Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 95, Hammond, Lake County, 9 October 1906 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES TUESDAY. OCT. 9, 190G.
Telegraph News bv Direct Wire from All Over Indiana
Kokomo, In., Oft. 0. The vendetta existing between Oukford and Hemlock, rival villajrks oijrht miles south of horo, lias hrokon out afresh. Late at night Carl Vnnde rhart, of Oakfonl, was shot from arnlnjsh.refe'vinv; adanpprims sralp wound. Yandcrhart H'turnod the fire, shooting four tinis at his assailant. He had been falling on a younir woman in Hemlock, and was en route home when shot. The officers are searching for the assailant. It was near this spot that Francis Sutton and I.onis Ycazer were killed by masked men three years ntro. ,o on? was convicted in that ease and th late attack was as mysterious as the others. The feud is confined to young men and boys, and when a man of one village calls upon a young woman of the other town it is- a signal for bloodshed. The Tragedy at ShelhyTilSe. Shelbyville, Ind., Oct. 0. In an Interview Mrs. M;!ry Armbrusier. in whose house Mr. and Mrs. Ayrcs had apartments, said the couple had frequent quarrels about property and money matters. "It seerr.:-." said Mrs. Armhrrster. "that a new building which the (ouplo was erecting was costing them too much money, a great deal more than Ihey had expected it to cos.t. and Mrs. Ay res had an idea that her husband was making a botch job cf it. During these quarrels Mr. Ayres would often talk harsh and roughly to Ler." Wealthy and Prominent. Mrs. Ayres before her marriage nbout six years ago was Miss Laura Sorden, a member of one of the county's wealthiest and most prominent families. The dead woman met Ayres In Kokomo while visiting in that city. He was at that time ; widower and a resident of Creentown. Shortly after the marriage of the couple they moved to a small town named Phlox, in Howard county, removing to this place shortly afterwards.
NEW SB FOR CUBA
Upon Which, Perhaps, Sha Can Write Her Future History as a Nation.
THAT IS WHAT TAFT AIMS AT
Would Wipe Out Old Scores and Heal Old Sores Amnesty To Be Given Kvery Sinner oa the Island.
Havana, Oct. 0. The factional ill feviing that has existed at Cienfuegos since the presidential campaign of Ifior. resulting in tJie death of Representative Yilluendas and Chief of Police lllance. increased during the recent revolution to such an extent that the return of the rebels from the held
TAKE3 UP THE CHALLENGE
QILTRUST IS OH TRIAL
Independence league Leader Replies to an Ultimatum by a Democratic Chief.
Iiuffaio, Oct. a After a confer-! Rockefeller's Big Octopus Faceonce, which lasted all day awl up to j tO"Face with a Tussle
i ii i ii , jSv
1
Sit w (
midnight, between representatives of thy Demociatic county organization and Clarence J. Shearn, personal representative of William It. Hearst, Chairman C'oatsworth, of the Erie county general committee, gave out an open letter addressed to Steam in which he declares that the Democracy of Erie county stands as a unit for the action of their respective conventions, and that no person regularly nominated will be asked to withdraw. Should any attempt be made on the part of the Independence League to defeat any Democrat by placing a third third ticket in the field, the letter says, "a condition might be created in the comity which may be disastrous to the man for whose 1 enetit the Independence League was organized." Th letter coiK-ludes with the words: '"This is the ultimatum of the Democratic organization of the county of Erie." After reading Chairman Coatsworth's ultimatum Shearn gave out a statement m which he says that the only course now open to the Independence League is the nomination of a full ticket in the county.
with Ohio Law.
JOHN D. IS
NOT TO BE CALLED
Delense Makes a Fight on Technical Points, Saving Them All Summary of the Valentine Law.
Humor end Philosophy Cy DUNCAN M. SMITH
WELL, IT DEPENDS.
