finding it hard to respect the law. The hpusing statute will go down into history as a beautiful piece of Uptopianlsm handled by the delicate hands of a blunt, narrow-minded. simian gang of legislators. THANK HEAVEN. Late Tuesday night it will be history of the past. The headquarters of defeated candidates will bear a close resemblance to a summer resort in December. Then nothing to do until another election. THE TITLE OF NOBILITY. "I have no occupation, sir! I am a gentleman a nobleman understand!" This was said in a New York, police court by a European baron who had created a disturbance in a theater lobby. This baron saw nothing Incongruous in a nobleman's creating disorder in a public place. A nobleman may be a common rowdy'. But work! - that is beneath him, understand! Work would tarnish his high title, understand! Well, maybe it would. Certainly a patent of nobility is worth nothing to a man if he must stand on his own feet anyway. And the man who j doesn't stand oa his own feet isn't
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Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hitt and William P. ("Billy") Hitt, who married Katherine Elkins the other day, is just completing a handsome home on Massachusetts aVenue in
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ANDOM Tl-illNQS A IND FLINQQ
WHEN blue think of the big incoms tax that young Vincent Astoc has to pay. "CRABS AND TliE'IR HABITS." Our Dumb Animals. Married or the sea variety? WHY can't we get something from the white-house about Miss Jesse's trousseau? WOMAN who sued her husband lor divorce because he beat her, called him a wolf. But even the wolf won't resent the severest bites of its , female. IIOBART man who disappeared in 1869 has just returned home after being declared legally dead. Any .one who would stay away from llobart that long must be prepared to suffer the consequences. THERE are seven men runnin? for governor of Massachusetts. This ex plains why the state's output of shoes is less than last month. INDIANAPOLIS department store ad vertises tables that can be converted into beds. DARKY who heard that President Wilson had a big sweet potato sent much of a man though he have a line of ancestry reaching back to Adam. This baron's ancestor who first won the title for his family may have been a good deal of a man. He may have had real nobility. If he hd, he proved it by hard work, for it is to be proved In no other way. But, unfortunately, the ancestor could transmit only the title, cot the worhy qualities. And the title, fitted upon emptiness, seems to have made a fool. This baron vho Is above w-nk has yet to lean that in this country at least every rcan must make 1ns own title to nobility and mako it by work. The Day in HISTORY NOVEMBRK 3 IX HISTOIIY. 1829 Treaty of St. Louis, by which Indians ceded to. the United States land east of the Mississippi River. 183 Dr. Horner, writer of "The Natural History of Russia," died at Zurich, Switzerland. 1840 St. Jeane d'Arc bombarded by the allied British and Turkish fleets; Egyptians evacuated next morning. 1S54 Louis Napoleon withdrew his interdict to the journey through Prance of the American Minister, Mr. Soule. 1904 Japanese capture Important forts east of Port Arthur. TOUAVS BIRTHDAY IIO.XOHS. Congressman Scott Ferris, of the Fifth Oklahoma district, was born November 3, 1877, at Neosho, . Newton County, Mo.,; graduated from the Newton County High School, 1887. and from the Kansas City School of Law, 1901; has practised law continuously since, 1901; Is married and has served in the Legislature of Oklahoma. Was elected to the Sixtieth Congress and has been re-elected to eac huscceedlng session.
