Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 107, Hammond, Lake County, 23 October 1906 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES TUESDAY. OCT. 23, 1906.

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Good Clothes for the Boys

SILVEIRA SEEMS SAFE

For the strenuous boy they should be made of "iron. " We have the next thing to it. Cultivate in him that desire to be dressed right; this you can do best by getting " the habit" of coming to us.

THE MODEL Majestic Building.

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PHONE e O Firs elas livery In J connection. Night alla j promptly attended.

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UOr ASSISTANT Private ambulance Office open night and day

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NICHOLAS, EMMERLING 3ecceif or t Kret A Banntrllng -

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UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRACTICAL EM BALM ER.

t 211 Sibley Street, Hammond, Ind.

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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, and in either case have a good income for life. Land is situated in the tnost 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

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Artistic Commercial PrintingTimes Office

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

Home Made Candies. Special Sale.

Wo biluSu

sbert's Bread

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 recommended by physicians. Made by our own process. For sale evrrywhere. The Hammond Baking Co. Incorporated HAMMOND. IND.

Cuban Who Looted His Own Firm and Ceballos & Co., of New York.

'CJ. AH SHAN" EAISE3 A liJOT

IT ALL DEPENDS ON

Venezuelan President Can Give Him Up, but la Not Treaty-Bound in the Blatter.

Havana, Oct. .23. The captain of the cattle sbip Carmelina, which has arrived here from Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, confirmed the report that he landed Senor Silveira, the fugitive Havana banker, and his family at Puerto Cabello, from whence they went to Caracas. He Left the Firm Looted. Silveira's partner denies the statement cabled. from Caracas, Venezuela, that Silveira left the linn solvent, with ?l..r,00,000 assets, against liabilities of $700,(i00. He declares that Silveira left nothing with which to meet the firm's

Only a Mild Sort of Turbulence, How. ever Negroes Object to the Drama. Philadelphia, Oct 23. 'The Clansman" was presented here at the Walnut Street theater. The colored c leryy of the city had made a formal protest to Mayor Weaver against the production,

CASTSO j alleging that "lynchings have been en

couraged by the play." The mayor refused to take any action. About half an hour before the theater opened Ninth and Walnut streets, where the play house is located, were packed with colored people. Director of Public Safety McKenney, who had hastened to the scene, begged the ministers to disperse the mob. ,

A riot call was sent In .and patrol wagons brought half a. hundred policemen to the theater. The colored ministers sutT0inded Director McKenny

and demanded that he stop the play. The director delivered a brief speech,

asking the crowd to disperse, and saying that he would endeavor to have the presentation discontinued. This seeir.ed to have a soothing effect and the crowd

slowly scattered

MANXJEIi BTIiVEIEA. obligations, and that after making unsuccessful efforts to secure loans from two Havana banks Silveira took with him $C3.C00 in cash. .The. partner of the firm says he will pay all the firm's obligations and that the firm will then go into liquidation. Posed as a Political ltefugee. Captain Anderson, of the CarmeHna, declares that when the vessel was three miles off the Cuban coast Sil

veira ordered him to change his.courso for Venezuela alleging political rea

sons. Prior lo complying the captain

called the mate of the steamer to wit

im'fs the signing of a document to this

effect. Captain Anderson was greatly

surprised upon arriving here to learn

of the charges against Silveira.

Silveira Seema Pretty Safe.

Washington. Oct. 23. The United

States can take no steps to bring about

the extradition of Silveira, the Cuban

banker wanted at Havana, and now

said to be in Caracas, Venezuela. There

is no extradition treaty between the republic of Cuba and Venezuela, and the United States cannot interfere in any way in the case, according to state department officials, who insist that the relations of this government to Cu

ba are not such as to justify United States participation in any manner to

have Silveira extradited. Consequent

ly Governor Ma goon, of Cuba, may ask President Castro, of Venezuela, to permit Silveira to be taken by Cuban authorities, but the outcome is dependent entirely upon the will of President

Castro.

NO REDUCTION Or DEATH ROLLS ftothing New Develops, However, ef the Deadly Storm on the Florida Coast. jKcksenvile, Fla., Oct. 23. There are no developments regarding the effects of the recent hurricane in Florida. Repair of some of the damage to property caused by the storm is being1 projected, and some of the men res cued, and carried to various ports by the vessels that picked them up. Including the twenty-four survivors of the houseboat No. 4, who were ongaged in building the extension of the Florida and East Coast railroad, have already started back to resume their ttork. A fresh northeast wind is blowing over the east gulf section, but it is of the ordinary character, and the remnant of the big storm which hung oer the lower part of the peninsula has disappeared. The casualty lists heretofore given are unchanged.