Findlay, O., Oct. 0. Charged with "conspiracy against trade" in violation of the anti-trust laws of the state th? Standard Oil Company of Ohio and its alleged constituent companies, the Huckeye Pipe line and the Manhattan Oil company, were placed on trial here today before Judge Gideon G. Banker and a jury in the probate court of Hancock county. In the original in-
ANOTI1KK MUSIIItOOM VICTIM
Two Oat or Three in a Family Are Dead, One Dying Daring the Other's Funeral. Anderson, Ind.; Oct. 0. While the funeral services over the body of Myrtle Earl, 7 years old. who died from the effects of eating toadstools which were mistaken for mushrooms, were being held, her brother, Gordon Karl, aged 11, died In an adjoining room. The mother of the children. Mrs., Robert Earl, is unconscious, and Is not expected to survive. The three members of the Earl family ate of the poisonous plant nt supper Friday evening. Shortly afterward nil three were taken suddenly ill. The
WHITE HOUSE AT HAVANA. is causing a dangerous condition which the provisional government considers it is highly necessary to end. In view of this Governor Taft sent Consul General Steinhardt to Cienfuegos with authority to take any action he mny deem advisable. Would Only Ileopen the How. Governor Taft believes thiit it Is
particularly necessary that the vexed local situation in Cienfuegos shall be settled before the issuance of an amnesty decree, since he has determined to include in the amnesty all persons charged with complicity in the Yilluendas murder. He holds that if he yielded to the importunities of many residents of Cienfuegos and allowed tiiose charged Avith the crime to be brought to trial it would result in the event of their acquittal by a judge belonging to the Moderate party in reopening the quarrel over the incident in a mor? violent manuerthan ever. Wants the Hatchet Buried. Governor Taft has also decided to Include in the general amnesty all persons alleged to have been connected with the Guanabaeoa outrage of last February, when several rural guardsmen were wantonly killed in their' quarters by a gang of night marauders. He is unwilling to furnish r.ny opportunity for the reopening of old sores In either of these notorious matters, and will insist in the effectual closing now of all incidents which are an outgrowth of former political strife. Not Attending Partisan Meetings. Alfredo Zayas, the Liberal leader, called at the palace and invited Governor Taft to attend the Liberal mass meeting on Oct. 14. Governor Taft re-
S0CIALISTS MAKE PREDICTIONS They Say They Will Probably Elect a Member of Congress lor New York. New York, Oct. 0. The socialist party announces that it will probably elect one of its representatives, Morris Hillquit. to congress from the Ninth congressional district, on the lower east side. One of the chief causes for the hope of Hillquit's supporters is the Russian revolution. The district ha Seward park as a geographical center, and embraces a large part of the Russian Jewish east sid-?. There arc thousands of families that have lost relatives in the revolution, and scores of socialist orators are making that one of their strong points, picturing Hillquit as the man who will look out for the interests of the Jews. A house to house canvass is being conducted for Hillquit. Many women have taken up his cause and are working for his election. A daily paper, in Yiddish, will be published the lat ten days of the campaign and circu
lated among the Jews, outlining the socialist doctrines.
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f4ti.jti' emit,
You hear nbout a great reform To elevate your fellow man. Some project that is very warm. A nifty and a noble plan To make the human race advance And give the poorest man a chancy Eut whether it appeals to you Depends upon your point of view. A measure that looks very fine Some party is nbout to sprint: To keep the doubtful oiks in line And others to the standard brinsr: A plot to make the v.ho'.t- world good. If every one would just saw wood. But whether you can catch the note Depends somewhat on how you vota. If some one pretty close to you Is booster for the holy cause You take a hold and see it through And bolster it with loud applau.se. If it's an enemy to win. You do not see where you come in. And when the booster sinsrs his tune lie finds you gazing at the moon. Yes. very pad to think about. The merit does not cut much ice. For these who for the measure shout Are slyly looking for the price. And those who are not in the deal A very languid interest feel; Those on the ground floor. I opine, Without assistance get in line.