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mj??Vv-''1fr tkj'A-JaMSa&'J-l-V'.'.'i, :;.aaF"l their new home in Washington. Washington, where he will take his bride after the honeymoon. Near this residence are the homes of the McLeans, Mrs. Clarence F. Moore. J him a possum. Hennery Coldbottle holds a Mum's extra dry cork and awaits any and all gifts. NO doubt by this time Mayor Knotts has his steam roller well oiled and in good working order. HAPPY. HAPPY. MEN! Report c6mes from northwest about Eskimos being marooned a la Robinson Cruso on Icy island since 1900. Lucky men! They have escaped the harem, the slit, the diaphonous skirt, the turkey trot, th grizzly pear, the tango, the ItSgh cost of living and motion-picture thrillers. ; . . . BAVARIA changes kings, states a cablegram. Well, so some of our cities on next Tuesday. THIS is the time of the year when the turkey begins to get suspicious of the generous way in which the farmer feeds him. ANTI-NOISE society is to meet in Chicago. Can this be the brotherhood of boilermakers or the association of bull moose antiquarians? BEES always go home in a straight line. There is a great deal of difference between trees and some men. Motions and Orders LAKE SUPERIOR COURT. 10760 Augusta 1 Kranlchfelt vs. Phillip Krantchfeld finding for plft divorce granted, maiden name of plft, Augusta L. Kohn restored, plft forbidden to remarry for period of 2 years. Judgement. 10940 Kred B. Kltcheli vs Strickland J. English finding for plft for 8100 Judgement. 11111 J. C. Wells vs Annette Bowser et al plft files aflf of non residence of all defts. publication ordered, Lake County Times, returnable Dec. 29th, 1913. 11112 Alex Aszmongya vs Anna Aszmongya Aff. of disinterested person filed, non-residence of deft, publication ordered, Gary Tribune, returnable Dee. 29th, 191S. 7430 Studenaber Bros Mfg. Co. vs. Geo. V. Bacon finding for plft for J5S1.40 judgement. 7595 Wm. Zumpfe vs David E. Boone dismissed at deft's cost. T733 Chicago Auto Supply House vs. George B. Roberts by agreement of parties cause dismissed, at deft'a costs. 8573 Diamond Rubber Co. vs Kred L. Heintz et al plft dismisses at his own costs. 8910 Atwood Lumber and Mfg Co vs. Calumet Contracting Co et al finding for deft I". S. Lumber Co., finding for plft Rgainst Deft Calumet Contracting Co., for J383.22 Judgement. 7228 Nathan Black vs. Frank Eisenhutt et al deft withdraws its motion to set aside Judgement. 7228 Hugh Flack vs Robert Leinster et al plft suggests death pf deft, and dismisses cause. 8228 Allen and Co vs Wm. It. Ryan et al plft dismisses, at his own costs. 10418 Frank Lello vs Wacker and Birk B. and M. Co. plft dismisses. 10856 International Hod Carriers and Bldrs Union Local 41 vs. Robert L Brigman et al finding for plft attachment and garnishment sustained, court fnds for plft against deft Brigman for 82015.01 and further finds .that garnishee deft Citixens German National bk holds 11009.58 belonging to left Brigman
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Joseph Leiter, Mrs. Richard Townsend, the Edson Bradleys, and many other people whose fortunes art estimated in millions. and court orders amount paid Into Clerk's office for benefit of plft, judgement. 10976 Pearl Artlm vs Joseph Artlm by agreement of parties deft Is to be permitted to visit children ot parties at reasonable hours onde a week. Articles of Incorporation. Articles of incorporation have been filed with the secretary of state as follows: The Chicago, uluth and Georgian Bay Transit Company, of Michigan City, has increased its capital stock from $500,000 to $1,000,001). The Lincoln Fraternal Copmany, Evansvllle, capital none; ritualistic; directors, A. II. Logan, O. L Smth, E. H. Ireland. The Union Mills Co-operative Butter and Cheese Company, Union Mills, has dissolved. ' ' The Christian Woman's " Board fit Missions,' Marion county. religiouTn rectors, Maria Jameson, Lizzie Atkinson. Sarah Wallace and others. ; Lambs, Indianapolis: fraternal; directors, R. H. Ritchie, G. R. Davis, F. C. ' Swift and others. Michigan City Sand Company, Michigan City; capital, $10,00; excavating sand; directors, Carter II. Manny, Finley C. Carson, Samuel W. Larsen. The Krausgill Piano Company" of Kentucky, has announced that less than $10,000 of its capital will b represented in Indiana. The Taylor-Steffen Company of Lafayette, has changed its name to the Ed A. Tayor Company. The Smith-Gray Shoe Company, Franklin, has filed notice of dissolution. The Star Shoe Company, Portland, has filed notice of dissolution. Temple No. 22, the Order of Larks, Muncle; fraternal; directors, Frank B. Carpenter, Charles L. Brown, John P. Welsse. Mehllg Crider rug company, Kokomo; capital, $8,500; drug business: directors, Edward C. Crider, Louis Mehlig, G. L. Crider. TTTB HOME NEW8PAPBR OF LA KB COUNTY IS THE COMPLIMENT BESTOWED BT ITS READERS OS TH KlMVEa Popular Actress Now in Chicago MlW UNA. A&A&ANtU.
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