Porter

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 12, 1936: Chesterton, Porter Plan Big Banquet To Bury the Hatchet; Fire Truck For Farmers Sought

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 12, 1936.

Chesterton, Porter Plan Big Banquet To Bury the Hatchet; Fire Truck For Farmers Sought

CHESTERTON, March 12.ーThe age-old rivalry between Chesterton and Porter, miniature “twin cities” of Porter county, may soon be just a memory of the horse and buggy era.

If present plans materialize the two towns may join handsーnot to the extent of forming one communityーbut to bind two units into a group working together for common benefits.

Not so long ago a reorganization of the Chesterton Business Men's club was effected and a younger element gained control. More recently a membership drive was sponsored by the Porter Chamber of Commerce and the new blood obtained has enlivened the group considerably.

The latest result of this unheard of phenomenon is that a committee has been appointed by the Porter group to meet with a similar body from the Chesterton organization and smoke the pipe of peace. Porter representatives are M.H. Smith, Arthur Hokanson and William Givens. The Chesterton group will be appointed next Monday night by President Leslie Pratt of the Business Men’s club.

The two committees will formulate plans for a joint banquet at which time the hatchet which has taken so many scalps in the past will be buried and the promotion of projects to mutually benefit the two towns will be discussed.

One of the proposals is being clothed in airtight secrecy but that both towns would welcome a new factory is common knowledge. Recreation parks, attractively landscaped and with facilities for kittenball and tennis is the most immediate goal of the Chesterton club which has appointed Lester Gunder as chairman of a committee to obtain permission for the use of Railroad park, located in the heart of the north Porter county community.

To date no active attempt has been made by either Porter Chesterton to entice the hundreds of summer resorters at Lake Michigan into visiting their shops and churches. A program of this nature is expected to be one of the major issues at the hatchet-burying banquet.

The one immediate problem: where will be the banquet be heldーin Porter or Chesterton?

A spark which Friday night started the fire that completely destroyed the home of Carl J. Rhoda, Jr., has also generated a blaze of sentiment for the purchase of a new fire truck. Leaders in a new movement to get such equipment for the use of farmers in the north end of the county are John Lenburg, C.A. Anderson and M.P. Brummitt.

Township trustees of Westchester, Pine, Jackson, Liberty and Portage will be asked to contribute toward the purchase of a light truck equipped with a 500-gallon tank.

The fire Friday night was the second disaster to befall the Rhoda’s within the last year. The owner had just recently completed a new barn, the old one having been destroyed by a conflagration. Because of the frozen water main and lack of other adequate water facilities both the Chesterton and Porter fire departments were handicapped in fighting the most recent blaze.

Chesterton is entering a “wite hope” into the heavyweight ranks. He is Bill Peterson, 19-year-old giant, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Peterson and a graduate of the local high school in 1934.

Bill was spotted by a fistic expert while working at the Inland Steel company and now holds a membership in the George Trafton gym, Chicago. The local fighter, while a student at Indiana university, was a star member of the boxing squad.

Bernard Wiseman is reported improved following a dangerous double mastoid operation at the Mercy hospital, Gary, last Friday. Earlier reports which gave the cause of his critical illness as streptococcus infection and a spinal meningitis complication were not substantiated by a more complete medical examination.

Twenty-one Boy Scouts were guests of their sponsors, members of the Chesterton Lions club, at a chicken dinner held Tuesday night at Mrs. Krueger’s restaurant.

Boys who enjoyed both the dinner and the entertainment were: James Lillywhite, Kenneth Magnuson, James Somers, Richard Wiseman, Richard Friday, Henry Radiger, Ned Beatty, Horace Cooper, Harlan Behrendt, Raymond Deiotte, Howard Johnsen, Milford Hageman, Cleon Trowe, Myron Braun, Bud Fend, Dewayne Yost, James Dee Vaughn, Richard Klinkman, Walter Peterson, Frank Brunk, and Robert Miller.