B'JUI R SB

IDEA IMPRESSES ROOSEVELT

Ship the Idle Negroes Down to Pan

ama and Put Them to DigKing Dltt. Washington, Oct. 23. Colonel N., F.

Thompson, of Chattanooga, Tenn.,

called at the White House and suggested to the president that the idle negroes In the south he utilized for labor on the Panama canal. "The better class of negroes in the south." tie explained, "would aid the white people in securing this class of labor, for that work. "It is the idle negro that makes the trouble in the south and reflects on the better class of negroes., Their presence interferes with the introduction of foreign immigrants. The president wis impressed with the suggestion, and asked me to talk to Secretary Taft and Chairman Shonts, of the Panama canal commission, on the subject. I will call on them tomorrow."

Our Women Gain Honor. Paris. Oct. 23. Ambassador McCorrolek has received from the management of the Western railroad a letter expressing in glowing terms its appre

ciation of the "devoted assistance"

rendered to the persons wounded in

the railroad wreck ft Epernon, depart

ment of the Eure and Loire, Oct. 14, by three women from the United

States who declined to give their names.

aying only that they came from Bos

ton.

Falls on November 29. This is Official, Commence Fow your campaign for your Thanksgiving Suits, Overcoats, Trousers or Fancy Vests. The Only Place in Hammond for a perfect fit in the latest styles and cloth. 100 CENTS ON THE DOLLAR IS THE VALUE DAVE HIRSCH GIVES YOU.

I A Complete Line of the most Tasty Patterns on the Mar

ket You are certain to get one that will please you. Suits to Order, $13.50 to $50 Pants to Order, $4 to $12

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CHURCH IS PLUTOCRATIC So an Ex-Raptist Preacher 'Declares in Explaining WhyvHe Quit the Ministry. St. Louis, Oct 23. Rerv. Wlllard W. Boyd, who resigned from the pastor

ate of the Second Baptist church in De

cember, 1904, and soon after went

abroad, recently returned and has giv

en out his reason for having quit the ministry. "It is impossible for the preacher to preach his convictions,"

said he. ' "The tendency of the modern fash

ionable church is whftlly to subserve

the interests of the rich. That is why

I have quit the ministry." He said he

would not again acceptlja regular pas

torate, but would preach whenever in

vited to do so providing, he wou'i be permitted to give expression to his

honest convictions.

STRIKE RIOTERS WOUNDED

an Attack on They

Two So Badly Hurt in

Worker That

May Die. " Newcastle, Ta.. Oct 23. Three

strikers were wounded, two perhaps fatally, in a riot following a strike of

trestle men at the four local Carnegie

Steel company furnaces . in this eity.

The men struck for an advance, and

In the afternoon a body of strikers at

tempted to stop operations at the Bed Jacket furnace by stoning the workers and Carnegie police. The officers final

ly fired a volley from their revolvers, and three of thestrikers fell, the others running to cover. The injure were all foreigners. Their names are: - Rocco Mass, shot through the lower abdomen; Lewis Movocco, left breast; Antonio Ferrono, right cheek, not serious.

Wrecked in the Yards. Chicago. Oct 23. One man was seriously injured and two other passengers were hurt when the Madison train on the Chicago. Milwaukee and St Paul railroad crashed into the eastbound overland limited train No. 2 on the same road in the freight yards at Rockwell street. Th injured are Mrs. A. Newstead, Omaha. Ne!., cut and bruised, not serious; George Atkinson, Chicago ynrdtnaster. badly crushed, condition serious; Anton Norwick, Chicago, cut about head by shattered glass.

Central Base Ball Leagce. C.rand R-ipids, Mich., Oct. 23. The final meeting of the Central Base Ball League for tho season of 1900 was held here, the nennant belnsr forinnllv

awarded to Grand Rapids. The report of President Carson, of Fort Wayne, showed a deScit of $317.31 for the season.

Planned to Kilf 'Alfonso. ' Madrid, Oct. 23. A report of an oe

curreuce believed by some to have been

a planned outrage against King At

fonso is published here. Several auto-

inobilists encountered ft stout wire fixed across the high road at a point

which his majesty would have to pass

on his way back to Madrid. The wire

was found shortly before the king's

automobile was due to pass.

" Whole Family Cremated.

Washington, Kan., Oct 23. In a fire

which destroyed the home of J. M. El

liott, a farmer eight miles west of

here, Elliott, his wife and n 16-year-old daughter, comprising the entire family

lost their lives.

Ijatest Price of Silver.

Washington, Oct 23. The director of the mint has purchased 100,000 ounces of silver at 70.747 per fine

ounce, to be delivered at the Denver

mint

NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE

Old Man Killed and Butchered. Muscatine, la., Oct 23. The dismembered body of Patrick Nevins, an old man who lived near here, was found in the basement of his house after the dwelling had burned. Nev1ns' head, arms and legs had been cut aT- Thprjv s n& cluc tQ j,e jjjuvrtwjxr.

