March 16, 1961: Three Stores Ruined: Fourth Water Soaked Thousands Of People View Blaze

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 16, 1961.

Three Stores Ruined: Fourth Water Soaked

Thousands Of People View Blaze

Thousands of spectators from miles around converged on downtown Valparaiso Wednesday night to watch the spectacular Masonic hall blaze.

Some of the viewers sustained minor burns from flying debris. Auto parked in the vicinity were also peppered.

Gary’s water tower drew the admiration of many of those watching the fire. “Valparaiso ought to have one of those,” was a frequent comment heard.

Not only were firemen, police and civil defense personnel active, but so also were the employees of Northern Indiana Public Service company.

When the Gary water tower arrived and main street lights were doused on Lincolnway the general supposition was that the Gary units snapped a wire.

Not so, reported Morris Groverman, Jr., NIPSCO district manager. The circuit was cut off at request of police to insure safety.

The primary elective circuit which stretches east-west through the alley behind the Masonic hall was not affected by the blaze. Lines to the building were disconnected, however, for safety’s sake.

“We had wonderful cooperation from the firemen,” Groverman said, “enabling us to maintain service in the area.”

One of the merchants hit by the blaze told a reporter that he was advised not to remove any merchandise from his store because it would “complicate” his insurance settlement.

Much of the clothing in Meyer’s Ready-to-Wear and Anderson’s Gift and Tot shop was being displayed for the Easter trade.

This marked the third major blaze in Valparaiso in six weeks. Garden City Foods, Inc., 1209 Calumet, was destroyed Feb. 3 at an estimated loss of $250,000, and on Feb. 28 a $70,000 fire levelled a hanger, several planes and equipment at Urschel Field, north of Valparaiso.

Carl Werth, senior at Valparaiso university, and employee of the Feldhaus and Sons store which adjoins the burning buildings, donned a slicker and assisted the firemen in fighting the blaze. Carl, whose late father was a member of the Westmont, Ill., fire department, had worked as a volunteer on many occasions, and lent valuable assistance to Wednesday’s fire-fighters.

Twenty-five minutes after a call from Leonard Wetmore, Porter County Red Cross director, the Gray Ladies were serving coffee to firemen and other workers from a building on Michigan street which was opened up for use by owner Gilbert Peters. Fifteen women, under the direction of Mrs. Paul Johnson, of Liberty township, chairman, served coffee, rolls, doughnuts and sandwiches until 2:30 a.m.

Officials of local 1227, International Association of Machinists, donated the use of their kitchen, where Mr. and Mrs. Keith Dinwiddie made coffee for the firemen. This coffee was taken to the Red Cross canteen on Michigan street.

Operators at General Telephone company handled several emergency calls. Division manager Preston Platt stated troubleshooters went to the scene to disconnect phones of the threatened business places. No serious phone interruption occurred, Platt stated, since the cables are underground in that area.

Platt noted, however, that had the fire occurred at the same place six years ago his firm could have suffered a major setback. Since that time overhead lines have been sunk below the ground thus shielding the equipment from damage.

The management of the Varsity Grill, 120 Lincolnway, stayed open until 2:30 a.m. to serve free coffee to firemen and other workers. Waitresses, who were off duty, returned to help in the project.

More than 30 members of the Porter county Civilian Defense corps arrived on the scene early and helped local and state police officials with traffic.

At the height of the blaze, many persons were showered with flying embers near the intersection of Lincolnway and Michigan. One large piece landed on the shoulder of an unidentified woman. It was quickly knocked off by her husband. V-M Photographer Rollie Bernhart and Reporter Charles Zulich suffered slight burns on their hands from embers.

As a coincidence, the last time a Gary fire department was called to Valparaiso was in 1926, when the Farmers State bank building and the old Masonic quarters, and other businesses at the intersection of Lincolnway and Washington burned. At that fire, a Gary fireman was killed and a local fireman, Lloyd (Mud) Miller was injured.

