Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 56, Hammond, Lake County, 22 August 1906 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

TME LAKE COUNTY TIMES Wednesday. Awe. 22. 190G.

To Succeed, a Man Must I Make a Stiow of Success By WILLIAM F. CREKAND, Millionaire New York Publisher fiTlIE man who is in a hurry all the time will be stopped by peo-

POLITICS 111 ILLINOIS

Twd State Conventions in One Day Would Seem to Indicate a Warming Up.

DEMOCRATS HAVE A HOT TI2IE

Refuse to Bounce Sullivan, While In dorsing Eryaa Heartily.

i pio to tell him ot something IU 111b AU V AATAUh.

'Sfc When people see a man hustlincr around they assume at

once that he is doing something worth while, and they want to feel that they aro in touoh with him. The man who has real troubles will find some one to help him if lift will let tho trouble bo hnown in somo modest wav, but as a rule the jnan with real trouble seldom airs them, and if ho can't work it out himself HE LETS IT WORK ITSELF OUT. Eight out of ten men who have troubles lay it tor women, when, as a matter of fact, .it's something else. Women aro trying all tho time to keep men out of trouble, and when the real trouble has a woman at tho bottom of it THE MAX got her into the partnership in ihn first Tlocr

r. Peoria, 111., Au;. 22. For state treas

women aro not uiscriminaung in uivir hvinpaimes, auu iu uu pur. j nrcr, N. L. Piotrowski, of Chicago; for cent of the cases where a woman causes trouble in a man's family it's j superintendent of public instruction, because ho began bv telling her how badiv he was treated AT HOME I M!ss C!,rolje Grote- of riko . . ' . " I for trusters of the university of 1 115-

anu aroused her sympathy. THAT NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS 13 A SAYING AS OLD AS THE HILLS, AND NONE IS TRUER, AND TO GET ON IN THE WORLD A MAN MUST MAKE A SHOW OF SUCCESS.

csrtf fv the frnnt rrnld the

thusiasm. She ?aid; "I thank you sent I en: en f jt what you Lave been saying to me in this apsJause. It means that you are willing to trust to me your most cherished possessions, the care of your children. I trust and believe that the voters of the state wi! lact according to your wishes. Gentlemen. again I thank you."

Miss Grote then retired with

band playing "Good Morning. Carrie." while the delegates mounted chairs, threw their hats in the air and cheered her frantically.

UAVY T7ANTS IIORE SAILORS

REPUBLICANS OF ILLINOIS

Woman on the State Ticket Republicans Are Harmonious Cannon and Cullom Duly Indorsed.

ilommond Horse Market i5to 40 Head of Morses always oa hand. flay, Feed end Wood for Salt. Exchange Stable. ED MARSH, Proprietor, MANHATTAN HOTEL, 396 Calumet Ave.

Tel. 2032

411 Sohl St.

Kollleg & Co

Contractors

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

- Lake County Title &. Guaranty Company ABSTRACTORS F. R. MOTT, President, J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary, FRANK HAMMOND, Vicc-Pres. A. II. TAPPER, Treasurer. S. A. CULVER, Manager. Hammond and Crown Point, Indiana. Secretary's office in Majestic Bldg., Hammond, Abstracts furnished promptly at current rates.

nois, Danied It. Caleron and John S. Cuneo, of Chicago, and Miss Clara Bouiiand, of Peoria. The foregoing is the ticket nominated by the Dernoratlc state convention. Declines to Bounce Sullivan. By a vote of 1,038 to 570 the Democratic convention laid on the table the request of William J. Bryan for the resignation of Iloger C Sullivan from the national committee. Despite the fact that Bryan hud declared that he did n&t wish to he indorsed unless Sullivan, was. repudiated the convention declared him to be the one and only man capable of leading the Democratic party to victory in li-'OS. The indorsement of Bryan and the tabling of the motion calling for the resignation of Sullivan came at the close of a most ex iting session of the convention in which there were several fights and throughout wh'ch confusion reigned supreme. Thompson. Attacks Savagely. The committee on resolutions declined to report a. plank calling for the resignation of Sullivan, and the debate followed upon a motion made in

the convention by Judge Owen Thompson, of Jacksonville, calling for Sullivan's resignation. It had been agreed, that each side should have forty-five minutes in which to present its side of the case and Judge Thompson was the first advocate of the cause of Bryan. He aroused the hostility of Sullivan's friends by the unsparing mariner in which he dwlt upon the last Democratic convention at ' Springfield. Much Feeling on Both Sides, lie strode up and down the platform, his face white with wrath, and h'13 form shaking with- the intensity of his feeling. His caustic criticisms finally lost him the ear of the convention, and he might iiever been able to conclude his speech if Sullivan had not personally requested quiet. Sul

livan, who followed Thompson, and who was the first speaker in his own behalf, declared that the ear of Bryan had been poisoned against him, and that he demand for his resignation sprang from his personal enemies. Great feeling was displayed cn both sides during the debate, and at times personalities of a disagreeable character were made by various speakers.