The Cause of It AIL
llA-iT LOOK ) 0UKLTC )
"He has been feeling very miserable for several days." "What's the matter with him?" "The doctor says it is eye strain." "I tell you those peekaboo waists should be prohibited by law."
g'rl died Satnrdav evening. Varl the ' r'lh'1 that ho wo"M probably sail for head of the family, wh.o Is emnlovcd j tlu V" states on Oct. 1.".. Sonor
nt a glass factory at Reading. O.. arrived here just before the death of the little ffirl.
mor
Zayas then offered to hold the meet
ing before the governor's departure, but Taft intimated that he did not re-
Fg:ird it wise to attend a party demon
stration. Difficulty Smoothed Over. The situation at Casilda. Santa
province, which was critical on
MYSTERY IN A SUICIDE Stops Dressing for His Wedding Long Enough to Put a Bullet in His Drain. Loveland, ()., Oct. 0. There is something of a mystery about the suicide of John Kell, and Coroner Gatch is trying to unravel it. Kell, a widower aged 3S years, was engaged to marry Miss Delva Malloy, an lS-year-cld daughter
of a neighbor at Bethel. Two hours before the hour for the ceremony Kell i began to put on his wedding clothes;
then he suddenly changed his mind and wrote a note to the girl saying that "everything is going against us and always has. good-bye." He then shot himself in the head and was dead when found. Miss Malloy is unable to explain either the note or the suicide, nor has any one else been able to explain it.
Wasn't a Wooden Leg. Princeton, Ind.. Oct. 0. Because Louis Telly was so rude as to pinch Mrs. Maude Richardson on the leg in
n playful manner ln was haled before account of the government volunteers
Justice Sprowle and fined $1 and costs, j v.itlnn the town refusing to deliver up md is now threatened with a civil ac- j their rifles, and also in view of the tion by,J Mrs. Richardson. Telly do- faf-t that insurgents were numerous clared he was only ascertaining if Mrs. ! between Casilda and Trinidad, four Richardson's neither extremities were i miles from town h-k eienri m ,t-
real or wooden, and that he meant no Jiarm.
Do the Good Die Young? Columbus. Ind..,, Oct. 0. Steven Owens, aged 7S years, who died at his home north of this city. Avill be remembered by his neighbors as the man who never told a lie. Owens was born in this county and spent his entire life as a farmer, aside from some work during the summer season for several years with a threshing outfit.
the vigorous work and diplomacy of the disarmament commissioners, assisted by Gen. Jose Miguel Gomez.
THIS SETTLES THE MATT EE,
I-'atality at a Fire. Evansville, Ind.. Oct. P. While lighting a rire in the tenement district of this city; which caused a damage of SV'O four tiremen were injured. Captain James FitzWilliams was fatally. CharVes Cecil and Charles Olden
seriously, hurt.
and John A! gear slightly
No Divorce lor This Woman. Muncie. Ind.. Oct. 0. Because Mrs. Nettie Crawford admitted on the witness stand that William Crawford was drunk when he married her. Judge Lefi'er refused to grant her a decree of divorce, although she apparently hail sufficient grounds otherwise. Another Clew to a Lost Doy. ' Torre Haute, Ind., Oct. !. Information from Iowa City. Ia.. was of such : definite nature that Dr. S. L. Byers. father of Rich." Byers, kidnapped two years ago and more, is making inquiries there. W. C. T. U. Is Increasing. Richmond, Ind.. Oct. 0. Reports to the Indiana W. C. T. F iu session
at Portland, show that fifty-four un-
What Is Going to Happen to the Wisconsin Central at the Directors' Meeting-. Milwaukee. Oct. 0. The Sentinel today says: "The men to whom the
! control and management of the WIsj cousin Central will' bo officially transferred at today's meeting of the stock -j holders and directors of the company ! arrived in thi city today. Coincident 1 with their arrival comes the authoritative statement from W. A. Bradford. Jr.. of Cincinnati, who. it is said, will b'"1 the new president of the road; that i there is no chance of policy in the con- ; tied of the road contemplated; that the i road will not be consolidated with any i other, and that it will not be sold, j "President II. F. Whitcomb will rej tire tomorrow, to be succeeded by Mr. ; Bradford, and Vice President Howard ; Morris will also retire."