The Gary fire department representatives and equipment came to Valparaiso through a mutual aid agreement. No charges are reportedly involved.

Valparaiso Legion Post 94, in session Wednesday night during the early part of the fire, passed a resolution offering their building at Washington and Monroe to the Masonic lodge for meeting quarters.

Officials of the Masons said today that they had received offers for meeting sites and condolences from practically every order in northwestern Indiana.

Damage Is Estimated At $800,000

By CHUCK ZULICH

A wind blown fire, causing estimated damage of more than $800,000, struck the Valparaiso business district Wednesday night.

Destroyed by fire was the Masonic Temple, upstairs with entrance at 113 Lincolnway. Put out of business by fire, smoke and water were Meyer’s Ready to Wear, 113 Lincolnway; Anderson’s Gift and Tot Shop, 15 Lincolnway, and Ehrhadt’s Auto Shop, 117 Lincolnway.

Suffering an estimated $30,000 damages from water was the Johnston’s ASports Store, 119 Lincolnway.

One fireman suffered minor injuries in the fire.

Discovered At 6:00

The blaze was discovered shortly after 6 p.m. Several calls were received by the Valparaiso fire department regarding the outbreak of the fire.

Firemen from Valparaiso, Liberty and Gary battled the blaze before bringing it under control.

Many departments in the surrounding areas volunteered services. One Liberty truck was at the scene and the other at the downtown Valparaiso station to take care of possible additional calls. Portage and Chesterton fire departments stood by at Liberty.

A fire chief and 12 firemen from Lansing, Ill, came to help fight the blaze. It was estimated that more than 65 firemen took part from the various departments.

Wiring Possible Source

Valparaiso Fire Chief Stanley Conner said the fire apparently started from defective wiring in the ceiling at the rear of this Ehrhardt Auto shop.

“This blaze could have been smoldering in the ceiling of the auto ship for hours before burning through onto the kitchen of the Masonic Lodge above,” Conner said.

When firemen arrived on the scene, the kitchen of the lodge hall was engulfed in flames. “A register in the room was already red hot,” one fireman said.

Richard Stombaugh, a Valparaiso fireman, in breaking out a window suffered a cut on the middle finger of his right hand. He was taken to Porter Memorial hospital, where seven stitches were used to close the wound.

Slips Down Stairs

Another local fireman, Capt. Byron Butterfield, slipped and fell down the stairs of the lodge hall, but was not seriously injured.

About one hour after the blaze started, it appeared that firemen had it under control. However, when windows broke at the rear of the Masonic Temple the fire, fanned by a northwest wind, quickly moved out of control.

At this time, Councilmen Robert Miller and Bryce Billings, who were at the scene, went to the nearby business establishment of Mayor Don Will and it was decided to call the Gary fire department for aid.

Forty-seven minutes later, a fully manned aerial ladder truck, a pumper and a special service vehicle arrived from the Lake county city.


Battle From Top

Minutes after the Gary truck arrived, men were pumping water over the top of the three-story building down into the fire.

Thanks to the combination of this added equipment with the local and Liberty Township forces, the blaze was “snuffed out” before it could burn through the flooring into the three businesses under the Masonic Temple.

At one time, it was feared that firemen would lose all the buildings east of the Temple, including Johnston’s Sport shop, Feldhaus and Sons, Casbon’s Electric company, offices and apartments upstairs.

A stout firewall between the Temple and Sievers Drug Store and the direction of the wind saved the drug company from damages. There was another firewall between the Masonic building and Johnston’s.

All of the businesses and the lodge hall were partially covered by insurance. Whether any of the shell of the building can be used for reconstruction will be decided by insurance adjusters.

The upper stories of the building have been occupied by the Masonic lodge and its various orders since 1926. The lodge took over the building, a former garage, and reconstructed it after the lodge lost its previous quarters in a fire which occurred at the corner of Lincolnway and Washington, early in 1926.

