Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 38, Hammond, Lake County, 1 August 1906 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Weduesdaw August 1, 1900.

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ITS A MONEY SAVER. This Sale commences Monday, July 30, and continues until Friday, Aug. 3.

Fairbank's Celebrated Gold Dust the large 4 lb. package Extra Choice Oil Sardines, per can Star Brand Tomato Catsap, pint bottle The Famous Lion Brand Soap, 10 bars for Pare Table Salt, five pound bags Good Parlor Matches, 12 boxes in large psc'iage 1 Choice Roasted Santos and Rio Coffee. 2 lbs. for

Choice Ginger Snaps and Soda Crackers, per pound IValct) for "THE LITTLE BULLETIN"

IITEDTlT'SXIDOOO"

Illinois Representative in the Dem ocratic National Committee Asked to Resign.

BEYAH DECLARES HE MUST GO

He Refuses and the State Convention Is Urged to Act

15c I6G 31c C 20C 4c Next Veek

Michigan Republicans Nominate

State Ticket Iowa Republicans President Sends His Contribution.

ION

HAMMOND, IND.

Tel. 2032. 411 Sohl St.

al o

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Building Contractors Buy a lot and build your own home. Suit' yourself. We loan the money to build and build yourhouse for you.

i itle

Lake County & Guaranty Company ABSTRACTORS

F. R. MOTT, President, J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary, FRANK HAMMOND, Vice-Pres. A. II. TAPPER, Treasurer, S. A.' CULVER, Manager. Hammond and Crown Point, Indiana. Secretary's office in Majestic Bid?., Hammond. (Abstracts furnished promptly at current rates.

After a series of the most successful flights ever seen in the west, Horace Wild and his airship "Eagle" are established at White City in Chi

cago, where they have vied with fine weather in bringing the amusement park, almost a record attendance during the last few days. Mr. Wild has gone higher and farther, shown more complete mastery, and an absolute fearlessness that have made his ascensions, repeated every day when the weather conditions are not absolutely forbidding, a source of eager inquiry to thousands. Alessandro LiberatI and his mnd military band opened a scries of concerts In the White- City plaza last Sunday afternoon, playing programs made up almost equally from the great Italian operatic composers and from the tuneful and catchy music of the day. SIg. LiberatI Is heaid at every concert in solos upon the cornet, an instrument of which he is a master, and the celebrated French tenor, A. L. Gullle, sings every evening. John F. Carroll, director of the free open air hippodrome at the north end of the plaza, presented a complete change of bill for the current week on Sunday, including Campbell and Brady, club jugglers; Fisher and Johnson, in a coni: bicycle turn; and Scheppes' dog and pony circus. Toddles, the riding elephant, has also been added to the list of plaza attractions, and the vaudeville theater on the east side of the board

walk has a complete change of bill

this

Gathered together from their summer vacation, the company . which will appear at Chicago's most .beautiful theater, the Colonial, Sunday night, July 29, in the Chicago production of that tremendous New York fcuccess of list seasoa, "The Vander-

Diit uup, is engaged in active rehearsels and the final preliminaries

for the western debut of this play

Lisle Janis, the inimitable and im

mensely popular star of the produc

tion, has returned from a brief Euro

pean trip refreshed and re-Inspired

and she has a fine support of such

players as Otis Harlan, Henry V

Donnelly, Jacques Kruger, F. Newton

Lindo, Edith Decker, Blanche Chap

man and Charles Dow Clark. A

Biaut-u al me names memseives Is sufScient endorsement for the quality of the offering, while the fascinating

tneme 01 tne automobile and the celebrated Vanderbilt cup contest has

afforded splendid opportunity for

real play with a real plot.. The auto

muuue race is aeciarea by competent critics the most realistic scene

ever placed on the stage . The Chi

cago engagement is limited.

UNCALLED FOR LETTERS.

Democrats may have their leaders, the leaders may have their followers, but their leaders will never be autocrat and the followers will never be serfs, obedient to the orders prompted by court favorites." The charges of fraud brought by P.iyau in connection with the selection of Iloger Sullivan as Democratic national committeeman from Illinois are based on the action of the committee on credentials of the Democratic state

convention of in unseating a number of delegates from Cook county and seating contesting delegates backed by the so-called Hopkins-Sullivan organization, thus giving the control of the convention to the latter organization. MICHIGAN REPUBLICANS

CQHFERRING Oil DIETZ

Wisconsin Authorities Cat Their Heads Together and Taka " Some Counsel.

f.;

CONCLUSIONS A DEAD SECRET

Chicago, Aug. 1. Judge Owen F.