Smulki for State Treasurer Easily Cullom and Cannon Indorsed. Springfield, II!., Aug. 2 Treasurer of state, John F. Smulski; superintendent of public instruction, Francis G. Blair; trustees of the state university, Mrs. Carrie S. Alexander, Fred Hatch, Alexander McT.ain and L. L. Lehman (short term. The foregoing ticket was nominated by the Republicans of Illinois in a convention which was marked by harmony and good feeling. The presidential boom of Speaker Cannon for lrS, which was launched

last week by his own congressional I district, was given an enthusiastic in- 1 Two riorsement. The mention of Cannon's j

name brought the convention to its feet and there was enthusiastic cheering. The convention carried out the will of the people of the state, expressed at the primaries a few weeks ago, by a unanimous indorsement of Senator Cullom for re-election. Outside of the indorsement of Cannon for president and Cullom for reelection there was little of general interest in the convention's proceedings. The fight for state treasurer was the most spirited of the convention, but Smulski won easily on the second ballot. The resolutions contain an indorsement of President Roosevelt's administration, of Illinois senator and representatives in congress and of the administration of Governor Deneen. The paragraph on the tarff is the wellknown adherence to the cardinal doctrine "Of protection to American labor and American capital." but "we do not hold that any particular schedule of tariff duties must be of endless duration, but, on the contrary, when changing business and industrial conditions,"

etc.

Inducements Offered to Young ?Ien to Join Uncle Sam's Ulue Jacket Corp. Washigton. Aug. 22. The navy department is making every passible ef

fort to induce young citizens to enlist j aboard the ships of I'ncle Sam. In ad- j

the j ultion to exposing popular pictures of j

scenes in the naval service, interesting j reading matter is being circulated to j win the youth of the laud to the pleas- I

ures and dangers of the sea. One of the circulars asserts that enlisted men now stand an excellent chance of obtaining commissions" in the navy if they are persevering and studious. Since congress in 1001 passed a law that the secretary of the navy could commission each year twelve warru'nt officers of the navy who had served, served seven years as enlisted men and four years as warrant ofiicers, twenty enlisted menhavereeelved commissions, and two of them now are holding rank in the service as full lieutenants.

r av Ke

cJ

lay a Moaem nome on easy payments near Hammond's Center.

Willie your properly grows in value. Act Now. E. A. KINKADE, builder

Fhone 3253

1 10 First National Bank Bldg. Hammond, IncL

RESULT OF AN ITALIAN FIGHT

20th Century TROHBER

And the Popular

fi

OFFMANN

ir FI h W fJFl

INCIDENTS OF THE DISPUTE

LEADER MURPHY AND HEARST

Honsslly Made by Skilled Workmen

33

Sold Direct From Factory fo Home at Reasonable Prices and Easy Terms,

Factory Branch9049 Commercial Ave., South Chicago. CHAS. F. DICKINSON. Manager.

One Delegate Gives the Iie Direct and a Scrap Ensues, While the discussion of the anti-Sullivan resolution was proceeding and at

the point where Sullivan declared that Thompson "came here to gratify his spleen," etc., '"You're a liar," came from the Dupage delegation. Instantly a Sullivan delegate sprang fcr the speaker, and it took half a dozen policemen to stop the Sght. Order was finally restored End just as Sullivan commenced to speak two men clutching each other by the threat staggered through the door on the opposite side of the hall. They cuffed each other without mercy, and it took a platoon of police to dras them out of the hall and put them cn the sidownl'i, where they started the second round. The end came on a motion made by ex-Representative Kern, of Belleville, th:;t the request for the resignation of Sullivan be laid on the table. Feeling during the roll call on this proposition ran very high. The votes of several counties were challenged, and one dele