Lorenzo Smith was the lodge master during the first fire and C.O. Pauley was the first master at the Temple when it was completed on Lincolnway.

The present rooms housed the Porter Lodge 137; Valparaiso chapter 79 (Royal Arch Masons); Valparaiso Commandery 28 (Knights Templars); Valparaiso chapter 164 (Order of Eastern Star); Valparaiso chapter Order of DeMolay, and Bethel 64, Job’s Daughters.


Save Some Items

A Demolay meeting had been scheduled for Wednesday evening. Several of the young men, under the direction of Larry Will, were able to carry out valuable robes owned by the DeMolay order. Files and records of the Masonic lodge were also saved by the youths, as well as many pictures and small pieces of furniture.

A member of the Masonic lodge said this morning it would take $50,000 to replace the mahogany overstuffed furniture in the main room of the Temple.

All of the commandery equipment, including valuable robes, hats and swords was destroyed.

Several smoldering spots were soused with water by firemen this morning. Early today, the area was roped off while employees of the State Highway department cleaned off Lincolnway.

Shortly before 9 a.m. the street was again opened to traffic. Insurance adjusters began arriving to discuss losses with their clients.

Snorkel Here?

(Editorial)

A water tower operation in fighting fires was given a practical demonstration in Valparaiso Wednesday night.

The display put on the equipment hauled here by the Gary Fire department to help battle the Masonic building blaze proved to be a pointed lesson.

Much sentiment was expressed by spectators at the fire that Valparaiso add similar equipment.

The ladders were hoisted and a stream of water was played on the flames from above the burning structure. Valparaiso’s hoses can only be shot from the ground upward.

Secondly the tower shot its load automatically from the top rung until things cooled off sufficiently for a man to climb to the top of the ladder.

Certainly the Gary equipment helped contain the flames in more rapid order than would have been possible from ground level only.

The Valparaiso city council has been talking about the possibility of procuring a snorkel (an improved water tower apparatus which reportedly is not too much more expensive to purchase), but the feeling has been “it isn’t needed here.”

Last night’s fire, however, aptly demonstrated that such equipment could well provide insurance that future fires could be brought under control quicker than under present circumstances.

The snorkel, incidentally, could also help save livesーsuch as at the hotel, apartment homes, factories, or on the university campus. It has a basket attachment at its peak, which could drop six or seven persons to the ground in short order.

We would encourage the city council to pursue its snorkel procurement with renewed vigor.

FIREMEN BATTLE BUSINESS DISTRICT BLAZEFireen from three departments, Valparaiso, Liberty township and Gary, plus many volunteers from nearby units, fought a wind-blown blaze in downtown Valparaiso Wednesday night before bringing it under control. Ph…

FIREMEN BATTLE BUSINESS DISTRICT BLAZE

Fireen from three departments, Valparaiso, Liberty township and Gary, plus many volunteers from nearby units, fought a wind-blown blaze in downtown Valparaiso Wednesday night before bringing it under control. Photo at below, shows fire at rear of Masonic Temple, 113 Lincolnway. Picture at above shows front of building during height of blaze. Masonic Temple was destroyed and four other businesses severely damaged by smoke and water.

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March 6, 1976: Hunting, Trapping Thrived At River Untamed ‘Grand Marsh’ Held Ecological Key

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 6, 1976.

Hunting, Trapping Thrived At River

Untamed ‘Grand Marsh’ Held Ecological Key

By MURL M. NICHOLS

THE KANKAKEE RIVER is the southern boundary line of Porter County. The lowland lying along the north side of the river is a part of the original Grand Marsh. At one time this marsh served as a huge sponge, soaking up and holding much of the surface water that drained in from the surrounding higher ground during the periods of excessive rain. This water would gradually seep into the ever-winding Kankakee River where it would move very slowly westward into the State of Illinois.