Feb. 23, 1981: Fire revisits Porter motel

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on February 23, 19.

Fire revisits Porter motel


PORTERー Fire ー possibly the work of an arsonist ー struck a vacant motel here Saturday for the second time in three days, gutting the interior of the structure.

Firemen from Porter, Chesterton and Burns Harbor were summoned to the Edgewater Beach Motel at 11 a.m. when a bedroom on the second floor of the 50-year-old building was reported ablaze. Damage to the motel at Wabash Avenue and Johnson Beach Drive was estimated at $15,000 and brings to $40,000 total losses incurred since another fire hit the motel Thursday night.

A spokeswoman for the Porter Police Department said officers there will investigate the cause of the latest blaze. She said a burn pattern ー indicating the use of some sort of accelerant ー was discovered under the carpeting in the bedroom where Saturday’s fire broke out.

Careless use of smoking materials was blamed on the Thursday fire. A caretaker who was tending to the lodge while it was closed for the winter escaped unharmed from the blaze.

Motel owner Carl Dahlin, East Chicago, was reportedly in California when the fire broke out and unavailable for comment. Dahlin also owns Johnson’s Inn across the street from the burned out Edgewater Beach Motel.

A barricade halts traffic in to and out of the Edgewater Beach Motel in Porter, which was hit twice last week by fires that gutted the interior of the 50-year-old building. The latest fire, which struck Saturday morning, has been blamed on arson and…

A barricade halts traffic in to and out of the Edgewater Beach Motel in Porter, which was hit twice last week by fires that gutted the interior of the 50-year-old building. The latest fire, which struck Saturday morning, has been blamed on arson and investigators from the Porter Police Department have been assigned to the case. Damage from both blazes is estimated at $41,000.

(V-M: Kathy Steinbach)

Dec. 1, 1930: F. W. SIEVERT OF PORTER GIVES INTERESTING FACTS ON BEE HIVE “BEESNESS”

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on December 1, 1930.

F. W. SIEVERT OF PORTER GIVES INTERESTING FACTS ON BEE HIVE “BEESNESS”

(BY JEROME KENNY)

PORTER, Dec. 1.ーF.W. Sievert , local confectionary and cigar store owner, has a unique recordーhe has eaten honey every day for the last sixty-two years. M. Sievert is a beekeeper and he certainly believes in his honey as a healthful and excellent food.

Since he was a youth of fourteen and living on a farm a mile west of here the local man has followed his hobby of keeping bees. Mr. Sievert now has 100 hives which he keeps on a hillside farm near the site of Port Williams.

“When we were kids,” says Mr. Sievert, “we used to open the hives regularly and look in, but we never knew what we were looking for. Beekeeping has changed much since that time. At least we know what to look for now.”

In following his hobby for a great many years, the experience has taught him much, Mr. Sievert has become an authority on all phases of bee culture. He is well known at meetings of apiarists and his advice is sought by many beginners in the business.

A few days ago Mr. Sievert began packing his bees for the winter. This winter he is trying out a theory that is radically different from the usual practice in beekeeping. The bees will be left outside this year instead of putting them in a sheltered place such as a basement. This will allow them to adjust themselves to the changing temperatures better, explained Mr. Sievert.

At this time of the year the bees are getting ready to survive until spring and warm weather on the honey that they stored up this summer. The bees this year, Mr. Sievert explained, went into winter quarters with a good many young bees.

“The breeding of bees depends largely upon the amount of nectar available to make money, and this year there was little or no food for the bees until fall,” he says.

Most of the honey was obtained from the fall flowers. The yield this year averaged slightly more than fifty pounds per hive. Yield sometimes goes to over 200 pounds per hive, if the weather is favorable.

Although fall honey is considered the better in food value the American public prefers the summer honey which is lighter in color. The summer honey is gathered from clover or basswood while the later product is a combination of the nectar of all the fall flowers.