The Minneapolis base ball team of

the American association has been sold

to Mike and Joe Cantillon, of Milwau

kee.

Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles.

TT. S. A. (retired), has arrived at New

Yerk from Europe.

A blizzard prevails in western Kan

sas and Wyoming.

A final review or the form or con tract for the construction' of the Pan

ama canal has been completed.

James Haggerty, aged 19, of New

York city, registered Illegally fourteen

times before he was caught

M. Clemenceat has begun the forma

tlon of a French cabinet Isaac Woolf, the "newsboys friend, of Chicago, is dead, aged 54 years.

The Russian ministry of agriculture

has issued a renort showing that on

the whole the harvests in European

Russia are below the average.

Wind blowing at a velocity of sixty miles is sweeping across the plains country In the Texas panhandle, with

blinding sleet and snow.

James L. Kelly was killed and An gust Anderson and Charles Cornel

were severely injured by the breaking

of a derrick boom at Pittsburg.

The local authorities being powerless

to take action have invited the bandi

Raisuli to restore order at Arzilla, Mo

rocco.

Daniel Van Yalkenburgh, a wealthy

real estate dealer of Houston, Tex., fa tally shot Ms wife and then sent a bnl

let Into his own brain. Inflicting a fata

wound. Domestic troubles.

David Ganaway and Hubert Brown

young sons of prominent residents of Chamberlain. X. D., lost their lives In

uralrie lire near that, city

BAY

IRSCH

Hammond Building

Probably Death to Four. Pittsburg, Kan., Oct. 23. Three

Austrian miners were killed and a fourth probably fatally Injured by an

explosion of powder in mine No. 11 of the Southwestern Development com

pany near Mineral, twenty miles south

of Pittsburg. The dead are Frank Kromac, Charles Konkle and, Frank Kaske. Peters Grion was badly burned and will probably die.

Badger State Flush -oT Money. Madison, Wis., Oct 23. The state

board of assessments has voted to elim

inate all state taxes this year and to assess but half of one mill tax for school purposes. The latter action is taken for the first time in the history

of the state. It is announced that the

state treasury had $2,1S.,000 cash Oct

1, the largest sum on record.

Twenty Hurt on the Hail.

Foraker, O. T., Oct 23 An east-

bound passenger train on the Midland

Valley railroad was wrecked on a

trestle seven miles west of here and

twenty persons were injured. The more

seriously hurt were Mrs. F. D. Clary,

Claremore, I. T., internal injuries, and

L. T. Henderson, Rockford, 111., back

and legs injured.

Rockefeller Leaves for Pocantlco.

Cleveland, Oct. 23. John D. Rocke

feller has left here for his home at Pooantieo, N. Y. He said he would not

return to Cleveland until next summer.

Degrees of Heat and Cold.

The greatest heat is never found

on the equator, but some ten degrees

to the north, while more severe cold

has been registered in northern Si

beria than has been found near the

pole. Facts About Lake Erie.

Lake Erie has the largest numher of

ports of 100,000 population or upwards

Lake Superior has no city in that class, nor has Lake Huron one near the 100,000 limit. Lake Ontario has

only one and that a Canadian port

unless Rochester, which has Char

lotte for a port and lies several miles

inland, la included.

Horse Out of Its Place.

A frightened horse jumped Into an automobile at Greenwich, Conn., a few evening3 ago. When will people learn

to keep foolish horses off the public

highways? Chicago Record-Herald.

tne smallest rouea riants.

German women collect what are

supposed to be the smallest potted

plants in the world. They are cact growing in pots about the size of i thimble.

Oldest European Royal Houe.

The oldest royal house in Europe is that of Mecklenburg. It traces its descent from Genseric, who Backed Rome in A. D. 455.

203 Fayette Street

Don't Read This Advertisement if you Wish to

Keep Your Money. Why? Because I am 'offering: acre and lot property so tre

mendously low that the temptation will be too great for you to hansj

on to your money any longer. . I am selling vacant lots for $10, $15,

$20, $25, $30, $50 and upwards; acres at $50 and $100 per acre and upwards. Write or call for particulars.

R L. MILLER.

Suite 408, Hammond Bldg., Hammond, Ind. Phone 3021

Branch Office, Tolleston, Ind.

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HEW

ELECTRICAL THEAT . 252 East State Street.

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The beautiful homes illustrated aboe, located on Summer street, one of the most popular streets in Hammond. For sale Gostlin, Meyn & Co, on exceedingly liberal terms. A small payment down the balance on payments but slightly in excess cf rent you are now paying.