Maybe we should go back a few years and see just how our Grand Marsh was changed into farmland. This original Kankakee River area was one of the most efficient ecological systems in the world. If there was ever a balance in nature, this area was surely outstanding. The river and the marsh contained plenty of water and a rich soil that was conducive to supporting an abundance of plant and animal life.

We should also mention here the numerous sand ridges that dotted the marsh area and played such an important part in this ecological system. These sand ridges provided campsites for the Indians and also furnished a habitat for animal life not able to adapt to the wet areas.


THE BIRD LIFE in the original territory was huge and many species were a great aid to the early farmer in helping to control insects in gardens, orchards, and crops. At present, a lack of suitable habitat for birds has greatly reduced their numbers, and we are becoming more dependent on insecticides for insect control in our growing of crops.

A few of the other animals that were abundant in the old swamps and ridges were fish, deer, frogs, clams, crayfish, muskrats, mink, otter, rabbits, raccoon, squirrels, opossum, groundhogs, skunks, snakes, lizards, ducks, geese, and many other species of waterfowl. For the hunter and trapper, the fur-bearing animals and the waterfowl were the most popular game, with some deer also being hunted. Some of the local people made good money by guiding hunters and fishermen in the Kankakee River area. More than one early settler bought land with money earned from the sale of game and fur shipped to nearby cities.

Marsh hay and timber were natural crops harvested in the early days.

The American Indians were probably the first people to make a living from this area; and the loss of their beautiful life, which supported the land, is a sad story indeed. The true story of the Indian is rarely told because the white man wrote the history books. I only mention the foregoing information to show that the marsh did provide a living for man but in a different way from that of the present time.

MAN WILL PROBABLY never be able to improve upon nature, but able to improve upon nature, but many seem to be motivated in the direction of making a change. Some call it progress, and we sometimes have to wonder what the end results of progress are going to be. Anyway, the white man was determined to tame the Grand Marsh and the related submarginal lands for farming.

In 1850 Congress gave the Kankakee Marsh area to the State of Indiana. In 1889 the Indiana State Legislature passed measures that permitted the sale of lands along the river. The sale of this land was to help Indiana pay for the initial drainage operations on the marshland. Some drainage of submarginal lands was tried around 1858, but the main straightening of the Kankakee to speed the water out of this drainage basin was completed in the early 1900s.

Straightening of the river was only the beginning of making new farmland. Many drainage ditches had to be dug in the submarginal areas before the land could be made suitable for the planting of crops. Even today, the marsh can become flooded from an over-abundance of rain and many lateral ditches have been constructed so that mechanical pumps can force the water into the main ditches, thus lowering the water table on the farmland. There seems to be a constant battle going on between nature and the farmer over the floodwater that flows in after heavy and frequent rains.

ONE OF THE FIRST crops to be raised on the new farmland was buckwheat. This crop was planted after the wet season and usually could be expected to mature before a killing freeze. However, because of better drainage methods, the growing season is a little longer now and other crops with a longer maturity period can be grown. The most popular crops now being raised in the lowlands are corn, soybeans, wheat, oats, rye, hay, and pasture.

Besides grain farming, some of the other enterprises are dairying and the raising of beef cattle, hogs, and sheep. There are also some vegetable and fruit crops. Herbicides have aided the marshland farmer in controlling noxious plant life in the crops being raised.

THE MAIN TYPES of soil in the marshland are much, sand, and gumbo. The soils of lighter texture are subject to wind erosion under dry conditions if planted crops are not yet established. The farmer has learned to keep the soil surface in a somewhat rough condition to keep wind erosion to a minimum. Water erosion is also a problem at times. An early frost is usually more damaging in the marshland than it is on the higher ground. I do not wish to imply that the farmer in the marshland has any different problems from those of the farmer on higher ground; but there is a greater problem from high water.

Man is a consumer in his environment, and the farmer is becoming aware of the necessity of taking good care of the soil that produces food. There has been much controversy in the past over whether or not the marsh should ever have been drained; and because this is an article on farming, we are not going to debate the issue from either camp.