gate from Warren county declared that the vote from that county had been deliberately garbled. When all these difficulties had been straightened out the vote was declared to be as given above. The platform denounces generally and particularly the Republican administration of state affairs; declares the primary law a cowardly makeshift; demands an efficient state banking law: declares for the rights of labor

in general terms and denounces child anJ Chinese labor; asks of congress the eight-hour law and anti-injunction law demanded by organized labor, and favor? popular election of senators. The revision of the present tariff is demanded and declares that "For president iu the Democrats of Illinois, first and last, have but one choice, and that man is William Jennings F.ryan." Much more pleasant to record wa thf scene when Miss Grote was nominated for superintendent of public instruction. She is the second woman in Illinois to lje nominated for a state office, but the first to be nominated by a great party. Immediately after the announcement of the vote there were loud cries of "Speech." '"Speech, Caroline." Miss Grote. who is a tall, large woman, "with a Tery pleasant face,

IiOoks Dike the Illinois Fight Over Again In New York. New York, Aug. 22. Charles 1 Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, said he had not observed any sentiment in Tammany for the nomination of District Attorney William Travers Jerome for governor by the Democratic state convention, but there was, he said, plenty of sentiment for W. It. Hearst. Murphy declared that he was not com

mitted to any candidate, but it was the rule of Tammany to be guided by the sentiment of the organization and he

would be guided by it at the state eon vention.

District Attorney Jerome says that

"It is no surprise to me to find Mur

phy practically declaring for Hearst,"

Then he uttered a red-hot denunciation of the party "boss." And now here comes William Ran

dolph Hearst and declares a state of

things very like that existing in I11I nois between Bryan and Sullivan

Says Hearst: "I have no interest what

ever in the factional disputes of Tarn

many Hall. These declarations for or

against me are nothing more than attempts to influence votes in primary contests. I am absolutely and unalterably opposed to the Murphys and the

McCarrens. and also to the Sullivans and the McClellans and the kind of

pontics tuat tney an represent, l am

opposed to boss rule in politics."

Illinois Socialists.

Chicago, Aug. 22. The following

ticket was- nominated by the Socialists of the r-tate at a convention held here:

Stste treasurer, W. E. McDermctt, Chi

cago; superintendent of public instruc

tion, Mrs. Bay Wood Simons, Evans-

ten; university trustees, Mrs. Gertrude D. Hunt, Norwood park; Mrs. Corinne

Brown, LaGrange; Algy M. Simons, Chicago.

Dead Men and Four Serious

Cases at the Hospital Feutl Breaks Out. Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 22. Two families of Italians engaged in battle in Main street. Two men are dead and four are in the hospital with serious wounds. Some time ago Frank Sardinia had a fi?t fight with Dominic

Garcia. Bad blood has existed ever since between the two men and Garcia and his brother lay in wait for Sardinia, who came along tho street ae companied by his two brothers.

The Garcias stepped out to confront

the Sardinias. and the battle was on.

Raphael Balstrie attempted to interfere and was stabbed to death. When

the police arrived Frank Sardinia also

lay dead in the street, and his two

brothers were kneeling beside him

weeping and moaning. Dominic Gar

cia tried to escape, but fell from his

wounds. He is expected to die.

TJIIES TO STARVE HIMSELF

Murdeicr Says He Will Die Because

a Woman Ha Committed Suicide. Louisville, Aug. 22. Clarence Stur

geon, who killed three men on account

of Daisy Jackson, a 10-year-old girl,

announced in his cell, when told of her

suicide in a resort in this city, that he would starve himself to death. He started at once by refusing to take

food.

Sturgeon admitted that the girl was from Carrollton, Ky., and that he had betrayed her. He said he had intended making her his wife. A peculiar feature of the case, so far as Sturgeon's loyalty to her memory is concerned, is that she killed herself because of her Infatuation for another man.

Pat Crowe Promises Reform. New York, Aug. 22. Fat Crowe, of Omaha, Neb., who was taken in charge by the local police, but was later given his freedom, called at police headquarters in accordance with an arrangement made. Crowe had a long talk with Sergeant Dunn. He told him he had given up his old life. He said he was engaged In newspaper work, and meant to earn an honest living henceforth. He was told he could remain in the city as long as he did as he promised. Another Negro Lynching. Tampa. ITa., Aug. 22. While the

Polk county authorities were bringing

Will Lawrence, a negro, to Tampa to prevent him from being lynched an Infuriated mob at Mulberry, in Tolk county, hanged John Bapes, a negro, and riddled his body with bullets. Bapes attempted to kill Capt. Hughes, a prominent white citizen. Lawrence

was charged with an attempted rape

on a young white woman.