Thompson, of Jacksonville, 111., has

made public two letters from William

Bryan, both dated "The Trossaehs

Hotel, Lock Katrine Scotland, July

" which are interesting reading. In

the first letter F.ryan entrusts Thompson with a message to Koger Sullivan.

Illinois representative in the Demo

cratic national committee, which mes-

age, Bryan says, lie would deliver

himself if be were at home, but as he j thinks the message should be delivered

at once he sends it through Thompson.

The letter then says:

Must Resign for Harmony's Sake. "Please say to Mr. Sullivan that he

has expressed a desire for harmony, and that I assume that he means to

help the party to the extent of his ability; but there is but one way in which he can promote harmony and that is by resigning as national commjtteeman. We are approaching another national campaign, and our party's

hances depend upon its ability to con

vince the public of its good intentions.

Mr. Sullivan's presence on the committee contradicts all that we can say

n the party's behalf. His corporate

connections would harm the party far

eyond his power to aid the organiza

tion.

"Holds Office by Fraud." "But this could be left for some fu

ture convention to deal with if he were actually the choice of the Democrats

of Illinois. The fact, however, that

le holds his office by a fraud, and

against the express wishes of a m:i-

ority of the delegates to the state con

vention, makes it impossible for honest

democrats to associate with him as a

member of the committee.

Ejectment if He Refuses. "If be refuses to resign, and thus

puts his ambition or his business be

fore the party's success the sooner he

is ejected from the committee the better. It ought to be made an issue in the state convention, if necessary, for

the Democracy of Illinois cannot fight under such leadership, and ought not to permit itself to be misrepresented on the national committee."

Judge Thinks the Job of Abating Dietz Belongs to the Uncle Sam Logging Company j Not Interested.

They Adopt a Resolution Favoring Popular Election of Senators. Detroit, Aug. 1. Excepting a slight brush in the resolutions committee over P.epresentative William Alden Smith's resolution pledging the party to the direct nomination of United States senators the Republican state conveutioa was featureless and partook more of the nature of a ratification meeting than a convention. The contest in the resolutions committee resulted in the adoption of a compromise resolution

which recommends to the Michigan delegates to the Iowa convention in September that they "direct their efforts to the end that the people of the United States so amend the constituion of the United State as to permit the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people." The platform which was adopted thoroughly indorses President Roosevelt's administration, expresses appreciation of the work of the Michigan congressional delegation, affirms eontinned belief in the Republican tariff policy, congratulates the state upon its prosperity, and indorses Governor Fred M.Warner, the other state officials, and the last legislature. The state ticket is as follows: Governor, Fred M. Warner, of Farmington; lieutenant governor, Patrick II. Kelly, of Wayne; secretary of state, George A.Prescott.of Tawas City; state treasurer. Frank P. Glazier, of Chelsea; auditor general, Dr. James B. Bradley, of Eaton Rapids; land commissioner, William II. Rose, of Bath; attorney general, John E. Bird, of Adrian; superintendent of public instruction. Luther L. Wright, of IronAvood; member of state board of education, Dexter M. Ferry, Jr., of Detroit. All are renominations except Kelly, Wright and Ferry. The nominations of governor and lieutenant governor

naa neen mane hy primaries some time before the convention meet.

CUMMINS IS IN CONTROL

SENDS ANOTHER MESSAGE

rv V, f .o i , r i . . 1

iiic umuHiug it'iiers remain un

called for at the Hammond postoffice

for the week en. ing July 30th, '06 Burton Cochran. Mr. Erwin Carrier. Mr. Gardner Church. Mrs. Mary Freeman. Miss Ida Case, (2). Johu Groose. Mrs. Sprague Green. Mr. Harvey Helper. Annie Jurner. Mr. W. B. Jeninson. Mr. E. R. Jones. Mrs. E. W. Lunn. Mr. B. McCalla. " Mr. Ed Maloney. Mrs. P. Smith. Mrs. Pearl Shaffer. Samuel II. Woods. Mr. Henry Warren, (2). WILLIAM K. GOSTLIN, P. M.

Second One Is for the Democrats of

the Prairie State. Apparently thinking there was lit

tle probability of Sullivan resigning Bryan wrote his second letter on the game date. It says.

"My Dear Judge If the effort to in

duce Mr. Sullivan to resign from the national committee fails I wish you would deliver the following message to the Democrats of Illinois: 'You live in the largest of the western states, find must play an important part in

the work which lies before the Democratic party. You can do little to advance Democratic principles so long as you permit the most fundamental of these principles namely, the right of the majority to rule to be violated.