JOHK r. KOCKXFEXIiEB. formation filed last Jume by County
Prosecutor David John P. Rockefeller
was made a party to the suit, but through the granting of a request for a separate trial Rockefeller will not be called as a defendant until the. case against the company has been disposed of. Rockefeller, it is said, will
not be summoned as a witness and will not attend the trial. Defense Defeated on All Points. Both the manner of bringing the (suit and the jurisdiction of tlw? probate court have been questioned by the attorneys for the defense, but Judge Banker has decided against them on all points, and no appeal can be taken on these preliminary questions until after the case has been tried. Judge Banker ruled that a violation of the Valentine law constitutes a misdemeanor, and that the last session of the legislature gave probate courts concurrent jurisdiction with common pleas courts over all misdemeanors. To this ruling, as well as that on other technical points, the defense took exception. MAIN POINTS OF THE LAW
Training for Office Hoys. New York, Oct. 0. The office-boy question has been taken up seriously by the Y. M. C. A. and a training school for ofiice boys will be opened
by it. Part 1 of the instruction will consist of business arithmetic, spelling, correspondence and commercial geography. Part 2 is divided into elementary and advanced work. Included in the latter are all systems of letter filing, card indexing, manifolding, mailing and shipping desk Avork, cashier's department work and general office routine, with elementary bookkeeping and simple commercial correspondence. Mad Murderer Dies on the Hail. Jackson, Miss.. Oct. 9. Charles Carraway, a deaf mute who shot and killed Dr. Preston Collins in the station there several months ago, and who was afterwards adjudged insane, escaped from the asylum. When a search was made for Carraway his dead body was found on the railroad track several miles from the city horribly mangled. He had been run down by a freight. Insurance Company Must Pay. San Francisco. Oct. 0. The Trans-
Atlantic Fire Insurance company loses j in the first decision to be rendered in ; the superior courts regarding the lia- ; bility of companies which have re- ! fused a dollar-for-dollar settlement, i The company has not a single excuse ; in law for repudiating the claims of i its policyholders, according to the do- i cision rendered by Judge Carroll Cook. !
Can Convict a Corporation on Its "General Reputation'
The Valentine law, under which the action is brought, was passed July 1, 1S0S. It defines a trust elaborately
as a combination of capital, skill or
acts by two or more persons, firms.
etc., to create or carry out restrictions
in trade. The violations of the act are defined as "conspiracy against
trade" and punishable by a fine or
from $,"0 to $5.CX, or imprisonment
for from six to twelve months. As
to the evidence required to convict
the statute says:
"It shall be sufficient to prove that a trust or combination as defined here
in exists, and that the defendant be
longed to it. or acted for or in connection with it, without proving all the
members belonging to it or proving or
producing any article of agreement or
any written instrument on which it
may have been based; or that it was
evidenced by an- written instrument at all. The character of the trust or combination alleged may be estab
lished by proof of its general reputa tion as such."
Theory and Practice. Although in theory Mrs. Clarence
Mackay is of the opinion that moral suasion is just too cunning for anything, she is ready, after having served a term as school trustee, to allow corporal punishment to raise a few artistic welts on the tender hides of the youth of the land just for the purpose of mildly calling their attention to the
fact that they are not running the works.
To govern by love is a beautiful
and inspiring thing when you are allowing some one else to do the govern
ing, but it takes a strongminded per
son to keep his theories intact when he
tries to apply them to a lot of miscellaneous kids. We tremble to think of a great rough skate strap being applied to our own loved ones, but it is seldom that we can view the neighbor's children with an impartial eye without reflecting that a fine spanking would do them a world of good. Quite Right. "Expenses have much to do with appearances, though." "Yes, and they have much to do with disappearances also."
Hadn't HesstiS It. "Fortune calls on every man." "Then she must speak Greek, for that's the only language that I don't understand."
Where the Water Comes From, "It's easy riding on the water wagon. "That so?" "l'es; lots of springs in it, you know
Literary Aid.
"For a time the cook wasn't satisfac
tory, but he brought her to book." "Cook book?"
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
Death for Two Firemen. Chicago. Oct. 0. One fireman M. J. Ehret was killed, another Charles Slayhize fatally injured and several others narrowly escaped being crushed to death when the Evanston "flyer" on the Chicago and Northwestern railroad struck a fire truck at Estes avenue crossing in Rogers park.