During the winter only the queen bee and the workers exist. All the drones, or male bees are killed off by the workers so that the food supply will hold out. The bee colony is not a socialistic community.

Even though the workers are not as large as the male bee they are able to kill him off by using strategy. When the drone tries to eat the workers annoy him and he doesn’t get enough to eat. Eventually he is so weakened by starvation that the worker is able to sting him to death. He is then carried outside of the hive.

There is a great amount of justifiable “beeicide.” a colony with 200,000 members during the summer will have only 80,000 left during the winter. This number is greatly augmented during the advent of warm weather.

On March 15 or 20 the breeding season begins. The queen lays about 150 eggs a day. In April she increases her output to 5 to 6 hundred per day and by June she is in the height of production with 3,000 eggs per day. She continues at this rate until about Nov. 1.

According to Mr. Sievert the egg quantity is dependent upon the honey supply and a good keeper will provide his bees with all they can eat. Likewise it is essential that the swarming should be controlled scientifically. There should be plenty of room to swarm.

Oct. 20, 1955: Porter Is Growing Fast; Taxes Are Dropping

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on October 20, 1955.

Porter Is Growing Fast; Taxes Are Dropping

(EDITOR’S NOTE一This is the third of a series on the government, facilities, problems and fall election plans of the wight incorporated towns of Porter county.)

A “quiet election” is expected this year in the small but fast-growing town of Porter, located northwest of Chesterton in Westchester township.

The town board is said to have taken advantage of the fact that the town’s valuation has increased greatly, and taxes have been reduced, during its four-year administration. The board is composed of three Democrats and one Republican.

A $1.59 town tax rate for 1956 is currently proposed for Porter, 13 cents less than the present tax of $1.74. Porter’s valuation rose by $270,000 to total $2,250,000 this year, the second highest increase among the county towns. A total of 45 homes were built there during the last assessing period, more than in any other county town.

All Incumbents Run

All four incumbent town board members, three of which are Democratic, are running in the fall election. Current board members include: first ward, Charles Meyne, Democrat, employed by Gary Sheet and Tin mill; second ward, Henning Hokanson, Democrat, employed by Carnegie Illinois Steel in Gary; third ward, William Sexton, Republican, employed by Ortman-Miller Machine company in Hamond, and clerk-treasurer, Robert Griffin, Democrat, employed by Sears, Roebuck company in Michigan City.

The Democrat running against Sexton for the office of third ward trustee is John Sitar, a barber at Richard Anderson’s barber shop in Chesterton.

The three new Republicans seeking office are: first ward, Henry Edd Cosley, employed by E.J. and E. railroad: second ward, Arthur Hicks, employed by Charles Lorenz and son, Chesterton contractors, and clerk-treasurer, Lester C. Esmoer, treasurer of Gary Street Railways.

Though Porter, with an estimated population of about 2,000, has less than half the population size of neighboring Chesterton, it boasts more than double the Chesterton land area. And new subdivisions are quickly adding to its population. As available Chesterton lots get fewer, many land purchasers are settling in Porter, it was pointed out.

Porter comprises 2,500 acres, compared to 1,177.6 acres in Chesterton, swinging in a large arc around the more populous town. Porter is bounded on the north by Lake Michigan, on the east by Waverly road and the Calumet river, on the south by Woodlawn avenue and the Michigan Central railroad, and on the west by Mineral Springs road and 23rd street in Chesterton.

A long, narrow town, with wandering boundaries it is about a mile wide on Lake Michigan, located between Dune Acres and Dunes State park, about 4 miles long, and broadens suddenly to a width of 2 miles on the south end.

Of the town’s 2,500 acres, which comprise 3 and 8/10 square miles, 120 acres are zoned for industry, 150 for business, 20 for parks and the remainder is residential, officials said. Though the town zoning board has provided land for industry when it comes, none has yet been attracted to the town.

Porter has a small business section, with bank, grocery, drug, hardware and a few similar stores, but for medical services and many other needs residents go to Chesterton, a fact which tends to make Porter seem a suburb of its larger neighbor.