"'Mr. Sullivan Mas selected as na

tional committeeman by delegates who

were not chosen by the convention. As he was oue of the leaders in the high

crimes and misdemeanors committed

against the Democracy of Illinois his refusal to resign cannot be attributed to ignorance of the facts, but is proof positive of his unfitness for the place. We are about to enter upon a campaign in which our party will appeal to the people and ask the confidence of the nation. " 'I do not know how you the Democrats of Illinois could better open that campaign in your state than by demanding his resignation. Let it be known that you insist on honest politics within the party, and that you will be believed when you plead for honesty in the government. 1

had hoped that he would resign in the

interests of harmony, but his refusal

leaves you no choice but to repudiate him or abandon Democratic princi

ples.' " Judge Thompson says be saw Sullivan and delivered Bryan's message.

Sullivan declined to resign as request

ed.

SULLIVAN'S REPLY IS SHARP

Times' Want Ads. Bring Results

Hints That Bryan Is Usurping- the

Place of a Boss.

Sullivan in reply to Bryan's letter, after roasting the "Jacksonville cabal"

says that Bryan has allowed himself to

persist in what the Democratic national convention declared a misrepresentation and libel; that the question was

tried out in three party tribunals, with

Bryan as the advocate against Sulli

van, and each time Sullivan won. and that by the votes of such Democrats as Tillman. Culberson, John Sharp

Williams and other well-known Demo

cratic leaders.

"In conclusion," Sullivan says. "I

would like to remind Mr. Bryan that

the 'fundamental principles of Democ

racy which he speaks of do not include recognition of political czardom.

State Central Committee of Iowa Acts on Contested Delegations. Des Moines, la., Aug. 1." The Republican state central committee has completed its work of hearing contest cases. It decided to give seats in the convention to the sixty Perkins delegates representing Jasper, Jefferson and Wapello counties. In addition the

majority voted to let in eighteen Ter-

kins delegates from Dallas and ten

from Audubon. As Governor Cum

mins claims to have SS5 delegates not counting the sixty first mentioned, about whose seats it was admitted there might be question his loss, if the committee's action is sustained by

the committee on credentials, will be

2S giving him S57. It requires 821 to

make a nomination.

in the cases of the other seven coun

ties in which contests were made on

behalf of Terkins the committee agreed

to admit the Cummins delegates. In two. Polk and Boone, they heard ar

guments, but in the other five had before them only the documentary evi

dence. The Cummins people went into

conference as soon as the announcement was made to agree on a programme to be followed by them in the convention.

The great care of the state central committee was not to create a situation that might result in a bolt, two state tickets and the disastrous conse

quences at the election of such a state

of affairs.

Madison, Wis., Aug. 1. Long con

ferences between Governor Davidson

and Sheriff Peter Gylland, of Sawyer conntv. and between United States

Marshal Charles Lewiston and the

sheriff here were hold to discuss the

Dietz situation. Neither the govern-

ernor Davidson said that Sheriff Gylthat it had been decided to call out state troops to capture Dietz. Governor Davidson sai dthat Sheriff Gyl

land had told in full of the gun bat

tle between his posse of seven men and the Dietz family last week, when the

latter renulsed the former after one

man on each side had been seriously

wounded. Up to Your Uncle Sam. Milwaukee, Aug. 1. "Dietz is entire

ly in the wrong," said C. II. Ingram,

of Eau Claire, president of the Chip

pewa Log and Boom company. "My company at one time owned the prop

erty now occupied by Dietz, but later transferred it to the Mississippi lagging company. The deeds to Cameron

dam are in the hands of this concern.

I talked with United States Judge Sanborn, of Madison, a few days ago, and he agreed that it was up to the United

States government to eject Dietz. He said he believed the best method of procedure was to bring down a com

pany of regulars from Fort Snelling,

surround the cabin and take the des

perate family. Logging Company Not Interested.

Chippewa Falls, Wis., Aug. 1. T. J.

Connor, attorney for the Mississippi

River Logging company, said that this

company was not involved in the efforts to capture Dietz. "As soon as the company found that neither state nor federal court decrees could be served

on Dietz to give the right to use its

own dam," said Connor, "the idea to

drive the logs through the Cameron

dam was abandoned, and it was de

cided to let Dietz have his own way.

Even if Dietz Is capture! it will not

help the company, as the Cameron dam

has been destroyed and there is no in

tention of rebuilding it.

Trouble Is with the State.

"There are about 4,000,000 feet of

logs in the Thornapple river above the

Cameron dam. These will probably be ;

taken to the Flambeau river by team

next winter, which would be cheaper

than rebuilding the dam. The company

has no warrant out for Dietz. The

trouble is between him and the state.