I’m sure that the farmer who owns land in the marsh area is glad for the opportunity to earn a living for his family, and he is adding much to our food supply. He has also learned to handle his farming problems in a most efficient way and is constantly trying to improve his farming methods.

March 15, 1966: Card Show Preference For Merger

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 15, 1966.

Card Show Preference For Merger

By ADELYNE RUOFF

CHESTERTON ー More than 530 Chesterton residents have sent in cards favoring the merging of the town of Chesterton and Porter and only six against, Everett Witte, town board president, reported at the regular meeting of the organization held Monday night.

Following a short discussion, board members voted unanimously in favor of a merger of the two north county towns. Witte suggested that action be taken in the near future to have the proposal placed on the November general election ballot.

To Arrange Meeting

Fernandes Babcock, member of the Porter Action committee said he would try to set up a meeting with the Porter Town board concerning the merger.

In other matters, Dr. Phillip Vukovich, president of the Chesterton Park board, appeared before the town board to discuss the fencing along the New York Central railroad right-of-way, at the rear of Railroad park.

Dr. Vukovich said his group would fence 455 feet and asked the town board to fence 373 additional feet. The town board voted to make the fencing a joint project.

Bids were opened and taken under advisement on street materials and gasoline.

Bids on street materials were received from U.S. Steel corporation, Gary, Material Service corporation, Gary, United Blacktop Paving, Westville and Seneca Petroleum, Chicago.

Gasoline bids were opened from Mobil Oil and Marathon Oil companies. This was for 50,000 gallons, more or less, plus the installation of a pump.

The board passed a resolution to issue $40,000 in bonds to raise funds to pay for the New York Central railroad depot and surrounding land. Resolution will be sent to the State Tax commission for further action.

March 15, 1941: Police Duty Is Discussed Here Friday

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 15, 1941.

Police Duty Is Discussed Here Friday

Tell the truth; be fair and impartial and give an unbiased account of the facts as they are gathered; be courteous and do not try to enact the role of prosecutor.

These were the recommendations made to Lake and Porter county police officers attending the eight weekly session of the regional training course in traffic enforcement and public safety held Friday afternoon at city hall.

The speaker was Attorney William Davis, of Chicago, assistant manager of the Automobile Protective and Information Bureau. Attorney Davis spoke at a meeting two weeks ago on “The Basic Laws of Evidence.” Yesterday’s lecture pertained to the powers and duties of police; the law and manner of arrests and use of force.

Discusses Arrests

“Police have the power to make arrests for any misdemeanor within view without a warrant,” Davis said. “However, in case of a traffic violation he must be acting within his territorial limits. Police have the power to make arrests outside their jurisdiction for state offenses but not for violation of city ordinances.”

According to Davis Valparaiso police have power to make arrests while in civilian clothes if they inform the offender that they are a police officer. Civilians also have the power to make arrests, but their powers are more limited than that of a police officer.

County police and constables have county-wide authority, and Valparaiso police, by virtue of being deputized by the sheriff, also have authority to make arrests in any part of the county.

Next Friday, Paul Beverforden, sergeant of Indiana police, stationed at Indianapolis, who is in charge of the local school, will speak on state laws and city ordinances. Professor J.L. Lingo of Purdue university, will show police how to compute speeds of automobiles by skid marks.

March 14, 1986: Arbitrator ignores bare facts of layoffs

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 14, 1986.

Arbitrator ignores bare facts of layoffs

by Doug Ross

Staff writer

UNION TWP. ー An arbitrator has ruled that the School Board must rehire a male physical education teacher even though the office he will use is accessible only through the women’s locker room.

The board laid off Larry Ailes instead of Debbie Disney, a Wheeler High School physical education teacher with less seniority, when it laid off teachers last spring.

Had Disney been laid off, Ailes would have become the boys’ and girls’ physical education teacher at the high school, Superintendent Glenn Krueger said.