Same Water Source

An example of its close tie-in with Chesterton is the fact that both towns have been supplied with water for some years by the Home Water company. Chesterton plans a referendum on Election Day, Nov. 8, in which its residents will decide whether they wish to buy the company.

Porter plans no such referendum, but according to Clerk Treasurer Griffin, holds an option on the water supplies, which would probably mean that if Chesterton buys the water company, it will in some manner be required to supply water to the neighboring town, an unusual procedure.

Porter’s mile of beach on Lake Michigan is not public, except for those areas where town streets, often forming small beaches, are established, Griffin pointed out. As not all these streets are yet laid out, this is a source of trouble between beach - goers and persons who own property along the lake, Griffin said. Johnson’s hotel owns a block of property along the lake in Porter, which it keeps open to the public, however.

Has Three Parks

Another source of recreation to Porter townspeople is the town’s three parks, Hawthorne park, Dunes Forest park and State little League park. Hawthorne park contains a community building, ball park, wading pool and bandstand.

The Porter Victory club, an organization of young Porter men, sponsors various recreational town activities and this year raised $800 for improvements for the town’s park, to be used mainly in rebuilding the park lighting system, according to reports.

Porter has no Chamber of Commerce, and few organizations except the Victory club and Veterans of Foreign Wars organization.

The town’s “adequate” volunteer fire department consists of 16 firemen and the fire chief, and has three fire trucks. A town marshal and two deputy marshals police the town, and plans are to use the 1956 budget to purchase a badly needed squad car and radio for the marshals, the town clerk-treasurer reported.

The town has a sewage system, but no sewage disposal plant, and no immediate plans to purchase one. There are about 55 miles of road in Porter, of which 50 are blacktopped and 5 miles cindered.

Porter school children are included in the Westchester township school system and taxpayers, with the overall increase in the township’s school population, are paying increased rates accordingly.

Porter Hopes To Attract Its Own IndustriesTHIS VIEW OF DOWNTOWN Porter was snapped by The Vidette-Messenger photographer in the community where 700 residents are eligible to vote in the Nov. 8 town election. Porter has no industries, but it is the h…

Porter Hopes To Attract Its Own Industries

THIS VIEW OF DOWNTOWN Porter was snapped by The Vidette-Messenger photographer in the community where 700 residents are eligible to vote in the Nov. 8 town election. Porter has no industries, but it is the hope of the town board to attract some soon.

Oct. 13, 1965: Home Mail Delivery In Offing For Porter People

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on October 13, 1965.

Home Mail Delivery In Offing For Porter People

By ADELYNE RUOFF

PORTER 一 Residents of the town of Porter will have house-to-house mail delivery and mounted route service, according to numbers, in the near future.

Mail service will also be provided for residents of the newly annexed area after a numbering system has been set up.

The information was received by the town board via a letter sent by Charles Ryan, deputy assistant postmaster general of the United States.

Reads Letter

Thomas Wagner, president of the Porter Town board, read the letter at Tuesday night’s meeting.

Ryan stated that the conversion of the present Porter Post Office to a branch of the Chesterton Post Office has been approved.

In the letter, it was stated that Porter, as an independent post office, does not meet the request for establishing city delivery service.

“We can comply by converting the Porter Post Office to a contract branch of the Chesterton Post Office,” Ryan said in his letter. “Mail delivery service will be brought to more than 8-- people with a savings in operation costs of $3,500 yearly.

Favors Change

“Porter’s present postmaster, Orith Imhof, favors this change since it provides improved service to his patrons,” Ryan noted in his letter.

“Imhof is eligible for immediate annuity and has indicated he will retire when the contract is effected,” the acting deputy postmaster general added.

Bids are now being received for a building to house the branch office in Porter.

At the present time, residents of Porter come to the post office for their mail. Rural routes are serviced out of Chesterton.