Relief for Chile Sufferers. Washington, Aug. 22. Funds for the relief of earthquake sufferers in Chile will be received by the American Red Cross and sent to Valparaiso and other stricken cities for distribution through United States diplomatic and consular representatives in that country. Russian Colonel Murdered. Samara, Aug: 22. The commander of the Borisov regiment was attacked and killed at his residence here. The murderers escaped after saturating the body of their victim with alcohol and setting it on fire.

Bank of Mentor Robbed.

Crookston, Minn., Aug. 22. The

bank of Mentor, Minn., was burglar

ized. The robbers blew open the safe

with nitro glycerine, and secured $1, 20Q in cash. The burglars escaped.

NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE

Are Ministers Son Bad? A bishop marked the names of those whom he deemed worthy of remembrance for some service performed in religion or politics or literature or science or art or commerce or philanthropy or ware fare, or some other aspects of the various life of the nation. Of such names he found 1,270 who were the children of clergymen or ministers, taking no account of those who were grandchildren of clergymen or more remote descendants. Of the children of lawyers, there were 510, and of doctors So0. The sons of clergymen who became themselves clergymen

were SoO. He further asserts that the superiority which the clergy enjoy Lu respect to their children to the other professions lies beyond dispute. The superiority has been not of numbers only, but of degree. , From ..clericn.1 homes have sprung more distinguished sons than from the homes of any secular, profession. LesUe's-Weejdsy

SA VE TWO CENTS. A DAY YOU CAN OWNA FARM We mean what we say. "The Marvin Tlan' enables any one who will put away a small sum each day to own a farm that he can live cn, or lease out, and iu. 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 explain 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

. TAKE NOTICE

About $4,000,000 Worth, of Land Sold Already Lots and Acres Immediate Adjoining the Purchase of United States Steel Corporation on Lake Michigan, Adjoining Tolleston, Lake County, Ind. MODEL CITY TO BE BUILT

OVER $75,000,000 TO BE SRENt

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

PERRY ULRICH, J08 Dearborn Street

The king and queen of Spain have

sailed from Cowes for Bilbao on their

yacht Giralda.

John W. Yerkcs. commissioner of

internal revenue, has arrived at New

York from Europe.

The business section of Haileybury, New Ont.. has been wiped out by fire. Loss, $150,000: insurance, $100,000. The demand for laborers in the northwest is urgent, especially in Oregon and Washington. All the foreign ministers at Santiago, Chile, have expressed the condolence of their governments to President Rlesco. Louis rfromme, a well-known resident of Allegheny, Fa., was found dead about daylight near his home. Murder is suspected, for the purpose of robbery. Five hundred delegates, representing several thousand negro physicians, dentists and pharmacists, are in session at Philadelphia, discussing medical subjects. The mining town of Johnsville, Plumas county. Cab. was practically wiped out by fire. Two miners were

killed and twenty-nve buildings destroyed. There is an ice famine at Baltimore. A great prevalence of hydrophobia is reported ia western Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Maryland. Foreign Minister Tittoni. of Italy, who was taken ill while visiting Castel Irescoro, has compjately recovered.

1

acooson s Agency

Real Estate and General Insurance

77 SOUTH HOHMAN ST.

If you vfant to buy or sell real estate, or need 6re. life or accident insurance, it will pay you to call on us. Our companys are of the best. We list below a few bargains. If you do not find anything here that suits you ask to see our list, io-room brick house on East State street, lot 50x1 18 Price, $3,000. Will exchange for a farm. 25-foot lots near Pennsylvania depot at $55 each. $5 down and $1 per week. 4-room house cn Cedar street, 50-foot lot, $900. 52-foot corner lot on Hoffman street, $3oo. 5. room cottage on Oak street, 50-foot lot, fine lawn, shade trees, a fine piece of property at $1450. 371 foot lot on Hickory street at $250. 25-foot lot on Pine street, $200. 25-foot lot on Ash street, $150. 4 lets on Grifin street, a snap at $125 each. Easy terms. We can sell you a lot on any street on the north side at very low prices and very easy terms.

Phones: Office, 1394 , T L A Residence, 3632. JacoDsoii Agency 7'7 SOUTH HOHMAN ST.