It was common sense for the board to lay off a man instead of a woman, Krueger said.

“The PE teacher can’t even get into his or her office because it’s in the locker room with semi-nude or nude girls,'' he said.

It would be possible to have a female business teacher supervise the girls showering, but that would take 15 minutes away from each of her classes, Krueger said.

Under the teacher contract, the board is obligated to obey the arbitrator’s decision. The district received a copy of the March 4 ruling this week.

In addition to rehiring Ailes from Westville School, the board was ordered to pay him the difference between his salary at Westville and what his salary will be at Union. Krueger estimated the amount to be $8,000 to $10,000.

Bringing back Ailes and giving him back pay will cost each of the district’s teachers $301 in 1986 because that money will be drained from the salaries account, Krueger said.

Ailes, who was a physical education teacher at Union Center Elementary School, was among 11 teachers laid off in a cost-cutting move.

The arbitrator “took it to the letter of the law” by following the seniority rule in the teacher contract, Krueger said.

But the case was whether AIles should have taught girls’ phys ed, Krueger said, and the arbitrator assigned Ailes to a different position.

Ailes was reinstated to his previous position at Union Center. That position has been abolished since Ailes was laid off. A new elementary physical education teacher also teaches social studies, which Ailes isn’t qualified to teach.

The subject is likely to be discussed at the next School Board meeting, Krueger said.

“Our contention was that they could hire an aide” to supervise the girls’ showers, said Robert Rosinski, UniServe director for the Indiana State Teachers Association.

March 14, 1961: County Doctors Asking More Welfare Money

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 14, 1961.

County Doctors Asking More Welfare Money

By CHARLIE TRENKLE

Fees charged by physicians to recipients of county welfare aid will probably be increased at the insistence of the doctor.

Three physicians, Drs. Martin J. O’Neill, Thomas C. Hall, and Leonard J. Green, Monday evening protested the present fee schedule for medical aid, originally established in 1950.

At a meeting Jan. 31, 1961, members of the Porter County Medical Society unanimously went on record attacking the fee schedule as obsolete, the doctors reported.

A letter from Dr. Thomas J. Covey, secretary of the medical society, also stated that the members felt they were no longer bound by the fee schedule which had been agreed upon jointly by the society and the county welfare board.

County Commissioner Virgil O. King,  present at Monday night’s meeting in the courthouse between the three doctors and the welfare board, pointed out that the welfare department is now bound until Jan. 1, 1962, with the present fee schedule because of the budget passed in September.

“There are no provisions for any increase in fees,” King told the doctors. “The earliest we could start paying for any change would be next January after the budget was revised this fall.”

Dr. O’Neill called the present fee schedule “unrealistic” in comparison with fees charged private patients and asked for a $1 increase on all items “across the board.”

If charity is to be given, it should be given by the doctor,” Dr. Green added.

At the present time, the welfare fee schedule items mainly objected to were the $2 charged for office visits (adjoining counties reportedly pay $2.50 and $3), house visits at $4 during the day and $5 at night (other counties reportedly pay $4 and $5 during the day and $4 and $8 at night) and the hospital call fee of $3 a day (others are said to be from $1 to $3 with some providing for a higher fee for the first day of acute conditions).

The adherence of the welfare department to Blue Cross standard schedule of fees for surgery was also attacked. Dr. Green told the welfare board that this schedule was 35 to 50 percent below the fees charged by Porter county surgeons for their patients.

Mrs. Lester Hineline, secretary of the welfare board and head of the department, pointed out that the welfare department spent nearly $46,000 on medical care for the aged and under the Aid to Dependent Children program in 1960.

She added that $5,000 a month was spent this far in 1961. The aid includes services of dentists, physicians, optometrists, pharmaceutical supplies and appliances, hospital expenses, ambulances, and nursing home care.

Further discussion of the matter is expected by members of the county Medical society. It was anticipated that the fee schedule will be revised upward by members of the welfare board.