Soeriff Gylland is trying to arrest him

on a criminal warrant charging him

with assault with intent to kill one of

the sheriff's posse about a year ago.'

PRESIDENT SENDS HIS DOLLAR

lie Contributes That Much to the

Republican Campaign Fund.

New York, Aug. 1. President Roosevelt has contributed one dollar to the Republican national congressional committe's campaign fund. The contribution was sent in response to a general

appeal for one dollar contributions Chairman Sherman, of the congression al committee, made public the presi dent's letter inclosing his eontribu tion to the fund.

The letter is dated Oyster Bay, N. Y.,

July 2o, 1900, and says: "Dear Mr,

Sherman I have your letter of the 21th inst.and iuclosures. I send my dol

lar. I think it an admirable plan, and

l congratulate you upon the success that bids fair to attend the move

ment."

Illinois Tourist Dies Suddenly.

Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Aug. 1.

Seized by sudden illness while fishing:

on Lake Superior A. R. Martin, a tour

ist from Plainiield, 111., was brought to

the Canadian Soo hospital, where he

died. Thysicians decline to state the

cause of his death.

Marquis Sentenced to Prison

Paris. Aug. 1. The Marquis of

Montebello, a recent candidate for elec

tion to the chamber of deputies, has been sentenced to fifteen days' imprisonment and ?100 fine for assaulting

CONSTITUTION TO BE SAVED

She Will Be Rebuilt Exactly Like She

Was When She Roamed the Seas.

Washington, Aug. 1. Reconstruction

of the old Constitution is one of the

tasks of the bureau of construction

and repair of the navy department, pro

vision having been made to save all

that is possible of the famous old ship.

Constructor Snow, of the Boston navy

yard, recently made a trip to Salem,

Mass., where there is a model of the Constitution as she was before being

reconstructed in 1S-i".

This model was presented to the Sa

lem Marine museum by Commodore Hull and is the only one available showing what the Constitution was in

her best days. It is likely that in re

building the Salem model will be used.

Some News from China.

Feking, Aug. 1. The fact that the United States is sendingreinforcements

to her legation guard has caused great surprise here. The United States has

the hardest position in the legation

quarter to defend, and one of the small

est guards, but the present situation does not furnish cause for uneasiness,

while the increase, it is pointed out,

will offend the Chinese. The United States minister, Rockhill, telegraphed to Washington strongly opposing the increase.

Mechanical Expert Dead. nartford, Conn., Aug. 1. Dwight Slate, one of the most prominent mechanical experts in the country, is dead, aged 90 years. He had been identified with some of the biggest manufacturing concerns in the United States, and was the inventor of many drills and tools.

Hammond Horse Market iSto 40 Head of Horses always oa hand. Hay, Feed and Wood for Sale. Exchange Stable. ED MARSH. Proprietor MANHATTAN HOTEL, 396 Calumet Ave.

SA VE TWO CENTS A DAY YOU CAN OWN A FARM We mean what we say. "The Marvin Plan" enables any one who will put away a small sum each day to own a farm that he can live on, or lease out, nd in either case have a ! good income for life. Land is situated in tha most productive belt in the United States. Aa absolutely safe, sure and profitable investment far superior to a savings bank. Let us expkua the plan to you. It is money in your pocket to know our method of doing business. TRENHOLM, MARVIN & CO. D, 605 Baltimore Building, Chicago, III. 1

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About SOOO.OOO-

Land Soli. Ais?

Lots and Acres Immediate Adjoining the Pur

chase of United States Steel Corporation on Lake Michigan, Adjoining Tolleston, Lake County, Ind. MODEL CITY TO BE! BUILT

OVER S 75,000.000 TO BE SPENT

Largest Steel Plant in the World Enormous increase in values in property now offered is in sight in short time

PERRY ULRICH, 108 Dearborn Street

Challenge to Harvard Rower. Cork, Aug. 1. The Bann Rowing club, of Coleraine, has invited the Harvard crew to race them on the Bann river on any date convenient to the visitors subsequent to the HarvardCambridge contest.

Still Waters Run Deep. First Lady That new houseraaid of yours seems a very quiet girl. Second Lady Yes. She's so quiet that when she's cleaning ont a room ehe doesn't even disturb tae dust.

Tronble Ahead for Sweden. London, Aug. lj A dispatch to The Daily Telegraph from Copenhagen says that the Young Socialist Dartv of

his successful opponent, M. Larguier, t Sweden is again encouraging the

in the stret-t. troops to turn mutinous.

Negro Lynched in Georgia. Atlanta, Ga., Aug. j. A negro who was charged with raping Miss Annie Fole. a young white girl, iu Lake-

wood, an Atlanta saburty was captured

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