Thinks $4,000 Is Enough. Minneapolis, Oct. 9. A Minneapolis jury says Miss Cora F. Kasson. of Saratoga Springs. N. Y., who brought
ions were organized during the fast a breach-of-promise suit against HenTt.ar. rJ Klauser, proprietor of the Litch
field Woolen mills, for 10,000, is entitled to $4,000.
He Directs His Own Treatment. j New York, Oct. '.. While out driv- j ing Dr. J.Lewis Amfter was run down i by a trolley car and probably fatally j hurt. Although wedged under the ear ! while waiting for the wrecking crew, ! the physician accurately described his j Injuries to the ambulance surgeon and ! then asked for morhpine to relieve hi i sufferings.
Costly Railway Stations.
Chicago. Oct. 0. Chicago is to have the greatest railroad station in the world for handling passenger traffic. This is to be the result of plans which the Pennsylvania Railroad company is rapidly bringing to completion. Following the official announcement that the Chicago and Northwestern had practically completed plans for the erection of a $20,000,000 passenger terminal, comes the unofficial but authoritative statement that the Pennsylvania company will expend as much if not more in the erection of a new passenger station, directly opposite, on the south side of West Madison street.
Subscribe for. The Lake County Times.
Kaiser Interested in Ballooning. Berlin. Oct. 9. Emperor William has offered a prize for an international balloon nue to take place Oct. 14. In a race between balloms and automobiles tomorrow Prince Erenest von Saxe-Al-
I tenburg. Puke Adolph Frieirk h of Mecklenburg-Sehweria and Prince i Henry of Prussia , will takt naif
Bathed in Scalding Water. New York, Oct. 0. Mrs. George II. .Tenks. 00 years old. wife of a Chicago physician, is in a serious condition at St. I.uke;s hospital. Mrs. Jenks has long been a victim of insomnia, and it had been her custom 'to take a hot bath immediately before retiring. Some time after midnight. Mrs. Jenks filled the bath in her suite and plunged in. The water was almost boiling, and
she was terribly scalded before her
It is as criminal to be stupid as it Is
stupid to be criminal. It is pretty hard on you when you are both the direct and indirect object of a sale. If you have a secret to be kept, salt it down. Himself being, judge, every man's story telling is surpassed by nothing but his singing. Disliking flattery is a pose that every one thinks becoming to himself. A damaging truth has a thousand tongues.
husband succeeded in
from the tub.
removing her
First Snow at Minneapolis.
A good promoter can make molehills of mountains. If we could see others as they see themselves we would have friends to throw at the birds. Men admire feminine fripperies immensely if they don't have to pay the bills. The man who said there was nothing
j automobilists.
Minneapolis. Oct. 0. Minneapolis i e leather had never eaten a beef-
Feterday experienced her first snow j steak In a forty-faurth rate boarding
ncie wrrs ireao
Was the first prize winner at the National Master Baker's convention at Philadelphia as the most gluten bread on the market. Light and Porous Highly recommenced by physicians. Made by our own process. For sale evrryw here. The Hammond Baking Go. Incorporated HAMMOND, IND.
JOS. W. WE1S, R. Ph.
TPS-BE FfcO LTtTSICTP
98 State Street. Phone No. 1.
LOTS
N GARY
$150 Each and Upwards In the new tteel city, Gary, Indiana, $75,000,000 now being expended in building the largest steel plant in the world; by the United States Steel Co. Twenty-five thousand men will be employed which means a city of over 100,000 inhabitants. Lots will double in value many times. Send for large map and particulars. W. A. PRIDMORE, 134 Monroe st., Chicago. C. J. WARD, Loc-ii Agent. Office opposite depot, Tolleston.
An Ad in
I
L ,.S t
ii
TIMES
is five times as valuable as any other advertising medium in Hammond.
w
7IL1T H Y
oy r
Because it goes into the homes of 5000 PAID subscribers.
It does not lie on front porches for days like a bill.
Why do we have so many NEW ads in our want column daily? Because
$r this season
use.
f iTimes Want s I I
j
Ads
results,