March 13, 1961: HEBRON SCIENCE FAIR’S TOP WINNERS

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 13, 1961.

HEBRON SCIENCE FAIR’S TOP WINNERS

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Judges in Hebron’s Fourth Annual Science fair Saturday, awarded top senior division honors to David Piepho, 17-year old senior, and junior division title to seventh grader Allen Larsen. Left photo, Piepho explains ‘Fetal Pig Dissection’ to Oscar Fitzgerald, Valparaiso. Top junior entry, ‘Uses of Electricity,’ right photo, attracted interested 12-year olds Donald Yoeman and Darryl Parent. Larsen is at the extreme right. Both exhibits will be entered in competition in the annual Northwest Regional Science fair at Valparaiso University next month. More than 170 science entries were on display Saturday. Judges were: Dr. Kermit Carlson, Valparaiso university; Melford Crisman, principal Columbia school; and Glen Ellis and Roger Williams, Valparaiso High school. Phillip Lawson, Hebron science instructor, was fair committee chairman.

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 13, 1961.

Eades Will Be Science Fair Judge

Gets Appointment To Panel For National Event

Dr. Ralph C. Eades, 203 Jefferson, has been notified that he has been chosen as one of the judges for the 12th annual National Science Fair to be held at Kansas City, Mo., May 9 to 12.

The doctor, a leading promoter of Science Fairs for several years, was named to the judging panel by Joseph Kraus, co-ordinator of the National Science Fairs, with headquarters in Washington, D.C.

The fair is endorsed and supported by the Indiana Academy of Science, and the Indiana Medical societies.

Gains Society Support

Dr. Eades was instrumental in obtaining the support of the medical societies in Porter, Stark and LaPorte counties for the regional fair which is held in the local area.

He noted that the Porter County Medical Society, headed by Dr. Theodore Makovsky as president, voted at its February meeting to contribute $400 toward the forthcoming Regional Science fair which will be held at Valparaiso university on March 24-26.

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The two top winners of the fair will be awarded an all-expenses paid trip to the National fair, where they may present their exhibits in national competition.

Teachers, Too

In addition, two all-expenses trips will be awarded to their teacher-sponsors.

Dr. Eades stated the local medical society was gratified at the increased interest in the fair from year to year.

“It has been shown through surveys conducted during the past ten years that many of the top winners continue their career in the medical profession and its related fields,” Dr. Eades said.

March 13, 1946: Files For Post Held By Granddad In 1868

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 13, 1946.

Files For Post Held By Granddad In 1868


From 1868 to 1874 Samuel Putnam Robbins served as county commissioner of Porter county. Today his grandson, Joseph S. Robbins, of Portage township, is a candidate for the republican nomination for county commissioner of the North district.

Samuel P. Robbins was identified with the early life of Porter county, coming here in 1835, before the county was established. During his service on the county board Valparaiso university came into being, and the present county jail was built. The elder Robbins played a prominent part in encouraging Henry Baker Brown, then a young Ohio educator, in starting the school in Valparaiso. He favored a donation to Brown, but was opposed by the other commissioners, A.V. Bartholomew and A.B. Price.


Idea Ridiculed

Many people at the time ridiculed the idea. But Robbins persisted and won Bartholomew over to his side and Brown went on to build one of the greatest educational fronts of learning in the United States.

Joseph S. Robbins, who aspires to the county board post, was born and reared in Porter county. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. Robbins, both Portage township pioneers.

Robbins has confined his public office holding to acting as a member on the Portage township advisory board and serving as postmaster at McCool for nine years.

He is married and has four children: Lewis Robbins, who lives on the old Robbins homestead near McCool, and three daughters, Miss Ruth Robbins, a deputy in the Porter county treasurer’s office; Mrs. Ralph Herren, home economics teacher in the Portage township school, and Miss Loretta Robbins, visiting nurse for the Goodfellows’ club, Carnegie-Illinois Steel company, Gary.